The horizon is not so far as we can see, but as far as we can imagine

Month: May 2021 Page 2 of 3

Protecting Diaspora Jews and Ending the Israeli Threat to Jews

Last week, I argued you couldn’t be Jewish (in any religious sense) and defend Israel’s actions.

The great Rabbi Hillell, challenged to teach the Torah while standing on one leg, said:

“What is hateful to you, do not do to your fellow: this is the whole Torah; the rest is the explanation; go and learn.”

It should then be obvious that stealing people’s houses, beating them, destroying their orchards, and killing them is in complete opposition to the whole Torah.

Now everyone who isn’t a bald-faced liar or a fool knows that Israel uses its “Jewish” status as a shield. If you criticize Israeli crimes against humanity or war crimes, you are called an anti-semite. Lives are destroyed, routinely, by accusations of anti-semitism.

Meanwhile, we have actual anti-semitism caused by the reaction to Israel’s crimes. People get mad, and a very few attack Jews.

“Somebody in one of the cars driving by started throwing glass bottles or glass cups at the tables and they shattered everywhere,” she said. A bunch of the cars stopped, and maybe 30 of the men in the cars got out, started running towards the tables and asking indiscriminately, ‘Who’s Jewish?’”

No one was seriously hurt. Los Angeles police said they are investigating this as a hate crime, with five victims who were either punched or injured by broken glass.

Obviously this is horrible, though nothing near as bad as what is happening to Palestinians as I write. But it could be a precursor of far worse actions.

Anti-semitism is terrible. It shouldn’t be tolerated.

And Israel creates it on a vast scale by claiming to be a Jewish state, then committing atrocities, then using that they are Jewish as a shield from criticism or change.

In effect, Israel claims that its crimes are Jewish crimes. To criticize them is to criticize Jews.

This is bullshit. Israel is a settler apartheid state, but it’s not Jewish except somewhat ethnically, because what it does routinely; what it did to create itself (cleanse Palestinians at its birth, and steal their homes) is against the whole Torah.

Israel isn’t Jewish. They’re an evil state who has stolen the cloak of a great religion, which under Rabbinical guidance has largely been peaceful, and used abhorrence of the Holocaust and anti-semitism to allow them to steal and murder.

Stealing and murdering aren’t Jewish, they are what Judaism stands against.

The way forward is simple: Jews and non-Jews need to push back, at every chance, when Israel claims to be Jewish. It isn’t

When it is seen that it isn’t, this will both make Jews outside of Israel (and within Israel who oppose Israel’s crimes) safer, and make a one-state settlement which makes everyone in Israel-Palestine a citizen and equal before the law more likely.

If Israel isn’t Jewish, then it’s no big deal to have Palestinians be citizens.

Israel as a state that claims to be Jewish, and uses its supposed Judaism as a shield against criticism of its crimes, needs to end.

What will remain is a state that by treating everyone equally (do not do to your fellow what is hateful to you) will be more Jewish for proclaiming it less.

May God, in all his forms, bless those who seek equality and peace and cast his gaze upon Israel, who claim to be his children, and bring to them Justice with Mercy.


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Neoliberalism in India and Covid Deaths

I’ve had my eye on India ever since I found out that calories per capita had dropped in India over the last 30 years.

That’s not what happens when things are going well, unless a huge number of people have moved to sedentary jobs, which they had not.

Neoliberalism is about production and supply trains. They’re very complicated, and the parts for a finished good may be made in a dozen countries and shipped to a plant which does the final assembly. The IP holder often skims ten to 30 percent profit off of this.

Most countries currently industrialized didn not industrialize under neoliberalism. They ran protectionist trade policies and exported their way to mature economies. That was generally allowed because they were a military ally or satrapy. Japan was first Britain’s ally, then for the US. Taiwan and South Korea were American satrapies, etc.

China used a hybrid model. They got themselves into the supply chains by offering high profits to Westerners, generally through simple wage arbitrage (“our workers cost less”). They put heavy pressure on people who took those profits to give them their technological secrets (IP) in exchange. And for much of the early period, they also ran a protectionist policy, keeping their currency low against the US dollar. They turned neoliberalization into mercantalism, and because less than five countries have EVER industrialized under any system but mercantalism, they succeeded.

They were able to do this because they made it very worth the while for greedy Western elites to ship jobs to them; they made a lot of Western elites rich. They knew exactly the deal they were offering.

India was socialist for a long time. They felt it didn’t work, so they decided to try neoliberalism.

