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Wednesday 3 June 2015


Historic U.S. Supreme Court Judgement

A historic decision was made in the U.S. Supreme Court on Monday 1st June.
It involved the case EEOC v. Abercrombie & Fitch.
It is historic not just for the majority decision or judgement but also for what is probably Justice Clarence Thomas' finest dissenting Opinion ever made as a Supreme Court Justice.

It is a case of enormous significance the reverberations of which will echo across America in the context of Civil Rights, Religious Freedom and the separation of Church and State.

I will admit that I have a personal interest in this judgement because many years ago I had knowledge of a similar situation along the lines of Abercrombie & Fitch which never reached the Courts.  The decision in the matter was not based on prejudice but on policy issues – but it likewise could (and perhaps was) perceived as based on personal prejudices. 
[Indeed for over two decades Ross Perot, the Founder of EDS, as a matter of company policy, would never hire any employee who wore a beard or moustache and it's Texas headquarters for new recruits was more akin to Boot Camp than induction training.]

This issue of headscarves also has a personal significance.   I grew up in a very traditional Christian community where women always covered themselves with a semi-veil or headscarf going into Church out of respect and tradition rather than because there were prohibitions against going uncovered.
For example, my mother and aunt would never think of going into a Church uncovered (without a headscarf) because such would be highly disrespectful.

The Case
centered around Samantha Elauf, a lady who wore a headscarf to her job interview with the firm Abercrombie & Fitch. They decided that while she ws qualified for the job, wearing a headscarf at work would be contrary to their 'appearance' policy.  On this basis they refused to employ her.
The EEOC took on her case.  The trial court ruled in favor of the EEOC-Elauf. Abercombie & Fitch appealed.  This decision was reversed by an appeals court who decided in favor of Abercrombie & Fitch.
By an 8-1 vote the U.S. Supreme Court have now reversed this decision.
What is even more important is the ruling by Justice Antonin Scalia who delivered the Opinion of The Court:
''Samantha Elauf is a practicing Muslim who, consistent with her understanding of her religion’s requirements,wears a headscarf.........
Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 78 Stat. 253, as amended, prohibits two categories of employment practices. It is unlawful for an employer:
(1) to fail or refuse to hire or to discharge any individual, or otherwise to discriminate against any individual with respect to his compensation, terms, conditions, or privileges of employment, because of such individual’s race, color, religion, sex, or national origin;
or
(2)to limit, segregate, or classify his employees or applicants for employment in any way which would deprive or tend to deprive any individual of employment opportunities or otherwise adversely affect his status as an employee, because of such individual’s race, color, religion, sex, or national origin.”
These two proscriptions, often referred to as the “disparate treatment” (or “intentional discrimination”) provision and the “disparate impact” provision, are the only causes of action under Title VII. The word “religion” is defined to “includ[e] all aspects of religious observance and practice, as well as belief, unless an employer demonstrates that he is unable to reasonably accommodate to” areligious observance or practice without undue hardship in the conduct of the employer’s business.” §2000e(j).Abercrombie’s primary argument is that an applicant cannot show disparate treatment without first showing that an employer has “actual knowledge” of the applicant’s need for an accommodation. We disagree. Instead, an applicant need only show that his need for an accommodation was a motivating factor in the employer’s decision........''

2
''The disparate-treatment provision forbids employers to:
(1) fail . . . to hire” an applicant (2) “because of ” (3) “such individual’s . . . religion” (which includes his religious practice). Here, of course, Abercrombie (1) failed to hire Elauf. The parties concede that (if Elauf sincerely believes that her religion so requires) Elauf ’s wearing of a head scarf is (3) a “religious practice.” All that remains is whether she was not hired (2) “because of ” her religious practice.''

Concurring with the Judgement Justice Samuel Alito Jr.,added:
''In sum, the EEOC was required in this case to prove that Abercrombie rejected Elauf because of a practice that Abercrombie knew was religious. It is undisputed that Abercrombie rejected Elauf because she wore a headscarf, and there is ample evidence in the summary judgment record to prove that Abercrombie knew that Elauf is a Muslim and that she wore the scarf for a religious reason. The Tenth Circuit therefore erred in ordering the entry of summary judgment for Abercrombie. On remand, the Tenth Circuit can consider whether there is sufficient evidence to support summary judgment in favor of the EEOC on the question of Abercrombie’s knowledge. The Tenth Circuit will also be required to address Abercrombie’s claim that it could not have accommodated Elauf ’s wearing the headscarf on the job without undue hardship.''

