#capitalism

kuchinster@rusx.org

The Soviet Union has been gone for 33 years. What is the U.S. military still doing in Germany?

#european #censorship #totalitarism #capitalism #imperialism #banksters #american #deepstate #occupation #german #vassalage

Image/phototechriot (inlägg med hubzilla) wrote the following post Tue, 10 Sep 2024 02:26:18 +0300

Democracy In Occupied Germany.

Democracy In Occupied Germany.

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Sascha Schlösser, AfD representative in the Thuringian parliament.

Democracy is not a valid system. You can vote, but if you vote the wrong way, something will happen and you’ll end up with the same people you had before. We need to end democracy. It’s a totally failed system. Unless you’re Jewish or like, an arms contractor, this is a system that has failed you.

Germany: Days After Winning Election, AFD Politician Gets His Bank Account Shut Down.

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We’ve said it from the beginning: there is no actual way for AfD to take over the government. Germany is militarily occupied by the United States, and they’re not going to let some party they don’t like take over the government.

#Germany #EU #US #CollectiveWest #OurDemocracy #ClownWorld

adolar@diaspora.psyco.fr

Germany in crisis: Intel and Volkswagen mull a multibillion-dollar withdrawal from the country https://finance.yahoo.com/news/germany-crisis-intel-volkswagen-mull-105751082.html

Volkswagen, the jewel in Germany’s industrial crown, is turning sour on its native home, which it sees as compounding its struggle to expand its profit margins.

Funny. Assuming the author did not make a mistake here, Volkswagen is miffed because they can't make even more profit for every Euro they invest. It's not about total profits, it's the profit margin they whine about.

Time to reintroduce forced labour! Oh wait, CDU and FDP are preparing right that...😲
#capitalism

janet_logan@diasp.org

The right’s obsession with childless women isn’t just about ideology: it’s essential to the capitalist machine | Nesrine Malik | The Guardian

I'm not usually a fan of The Guardian, but this piece strays sufficiently from their usual virulent anti-trans agenda as to make it worth sharing.

A woman without biological children is running for high political office, and so naturally that quality will at some point be used against her. Kamala Harris has, in the short period since she emerged as the Democratic candidate for US president, been scrutinised over her lack of children.

#ChildlessCatLadies #GOPMisogyny #Capitalism #UnpaidLabor

einsnull@pod.thing.org

Signal Is More Than Encrypted Messaging. Under Meredith Whittaker, It’s Out to Prove Surveillance Capitalism Wrong

On its 10th anniversary, Signal’s president wants to remind you that the world’s most secure communications platform is a nonprofit. It’s free. It doesn’t track you or serve you ads. It pays its engineers very well. And it’s a go-to app for hundreds of millions of people.

https://www.wired.com/story/meredith-whittaker-signal/

#wired #signal #Surveillance #Capitalism #messenger

wazoox@diasp.eu

Bankruptcy is very, very good. “A large increase in earned income… | by Cory Doctorow | Medium

#politics #capitalism

There’s a truly comforting sociopathy snuggled inside capitalism ideology: if markets are systems for identifying and rewarding virtue, ability and value, then anyone who’s failing in the system is actually unworthy, not unlucky; and that means the winners are not just lucky (and certainly not merely selfish), but actually the best and they owe nothing to their social inferiors apart from what their own charitable impulses dictate.

https://doctorow.medium.com/https-pluralistic-net-2024-06-17-lovilee-jubilee-debts-that-cant-be-paid-wont-be-paid-3c9d724b97a2

florida_ted@friendica.myportal.social

Yes, they are trying to do this in Florida.

AnarchoNinaAnalyzes - 2024-08-25 15:07:42 GMT

Early this morning I published a piece expanding my thoughts on the reactionary (and disturbingly bipartisan) assault on history and higher education in Pig Empire society and its ultimate purpose. The tl;dr here is that transforming our education centers into functional arms of a reactionary police state is ultimately about creating the kind of people who can watch billions die for profit as the world burns.https://www.ninaillingworth.com/2024/08/25/nina-bytes-indoctrinating-a-dystopian-future/

Nina-Bytes: Indoctrinating A Dystopian Future

"If you take a step back however and ask yourself why the forces of reaction are uniting to silence educators, erase the past, and prevent young people from learning about important, mind-expanding social issues like colonialism, slavery, critical race theory, sexism, gender identities, genocide, and what fascism looks like, it becomes very clear that we’re looking at a coordinated attempt to control not just what the adults of tomorrow think, but how they think about it. There is of course a reason for that, and that reason is indoctrination; if you can control what the next generation of people think about, and even more importantly how they think about it, you can also to a great degree control how they feel, and how they act in society at large. As author George Orwell observed in the novel 1984, “who controls the past controls the future. Who controls the present controls the past.” While Orwell meant this observation to be a warning, it is increasingly clear that the powerful forces of reaction in our society have taken it to heart as a “how-to” manual for installing a fascist order."

