Archive for March, 2017

What Islam could teach Donald Trump about democracy and freedom – Washington Post

By David Decosimo By David Decosimo March 8 at 6:00 AM

David Decosimo teaches religion, ethics and politics at Boston University and is currently writing a book on freedom and domination in Christianity and Islam.

From his hateful tweets and provocative rhetoric to his new executive order banning Muslims and refugees all over again, President Trump is driven by the idea that Islam is a threat to what makes us American.

Trump has declared that Islam hates us. There is, he says, an unbelievable hatred. Stephen K. Bannon, one of his chief advisers, claims that we are in an outright war against Islam and doubts whether Muslims that are shariah-adherent can actually be part of a society where you have the rule of law and are a democratic republic. He believes Islam is much darker than Nazism and seems to agree with HUD Secretary Ben Carson that Islam is a religion of domination.

But Trump and his administration could learn a thing or two about American values such as freedom and equality from the religion and people they so hate.

In Islams founding story, after Muhammads death, it was unclear who would lead the nascent Muslim community. Typically, succession disputes make for great drama. This one, however, was more C-SPAN than Game of Thrones. Rather than intrigue or bloodshed, the believers pursued democracy. Only by the peoples consent, they reckoned, could a ruler justly be named and a community freely governed. They chose Abu Bakr, one of Muhammads companions. His inauguration speech, according to one of Muhammads earliest biographers Ibn Ishaq, was brief (though were not sure how big the crowd was). It went something like this: Im no better than any of you. Only obey me if I do right. Otherwise, resist me. Loyalty means speaking truth. Flattery is treason. No human, but God alone is your lord.

Abu Bakr sought to guard the people against domination by making himself accountable to them. The people obliged, securing their liberty. They could call him out at any time, and he had to listen. He even had to ask their permission for new clothes. His successor Umar carried the legacy forward. Publicly rebuked by a woman for overstepping the law, Umar responded: That woman is right, and I am wrong! It seems that all people have deeper wisdom and insight than me.

This spirit of accountability and liberty would become enshrined as a religious duty in Islam, though as with any tradition, these values are not always upheld. Nonetheless, every Muslim has the obligation to command right and forbid wrong, correcting and resisting any who betray justice, rulers included. That Abu Bakr and Umar are paradigms of good Islamic rule for well over 1 billion Sunni Muslims tells us something about this traditions love for freedom.

So does the 12th-century theologian al-Ghazali, one of Islams most beloved figures. In his most famous political work, an open letter to a young sultan, Ghazali famously defends a golden rule of liberty: The fundamental principle is treat people in a way in which, if you were subject and another were Sultan, you would deem right that you yourself be treated. Nothing a ruler would not himself endure has any place in politics. While sin against God can be forgiven, violation of this rule cannot: Anything involving injustice to mankind will not in any circumstance be overlooked at the resurrection. Ghazali tells rulers that on judgment day, not God but the people will determine their fate: The harshest torment will be for those who rule arbitrarily. He sounds striking similar to James Madison writing in Federalist 57, for whom rulers will be compelled to anticipate the moment when their exercise of power is reviewed, and they must descend to the level from which they were raised. Only in Ghazalis vision, the tyrant descends to hell.

Of course, like their Western counterparts, many Muslim regimes fail to honor this vision of liberty. But it is women and men like Malala Yousafzai, Humayun Khan and the hopeful youths who filled Tahrir Square who are faithful to the best of Islam, not the likes of the Islamic State, al-Qaeda and Saudi princes.

For Islam and the American founders alike, freedom is about protection from arbitrary power and rule by law, not the caprices of men. Theirs is a vision where citizens stand not in slavish deference to masters but on equal terms with all. This vision animates our whole system of governance. It was this vision Lincoln endorsed when he wrote, in words that echo Ghazali: As I would not be a slave, so I would not be a master. This expresses my idea of democracy. And it was this vision Sojourner Truth, the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. and Harvey Milk invoked when they each demanded that equality before the law be still further expanded so that it would eventually include not just straight white men but everyone.