But, they ran into the fact that it made more sense to offshore to China, and they didn’t do neoliberalism smart — they didn’t control their currency properly or find another way to turn neoliberalism into mercantalism. China kept large parts of their economy state-controlled, and used those companies actively. Yes, state-controlled companies were less efficient, but they gave the State power, and they provided ways of spreading welfare to people that the private companies weren’t taking care of. Not immiserating too many people meant making sure that Chinese citizens saw the new industrial and trade policies as good for them.

India, on the other hand, got in mostly on service jobs. “We speak English, so we can do service center stuff,” and a fair bit of IT outsourcing and offshoring.

But they neoliberalized as if they were already a first world nation; they sold off public enterprise and gutted state control over the economy as if there were a huge surplus created by decades of good growth which could be cannibalized to create a rich class.

India did create a small new middle class and rich, yes, but they did so without creating widespread prosperity.

Because of the way human psychology works (we have a strategy, it has not worked, we must do it harder because we are always right until we are overthrown), when the old elites couldn’t really make this work, a toxic mix of neoliberalism and Hindu Nativism took control of the country, with the face of Modi.

Modi’s a right-wing nationalist, verging-on-fascist (some would take out the word “verging”). But he’s also a neoliberal’s neoliberal. Practically, his first act was to de-monitize: removing large bills from circulation and forcing poor people to use electronic money. This was sold as crushing corruption, but what it did was make sure that the government and financial elites could grab more money from more transactions, while crushing the informal economy most Indians live in.

Recently, he’s passed a law which allows farms to be bought more easily. And so they will be (farmers, not being idiots, have opposed this law).

So Modi’s run the same play you can see in right-wing parties around the world: He’s offered nativism and feel-good, right-wing identity politics (Hindus are the best, Muslims are scum, get rid of them, no Hindu girl should marry a Muslim, etc.), and then run policies which will, over time, hurt the poor and create more rich.

But these general policies were running long before Modi.

One of those policies that has now been brought to light by Covid is that the public health care sector was gutted under neoliberal governments, so that private healthcare could make more money. So now, when it’s needed, there isn’t enough public (or private) care around.

This is how neoliberalism works: It looks for a public good and then it gets rid of it. This can be a regulation which, if removed, allows profit (making it hard to buy farms means they can’t be bought up and turned into large cash farms; cutting pollution rules means someone makes more money, etc.) or it can be by making public services shitty, or selling them off to the private sector, or other variations.

Again, in a developed country with a large prosperity cushion like the US, France, or Canada, you can do this for a while, and it doesn’t look so bad.

If, on the other hand, you do this to a country which had never hit developed status in the first place, well, people eat less calories, and when a pandemic happens, hospitals turns away patients in droves.

Neoliberalism doesn’t work when trying develop or industrialize countries, unless you game it so it turns into protectionist trade. China did that, India didn’t, and Indians are now paying the price.

Neoliberalism is designed to create rich elites while crushing ordinary people. In India’s case, it also created a small middle class (because that’s rich, really, in India, as anyone who’s spent much time there knows. Middle class means you have servants, for example. It’s not middle class like in The US or Europe.)

Neoliberalism is not designed to help anyone but the rich, except temporarily. Some asset holders will win (say, if you owned a house in 1980 in the US and didn’t sell until retirement, then moved somewhere cheap.)

But no other groups win for any length of time, because neoliberalism is the policy of looting, of pumping asset prices and of crushing wages. That’s the policy regime. It does what it’s meant to: It creates a rich class and, for a while, it keeps enough people supporting it who won’t win the end (unless they die soon enough) by giving them large, unearned asset price increases that are much greater than inflation.

India needs a new strategy. The overwhelming of its medical infrastructure is exactly the result of the neoliberal policies it has followed for decades. Modi is only the latest and worst, not the first.

I wish the Indians well. They have a very challenging few decades ahead of them, perhaps the most challenging of any non-African large country in the world. I hope they get their act together, ASAP, or a lot more Indians than Covid is killing will die, and die ugly, as climate change, ecological collapse, and water shortages hit.


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Week-end Wrap – Political Economy – May 16, 2021

by Tony Wikrent

Strategic Political Economy

Insider view: the tragedy of the US Deep State

Pepe Escobar [Strategic Culture Foundation, via Mike Norman Economics 5-12-2021]

“Now, Kissinger reflects the Deep State angst on the Russia-Chinese relationship and wants this split up for dear life. This is interestingly covered here by Kissinger. He does not want to tell the truth about balance of power realities. He describes them as “our values”, when the U.S. has no values left but anarchy, looting, and burning down hundreds of cities. Biden hopes to buy all these disenfranchised masses as money printing goes wild.

“So we are back to Kissinger shocked at the new Russian-Chinese alliance. They must be separated.