#Fascism #Education #Capitalism #Indoctrination #PoliceState

kuchinster@rusx.org

Another Boeing Fail

Boeing's Latest Mishap: Cracks in New 777X Jetliner

Boeing (BA) has found cracks in the structure of its 777X jetliner in initial test flights, another mishap for the carrier this year.

The plane maker said it is grounding its 777X test fleet after an inspection showed the failure of a key engine mounting structure.

"During scheduled maintenance, we identified a component that did not perform as designed," a Boeing spokesperson said in a statement provided to Investopedia. "Our team is replacing the part and capturing any learnings from the component and will resume flight testing when ready."

https://finance.yahoo.com/news/boeings-latest-mishap-cracks-777x-125134825.html

#USA #US #american #aviation #boeing #fail #capitalism

kuchinster@rusx.org

About the American Slave Trade

August 20, 2024 marks the 405th anniversary of slavery in the United States

August 20, 1619 - A ship brought the first 20 African Negroes to America, who were sold into slavery to the inhabitants of Jamestown.

The English privateer ship reached Point Comfort on the Virginia Peninsula. There, Governor George Yardley and his head of commerce, Cape Merchant Abraham Piercy, bought the “20-odd negroes” aboard in exchange for “provisions” - meaning they were trading food for slaves.

The year 1619 was a milestone in the long history of slavery in the European colonies and the beginning stages of what would become the institution of slavery in America.

The human cargo that arrived in Virginia in 1619 came from the port city of Luanda, now the capital of modern Angola. It was then a Portuguese colony, and most of the slaves are believed to have been captured during the ongoing war between Portugal and the Ndongo kingdom, as John Thornton wrote in The William and Mary Quarterly in 1998. Between 1618 and 1620, some 50,000 slaves - many of them prisoners of war - were exported from Angola. An estimated 350 of these captives were loaded onto a Portuguese slave ship called the São João Bautista (better known as the San Juan Batista ).

The ship was on its way to the Spanish colony of Veracruz when two English privateers, the White Lion and the Treasurer, intercepted it and captured some of the Angolans on board. According to James Horne, president and chief officer of the Jamestown Rediscovery , both vessels belonged to a powerful English nobleman, Robert Rich, Earl of Warwick. Rich was anti-Hispanic and anti-Catholic and profited from the disruption of Spanish shipping in the Caribbean. The White Lion, which flew the flag of a Dutch port known for its pirates, was the first to arrive in Virginia in late August 1619, followed four days later by the Treasurer.

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These 20 captives are believed to have been the first African slaves to arrive in what would become the United States 150 years later.

Four hundred years later, the arrival of the captives influenced virtually every important moment in American history, even if that history was created around anyone but Africans and African Americans. After all, for many Americans, familiarity with U.S. history is tied to the arrival of 102 passengers on the Mayflower in 1620. A year earlier, however, 20 African slaves had been brought to the British colonies against their will.

“Historians, elected politicians [and] community leaders would prefer to represent the United States as some mythical, Anglo-Saxon Christian place,” said Michael Guasco, a professor of early American history at Davidson College.

In 1992, Toni Morrison told the Guardian, “In this country, American means white. Everyone else has to spell it with a hyphen.”

After 1619, most of the country remained white and relied heavily on the labor of Indian slaves and white European indentured servants. It wasn't until the late 17th century that the transatlantic slave trade made its impact on the American colonies. There are now 26.5 million descendants of Africans in the United States.

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1661

The first anti-racial law - prohibiting marriage between the races - was passed in Maryland in 1661, shortly after slaves were brought to the colonies. By the 1960s, these laws were still in effect in 21 states, most of them in the South . Alabama was the last state to repeal its ban on interracial marriage in 2000.

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Advertisement in Boston for a cargo of about 250 “fine healthy negroes” recently arrived from Africa on the slave ship Bunte Island. About 1700.

1776

The Declaration of Independence, which in its first lines stated that “all men are created equal and endowed by their creator with certain unalienable rights,” did not extend that right to slaves, Africans, or African Americans, and the reference to condemn slavery was deleted in the final version. Thomas Jefferson, himself a slaveholder, wrote these lines rejecting slavery; he deleted the reference after receiving criticism from a number of delegates who had enslaved blacks. This may represent “the fabric of the American political economy” since then, as some historians say.

Initially, slavery flourished on tobacco plantations in Virginia, Maryland and North Carolina. In the tobacco areas of these states, slaves made up more than 50 percent of the population by 1776. Slavery then spread to rice plantations farther south. In South Carolina, African Americans remained the majority until the 20th century, according to census data.

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1860

The slave trade across the Atlantic, organized by the British, was one of the largest businesses of the 18th century. Approximately 600,000 of the 10 million African slaves made their way to the American colonies before the slave trade - not slavery - was banned by Congress in 1808. By 1860, however, there were nearly 4 million enslaved black people - 13% of the population - in the United States as the American-born population grew.