The Dissenting Voice (concurring in part and dissenting in other parts) In This Case Was That Of Justice Clarence Thomas:
''JUSTICE THOMAS, concurring in part and dissenting in part.''
''I agree with the Court that there are two—and only two—causes of action under Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 as understood by our precedents: a disparate treatment (or intentional-discrimination) claim and a disparate-impact claim. Ante,at 3. Our agreement ends there. Unlike the majority, I adhere to what I had thought before today was an undisputed proposition: Mere application of a neutral policy cannot constitute “intentional discrimination.” Because the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) can prevail here only if Abercrombie engaged in intentional discrimination, and because Abercrombie’s application of its neutral Look Policy does not meet that description, I would affirm the judgment of the Tenth Circuit.''
I
''This case turns on whether Abercrombie’s conduct constituted “intentional discrimination” within the mean ing of 42 U. S. C. §1981a(a)(1). That provision allows a Title VII plaintiff to “recover compensatory and punitive damages” only against an employer “who engaged in unlawful intentional discrimination (not an employment practice that is unlawful because of its disparate impact).” The damages award EEOC obtained against Abercrombie is thus proper only if that company engaged in “intentional discrimination”—as opposed to “an employment practice that is unlawful because of its disparate impact”—within the meaning of §1981a(a)(1).
The terms “intentional discrimination” and “disparate impact” have settled meanings in federal employment discrimination law. “[I]ntentional discrimination . . .
occur[s] where an employer has treated a particular person less favorably than others because of a protected trait.” Ricci v.DeStefano, 557 U. S. 557, 577 (2009) (internal quotation marks and alteration omitted). [D]isparate-impact claims,” by contrast, “involve employment practices that are facially neutral in their treatment of different groups but that in fact fall more harshly on one group than another and cannot be justified by business necessity.” Raytheon Co.v.Hernandez , 540 U. S. 44, 52 (2003) (internal quotation marks omitted). Conceived by this Court in Griggs v. Duke Power Co., 401 U. S. 424 (1971), this “theory of discrimination” provides that “a facially neutral employment practice may bedeemed illegally discriminatory without evidence of the employer’s subjective intent to discriminate that is required in a disparate-treatment case,” Raytheon, supra,at 52–53 (internal quotation marks and alteration omitted).
I would hold that Abercrombie’s conduct did not constitute “intentional discriminatio
n.” Abercrombie refused to create an exception to its neutral Look Policy for Samantha Elauf ’s religious practice of wearing a headscarf. Ante,at 2. In doing so, it did not treat religious practices less favorably than similar secular practices, but instead remained neutral with regard to religious practices. To be sure, the effects of Abercrombie’s neutral Look Policy, absent an accommodation, fall more harshly on those who wear headscarves as an aspect of their faith. But that is a classic case of an alleged disparate impact. It is not what we have previously understood to be a case of disparate treatment because Elauf received the same treatment from Abercrombie as any other applicant who appeared unable to comply with the company’s Look Policy. See ibid. ; App. 134, 144. Because I cannot classify Abercrombie’s conduct as “intentional discrimination,” I would affirm. ''
II
A
''Resisting this straightforward application of §1981a, the majority expands the meaning of “intentional discrimination” to include a refusal to give a religious applicantfavored treatment.” Ante,at 6–7. But contrary to the majority’s assumption, this novel theory of discrimination is not commanded by the relevant statutory text. Title VII makes it illegal for an employer “to fail or refuse to hire . . . any individual . . . because of such individual’s . . . religion.” §2000e–2(a)(1). And as used in Title VII, “[t]he term ‘religion’ includes all aspects of religious observance and practice, as well as belief, unless an employer demonstrates that he is unable to reasonably accommodate to an employee’s or prospective employee’s religious observance or practice without undue hardship on the conduct of the employer’s business.” §2000e(j). With this gloss on the definition of “religion” in §2000e 2(a)(1), the majority concludes that an employer may violate Title VII if he “refuse[s] to hire . . . any individual . . . because of such individual’s . . . religious . . . practice” (unless he has an “undue hardship” defense). See ante,at 3–4. But inserting the statutory definition of religion into §2000e–2(a) does not answer the question whether Abercrombie’s refusal to hire Elauf was “because of her religious practice.” At first glance, the phrase “because of such individual’s religious practice” could mean one of two things. Under one reading, it could prohibit taking an action because of the religious nature of an employee’s particular practice. Under the alternative reading, it could prohibit taking an action because of an employee’s practice that happens to be religious.''
''The distinction is perhaps best understood by example. Suppose an employer with a neutral grooming policy forbidding facial hair refuses to hire a Muslim who wears a beard for religious reasons. Assuming the employer applied the neutral grooming policy to all applicants, the motivation behind the refusal to hire the Muslim applicant would not be the religious nature of his beard, but its existence. Under the first reading, then, the Muslim applicant would lack an intentional-discrimination claim, as he was not refused employment “because of ” the religious nature of his practice. But under the second reading, he would have such a claim, as he was refused employment “because of ” a practice that happens to be religious in nature. ''
''One problem with the second, more expansive reading is that it would punish employers who have no discriminatory motive. If the phrase “because of such individual’s religious practice” sweeps in any case in which an employer takes an adverse action because of a practice that happens to be religious in nature, an employer who had no idea that a particular practice was religious would be penalized. That strict-liability vi ew is plainly at odds with the concept of intentional discrimination. Cf.Raytheon, supra,at 54, n. 7 (“If [the employer] were truly unaware that such a disability existed, it would be impossible for her hiring decision to have been based, even in part, on[the applicant’s] disability. And, if no part of the hiring decision turned on [the applicant’s] status as disabled, he cannot, ipso facto, have been subject to disparate treatment”). Surprisingly, the majority leaves the door open to this strict-liability theory, reserving the question whether an employer who does not even “suspec[t] that the practice in question is a religious practice” can nonetheless be punished for intentional discrimination. ''
Ante,at 6, n. 3. ''For purposes of today’s decision, however, the majority opts for a compromise, albeit one that lacks a foothold in the text and fares no better under our precedents. The majority construes §2000e–2(a)(1) to punish employers
who refuse to accommodate applicants under neutral policies when they act “with the motive of avoiding accommodation.”
Ante, at 5. ''But an employer who is aware that strictly applying a neutral policy will have an adverse effect on a religious group, and applies the policy anyway,
is not engaged in intentional discrimination, at least as that term has traditionally been understood. As the Court explained many decades ago, “ ‘Discriminatory purpose’i.e., the purpose necessary for a claim of intentional discrimination—demands “more than . . . awareness of consequences. It implies that the decisionmaker . . . selected or reaffirmed a particular course of action at least in part because of,’ not merely ‘in spite of,’ its adverse effects upon an identifiable group.” ''Personnel Administrator of Mass. v.Feeney , 442 U. S. 256, 279 (1979) (internal citation and footnote omitted). I do not dispute that a refusal to accommodate can, in some circumstances, constitute intentional discrimination. If an employer declines to accommodate a particular religious practice, yet accommodates a similar secular (or other denominational) practice, then that may be proof that he has “treated a particular person less favorably than others because of [a religious practice].” Ricci , 557 U. S., at 577 (internal quotation marks and alteration omitted); see also, e.g., Dixon v. Hallmark Cos., 627 F. 3d 849, 853 (CA11 2010) (addressing a policy forbidding display of “religious items” in management offices). But merely refusing to create an exception to a neutral policy for a religious practice canno t be described as treating a particular applicant “less favorably than others.” The majority itself appears to recognize that its construction requires something more than equal treatment. See ante, at 6–7 (“Title VII does not demand mere neutrality with regard to religious practices,” but instead “gives them favored treatment”). But equal treatment is not disparate treatment, and that basic principle should have disposed of this case. ''…......................''The Court today rightly puts to rest the notion that Title VII creates a freestanding religious-accommodation claim, ante,at 3, but creates in its stead an entirely new form of liability: the disparate-treat ment-based-on-equal-treatment claim. Because I do not think that Congress’ 1972 redefinition of “religion” also redefined “intentional discrimination,” I would affirm the judgment of the Tenth Circuit. I respectfully dissent from the portions of the majority’s decision that take the contrary view. ''