“Now, I do not agree with the balance of power intriguers in that morality or noble values should govern international relations, and not power. The U.S. has been following balance of power dreams since 1900 and now it faces economic ruin. These ideas do not work.  There is no reason the U.S. cannot be a friend of Russia and China and the differences can be worked out. But you cannot get to first base as balance of power considerations dominate everything. That is the tragedy of our time.”

Tech-Tonic Shift in Sino-Russian Cooperation

[BRICS – Joint Site of Ministries of Foreign Affairs of BRICS Member States, via Mike Norman Economics 5-13-2021]

Russia-China engagement in the military-technical field has ‘strategic importance’ for both parties, with bilateral cooperation on the upswing since 2010. This has gained momentum in the aftermath of the 2014 Ukrainian crisis, with Russia shedding its earlier reluctance to sell latest technology to China, signing deals for supply of Su-35 fighter jets and the S-400 missile defence system. The two sides are also engaged in joint projects, and Russia has agreed to help China develop its ballistic missile early-warning system. In fact, the latter development has been interpreted as a sign of increasing closeness between the two countries, which while not an alliance, does signal deepening engagement.

Mark Blyth – Trailer Age of Economics

We need to break the “folk models” of how people, and especially policy makers, think about economic issues.

Open Thread

Use to discuss topics unrelated to recent posts. (Please, in particular, discuss Palestine in one of the two recent threads.)

Israel Invades Gaza

After bombing the shit out of Gaza, the ground incursion has begun.

The strikes were so strong that people inside the city, several kilometers away, could be heard screaming in fear…

…Gaza’s Health Ministry said the death toll has climbed to 103 Palestinians, including 27 children and eleven women, with 530 people wounded. The Hamas and Islamic Jihad militant groups have confirmed 20 deaths in their ranks, though Israel says that number is much higher. Seven people have been killed in Israel, including a six year-old boy.

Let us remember the sequence. Israeli settlers stole homes in Jerusalem, and Israeli troops attacked peaceful worshippers in al-Aqsa mosque, then Hamas fired missiles after this had been going on for days and the government showed no sign of stopping.

Hamas exactly knows Israel’s weakness: Israelis are paralyzed by the fear of having soldiers taken captive, because the Israelis have become cowards: they have spent over 40 years killing and hurting and dispossessing the weak, and like all bullies, they can’t stand anyone who doesn’t cower in front of them. Remember that Hezbollah beat them in the last war, and even defeated them in the electronic warfare theater (which takes some doing since Israel has the best US equipment). Israel is too scared to patrol near Lebanon, because Hezbollah has told them that if they do, they will grab the first soldiers they can find.

Hamas military spokesman Abu Obeida said the group was not afraid of a ground invasion, saying any invasion would be a chance “to increase our catch” of dead or captive soldiers.

Catch ’em. Send them through the tunnels to safe houses.

The Israelis, of course, have many many prisoners, but Palestinians expect that, are used to it, and know it is a cost of resistance.

I will not cavil or “both sides” this. The Palestinians, as an occupied people, have every right to resist the occupiers, and the Israelis, as the occupiers, are the people committing the serious crimes against humanity and war crimes.

Hamas can’t “win” this. They are too outgunned and outnumbered.

But because they know the weakness of the Israelis, because they know the Israelis cannot bear one-one hundredth of the pain they routinely inflict on Palestinians, Hamas can make Israel pay.

Israel, as a Jewish-ethnic state, is an ongoing crime against humanity. The two-state solution is dead. Israel needs to become a single state, with everyone being a citizen with equal rights, and all stolen property needs to be returned to those from whom it was stolen.

To do otherwise is unworthy and pathetic; it shows that Israel learned the exact wrong lessons from the Nazis and the Wehrmacht. It is terrible and sad.

There is no good end here for Israel without doing the right thing. The only other option is to finish their wholesale ethnic cleansing and show that, while not strictly speaking genocidal, they truly are Hitler’s bastard children.

If that’s not who they want to be, then for once in Israel’s existence, it must do the right thing by those it has wronged. There is no other good path out; no other path worthy of a God served by Rabbi Hillell:

“What is hateful to you, do not do to your fellow: this is the whole Torah; the rest is the explanation; go and learn.”

The Israelis claim to be Jews. If I were a Jew, I would claim that no one who supports the actions of Israel towards the Palestinians can be Jewish, for they do not follow the whole Torah. God and all the prophets can only curse their names for doing their evil and cloaking in God’s name.