This vision is under threat in a way it rarely has been in our history. It is not under threat by Islam, but by Donald Trump and his administration.

Trumps first Muslim ban was an act of brazen, unconstrained power and barely concealed animus. The second ban is more of the same. The blessing of the first was just how blatantly it betrayed our deepest values. The danger of the second is its attempt to conceal its dominating and bigoted aims. No serious observer thinks these bans make us any safer. Instead, they seek to circumvent rule of law, roll back libertys benefit and wage Bannons war with Islam. They give Immigration and Customs Enforcement, the Department of Homeland Security and other agents discretionary power to decide on a whim whether to sever families, deport refugees and detain Muslims. And they make Trump and his cronies unaccountable arbiters of who really loves the very American values the administration is busy betraying.

Trump wants to return America to its former greatness. But when it comes to freedom, Ghazaliand Abu Bakr have far more in common with Madison and Lincoln than with terrorists and tyrants who claim Islams mantle. For that matter, they have far more in common with this countrys great lovers of liberty than does the current president. So, instead of banning Muslims, Trump should listen to them: He might learn something about liberty and equality, two values he seems not to have learned to love from our own nations history or the Constitution he swore to uphold.

The rest is here:
What Islam could teach Donald Trump about democracy and freedom - Washington Post

Frenchman cleans up after Russians; what’s Communism got to do with it? – Russia Beyond the Headlines

French artist Marc Ahr skates along St. Petersburg's frozen canals and removes the garbage, but this is only a small part of what he does in Russia's northern capital, and the locals are awfully puzzled.

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Photo: Ruslan Shamukov/RBTH

"You know, he could be the city's symbol, if he isn't already," a St. Petersburg musician tells me. We've known each other for five minutes and are watching together as Marc, a Frenchman, skates along the frozen Griboedov Canal.

Marc pins garbage with a lance he made and tries to throw it into a basket that he wears like a backpack. The basket has a sign, "Spb Eco Cleaner." He misses sometimes, but the children are nevertheless ecstatic. One ruddy woman stops in perplexity and exclaims, "It's that foreigner who picks up garbage from the frozen canals!" The locals think Marc's idea is bizarre but entertaining, and his ecological project is becoming popular.

Photo: Ruslan Shamukov/RBTH

Marc is actually quite extravagant. He looks like an expat gone mad with loads of free time. Its not that in St. Petersburg no one thinks of ecology, but no one goes into the canals to pick up garbage, making a spectacle out of it by using a lance in the form of a hammer and sickle.

I met Marc Ahr, the "famous artist," as he calls himself, when he splendidly lowered his hands into a street trash bin and smiling, fished out his booty - cardboard. Then he took us to his yard where he has a "garden" - a collection of dozens of plastic bottles, spruce needles, eggshells, corks, banana peels and many other things.

Photo: Ruslan Shamukov/RBTH

Honestly speaking, it looks like a private sorted-out dump. Some of his neighbors actually think so. "People always think that I'm a bit crazy, a madman, but what can you do?" he laughs.

Photo: Ruslan Shamukov/RBTH

"I give these metal cans to my grandmother, who hands them in for recycling and uses the money to buy medicine."

"And what's the bag with the spruce needles and shells for?"

"It will be compost! I'll take it to the dacha."

Photo: Ruslan Shamukov/RBTH

Marc believes that garbage is not garbage, but is either art or something that can be reused. This winter he made a series of pictures out of ice. He also keeps them in the yard, wrapped in fiberglass and plywood so that the February sun does not melt them. His favorite is the one with the cigarette butts screwed into the ice. In above-zero-degree temperature they have soaked, blackened and are now sadly hanging. There is a similar work with multicolored plastic corks.