                                               [Judgement ends]
  
References:
                                                         

   
 The above picture/print is either in The Holy Land, Persia, Ottoman Syria, Yemen or other Persian Gulf area circa 1896-1902
                                          ©Patrick Emek, 2015


















Monday 1 June 2015

The Wooden Horse of  Merkel


The prospect of Greece exiting the Euro becomes ever closer as the country lurches from crisis to crisis. Greek politicians have accused the EU of imposing onerous burdens on the counrty for the release of much needed bail-out monies. The EU and monetary institutions have said that they have no choice and that Greece can, in effect, take it or leave it. Under such conditions we should not be too surprised if the Greek government finally gives in to popular public pressure and exits the monetary union.

If Greece can persuade Russia and China to step in and fill the gap by providing much needed credit it might not just survive outside the Euro but actually prosper as the Switzerland (or Monaco) of the Mediterranean.
The fascinating thing about China is that it is not tied to the 'old' colonial (mercantilist) or European or U.S. models of trade-aid, investment and business.
For example, the business model in parts of Africa is to offer to develop the entire infrastructure for a country rather than piecemeal development tied to foreign NGOs and aid.
This model is much more acceptable for a developing country than one single project.
The business model in the United States simply cannot adjust to this way of doing business since the U.S. government cannot instruct the private sector to operate according to it's vision for the United States in Africa over the next 100 years.  Such thinking is outside the Anglo-Saxon (European) world financial parameters for the conduct of international commerce by private and stock listed conglomerates.
This is of course in return for guaranteed exclusive strategic resources, raw materials and mining rights for periods of 50-100 years.
Then there is the issue of politics. China is always reluctant to get involved in the internal affairs of countries it is trading with.  This is for two immediate reasons.    It does not at present have the logistical capability to project it's considerable military power globally. Secondly, for so long as the country it is trading with is politically stable, it sees no reason to 'play internal politics' so issues such as human rights are not as important as political stability whether under a totalitarian regime or benevolent dictatorship.  There is no 'public pressure' to respond to within China for the conduct of it's foreign relations. Indeed , with the exception of Japan, the concept of public and media 'pressure' determining foreign policy is non-existent – unless organised and approved by the State itself.
Of course it would like to 'export' its own development model – and indeed Africa could be a very fertile continent for a 'new beginning' having been left a patchwork of artificially created boundary nations by the departing colonial powers. To give one example, until very recently African citizens of Francophone countries sharing common borders, beside one another, had to travel by air through Paris to get to the country next door (!)   Such absurdities are matched in the Caribbean - another area where China is making considerable in-roads for the simple reason that there are untapped or some might say underdeveloped economic potentials which the colonial powers have ignored in favor of a (now outdated) mercantilist system of bilateral trade-aid. This master-servant relationship is now being challenged by new players with very different development models.
Inter-trade between Caribbean islands has been stunted in favor of the bilateral relations with the former colonial powers.   Again China has understood that within this vacuum is a vast untapped potential for inter-development and inter-trade amongst the islands of the Caribbean to its own advantage whilst at the same time showing Caribbean islands what their true potential could be as a 'bloc'. Perhaps it takes an outside force of a non-military kind with the resources to show what new possibilities could exist under different parameters?
Not everyone of course is happy with Chinese investment but, as with any pioneers, you have to admire their spirit of adventure – being prepared to risk all in foreign lands in the hope of future success. It's a major trek from China to Africa or to The Caribbean.
No less a trek than it was for Christopher Columbus or the great Arab explorers Ibn Battuta and Ibn Majid or Marco Polo or indeed the great Chinese Treasure Fleet under Admiral Cheng Ho or Scylax of Caryanda.
In terms of the mission, for China, it is an even bigger trek today to Africa than the one to Greece. At least in Greece systems of civic society are highly developed over thousands of years. In Africa there are major challenges.   In the Caribbean, because of it's proximity to the major superpower -The United States - and it's inheritance of Anglo-Saxon systems of governance (in much the same way as Europe inherited Greco-Roman civilization as it's foundation) systems are in place in civic society which only require 'kick-starting' or 'rebooting' to realise their fuller potentials as clusters of autonomous economic entities or units in their own right whilst also trading with the rest of the world. China has seen an underdeveloped potential and is rapidly exploiting it in a way Western economies either have no desire to do or are not configured to invest within.

So when I hear or read media comments about the imminent 'collapse' of Greece into bankruptcy, anarchy and chaos, I often wonder whether any of the individuals writing such nonsense ever actually studied the history of Greece from four thousand year ago or indeed have ever cared to remember where their own European civilization developed out of?
Because if they had, they would not be so dismissive of the Greeks when their backs are up against the wall and 'enemies' are at the gates or on the beaches or raining fire and brimstone.
There is a saying ''when the going gets tough, the tough get going.''