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The Right of Israel to Exist and the Fresh Hell it Is Heading Towards

I’ll be plain here: As a religious ethnic state which prefers Jews, I do not grant that Israel has the right to exist. (Wonder how many subscriptions that statement just cost me?)

As a state where everyone has equal rights, it has every right to exist, and all its residents should be left in peace.

Palestinians and non-Jews like Muslims are humans. As humans, they should be treated with the same rights as every other human.

What is happening right now is that Palestinian homes are being stolen by force. When the law is used (it often isn’t), it applies one set of laws to Palestinians, and another to Israeli Jews.

Meanwhile, at al-Aqsa mosque, entirely peaceful worshipers are being gassed and beaten. One signature move is “knee on neck,” of George Floyd fame, which is how fascist cops give the middle finger to everyone decent in the world, now. There are videos of this, with millions of views.

If you are a humanist who believes in universal human rights, you cannot support the existence of Israel as a Jewish ethnic-state. It was created by taking the lands and homes of other people, and it exists by keeping those people and their descendants a second class residents, often with great violence. Nor have its crimes ever stopped.

Map Story of Palestine

Map Story of Palestine

What this map should tell you is something simple: There is no possibility of a two-state solution; there is no viable Palestine without removing large numbers of violent settlers. Those settlers would assassinate any Israeli leader who tried, and odds are the army and police would help them.

What it also tells you is that Palestinians are still being ethnically cleansed. This is not a historic crime, long or short in the past, it is an ongoing crime.

 Two-state is dead. There are only two ends to this: The Israelis finish ethnic cleansing the Palestinians, or they give them full rights and citizenship and end the Jewish-ethnic nature of Israel.

It is very odd that cleansing Palestinians is, sub-voce, justified by the Holocaust. Being genocided does not give a free “ethnic cleansing” card, and if it did, one presumes it would be against those who genocided you. I, as someone of primary Irish descent, would presumably get one against the English (and, Lord, if anyone deserves it, the English are high on the list, but I will not descend to their level and kill vast swathes of innocents).

If Israel was “justice” for the Holocaust, then it should have been created by ethnically cleansing Germans out of Prussia.

But the issue here is that Israel is a religious-ethnic state where almost half the population (and yes, Palestinians are ruled primarily by Israel, not by the Palestinian Authority or Hamas, don’t make me laugh) are not even second-class citizens. It is an apartheid state, just not yet one with percentages as bad as those in South Africa.

Israelis of good conscience or good sense, know the horror they now face. What lessons did they learn from the Nazis? Who have they become? What is the state of their souls, should souls exist?

Van Creveld, an Israeli military historian and hardly a bleeding heart:

They [Israeli soldiers] are very brave people… they are idealists… they want to serve their country and they want to prove themselves. The problem is that you cannot prove yourself against someone who is much weaker than yourself. They are in a lose-lose situation. If you are strong and fighting the weak, then if you kill your opponent then you are a scoundrel… if you let him kill you, then you are an idiot. So here is a dilemma which others have suffered before us, and for which as far as I can see there is simply no escape. Now the Israeli army has not by any means been the worst of the lot. It has not done what for instance the Americans did in Vietnam… it did not use napalm, it did not kill millions of people. So everything is relative, but by definition, to return to what I said earlier if you are strong and you are fighting the weak, then anything you do is criminal

Israel, so far, has done great criminal acts. But yes, it has only ethnically cleansed, it has not committed genocide.

For their own sakes, I hope that Israelis will realize the precipice upon which they stand and see how they have let a combination of fear, power, and greed for a homeland convince them that a Jewish ethnic state is worth what it is costing them.

The next play is to bring down al-Aqsa mosque, and rebuild the Temple. Be very clear that that is where this is going.

May God, if he exists and is beneficient and not a monster, extend his blessings over all involved, that they see the hell they live in, and the worse hell they are charging towards. To live in peace, under just and kind laws applied evenly to all, is to live in heaven. To deny that peace or equal law, is to deny God.


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The Inflation Spike: What it Will Do & How to Take Advantage

So, many people have noticed there’s been a lot of inflation. Timber is up about three times. There is an international chip shortage (thank you Crypto). The price of everyday goods has risen significantly.

First: No, this isn’t a precursor to hyperinflation in core countries.

Second: Yes, higher inflation is here to stay, beyond what can be concealed by statistical tricks like hedonics. (Assuming the Fed doesn’t hammer the economy into the ground, which I don’t think they will.)

The temporary effect is pandemic driven. A lot of capacity was shuttered during the pandemic, and it will take time for it to ramp up. Once it’s back up, prices will stabilize.

