Boundaries of Executive Power (5) — Oil & Politics

Antonia Juhasz has more than earned our attention over the last few years as an oil industry watchdog… including being on point to raise the alarm about the Iraqi “hydrocarbon law.” This reply (written by her) to a Washington Post hit-piece against her book is as good a recommendation as I can give for […]

Boundaries of Executive Power (4) - Climate Change & Peak Oil

I’m linking two articles here, one emphasizing the secular trends themselves, and one that links those trends to the kinds of activism that each issue demands. The reason this falls into the category of boundaries of executive power is fairly obvious, but I’ll reiterate what they have in common in this regard. (1) […]

Boundaries of Executive Power (3) - fait acompli Shakedown

“Our Trash for Your Cash”
By Michael Hudson
The financial press has been negligent in reporting how last week’s two top financial stories are linked: first, the testimony by Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson and his evasive Interim Assistant Secretary Neel Kashkari defending why they followed a completely different giveaway plan to the banks (their own Wall Street […]

Boundaries of Executive Power (2) — Plastic Fantastic Credit Crash

…As with the auto industry in Detroit, some of the credit-card industry’s current problems have been years in the making. Over the past decade, U.S. households have been loading up on debt, with credit-card balances rising 75% since 1999. Yet families’ real wages have increased only slightly — by just 4% during that same time […]

Boundaries of Executive Power (1) - Obama and the Afghan Abyss

The Russians justifiably claim Gates may have already forced Obama’s hand. They see a distinct pattern. In August, cleverly using the Caucasus crisis and the unfriendly public mood in the West about Russia, Gates pressed ahead with the signing of an agreement on the deployment of elements of an American strategic missile shield - 10 […]

Obama’s Victory and the Future of Race in the United States

David Roediger has been wrirting about “whiteness” for some time now. His book The Wages of Whiteness is canonical for anyone who is making a serious study of anti-racism, imo. This short but thoughtful piece from Counterpunch reminds us of the contradictions of race in the US.
by David Roediger
In the afterglow of Barack […]

A Look Under the Hood at the (Potential) Obama Administration

[Hat tip to Lisa… this one merits a post.]
By Joshua Frank
November 06, 2008 — - Tuesday’s celebration hangovers have finally started to wear off, and the pieces are beginning to fall into place. Change will be coming to Washington in January, but it is difficult to decipher what form it will take. Early clues, however, […]

Tactical agility in the Obama campaign

People have heard me harp on John Boyd and the OODA-Loop (an acronym for a decision cycle in tactical conflicts). Tactical agility is something that is lacking in social movements, largely because we are mis-organized.
Here is a piece from CP by Chuck Spenney on Boyd and Obama’s campaign “ground game.” Two things we ought […]

Geography lesson

Essentially, geography was atheoretical. It was descriptive. You became an expert on a particular region of the world or a particular place. You became an expert on Southeast Asia, and you didn’t speculate too much on what connected Southeast Asia with anything else. I worked on the hop industry in Kent in the nineteenth century, […]

The complications of conscience and elections

This site has been about as critical of Barack Obama’s presidential candidacy as any one might find outside the Right and the sectarian Left. I am unapologetic about that criticism; and folks can rest assured that such criticism will extend past the election and the inauguration of — I hope, frankly — Barack Obama.
I […]