Monday, July 3, 2017

Post-WW2 Anti-Fascist Educational Film 1947






https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8K6-cEAJZlE&spfreload=5
























Žižek and Richard Sennett Conversation








https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bTsn3C-4KcQ





























Sunday, July 2, 2017

Trump's The Art of the Deal 2016 -- full film











https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oFjzFa7tgvg




























Merkel Worried G-20 Summit Could End in Trump Fiasco








The Trump in the Road: Merkel Concerned G-20 Summit Could End in Fiasco




Ahead of the Hamburg G-20 summit, the EU trade conflict with the U.S. is threatening to escalate. Both Brussels and Washington are looking into sanctions and Chancellor Merkel is concerned that a fiasco could ensue.


By SPIEGEL Staff      













Wilbur Ross is the kind of man who is easy to underestimate. Approaching his 80th birthday in November, he seems slow at times and occasionally nods off during longer meetings. And sometimes, he does so even when his boss is holding an important speech only a feet away, as he did recently in Saudi Arabia.

Ross, though, is U.S. President Donald Trump's commerce secretary, a key cabinet position, and on Tuesday, he was wide-awake. Standing next to an American flag, he read out a speech that was being transmitted to Berlin via video link. Specifically, it was being broadcast into the ballroom of a luxury hotel where German Chancellor Angela Merkel and several hundred guests of the Economic Council, a German business association that is closely linked to Merkel's political party, the Christian Democratic Union (CDU), were listening.

Ross had initially wanted to travel in person to the German capital, but he canceled at the last minute because, he said in the video, "urgent unexpected matters required that I remain in Washington." The commerce secretary then straightened his glasses and monotonously recited what his president expected of the Germans.

He demanded that Germany buy raw materials from the United States instead of from Russia, lower tariffs on automobile imports from the U.S. and ensure that America "obtain a larger share" of the European market. Otherwise, he added, the government in Washington, D.C., would have no alternative but to "engage in self-help."

Ross had been allotted a speaking time of 10 minutes, but when he still hadn't finished after 30 minutes, the event participants had heard enough. They turned down the sound and switched off the video link. The U.S. commerce secretary disappeared from the screen, silenced like a political gadfly. Some in the audience laughed.

A Potential Fiasco

One could see the episode as a negligible display of disrespect, unworthy of much attention. The chancellor, after all, has a full schedule and doesn't have time to waste. But one can also see the incident as a covert threat to the Trump administration: If you don't stick to the rules, there are consequences; our patience is not inexhaustible.

Less than a week before the G-20 summit is set to start in Hamburg, the risk is growing that the unpredictable U.S. president could turn the prestigious meeting of world leaders into a fiasco. Environment, refugees, trade: On a long list of issues, Trump and his America-first administration are sabotaging the search for joint positions among the world's industrialized and emerging economies. The discrepancies are "obvious," Merkel said during a speech before German parliament on Tuesday, the discussions "will be difficult."

If Merkel is right, the U.S. - after withdrawing from the Paris climate deal in early June - is now threatening another global agreement. Almost nine years ago, at the height of the financial crisis, the world's 20 largest economies agreed to launch economic stimulus programs and to reach consensus on joint regulations to prevent bank collapses and tax evasion. It was a far cry from the new global government that some had been dreaming of, but that summit did bring about some modest improvements.

Now, though, the Trump administration is reneging on numerous G-20 agreements because it doesn't see the world as a "global community," but as "an arena" in which countries "engage and compete for advantage," as National Security Adviser H.R. McMaster and Trump's economic adviser Gary Cohn wrote in a late May op-ed for the Wall Street Journal. Eat or be eaten: That is Washington's new foreign policy creed, one which doesn't have much in common with Merkel's image of a world with shared rights and regulations.
























Corporate Money Overrules Voters to Kill Single-Payer in California













California Democrats have a supermajority in the legislature & could pass ANY bill they want




June 30, 2017



What the Single-Payer Loss Reveals About the Role of Corporate Money in California Politics




The chair of the California Democratic Party’s progressive caucus explains how it went down.





Last week, the speaker of the California State Assembly, Anthony Rendon, shelved a bill that would have created a single-payer healthcare system. Progressives have looked to New York and California as the best hope for creating a single-payer, universal healthcare system at the state level, and potentially transforming the national debate. Rendon’s decision dealt a serious blow to that hope. It is a particularly painful setback because Democrats, with a supermajority in the legislature, can pass any bill they choose to.

The push for single-payer healthcare dominated the race for California Democratic Party state chair in May. Supporters of Kimberly Ellis were strongly behind it. The winner of that race, Eric Bauman, has also said he supports a single-payer system. But Bauman has been an adviser to Rendon, and a consulting firm he owns has accepted money from pharmaceutical companies to defeat a bill that would have capped drug prices in the state. The Ellis camp is now challenging the results of the election

The single-payer bill’s most influential opponent has been California’s governor Jerry Brown. Rendon derided the proposed legislation as “woefully incomplete.” Brown, Rendon and another member of the California Democratic establishment, Senate leader Kevin De León, have received $3.4 million in campaign contributions from the health insurance industry since 2010.