The permanent effect is driven by increased consolidation. A lot of small and medium businesses went out of business during the pandemic, and they aren’t all coming back. They were replaced by larger businesses. Those larger businesses (who, for example, bought up a lot of rental housing) will use their market power to raise prices and they will keep raising prices as long as they have little effective competition (a.k.a., as long as they are oligopolies). In industries like rental properties, they will keep properties off the market to increase prices, because capital is cheap and they can afford to do so.

Right now, this is being mitigated by pandemic government spending, like the additional $300/week for UI benefits. It is also being mitigated, on the low end, by the fact that a decent chunk of the bottom-end died. (Line cooks had the highest pandemic fatality rate of any job class.)

Remember that what matters is not what inflation is, but whether your wages are rising faster than your expenses. If companies are forced to raise wages more than they raise prices, you are better off.

This is why Republican governors removing UI benefits are hurting people. They’ll still get price inflation, without wage inflation, leading to people who are, overall, worse off.

The test here is if Biden, through his fiscal package, can pour money to the poor fast enough to keep the labor market tight. If he does, people’s wages will rise because businesses will have to raise wages to get workers.

If Biden pulls this off, he gets re-elected. He might even win the 2022 midterms. If he doesn’t, he becomes a lame duck President in 2022.

So, if anyone from the administration or Democrats in Congress are reading this, remember: Re-election and keeping power requires flooding poor people with money and good paying jobs like the jobs refitting buildings in the stimulus. Do that, and wage inflation will out-pace price inflation; people will feel great, and you and Biden will soar to re-election and do so with a larger majority which will allow you to do even more — win more seats and create a semi-permanent majority.

It really is that simple and that hard.

For readers, there is still a boom coming, there will be a period where the market is tight (there is already, as I predicted). Get your vaccines, and if you need a job, get one while the getting is good. Consider trading up: See if  you can get a better paying job than the one you have right now.

There is no guarantee Biden and Congress won’t fuck this up and let this turn into price inflation higher than wage inflation, so make while the making is good.


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Biden Defies Pharma Plan to Never Wipe Out Covid So They Can Profit Forever

So, this is a good thing. As is often the case with monopoly-related issues, the best explanation comes from Matt Stoller, and let’s start with why Pfizer and Moderna don’t want this to happen.

On an investor call last month, the CEO of Pfizer, Frank D’Amelio, discussed what would happen to revenue from his vaccine product as the Covid pandemic ends, what he called the “durability of the franchise.” He told analysts not to worry. People in rich countries will need annual booster shots, and that is where Pfizer will make real money.

For these annual treatments, Pfizer will be able to charge much more than it does now. The current price for a covid vaccine, D’Amelio noted, is $19.50 per dose. He told analysts of his hope that Pfizer could get to a more “normal” price, “$150, $175 per dose,” instead of what he called “pandemic pricing.”

This is to say, that if Covid is not defeated, then Pfizer and Moderna can charge everyone who can afford it $150/year (and maybe twice a year) for the rest of history.

Nice money, if you can get it, and based on simple pharma economics, which I’ve long pointed out, that selling a palliative which patients have to keep buying is a lot more profitable than selling a cure. Pharma doesn’t want cures: They want you on their pills or shots for the rest of your life.

Fortunately, as Stoller points out, Pharma’s out-gunned this time:

  1. No other industry wants more Covid shutdowns, so they’re up against every other economically powerful lobby
  2. The US diplomatic and military centers are livid that China and Russia are getting credit for sending vaccines that aren’t as good, while the US looks like the bad guy. So the generals are arguing for breaking the patents.

Because it comes up every time I write about this, let us note that Moderna’s former director of Chemistry said that with help, “a modern factory should be able to get vaccine production going in, at most, three to four months.”

Let us assume that the number is double that, and remember that many countries aren’t expecting to be able to start mass vaccination until 2023. Let us remember that if we had just broken the patents six or seven months ago, the first ones from new factories would be starting up now.

mRNA is a moderately difficult technology. There are real supply chain issues. There are also huge countries, technologically advanced enough, who have every incentive to move heaven and earth to solve those issues if they know how.

Anyway, Biden is doing the right thing here, presuming this doesn’t turn into a “make promises then drag the process out” situation.

We’re gong to discuss IP more, because it’s at the heart of the way that modern supply chains mostly return more profits to rich people in the Western world, which is at the heart of why the US and China are hustling towards the next Cold War.

The Chinese are real neoliberals who believe in supply chain fragmentation. They just think they should be ones reaping the profits at the center, not the West.

Meanwhile, let’s hope that mRNA is released, and Covid ends. I don’t know about  you, but I’m damn sick of seeing people die who didn’t need to.

 


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