The Wooden Horse of Merkel may well be in for a 'surprise' reception as the troops disembark!


©Patrick Emek, 2015









Saturday 30 May 2015

Keynes vs Von Hayek

(and much more)


the blog below is written as  continuous prose


Ben Bernake:

''I spent my life studying the Great Depression........it was not the failure of the stock market but the lack of credit which caused the Great Depression. Credit has the ability to build an economy but lack of it most certainly has the ability to destroy it.... and very rapidly....''

There were no two more influential economists in the world I grew up in than both Keynes and Von Hayek. J.M. Keynes I studied at school. Friedrich Hayek I encountered later on in life.
Perhaps it was first impressions or maybe my family circumstances (a very poor middle class background, where money was almost non-existent as most which Mom earned was spent paying bills – including school fees.)
Thankfully I grew up in a political environment where the priorities of health, education and basic social services-as extreme nets for those really impoverished (but most, alas, not for ourselves!) were provided by the State.  A great emphasis was placed on investment in a national public library system and, by any standards, libraries were in relative abundance and well stocked with materials.
Some of the health services, I can recall, were provided (or subsidized) by American charities such as The Rockerfeller and Getty Foundations, WHO and UNICEF.
As I recall these would include things such as basic polio inoculations for children (in a country where polio and tuberculosis were scourges.)

It's important to put my background into a perspective when discussing Von Hayek and Keynes because I probably grew up in the almost ideal economic model of society which Von Hayek would applaud (as being on the right road) and Keynes would despair as not providing sufficient government intervention (in terms of work programs and benefits for those less fortunate.)

Enough about me.