Karen Bernal, chair of the progressive caucus of the California Democratic Party, recently talked with In These Times about the fate of single payer in California—and the path forward. The interview has been edited for length and clarity.




Theo Anderson: What is the holdup? I mean, I know it's money from the insurance industry.

Karen Bernal: People need to understand that the governor has not supported single-payer for a long time. And everyone has known in advance that that this bill was doomed to fail—that the governor would never sign it. And the only decision about this was where, and in what committee, it was going to die. That's it. I know I'm sounding very cynical right now, but they never had the intention of passing this.

Theo: But everyone in the party supports it except the governor? I mean, in word.

Karen: Yeah, in word, but certainly not in action. The problem we have in politics here in California is that so much of it turns on money. And, you know, I'm sure that the carrot from the governor's office was money going to the election committees of the various legislators to sweeten the pot. And in other places, threatening to block their own pieces of legislation that they would like to see advanced. And that's the stick. They can come in and say, “We'll make sure that won't live to see the light of day. That it'll be killed in committee.” 

So those are the kinds of tactics being used here: threats and money. We knew months ago that the governor was lobbying legislators against it. So that's not a huge surprise. Brown said from the beginning that he was against it. We have to understand that, in a system where money determines the structure and the leadership, that's what turns things. 

Theo: It's not a secret that money plays a big role in our politics and shapes things. But even so, this level of corruption seems pretty brazen.

Karen: Oh, it's terrible! It's terrible. It's the open secret that everyone here knows about, especially those of us in progressive politics. And we're always constantly amazed how it is that California seems to have such a liberal and progressive reputation around the rest of the country. Because, I mean, we know so many dirty open secrets like that. We have fracking. We do drilling. We can't get single-payer passed even though there’s a supermajority.

Theo: For a lot of progressives, this kind of corruption makes them want to wash their hands of the Democratic Party and say, you know, “Electoral politics is hopeless.” What is your perspective is on that, especially after this really disappointing result with the single-payer fight?

Karen: I think you're right on that. This has a profoundly negative impact on the electorate and the base that the Democrats should count on as the future of their party.

The only thing that affected it was the infusion of energy from the Bernie Sanders campaign. It’s going to have a really bad effect on that. Unfortunately, they're caught up in what I would call a downward death spiral here, where they can't seem to do politics without this massive influence of corporate money in the party.

And it’s not as though these politicians, by the way, go out seeking it. It’s that, especially in poor districts, for instance, these interests come to them, and say, “Well, here’s how we can help fix your problems. We have what it takes to fix those problems and provide funding and so on.” Even people who mean well, when they first come in, end up finding themselves trapped in a system where, if they want to get anything done, they have to raise all this money for the Democratic caucus. You know, the speaker of the assembly isn’t the speaker of the assembly just because he’s a great guy. It’s because he can bring in a lot of money. And the same with the committee: They bring in money. It's a terrible situation. So, I can understand how people would feel that way.

We know these were the things that pushed people like Bernie Sanders to the brink of victory. It was because of those outside pressures. But then you're seeing on the inside, this is what happens. It kind of sends a message to people that there's nothing for them in the party. And they're going to stay on the outside.

Theo: Could it also have the effect of galvanizing more pushback, though? I know it's disappointing, but since the corruption is so obvious, it could also inspire people to fight against it?

Karen: Oh yeah, it is definitely doing that. And it has to happen from the grassroots and the base, which is way more progressive than the leadership. We have to send a message, especially to the governor. And this is an important thing to happen, because there will be a governor's race coming up, you know, in the next election cycle. It’s important that we send the message to any new governor that this is not going to be tolerated—that we've got their number and we know where the power the power resides.

Theo: I wonder whether the convention fight set the stage for some of the pushback you've talked about. Single-payer was such a central issue in the convention campaign—in Kimberly's campaign for chair. It got people galvanized.

Karen: To be fair about this, there are many people who supported Bauman who support single payer. And Bauman himself has said that he supports single-payer. And he did put out a message saying that he was, as he said, “unambiguously disappointed.” I find that a curious choice of words. He had to, uh, reassure us somehow?

I think the proof is going to be what he does next as a follow up, in terms of action. Certainly, on the Kimberly side, there is complete unity. We have to galvanize forces, and I think that you're going to see [that energy translated] into action.
































Save Granny from TRUMP, RYAN, & McCONNELL













America cannot be great without Medicaid

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=w228tzK7ZP8


























Climate Change Debate: Last Week Tonight with John Oliver










https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cjuGCJJUGsg