"In France, you can get 190 euros for a ton of such corks. But here no one needs them," Marc says with disappointment. "And I love ice, because it is not eternal, like our planet."

Photo: Ruslan Shamukov/RBTH

Suddenly, a woman walks out into the yard. She is one of those bothered by the "ecological" neighbor. They dislike each other because she "does not pay her rent." Marc is offended by this. She thinks that she is allowed to do more than others. But she cannot; it is not communistic behavior.

Photo: Ruslan Shamukov/RBTH

At home he has Bolshevik symbols in the form of a mosaic made of pieces of the Berlin Wall. It hangs in the most noticeable place and separates the living room with the spruces hanging from the ceiling, the "responsible" coffee under the piano cover and the glass samovars.

"I've wanted to do something with this Berlin Wall for a long time. And who spent the money to build it? The Communists, to protect themselves from Capitalism."

Photo: Ruslan Shamukov/RBTH

Marc went to Berlin a week after the Wall fell, and he began taking it apart by pieces, placing them into packages with the label,"Fragment of the Berlin Wall, original." For his first four hours on the Wall and the pictures about the experience he earned $500 in France. A couple of years later he became so rich that he went to Russia and bought a 230-square meter apartment. He paid tribute, so to say, to his Russian roots.

I ask him when Communism will come to Russia.

"No, it's still too early. You are only going through the first stage of Capitalism. Karl Marx said that Communism would arrive only after Capitalism, no sooner."

Photo: Ruslan Shamukov/RBTH

He has turned his apartment into his own micro-communist state in which each guest pays for a room based on his income: some pay 20 euros, and others pay 120 euros. For now the model works, everyone is happy and he intends to go to France for a while to get involved in politics, to get rid of corporate lobbyists and unite Russia with Europe.

Photo: Ruslan Shamukov/RBTH

"I want people to understand that Russia is nothing to be scared about. The fact that we have one road was already demonstrated by Alexander II and Peter the Great. You even have the Napoleon cake! You have oil, and we in France have intelligent people. You have really beautiful girls, we have awful feminism. A perfect balance. We need to live better and we definitely need a revolution if we want to save our planet. I don't know how to raise people's awareness, but I want to try very much."

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Frenchman cleans up after Russians; what's Communism got to do with it? - Russia Beyond the Headlines

Communism isn’t so great – Del Rio News Herald

North Korean Communism is considered great by Americas communist party, but only 2.83 percent of their roads are paved. They are much worse off than San Felipe. All the roads in North Korea would circle Pluto 3.5 times, but only 450 miles are paved, barely the distance of New York to Cleveland. I grew up on a gravel road, but that was 75 years ago. Even the sections roads where we ran our hounds in the deep forest are now paved. Growing up we had one thing in common with North Korea, we used animal manure as a part of our fertilizing the fields. They dont have modern fertilizers, and use manure as their only source to enrich the soil.

Socialism/Communism is a failure. Bill Gates net worth of $85 to $90 billion is much greater than North Koreas Gross Domestic Product (GDP). If you really hate him, you might be a candidate for immigration. North Korean GDP is estimated at a paltry $17.4 billion, while free market USA is $16.77 trillion. One can visit North Korea, but will be assigned a care taker, who will not allow you to roam freely. They cant allow for real truth, in a failing paranoid Communist state. When any state lives on lies, loss of freedom is a must. Soldiers are everywhere, and privileges with unhampered police authority. Visitors are required to properly focus all pictures taken of statues of dictators at Mansu Hill grounds. Pictures, not meeting standards are destroyed. Can you imagine being forced to destroy a bad photograph of Trump for not meeting standards?

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See the article here:
Communism isn't so great - Del Rio News Herald

Socialism By Any Other Name – Why Bernie Sanders Matters to the … – Patheos (blog)

Bernie Sanders captivated the hearts and minds of tens of millions of Americans when he ran for president in 2015 and 2016 manyof them young and relatively new to the political arena.