When I first read the works of J.M. Keynes it was almost like a spiritual revelation.
His model aptly described both why the Great Depression of 1929 had occurred and how it was resolved.
Keynes was a believer in the intervention of the State, not just as provider of basic services, but as a core defender and strategic planner of public services.   A public service would include Water, Electricity. Gas, Oil, telecommunications, Health, Education, Steel, Coal and any other critical strategic industry vital for providing for the needs of the individual or as a strategic asset.
Education was also a key service but Keynes was never opposed to 'competition' in this field but was of the view that State education services should eventually break the monopoly of elitist educational providers.
Von Hayek, on the other hand, identified a ridiculous over-abundance of credit (with nothing to back up paper money) as the chief villain.
Von Hayek saw the actions of the Federal Reserve (buying up debt to stimulate growth) as just exacerbating and accelerating the financial meltdown.
Thankfully Von Hayek was ignored and the great FDR (I always refer to him as 'the great' FDR because he put America back to work – public works programs, roads, railways, telecommunications, even dams (The Hoover Dam) were all testaments to public spending at a time when private capital had either retreated or was culling industry - as private entrepreneurs (industrialists) attempted to recoup their stock market and other financial losses by shedding their workforces - pushing even more ordinary people onto the breadlines and into the soup kitchens.
As far as Von Hayek was concerned, this was a normal 'corrective' process best left to market forces.
It did not matter that millions of children and their parents were starving, their parents pushed into
impoverishment by the loss of income from work, that families en masse packed all their possessionsonto trucks to head across the Dust Bowls to eke out an existence wherever they could find it – the promised El Dorado of the golden West Coast – if they and their family made it there alive (which many did not.)
Apart from suffering, this time gave rise to some of the greatest works of literature which capture many of the tribulations of ordinary folk.    I will just refer to two here:
John Steinbeck's  'The Grapes Of Wrath' written by someone observing, May Angelou, someone born just one year before the Great Depression and who grew up as a Black child experiencing the worst of the worst effects of the Depression, racism and no opportunities.
That despair and hopelessness which was was blind to color is apt in the choice of both Steinbeck and Angelou.    White folk likewise did what they had to in order to survive – and, if you were poor or unemployed, it was survival of the fittest which determined whether you would live or die. Hence my choice of Steinbeck and Angelou.    Von Hayek (were he alive today) would argue that Angelou's survival of economic and social adversity was exactly what he would have expected – and ignore the tens of thousands who perished because they were 'not fit enough' to survive.
I might be being a little unkind to Von Hayek but the essence of his argument was that the Great Depression was a 'corrective' process and, when the private sector was again confident that investment would yield the rewards it expected, it would again invest in profitable sectors – putting people back into employment – this time in a more robust, more efficient, slimmer and better adapted industrial working environment than had existed before the 'correction took place.
I would like to again turn this argument on it's head by saying that Von Hayek, seeing Stephen Hawking as a child quadriplegic (which he was not, but I am taking this suggestion to illustrate a point) (with nothing else as a guideline as to his intellectual potential) would dismiss as nonsensical the idea that keeping him alive would be of any benefit to society.    The idea of providing him with advanced technology to, say, progress in 3rd Grade or beyond would have been dismissed as lunacy by Von Hayek.   Von Hayek would add, no doubt that if Hawkings' parents were financially well-to-do, then how they choose to spend their money was entirely up to them but would emphatically dismiss the State as any source of provider for the value-added care required across many disciplines to keep both the child alive and provide him with opportunity to progress.
I am bringing Hawking into the debate because at a time of austerity and financial crises the first cuts always take place to services being provided to those most vulnerable who cannot protest - the elderly, the disabled and the very young.   With an ageing population in the developed world cutbacks on services for those in the upper (aged) and disability categories are the most attractive.
Relaxations on euthanasia and 'exit strategies' for the terminally ill and infirm are presented as
'fashionable' or 'worthy' options for the 'good' of society.   Indeed the processes could be made as easy as walking into a Candy Store (except, of course, that you won't be walking out!)
Some are even receiving Christian Church endorsements.
So Americans were saved from mass starvation and utter despair (and possible revolution) by FDR adopting Keynes' monetary theory of government intervention to save the economy from going down the toilet.   Huge public works programs were undertaken across America as the government both initiated projects and took stake holding shares in private enterprises to boost employment and inject purchasing power back into the hands of ordinary people.
It was FDR who saved the American economy from total collapse and started the process of America's ascendency as a world economic super giant.
The key strategies which both President Obama and FDR have both followed were that, in the event of a major economic crises, the taxpayer bails out the private sector where such is necessary to prevent dominoes effects which would otherwise collapse and shatter the entire economic system.
I believe that history will be kinder to Obama than the present pundits.
President Obama, history will conclude, not only saved the American but the world economic order from either total collapse or a transfer of global economic dominance to one (or both) of two other superpowers – in-waiting.
In my opinion there are two reasons why he has not been able to deliver the FDR syndrome for kick-starting the economy.
The first is ignorance and dogma.    Republicans lack both education in the real sense and are too dogmatic to allow a Democratic President to provide deliverance to the American people at this time of crisis.
The second is the misguided belief that in Ayn Rand, Von Hayaek and Friedman economics (and their acolytes) lie the only road to economic salvation for the free market economic world.      Other paths therein lies 'The Road To Serfdom'.
You may well ask why even bring in Rand when the title of the article is Keynes v Von Hayek.
Ayn Rand is 'the dark horse' in the room.   Neither economist nor mathematician but a writer and philosopher with strong views about existence, the state, capitalism, communism and individuality.
There are many influential (and of course rich and privileged) Republicans who susbcribe to her ideals and philosophies.
It is these misguided beliefs which, in my opinion, are ensuring the economic system in America stays stagnant.
Don't think that such ideas are confined to the U.S.   The above are giants in the sphere of philosophical, existential and economic thought, have huge followings amongst Conservatives (and even Liberals and Libertarians) in Western Europe and in the United Kingdom.
Western Europe is, however, a little more educated, mature and more circumspect to be too over-engrossed with Ayn Rand.   It has already gone through it's own more recent 'love affair' era of neo-Nazism and is wary of bourgeois existential philosophies such as Rand's which usually (ultimately) lead to the gas chambers or servitude for peoples (the helpless masses who through circumstance of birth cannot help themselves) in their millions. Nonetheless her continued appeal is similar to that of Adolf Hitler to this very day.    I am not comparing Rand with Hitler but her 'acolyte' following and adoration by an elite of very rich, well-educated influential and well-placed individuals in the United States cannot be easily dismissed.   Undoubtedly far more people read Rand as her philosophy for life appears to be, what I would call the 'Valhalla' or final destination of the gods of the philosopher Friedrich Nietzsche, national socialism and unbridled capitalism all combined - but without saying (spelling out in the crudest of terms) exactly what is required to arrive at this 'laissez faire' 'paradise' of governance by the chosen elite in a 'free' 'open' 'democratic' society.
It's almost as if the privileged pine for a 'golden age' where the serfs (sic. everyone else) live in blissful servitude totally ignorant of the forces which control and rule their lives and with no desire for freedom nor progress but continued toil from birth to the grave.   That's Ayn Rand in a nutshell.
I mention Rand's books in the reference section just in case you want to experience this journey for yourself.
Those captivated by her philosophies are usually very rich or privileged individuals and some who are very out of touch with, what I call, the reality of 'ordinary' man and woman in the street.    Don't misunderstand me here.    Rand understands ordinary day-to-day people struggling to get by from week to week but only from a sense of how to control and manipulate their thoughts and feelings to the betterment of her own elite and privileged class.    It is in this regard that I compare her 'vision' with that of Nazism.    (Indeed, in my opinion, Stalinism is also very much related to this same thinking.)
In a nutshell, Ayn Rand represents the 'holy sanctum' of unbridled capitalism – if only it could break free of it's 'chains'.   Her work is a 'cry' or lament of the privileged who have seen some (they would argue by saying many) of their 'rights' eroded through successive 'communistic' (mainly Democratic) administrations and legislation over decades and is an exhortation to return to the 'source' of freedom and individual liberty.
Social welfare nets,as a part of Federal State services, provide for a more balanced social framework than otherwise exists without them.   Such concepts, with the State as provider, are abhorrent to Ayn Rand's core beliefs.    Such 'communistic' frameworks undermine free enterprise.   [Those most affected by the absence or lack of such welfare programs are poor White, Black and other minorities already existing at the bottom of the wage or poverty scale as the most available vulnerable individuals for exploitation.]
At it's essence (the core of Rands' beliefs) is a 'Herrenvolk' destined to rule the 'ignorant' masses of the world.
If you appreciate ''Der Ring des Nibelungen'' then Rand becomes easier to digest.   Big government always stands in the way of the quest for 'The Golden Fleece'.   It has 'stolen' individual liberty and personal freedom which must be reclaimed by the bold and fearless.
Such philosophies, as ever, more often than not, ultimately, end up not with the promised salvation and freedom, but conflict on a global scale, enslavement to fossilized ideologies condemning conscientious objectors to places such as with Belsen, Theresienstadt and Sobibór concentration and death camps in Europe or, more recently, be they in Rwanda, in Bosnia, in Cambodia and, in today's world, in ISIL-style Caliphate concentration death States – where the only tolerable (and tolerated) viewpoint is that of their Waffen SS-style mind-control twisted interpretation of Islam to their prisoners - the ''untermenschen'' who must first be 'cleansed' of the Devil then, if allowed to live beyond this ritual, be 're-educated' into the true version of the Koran according to ISIL.
My analysis is no more aptly illustrated than in ISIL's most recent issue of it's magazine where one of it's female members praises the use of mass (even group) rape of non-believers to 'cleanse' them (their victims) of the 'evil'  within.   It is only after 'cleansing' and their disposal (murder of the mothers after giving birth - after a child with less of the 'stain' of 'sin' than it's 'demonic' mother) that a new generation (or new world) giving praise to Allah according to the real version of the Koran (sic. ISIL's version)  can be brought into existence*.
What followers or acolytes of Rand fail to appreciate is that within the global desire of the elite objectivist subscribers to exercise total control over the exploited masses, as with ISIL,  therein itself lies the seeds of its own ultimate destruction as, for example, in  its exhortation to undermine or weaken the social net of the State towards withdrawal of care for the weak and vulnerable in favor of private sector philosophy (provision) ultimately results in world-wide rebellion  and the development of totalitarian and extremist secular and religious ideologies 360 degrees  juxtaposed to Rands' values and ideals.
When you appreciate that the true essence of Ayan Rand's economic model is eternal slavery of the masses to the bourgeois or privileged, then it becomes unviable as a working model for the world – since it creates exactly those conditions which are the genesis of and breeding ground for the chaos, anarchy and revolution by the dispossessed and disenfranchised against their 'masters' which we see magnified in the strife played out through religion, tribe, race, ethnicity and class wars worldwide this very day.
Unlike a member of the British Royal family, none of Rands' elite supporters have ever spent a night homeless in the freezing cold to experience what those millions of impoverished Americans without proper heating have no opportunity but to accept nor how those without adequate money from their low pay minimum-wage jobs live on the fringes of existence, nor what those people too poor to buy food and (new) clothes for their families require to live in dignity, nor what the 60000* Americans living on the streets every night have to do to survive without food nor money.              It is these individuals who live in insular microcosmic social 'bubbles' shared with people like themselves, who churn out clichés by the dozen such as 'these bums [or hobos] should get themselves jobs' 'they just don't have what it takes'; 'they are all social outcasts criminals and drug addicts'; 'I've succeeded without help from anyone' ...who subscribe to Rands' economic models for human existence and even view Von Hayek as 'too liberal'.
[I was very fortunate to have worked, as an unpaid volunteer, with someone who was from a much more privileged background than Rand but her total antithesis.
She too had traveled in Eastern Europe both before World War II and in its aftermath.
She was instrumental in the creation of a body dedicated to the trans-Atlantic alliance (U.S.-Europe) but she never lost sight of the needs of ordinary people – despite her privileged background.
So when I discuss Rand, I talk about someone I can understand as I personally knew contemporaries of similar background but ones who never 'lost touch' with 'reality' – even into their nineties.
I am deliberately omitting Rand's 'appeal' to libertarians as it is too complicated an issue for discussion in this short blog.   Suffice to say, I believe that they are misguided and their concept of 'laissez faire' and 'the free market' are uniquely American in this regard. ]