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Eight of the first 12 U.S. presidents were slaveholders. Supporters of slavery supported the efforts of groups such as the American Colonization Society, which “sent back” tens of thousands of free black people - most of them born in America - to Liberia in the 19th century to prevent riots caused by the free descendants of slaves.

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A painting depicting freed slaves once owned by Confederate President Jefferson Davis arriving at the “federal camp” at Chickasaw Bayou, Tennessee

1865

According to Abraham Lincoln, the Civil War was fought to preserve the integrity of America, not to abolish slavery - at least initially. American historians like to write that the Civil War was fought to free slavery, but slavery was not abolished after the war either. Lincoln entered the fight to free the slaves, some historians suggest, because he was worried that the British would support the south in its self-proclaimed self-determination and recognize the south as a separate entity. If he started a war to abolish slavery, it would have looked bad for the struggle of the south and the British supporting his cause. Lincoln's death was probably the first casualty of “a long civil rights movement that was not yet over,” suggested historian Peter Kolchin.

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1868

Some experts argue that Reconstruction laid the groundwork for “the organization of new segregated institutions, ideologies of white supremacy, legal rationalizations, extra-legal violence, and everyday racial terror”-further widening the racial gap between blacks and whites. Others point out that the end of the war left black Americans free but their status “uncertain,” with the passage of “codes” that prevented black people from being truly free.

But eventually, under the 14th Amendment, African Americans were granted the right to vote. African Americans were also granted birthright citizenship: it extends to the descendants of freed black slaves and immigrants to this day.

1898

The recession of the late 19th century hit the United States. The Knight Riders marched in the dark, burning the homes of African Americans who had bought their own land. They came to Washington to demand change, as southern white Democrats had abolished many of the, albeit limited, freedoms of Reconstruction just a couple decades before.

The era of Jim Crow segregation prohibited African Americans from drinking from the same water fountains, eating in the same restaurants, or attending the same schools as white Americans, all of which lasted until the 1960s, and sometimes much longer.

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1926

As African Americans were denied jobs and opportunities during the Jim Crow era, and as more jobs became available in the North and Midwest, more than 2 million southern African Americans migrated after World War I. Yet, even hundreds of miles away from southern segregation, these migrating Americans encountered “sunset cities,” where black people were not welcome after sundown, and restrictions on where they could live in cities.

For example, Oregon's constitution did not remove the clause prohibiting blacks from entering the state until 1926.

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A man drinks water from a cooler for “coloreds” at a bus station in Oklahoma City in July 1939. Photo: Russell Lee

1954

As the end of the Jim Crow era and the civil rights struggle neared, the struggle continued. For example: it was not until 1948 that the U.S. Army desegregated by presidential decree. In 1954, in the Brown v. Board of Education decision, the Supreme Court ruled that segregation was unconstitutional and schools should be integrated. Civil rights leaders led marches against segregation across the country in the 1960s. In 1964, President Lyndon Johnson signed the Civil Rights Act into law. Getting African American children into white schools in white neighborhoods was considered constitutional.

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African Americans vote for the first time since 1890 in the 1946 Democratic primary in Georgia.

1965

“Slavery was gone, but Jim Crow was alive. Almost all southern African Americans were excluded from the ballot box and the political power it could give,” Edward E. Baptiste wrote in Half Never Told: Slavery and the Making of American Capitalism. The Voting Rights Act of 1965 attempted to remedy this by prohibiting racial discrimination in voting and imposing restrictions on a number of Southern states if they tried to change voting rights laws. These restrictions were recently overturned by a 2013 Supreme Court ruling.

Since the publication of Ta-Nehisi Coates' book The Case for Reparations in 2014, the topic of settling financial debts for 250 years of slavery has risen up the political agenda. Proponents of a financial settlement for the descendants of slaves say it is meant to address the racial inequality that still persists in the United States.

A 2017 Pew study found that the median wealth of white households is $171,000 - 10 times that of black households ($17,100). Democratic presidential candidate Cory Booker introduced a Senate reparations bill and received support from Elizabeth Warren and Bernie Sanders...

2013

19.02.2013. The Parliament of the state of Mississippi ratified the law on the abolition of slavery. Formally, slavery on the territory of the USA was until 2013. Thanks to kind people, they gave me the last date.

https://aftershock.news/?q=node/1412954

#BLM #afroamericans #USA #US #american #slavery #racism #european #capitalism #african #negroes #british #colonialism #anniversary #history

kuchinster@rusx.org

Systematic theft at the British Museum

In the year since the British Museum said it had fired a curator for stealing from its storerooms and selling the artifacts online, the organization has struggled to deal with fallout from the scandal, which has battered its reputation as a protector of world treasures.

While a police investigation continues, the museum has asked an eight-person team in its Greek and Roman department to search for about 1,500 missing artifacts, online and otherwise. So far, the team has secured the return of 634 items, leaving more than 850 missing.

https://www.nytimes.com/2024/08/19/arts/design/british-museum-gems-recovery.html

#uk #britain #england #british #museum #Western #fail #crime #theft #fraud #capitalism #history