In his doomed candidacy for the Democratic Partys presidential nomination, Sanders spoke with unbridled (and unpolished) passion about the economic injustice that so marks American society. As the campaign wore on, he expanded his message to include racial and environmental justice, as well as the most anti-imperialist platform a major presidential candidate has put forth in recent memory (although admittedly that isnt saying much).

It was Sanderss honesty and integrity on these issues that allowed him to bypass what many pundits assured the American people, time and time again in the mainstream media, in debates, and in thinkpieces for liberal sites such as the Huffington Post, was his greatest political weakness: the word socialism.

Sanders had identified as a democratic socialist at least since his tenure as mayor of Burlington, Vermont, where he had taken a hard line against business interests that sought to undermine local labor.

Interestingly, Sanders seemed to (whether consciously or not) distance himself from the label during his presidential campaign, for all the good it did him. When pressed on the subject by Stephen Colbert (who hilariously called Sanders a liberal and a socialist in the exact same sentence), Sanders fell back on the social democratic record of Scandinavian nations such as Denmark and Norway, touting those nations better education records and higher standards of living.

Redefining socialism as social democracy may have played well for the liberal-progressive audience Sanders was courting on Colbert, but with this tactic (which Sanders would use many, many more times throughout the campaign) Sanders drew the ire of the Left, of true socialists, Marxists, communists, anarchists, et al.

Many of these people seemed personally offended that a SocDem like Sanders would take up the mantle of socialism, which calls for a democratic and worker-controlled society, emphatically not the still-bourgeois-but-with-more-welfare state Sanders seemed to beadvocating.

Sanderss shaky record on American imperialism, such as his lukewarm supportfor (or, more accurately, his failure to ardently oppose)imperialist Israel, was a frequent target of criticism from the Left. Never mind that Sanderss position was by far the leftmost of any candidate in either major party; many Leftists would accept nothing less than total ideological purity.

Sanders was also accused of being a sheepdog for the Democrats an establishment shill who runs a destined-to-lose campaign to the left of the partys preferred candidate, then serves to shepherd their voters back to the center during the general election. When Sanders was ultimately defeated and endorsed rival Hillary Clinton, most of Sanderss critics felt (somewhat-justifiably) vindicated.

Today, many months after the end of the Democratic Party and after inaugurating a new, reactionary president, many on the Left are just so over Bernie Sanders. To some, his campaign has shown just how fruitless reformism is destined to be, and how ultimately useless electoral politics (at least on a national level) are for those yearning for The Revolution. No more charismatic leaders, no more ideologues, no more saviors.

But what many on the hardline left have forgotten, and what everyone on the Left should be celebrating, is the energy and life the Sanders campaign has brought to our movement.

Of course Sanders is not a real socialist whatever that is. He is still a liberal, albeit as far to the left as a liberal can be. His brand of social reform ultimately serves only to prolong the life of capitalism by putting a friendly, more caring face on it. (The fact that those policies could potentially save millions of lives is rarely discussed among these circles.)

That does not mean that Sanders is not well-intentioned, or that he has not been a boon to all stripes of American socialists.

A YouGov surveyin early 2016 showed as hysterical reactionary publications like The Federalist and Breitbart were quick to explain away as a result of millennials not knowing history that millennials have an overall higher opinion of socialism than capitalism. Another studythat year, from Harvard, showed a majority of millennials rejecting capitalism.

This is striking because it has never happened before in American history, with any generation. While it is quite probable that many of those surveyed were basing their conception of socialism on Sanderss SocDem reduction of it, the point is that the word is no longer scary. It is no longer an automatic disqualifier. And thousands upon thousands of eager young people will be taking to the internet and to their local library to get the skinny on what the word their parents detest with such fervor actually means.