To conclude this introductory blog, the world is facing very stark roads to follow for economic deliverance.   Three competing philosophies are being resurrected in the hope of salvation.
The three are as different as day, night and twilight. Whichever succeeds could well determine as to whether the world stays in global recession for decades or whether there is daylight at the end of the recession tunnel.  Clearly I do not believe that Rand or Von Hayek have the answer to a U.S. or world economic crash.   But many influential Republican decision makers in the United States most certainly do.    If they get their way after the next general election, expect communism, fascism and national socialism (or their equivalent inheritors) to be making spectacular comebacks as individual countries worldwide seek to assert their own nationalistic (or theocratic or neo-nationalist) agendas - as perceived opposition to imperial hubris.


©Patrick Emek, 2015

*The West has created this monster, ISIL, so when it looks into the mirror, ISIL is simply a reflection of failed political and ideological policies over decades and a failure of its own desire for control over affairs and destiny of peoples in the Islamic world.
This it will never recognise because to so do would raise too many troubling existential questions.
Some will say that ISIL is a deliberate creation of the West but I see it more as a byproduct or unintended consequential entity which now, unplanned, has an entire momentum all of it's very own.

*very conservative estimate – numbers have been given by other organisations of between 300000 to half a million homeless individuals for any one year in the United States

You may well be asking yourself:  'surely Rand cannot be take more seriously that Krugman or Friedman?'   In today's U.S. political world, dogma (or faith) supersedes all else.
Ecomomic models and policies are calibrated to fit the dogma and not the other way around.
(remind you of somewhere else?)



























[similar programs are being today undertaken by newer and more recent foundations such as




Sunday 24 May 2015

Edutainment:

''In an era where the cultural and educational heritages of the world are being burnt to ashes and demolished into dust by religious fanatics and other extremists we must all work even harder to ensure the spreading and sharing of the seeds of  universal knowledge amongst womankind and mankind''

[patrick emek]




'Alien Encounters'

[The Science Channel]



