September 28, 2013
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In her book Shock Doctrine: The Rise of Disaster Capitalism,
 Naomi Klein explains how crises are used by governments to distract and
 frighten people so that unpopular and exploitative policies can be 
pushed through.
It seems that now there is a different 
reaction disaster capitalism. Rather than disasters providing cover for 
the implementation of dangerous capitalist policies that lower wages and
 increase the wealth divide, the disasters being caused by these 
dangerous policies have woken the public and are leading to a more 
active and empowered people.
We face a triple threat of 
the “e”crises - in the economy, environment and energy - which are all 
connected, says journalist and academic Nafeez Ahmed, but rather than 
allowing them to overwhelm and weaken us, people are rising to the 
challenge of solving these crises through direct confrontation with the 
forces that created them and by building alternative solutions. People 
are taking initiative rather than waiting for leaders.
Ahmed states,
 “People are really hungry actually for answers, hungry for solutions, 
hungry for alternatives, so really this is actually an unprecedented 
opportunity. It’s an unprecedented crisis but it’s also an opportunity 
to dream-weave and say ‘well actually everything is going to go to pot 
over the next 20-30 years if we don’t change, so here’s an opportunity 
to think outside the box.’”
 
Enough people appear to 
recognize that the political system is dysfunctional and does not serve 
the public’s needs or interests. We saw this recently with the 
President’s call for an attack on Syria. Instead of falling for the 
media propaganda telling us that we must intervene to save Syrians from 
more chemical attacks, 
the public demanded
 that the President go to Congress, that there be an investigation into 
the facts and that the rule of law be followed.  The attack was averted.
 
US
 foreign policy is rarely attacked but stopping the war on Syria shows 
that something may be changing.  There were numerous critical reviews of
 President Obama’s speech to the United Nations.  One of the most 
important was 
Jeremy Scahill’s analysis of a portion of the president’s speech
 where he openly talked about the US using military force to protect our
 “core interests,” a virtual admission of imperialism.  Another was 
David Swanson’s review of the speech were he listed the 
top 45 lies in Obama's speech at the UN.
 
But the article that was most relevant to the building of the resistance movement was by David Lindorff who focused on the 
president telling the world that the US opposes violence to suppress dissent.
  Lindroff pointed to the coordinated attack on the Occupy Movement, 
where Homeland Security and other federal agencies worked with local 
police to arrest more than 8,000 protesters, use pepper spray, 
flashbangs, clubs and fists as well as infiltration and creating 
internal dissension in an attempt to destroy the movement.  The 
hypocrisy of President Obama in making this statement to the world was 
astounding.
 
Labor unrest is building and big labor needs to change to catch-up to American workers anger. There 
is lots of criticism of big labor for its ties to the Democratic Party and cautious lack of activism, but there are some good signs in labor as well.  
United Students Against Sweatshops which has been winning victories, is allying with the AFL-CIO.  Our hope is the students pull the AFL-CIO toward more activism.
 
On
 the bright side, as people speak-up, mobilize and take action not only 
is there a growing movement but the power structure is being divided. 
Divisions are occurring in the Democratic Party
 where some are being pulled away from Obama’s pro-Wall Street, 
market-based policies that undermine the social infrastructure.  
 
We
 hope that trend will continue, especially with regard to the mother of 
all neo-liberal policies, the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) that has 
been negotiated in secret for more than three years. This is a rigged 
corporate trade agreement (falsely called “free trade” for marketing 
purposes) that will do very little to get the economy going but will add
 to many of the mistaken market policies that hinder the economy and 
make it unfair. A 
study published by the Center for Economic and Policy Research
 made some amazing findings about the TPP: (1) the impact on economic 
growth will be almost nothing, only a .1% increase in the GDP, but (2) 
the impact on most Americans will be negative with 90% of workers seeing
 their wages decline.  The TPP will add to the decline of the middle 
class, race to the bottom in wages and continue the expansion of the 
wealth divide.
 
As it comes down to the wire – we expect a
 push by the President for Congress to grant him Fast Track (Trade 
Promotion Authority) so that he can sign it before Congressional review –
 
resistance to the TPP is growing.
 In Maine, where the state House of Representatives unanimously passed a
 resolution opposing “Fast Track,” Rep. Sharon Anglin Treat sees the a 
broad, bi-partisan opposition developing. The 
OWS made the TPP a focus of its anniversary protest with Adam Weissman of Occupy Trade Justice describing it as the “anti-Occupy” agreement, “a 1% power grab.”
 
In Washington, DC, 
a coalition of unions, environmentalists and Public Citizen organized a protest
 against the TPP on Friday, while lead negotiators were inside 
discussing the agreement. Over the weekend as part of a TPP Training 
organized by 
Flush The TPP  (which includes both authors), activists produced 
light projections on a federal building.  And, then on Monday, protests escalated as activists 
 scaled the US Trade Rep’s building and 
covered it with 
four massive banners in order to 
expose their secret negotiations, as captured 
in this video.  
The Washington Post said the “guerrilla theater . . . demonstration could rank among the best ever.” On Tuesday the activists celebrated with a “
Don’t Fast Track a Train Wreck”
 March that began at the White House went to the US Trade Rep, World 
Bank, US Chamber of Commerce, through the business district, and ended 
at Congress. You can see a video of the Fast Track train march at the 
end of this 
article summarizing the spectacle protests.
 
Opposition
 to the TPP is going to continue to grow as more of the secret agreement
 becomes public knowledge.  This week information about the impact of 
the TPP on two of the hottest environmental issues – hydro-fracking and 
tar sands – came out. The TPP 
could allow an end run by the oil and gas industry around local opposition to fracking and gas exports. And, the 
US Trade Rep, Mike Froman, is pushing less regulation of the already inadequately regulated tar sands industry.
 
A
 strong environmental movement that is independent of the corporate 
political parties is critical to addressing climate change effectively. 
Naomi Klein is seeing 
divisions between the Big Green
 environmental groups and the grassroots environmental groups; indeed, 
she says the Big Greens may be more damaging than the climate deniers. 
 And, the 
corrupt linkage between some Green groups and the Democrats
 can be seen in the Blue Green Alliance that is giving the 
environmentally-damaging governor of California an award, at which there
 will be protests.  In fact, the Big Greens and the Democratic Party are
 critical parts of the power structure that keeps the status quo in 
place.  For the popular resistance movement 
to be successful we need to divide those groups and pull people from them into the movement.
 
This video
 produced by the Post Carbon Institute explains why our current way of 
life cannot continue. Access to fossil fuels is declining and their 
extraction increasingly destructive. It requires us to change our way of
 living but this can be a positive transformation. The current crises 
are activating more of us and are forcing us to work together to create 
new solutions, such as the ones described by Gar Alperovitz in 
Ten things You Can Do to Democratize the Economy. In fact, it is already happening. 
Cooperatives employ more people
 than multinational corporations.  Join us.  People are taking up the 
challenge. It is time for the people to lead and create the kind of 
world we want to live in.
 
 
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