Since the fall of the Soviet Union, American conservatives and liberals alike have proclaimed that the irrationality of socialism and communism have been proven beyond the shadow of a doubt. Socialism in the United States has been so identified with Marxism-Leninism that the idea that true communism (as defined by Marx) has never actually existed would puzzle most Americans, factual as it may be.

But when young people do independent research, when they are put on a path of self-discovery to understand a term and its historical background of their own vocation, they are immune to the misinformation decades of American propaganda has instilled. This is what the Bernie Sanders campaign has inspired: thousands upon thousands of young people who want to know what socialism really is.

Some will no doubt be scared away by obscure terms like means of production and dictatorship of the proletariat. Others will learn for the first time (thanks, garbage American public education!) the link between socialism and communism and be turned off.

But many others will realize that the vision of socialism really isnt so bad. Many will begin developing a true class consciousness. Many will discover Marx and his political descendents in the course of their research, and become radicalized into the Left proper.

I know because that is exactly how it happened with me. I used to scoff at communism and think of socialism as simply when the government controls industry. Sanders inspired me (and thousands of others) to take another look, to think for ourselves, and to question whether or not capitalism can really be reformed. Along the way, I discovered that Christianity and socialism are much more compatible than I ever would have dreamed.

Sanders has the wrong idea about how to liberate the working class capitalism cannot be reformed and must ultimately be done away with. But he is earnest in his wrongness, and through his talent for energizing his base, will inspire many more in the years to come to move further and further to the Left. A gateway drug to the Left, if you will.

He has done this by relentlessly questioning the status quo, even if his solutions do not go far enough. What he has proven to all of us is that sometimes you do not need all the right answers to make a difference; sometimes, merely asking the right questions is enough.

More here:
Socialism By Any Other Name - Why Bernie Sanders Matters to the ... - Patheos (blog)

Trump is winning over Tea Party group on Obamacare replacement … – Washington Examiner

On Tuesday, the sometimes ferocious Tea Party pressure group Freedomworks announced that it would be doing a six-figure ad buy against "Obamacare Lite," its pejorative for the bill that is winding its way through the House of Representatives to repeal and replace Obamacare.

On Wednesday, Freedomworks issued a statement by its president Adam Brandon which did not mention the ad buy but rather said that the group "believe[s] we can negotiate" on provisions that many Tea Party conservatives find troubling, "address them in a substantive way, and get to 'yes' on this bill."

In fact, the amended bill's passage would "throw Obamacare in the dustbin of history."

What happened to get from commercials against it to grabbing that broom for some historical sweeping?

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President Trump and Vice President Mike Pence met with Brandon along with several other heads of Tea Party and conservative groups on Wednesday (as well as some hold-out lawmakers) and apparently put on a convincing performance.

"President Trump tweeted that House Republican leadership's healthcare bill was 'out for review and negotiation.' [Following that w]e had a constructive conversation," Brandon explained.

The Freedomworks president first set out points of agreement and praise.

"The president and we agree that we should repeal and replace Obamacare. There are aspects of the bill we like, such as the expansion of health savings accounts and repeal of most of Obamacare's taxes," he said.

He followed that up with the problems the group has with the bill, then expressed strong confidence that they will be got over and that Obamacare will be repealed using the House bill as a jumping off point.

Also from the Washington Examiner

Crowley claimed in a Fox News interview that her plagiarism scandal was a ginned up controversy.

03/09/17 8:50 AM

"We shared our concerns with the bill [with President Trump]," Brandon said.

The group's ongoing problems shared with the president include "the refundable tax credit, continued enrollment under Medicaid expansion, the likelihood of a 'doc fix' scenario of Medicaid expansion as it winds down in 2020, the continuous coverage language, and remaining regulations in the bill," he warned, but this time he wasn't threatening an ad blitz.

Freedomworks' president finished by effusing, "This is the beginning of the process to repeal and replace Obamacare and move to competitive free-market, patient-centered healthcare."

Continued here:
Trump is winning over Tea Party group on Obamacare replacement ... - Washington Examiner