It takes a lot these days for me to sit down and watch any television program.
Most programs are produced by arrogant, self-conceited elitist cliques – but cleverly designed and dressed up as 'mass entertainment' 'reality television' or 'educationally relevant'. For these reasons watching and listening to anything on the box - other than news channels worldwide these days - is a real burden for me.
So when the series 'Alien Encounters' were first aired some time ago I watched the first few minutes with the usual scepticism, my control at the ready to flick over to something more relevant and 'down to earth' in an instant.   However, I quickly woke up to the fact that the series was something really different from the others.
I was so impressed with the technical and scientific content that I called an 'emergency boardroom' 'meeting' with the kids to inform them that they were going to watch this program.   There were the usual howls of protest with one feigning a headache and another a tummy ache as reasons to excuse their availability from watching.    It was a battle - which I eventually won by means of 'gentle persuasion' (the promise of chocolates and ice cream) and 'time off' for good behavior.   The matter didn't end there.   There were scenes of utter exasperation, despair and hands wildly gesticulating in the air like some entranced religious worshippers - eyes rolling to the ceiling – as I paused and (just slightly) rewound frames or sections of each episode to explain some fundamental futurist, physical, biological or chemical theory or discovery which were being talked about.    The situation went from bad to worse with the (now) two remaining  'victims' (as they described themselves at that time)  just short of verbal altercations and maledictions towards me - and on the entire series - as the first episode ended.     (I had made matters much much worse by insisting they take notes as I would explain an important principle being discussed whilst I paused, then slightly rewound – so as to hopefully ensure that the matter was more accessible for their long term memories.    At the end of the first episode they swore they would never watch the second one under such onerous conditions.     However, the same two obligingly trundled in to watch the second, then the third, then fourth, fifth, sixth and seventh episodes.   Their protests never ceased – but were visibly growing far less as each new series evolved.
I could see that at least the two remaining 'victims' were intrigued - despite their howls and protests.
[The two interested individuals have very high IQs but one is very highly hyperactive – which means that anything requiring focused attention is always a challenge.]
When we arrived at episode eight, just before the Holidays, both declared that they had enough of my insistence on scientific-like note taking and would not continue to view unless I dropped this requirement and they could watch the program through from beginning to end – with no interruptions whatsoever.   This I could not agree to as I explained that the notes were to help them (as quite young children) to understand what was being discussed.    We could not agree.    The deadlock could not be broken.    We had reached an impasse – and neither of us was prepared to give way.    Other than taking the matter to the United Nations for arbitration I saw little future in continuing with my desire that they watch this with me for educational purposes.     I just forgot about the matter and gave it up as a lost cause.     Then, some time afterwards, quietly, little hints about 'when can we watch the next episode of Alien Encounters?' were innocuously and diplomatically hidden in passing conversations.     At first I ignored the hints because I was just too tired of doing battle, mentally scarred and emotionally drained of my own emergency reserve pack – the main oxygen supply line having been deliberately cut and long-since depleted.    But the innocuous turned into an outright 'we wanna watch the next episode of Alien Encounters!'; like protesters demanding their long-withheld civil rights.
So we watched episode eight together.     I still got the occasional protest as I paused, rewound and insisted on their taking notes to my explanations of situations.    By episode nine they were hooked.     No more protests and, to my amazement, vigorous independent notetaking (much to my shock and horror!) and not even a whimper as I would explain about theories of quantum mechanics, the links between  quantum computers, virtual reality, how big a yottabyte of information is and how such will operate with ease within the realms of quantum computers of the future.)
You will note that I have spent a lot of time talking about my battles with the kids and virtually none at all discussing what exactly 'Alien Encounters' is all about.
It's best summarised with the phrase given throughout: 'this program depicts a hypothetical scenario of first contact with alien intelligence' - a fictional  dramatization of the first encounter with intelligent life from another world.
It is however very different from anything which has ever preceeded it into production and, in my opinion, it is a unique series of considerable educational significance.
It could mark a watershed or new direction for edutainment or,  more likely,  is just a one-off gem in an otherwise desolate and (again, in my opinion) boring media and edutainment landscape.      [Other one-off gems include 'Through The Wormhole' (Morgan Freeman presenting) and Alien Planet.]
Perhaps I am just one of those elitist nerds I am so heavily critical of and most of the population, because of their limited scientific education or interest, will simply just not understand the series to such an extent that it fails to become a part of popular mainstream culture.    Perhaps indeed this is the reason it has failed to be 'internationalized' to the extent that, by now, it should, in my opinion, have become a 'cult' series.
[Perhaps one day when we live in a more popular 'enlightened' scientific community-linked world, it will take its true place in the pantheon of cult productions and what went unrecognised as just another quirky sci-fi faction story will then be seen for what it truly is – a unique work of art.]

All I can attest to is that two initially very doubting Thomases thought otherwise and 'Alien Encounters' has, no doubt, expanded their mental horizons of the possibilities to no outer limits hitherto reached by any teacher at their Junior High School.

I just want on this rare occasion of something useful having been produced for a viewing audience, to spread the good news of 'salvation' so that others may follow in their path.

The series will not assist with solving the insoluble problems of today nor bring hope to those in need and despair but, as with any good religion, the hope of salvation, at some point, needs to be kept alive.

This series is 'very heavy' on general science so if your knowledge of the subject is limited you might just wanna watch initially, ignoring the technical aspects and just appreciate the content for its style of dramatizations of fictional issues.
If the topics of science and mathematics are of absolutely no interest to you I suppose I'd better advise that you give the entire series a miss.


©Patrick Emek, 2015

Current 'cult' Edutainment series:

'Through The Wormhole' (with Morgan Freeman presenting)
&
'Alien Planet'

both also have been screened on 'The Science Channel'







Monday 11 May 2015


WHERE IN THE WORLD CAN I GET SOME PRIVACY?

Increasingly people are nervous about surfing the Web for a variety of reasons.   Revelations about snooping by many governments on all of their citizens on even the most innocent of internet activities has probably already ruined the profits of many companies as people become very wary about which internet provider, which security software, which server provider they choose for their business.  Industrial and commercial espionage through electronic eavesdropping and hacking have never had it so good.  It's a golden age for government snooping, for piracy and for internet terrorism.    As I write this blog, entities and terrorists are already plotting how to 'blow up' nuclear reactors, how to bring down civilian planes, how to crash stock markets worldwide, how to cut off life support systems in critical environments simply by disabling safety thresholds or corrupting programs - how to set 'time bombs' with long delay 'intelligent' fuses and all via the internet.  The concept of the destruction or corruption of  software authentication systems via the internet may not be as remote nor far removed from the movies as once imagined. 

Having said all of that there is one positive note.   Despite the wide availability of, say, for example, knowledge of how to construct highly accurate projectile devices, few individuals with such knowledge have been one can short of a six pack to the extent of offering their services to serious fanatics, political and religious extremists or others clearly over the hedge. 

It is a positive development that laws have been introduced to make such access for the purposes of crashing, for example, defense or financial systems, serious criminal offences - but such will most certainly not deter the committed fanatical political or religious individual or groups.  

