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"THOSE WHO FIGHT FOR THE FUTURE LIVE IN IT TODAY"--AYN RAND

Promachus - April 2007

Cleaning up Cesspools

April 25th 2007 02:08
If I thought there was a slow momentum building up, a sliver of support for the embattled President of World Bank Wolfowitz, the Economist comes up with a disgraceful article which actually details the kind of abuse he is getting there:

In their rage, the staff have shed all deference and discretion. Some heckled their president to his face in the vast atrium of the bank's headquarters; others have written to bank directors urging them to seek his resignation. One of his two deputies, Graeme Wheeler, has

reportedly advised him to jump, and other senior staff are considering leaving if he doesn't.

The rag calls this a decline in morale of the Wolrd Bank staff !

And it also with barefacedly details the campaign against him :

Why did the bank's people desert their boss so dramatically? Some insiders have known for a while that Ms Riza left on cushy terms. In January 2006, a whistleblower calling himself “John Smith” sent an e-mail to the bank's directors, complaining about the $180,000 salary the bank was paying her in her new job at the State Department. The board's ethics committee looked into it, and found the e-mails told them nothing new. Mr Smith warned them of a “trial by the media” if they did not act. Sure enough, the Washington Post last month reported that Ms Riza was now getting $193,590, more than the secretary of state. Disgruntled staff finally had the tip of a spear they had wanted to throw at Mr Wolfowitz for some time.

So, someone actually threatened a "trial by media" and actually giving Wolfowitz one and the Economist still doesn't seem to find anything wrong in it.


Is it payback for Paul Wolfowitz's role in Iraq? The mag says the reasons are more subtle than that:

He came to the bank tainted by his role as a champion of the Iraq war. Opposition to the war, he still thinks, explains much of the hostility to him. “For people who disagree with things they associate with me in my previous job,” he said on April 12th, “I am not in my previous job.”

The truth is perhaps more subtle. Some of the bank's professionals complain that he is too secure in his own insights, unimpressed by the accumulated wisdom of the institution. That intellectual temperament may explain both his enthusiasm for invading Iraq and his lack of support in an institution that prides itself on its expertise. Moreover, if Mr Wolfowitz entered the bank expecting to fight his corner against a staunchly anti-war staff, his expectation may have been self-fulfilling. Certainly his underlings dislike the sectarian style Mr Wolfowitz seems to share with the man who appointed him.

So, his fault is he too secure in his own insights. Meaning he came to fight corruption in the Bank and he is doing that and not bowing to the mandarin's diktats and that's the cause of the heartburn.

And why all the heartburn? The Economist indicates that:

According to leaked e-mails, Juan José Daboub, a former conservative finance minister of El Salvador named last year as the bank's managing director, last month ordered that all reference to family planning be expunged from the bank's aid strategy for Madagascar. This is a country where, the bank said in 2004, the use of modern contraceptives is stagnant and sexually transmitted disease abounds. “I am biting my tongue to avoid saying something impolitic,” a bank official wrote at the time.

So, if a "conservative" minister acts on his conservative comvictions that's a problem. After all this is a neo-liberal organization that is designed to promote neo-liberal policies.

For the record, I do not agree with those anti-contraceptive views. But, that is why I think undemocratic organizations like the World Bank should not have so much money and so much power at their disposal either.

As the Economist puts it ,"The world's poor, judged by its $1-a-day yardstick, now number fewer than 1 billion, down by over 250m since 1990." What happened since 1990? Maybe its that dread thing called globalization. This actually shows that the institutions like the World Bank are threat to poverty eradication.

More power to you Mr. Wolfowitz!

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The Defenestration of the Neocons

April 17th 2007 01:17
Donald Rumsfeld. DOuglas Feith. John Bolton. And now Paul Wolfowitz. Every one of neocons has been actively hounded and defanged and shamed and put out of office. But the latest " scandal " at the World Bank to get rid of Paul Wolfowitz shows the extent of corruption in the multilateral system.

Paul's been under fire for providing an unethical salary increase to his girlfriend. It turns out that Paul Wolfowitx tried to recuse himself of his girlfriend's amtter when he stepped in as the President. Not only the ethics board at the World banks stopped him from doing it but it actually suggested the salary increase which they tried to pin down on Wolowitz! He must be annoying the top brass of the World Bank where was fighting corruption, just as John Bolton annoyed the UN thugs where he tried to bring accountability to that monstrous bureaucracy. The international press went along with it because, as Melanie Phillips puts it , they are "obsessively seeking revenge upon Wolfowitz for his (absurdly) presumed role in single-handedly taking the west to war in Iraq."

Sensing weakness in the current Bush adminsitration and that no one will robably care for him, the bureaucrats set him up and pounced on him. Only belatedly, the Wall Start Journal has come with an analysis that proves how single-minded and mendacious this whole affair has been. Curiously enough, the media which went hog wild with the stories suggesting he might be forced to resign are stunningly silent on the latest papers released which show that he is innocent of any wrongdoing.

