As women, both Black and white, both American and Canadian, we see the question like this: What are the duties of radicals and progressives inside relatively wealthy countries to the world beyond our national borders? A warming world wracked by expanding and unending wars that our governments wage, finance, and arm — a world scarred by unbearable poverty and forced migration?
Naomi Klein, Opal Tometi The Intercept December 21, 2017
Cornel West, left, professor of philosophy at Union Theological Seminary, speaks at the National Press Club on Feb. 21, 2017 in Washington, D.C. Author Ta-Nehisi Coates, right, pictured during a press conference. Photo: Win McNamee/Getty Images and Lionel Urman/SIPA
Excerpt: IN SHORT, THERE is no radicalism — Black or otherwise — that ends at the national boundaries of our countries, especially the wealthiest and most heavily armed nation on earth. From the worldwide reach of the financial sector to the rapidly expanding battlefield of U.S. Special Operations to the fact that carbon pollution respects no borders, the forces we are all up against are global. So, too, are the crises we face, from the rise of white supremacy, ethno-chauvinism, and authoritarian strongmen to the fact that more people are being forced from their homes than at any point since World War II. If our movements are to succeed, we will need both analysis and strategies that reflect these truths about our world.
Until the Intercept, Democracy Now, Counterpunch, Greenwald, Klein, Goodman, etc. move beyond simple mention of “global financial system” and “international lenders” and directly confront the owners of said banking dynasties, in particular pointing out their fundamental influence on war decision-making plus offering an alternative money system, they remain “limited hangouts” and “gatekeepers”.
LikeLiked by 1 person