 Where Do the Politicians Fit In?

Almost without exception, Western politicians I have encountered have absolutely no concept of what it means to be prepared to die for a cause you believe in.   Of what it means to be prepared to strap explosives to an eight-year old to demolish a village market shopping area murdering all it's vendors and shoppers, to enter a maternity ward strapped with explosives, or a pregnant woman strapped with explosives entering a government building or airport terminal or a cafe to demolish it, as a symbol of her spiritual commitment.                              Let us never forget, ISIS or ISIL is the product of the failure of politics, of failed diplomacy, of weak central administrations where tribalism and religious extremism have been able (or allowed or encouraged) to flourish and take root, and are also the product of the triumph of tyranny, of perceived injustices, of failed hopes and dreams and, above all, of despairs and hopelessness amongst the next generation who, in a world at peace, would be at high or secondary school preparing for university rather than preparing to die as a suicide bomber or executing helpless civilians or Prisoners of War whom they are taught by fanatics to perceive as 'agents of Satan'.                They (politicians) will grieve for their own children if directly affected but such empathy never extends to the victims of, say, the School on Peshawar’s Warsak Road or the students and academic staff at Garissa University in Kenya, or the civilians and Police Officers such as Tukaram Omble, posthumously awarded the Ashoka Chakra for his bravery and all so mercilessly butchered in the 2008 Mumbai attacks where the objective was to kill anyone and everyone they (the terrorists) could find, independent of and incidental to their specific targets.

With this in mind, we have a generation of Western politicians who have never seen the bloody aftermath and carnage of the above, up close and personal.  It is such politicians with no real experience of life (beyond perhaps playing the school bully at Private or Public school) who then go on to enact laws to protect us all from the international terrorism that they have little to no knowledge about other than their schooldays swashbuckling adventure stories - where 'might is right'.

In the Shadows

Most Black Hat contributors would share my concerns about the future - but it only takes one lone wolf - and there are many worldwide far beyond the reach of reason and law - and it will take much more than just drone strikes to dislodge them all - and their portable devices.

 All Sparks In the Backroom

The European Union and other bodies are introducing mandatory laws requiring all motor cars have microchip and GPS devices installed by a particular date.  So the ability to, for example, effect an assassination by, say, disabling braking or other systems at a critical time or juncture will take the concept of warfare and terrorism into a new dimension.  

Full 'spectrum dominance' has been the goal of superpowers for a long time.  This dream - or nightmare - is approaching faster than the average citizen is aware.

'So Was It An Accident Then?  CNN Said That It Was?'

So, in the future, when you hear that some notable world political or spiritual leader 'died' in a plane crash, car accident or boating tragedy - or indeed that the airplane itself 'disappeared'  or the Coca Cola machine or his fridge or cooker or television or mobile phone or other microchip encoded device 'inexplicably' caught fire and blew up you might want to think twice about the initial report on your reputable news network - just in case there is more to it than just meets the eye.

Where Do I Fit Into This Brave New World? 

So where does the average citizen - you and me - fit into this equation?   The answer is nowhere I'm sorry to say. 

Independence Day

Some countries are developing their own 'autonomous' internets completely divorced from the United States - although this is a rather futile effort - unless you are North Korea - and even then you cannot prevent every single fibre of your system being 'tapped' somewhere along the line (!)

Keep Yourself Regularly Informed On Such Issues – That Is My Advice

As the subject of individual privacy becomes an international issue-even for the average citizen engaged in nothing more subversive than checking the school timetable for their child's activities on a particular day, I thought it might be useful to provide the most up to date analysis of world privacy.

For further information you should contact the providers of this useful guide direct.   Their reference is given at the bottom of the insert.

Please click on the image below to be redirected - Thank You!



©Patrick Emek, 2015


 https://ivarsmore.wordpress.com/2013/10/14/infographic-the-5-countries-were-ranked-best-for-privacy/

 

https://ivarsmore.wordpress.com/2013/10/14/infographic-the-5-countries-were-ranked-best-for-privacy/

 

footnote:

Researchers should note that this is a project in progress.  Countries will change in terms of repressive laws, internet snooping, freedom of access so do not take this as the definitive guide for all time on internet freedom.

PE

 

Other references

1.https://alumni.stanford.edu/get/page/magazine/article/?article_id=59976

2.https://www.ftc.gov/system/files/documents/reports/federal-trade-commission-staff-report-november-2013-workshop-entitled-internet-things-privacy/150127iotrpt.pdf

3. http://www.thejournal.ie/pakistan-school-hostages-taliban-1836791-Dec2014/

4. http://www.usatoday.com/story/news/world/2015/04/02/kenya-university-attack/70815094/

 http://ktla.com/2015/04/07/at-vigil-kenyans-mourn-147-killed-in-terrorist-attack-at-university-in-garissa/

http://www.dailyrecord.co.uk/news/uk-world-news/pope-francis-condemns-senseless-terrorist-5456268

 5. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Casualties_of_the_2008_Mumbai_attacks

6. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tukaram_Omble

7.http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ashoka_Chakra_%28military_decoration%29

8.An interesting blog was posted by Miguel Angel Ivars Mas entitled 'Google's War Against Blogs'.  Unfortunately the terrible translation from Spanish to English has distorted the narrative but if you appreciate this before reading you will get the jist of what is being said.  

For Spanish readers you should go direct to the Spanish version to get a clearer picture.

Versión Española:

La guerra de Google contra los blogs: https://ivarsmas.wordpress.com/2014/12/01/la-guerra-de-google-contra-los-blogs/

https://ivarsmore.wordpress.com/author/ivarsmas/

 English Version: Google's War Against Blogs https://ivarsmore.wordpress.com/2014/12/01/googles-war-against-blogs/

 

 

 




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