Obviously, there is a nexus between the so-called multilateralists, the US media and the Democratic Party. Why are we concerned about this issue? Because institutions like the World Bank and the UN have become bloated global bureaucracies incapable of reform, corruption-ridden and capable of allowing economies to plunge into chaose and nations to descend into genocide. Not only they are useless but they are actually harmful. And also, they have come to acquire power over the entire world and they are not representative. And our only hope for a meaningful reform lies in the hands of people committed and idealistic people like John Bolton and Paul Wolfowitz. John Bolton was shamefully defenstrated by Malloch Brown, Kofi Annan's dog, plotted and got him out. A similiar thing is happening here and I am surprised by lack of reaction even in the blogosphere.

As WSJ concludes, "The only way this fiasco could get any worse would be for Mr. Wolfowitz to resign in the teeth of so much dishonesty and cravenness. We're glad the Bush Administration isn't falling for this Euro-bureaucracy-media putsch. Mr. Wolfowitz has apologized for any mistakes he's made, though we're not sure why. He's the one who deserves an apology."

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Putin's iron grip grows

April 15th 2007 07:23
How stupid is Putin. Yesterday he had Gary Kasparov, the famous chess master, arrested. Gary was supposed to lead an anti-Putin rally. He had perhaps a couple of thosuand protesters. If allowed, there protest would have made news in Russia fora few days and elsewhere for a few minutes. What does he have to fear? his popularity in Russia is uncontested and even if wants to change the constitution and get elected for a third time, it was all smooth sailing for him. The public is behind him and most of the political class is in his pocket.But no. Putin has to deploy twenty thousand army personnel and arrest Gray even before the rally began and beat the rest of them to hell and put them in prison. Now this is major international news and it is official, Putin is a dictator. Gary Kasparov is not Khadovsky, the Yukos billionaire whom Putin sent to penitentiary. Gary is known worldwide and more importantly, the Yukos businessman was at least known to be corrupt but no such grievances against Kasparov exist. However quixotic his anti-Putin demonstrations might seem. If push comes to shove, this will again present a bitter dilemma to the West, the same they faced in Georgia and Ukraine. At least then, the choice was easy. But to support now insurrections in a powerful country like Russia would tip the scales of global balance. After all Putin started on this self-destructive path after what were to him his feudal holdings, Georgia and Ukraine, were yanked from under his feet. Slowly he is evolving into a classical tyrant. And if the cycle is complete, Russia will turn into a personal dictatorship yet again.

I used to like this man. No, I haven't looked into his eyes and seen his soul but I had always hoped that the understanding forged between Bush and him would steadily grow into a US-Russia relationship. How great that would have been for the world and the war on terror. Instead, the US-Russia relations have steadily soured which meant that Russia is arming Iran. People are already calling it a new cold war. Now this. Till now at least there was a tragic ring to these turn of events. You could at elast understand if not excuse Putin's behavior. Now this. Stupid, stupid.

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When the British sialors were first kidnapped, the predominant sentiment around the world was that the US had asked the British to allow their sailors to be captured to start a war with Iran. As Rosie O' Donnell put it "it's Gulf of Tonkin, google it." Don't call it a conspiracy theory,stupid. It's the one rational explanation.

Well, well, the British sailors have all been released by the Iranians and they are even selling their stories to the notorious UK media. So where are those conspiracy theorists now? Maybe Bush really arranged for his puppydog Blair to get his sailors to be taken hostage by Iran so that he can release the Iranian "diplomat" who in turn can cry wolf and say he has been tortured by the CIA which I am sure increases the rating of the President and improve his standing in the world. That makes sense to me


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Nancy Pelosi's train wreck

April 6th 2007 11:12
This must be the funniest thing to happen in some time. Remember Nancy Pelosi who i sona trip to Middle East defying the Bush Administration? Well, she basically went there to stick it up to the President. But it's not always a good idea to do that when you yourself don't have an iota of common sense. She is acting like a President,, a Secretary of state and a college age acitvist of Moveon type, all in combined.

She refused to pass a resolution in the house supporting the Brits when thier sailors were taken hostage. A nice message to send to America's biggest ally. She then made a complete idot of herself when he pranced around Syria wearing a hijab. Then she became an unofficial diplomat and carried a peace message from Israel that even Israel did not deliver. After that goof up, things get even better. Apparently, Syrian President Assad told her he doesn't have time to meet her because he got a soccer match! Oops. Will this visit make her realise that she isn't the empress of the world and nobody has any use for her except for using her as a tool for propaganda purposes


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The whole Iranian hostage drama comes to a nauseating end after the Iranian Thugs wrenched out every kind of advantage out of the situation.

Did they just agress on Britain and had the advantage of seeing the nation bend over its backwards to accomodate him? Check


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Iran has stormed British embassy. All those naysayers who said earlier that Britain was playing US's bitch by allowing its sailors to get captured to satrt a war with Iran, where are they now? WIll they say even this latest seizure of embassy, the press puts it mildly as "protests", was somehow prompted by the US? Maybe the CIA distirbuted all those mullahs and their students with the bricks and the "firecrackers" to protest the British embassy. That makes sense.

The good thing is that the Brits seem finally to be waking up unlike the first few days when they treated the matter as if their afternoon siesta was disturbed


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