The social dimensions of suicide are not often enough addressed. It’s high among the disabled, among Blacks in the US, among LGBT youth, among women, among oppressed castes in India, among war veterans. It cannot be personal weakness since it takes considerable strength of purpose to overcome the instinct for survival–though it does of course mean a collapse of hope for one’s life. Other examples would be the sky-high suicide rate among farmers in India being dispossessed by neoliberal economic policies in mining, agribusiness, & hydroelectric projects & the sky-high suicide rate among Guarani Indians in Brazil who are facing & resisting the same plunderous projects in Brazil. One could say, without melodrama, that suicide is an inchoate form of resistance & an expression of powerlessness–or at least a sense of powerlessness–before the implacable forces of oppression. Suicide is a social issue.

Clamoring for a US humanitarian bombing campaign in Syria to salvage the Syrian Arab Spring uprising is the quintessence of a Faustian bargain: betraying principles ostensibly for a higher good. You can’t have it both way in politics so choosing allies wisely is of the essence. Or is it less betraying principles than it is fatal delusions about the character of war, occupation, genocide?

There are many articles & memes circulating about impending doom for the rainforest in Brazil since fascistic Jair Bolsonaro was ‘elected’ president. He’s part of the global capitalist lurch to the right which includes Trump, Duterte, Suu Kyi, Assad, Modi, Putin, Netanyahu, Erdogan, Maduro, Ortega, Xi. Predictions are that Bolsonaro will eviscerate environmental agencies & laws, green light destructive hydroelectric projects, eliminate demarcation of reserves for dispossessed indigenous tribes to accommodate foreign agribusiness, & open up the country to strip mining projects. Of course he will. But none of that is distinguished from the liberal regime of Dilma Rousseff who was ‘elected’ in 2011 & illegally impeached in 2016. During her tenure, there were millions in the street protesting her policies, including Amazonian tribes fighting dispossession enforced by the Brazilian army & paramilitary thugs hired by mining & agribusiness corporations.

What’s different in the case of Bolsonaro vis a vis Rousseff (or Trump vis a vis Obama), et al, is the tempo of reversing social, political, & democratic gains made through the 1970s & 1990s. Capitalism is in crisis globally & in a headlong rush to resolve it off the backs of working people through neoliberal austerity policies. To fully implement these policies in the interests of corporate plunder, it is essential to curtail the right to protest & resist. Thus we see the increasing militarization of the police throughout the world, exacerbated ethnic & religious conflicts from scapegoating, the election of extreme rightwing politicians despite their lack of majority support. These policies are one of the primary causes for unemployment, massive population displacements, growing urban slums, & the refugee crises (most notably in Africa, Central America, South Asia) & for war (as in the Middle East). Islamophobia & the terrorism boogieman are not only to justify all this but also because the peoples of the Arab Spring uprisings were among those leading the most massive, powerful, & uncompromising resistance to neoliberalism & tyranny.

It does indeed impend doom that Bolsonaro was appointed president–just as it did when Trump was handed the election despite losing it to Clinton. It isn’t that Rousseff or Clinton would have presided over the capitalist crisis in a kinder, gentler way but that their populist demagogy would have significantly slowed the course of implementing neoliberal austerity policies.

The response to all this should not be panic that the sky is falling. It should be that working people reclaim an active role, despite political repression of protests, in standing up to these policies to demand our rights to free speech & assembly & force these regimes to retreat. In that regard, forging links of international solidarity are of the essence since the key feature of neoliberal capitalism–the barbaric phase of capitalism–is global plunder. To neoliberal globalism, working people respond with international solidarity which is the iron law of social transformation. There is no other way.

This photo is members of indigenous tribes from the Brazilian rainforest protesting along with 50,000 environmental groups & social movements at the 2012 Rio+20 conference in Rio de Janeiro against mining & hydroelectric projects, the dispossession of their lands, & the environmental destruction of the rainforest. Note that this was under the regime of Dilma Rousseff.

(Photo by Mario Tama/Getty Images)

Repost from November 26, 2013 on Guarani struggle:

Since October Guarani Nandeva Indians have occupied over 14 “farms” outside the municipality of Japora in the state of Mato Grosso do Sul, Brazil–claiming them as their ancestral lands–& legally declared so by the Brazilian Supreme Court in 2005. This young man stands watch at a roadblock they built to keep “farmers” out after an occupation (Nov 22nd).

The so-called “farms” are soybean & corn plantations & the “farmers” are transplanted US Midwesterners transmogrified into Brazilian plantation owners. As US farms ceased soybean production in favor of corn for the ethanol market (from the early 1990s), soy production increased at the rate of 14% a year in Latin American countries of the Amazon Basin, leading some to call the region Soylandia. Brazil, the heart of Soylandia, is now the world’s biggest soybean exporter as well as a leading exporter of beef, poultry, pork, ethanol, sugar (primarily from corn), & other products. Mato Grosso is now the largest soybean producing state in Brazil.

Soybean production & the growing corn & sugarcane industries are massively contributing to deforestation & global warming by pushing cattle ranchers further north into rainforest zones (according to an environmental study). The main demand for soybeans is not culinary as tofu & miso but industrial as nontoxic & biodegradable products to replace petroleum-based polyurethanes in paints, solvents, textiles, lubricants, plastics, foam insulation in construction, foam cushions in car seats, backing for artificial turf, & as biodiesel. As one media source reports, “Brazil is positioned to become the Saudi Arabia of biofuels.”

The considerable commercial stakes for agribusiness more than explain the extreme violence used against the Guarani & other Indigenous peoples of Brazil. Their ancestral lands have been forcibly taken from them & claimed by agribusiness interests with private militia & goon squads while the Brazilian government auctions off the lands at bargain basement prices. Every year dozens of Indigenous activists are assassinated. Their communities have been torched & they are forced to live in roadside encampments overlooking the ancestral lands which were the foundations of their economic, cultural, & spiritual lives.

The Guarani have continually fought for their land rights–in the courts, in the legislature, & in public protest & have been answered with physical intimidation & legal appeals justifying theft by plantation owners & occupation & forcible evictions by Brazilian military & police. The Brazilian government conducts a regular dog & pony show of legal & legislative maneuvers to convince the Guarani they stand a chance of having their lands demarcated against the incursion of plantations. But as of only a few years ago, only seven territories were mapped of the 600 tribal demarcation plans pending.

The Guarani & other Indigenous peoples cannot stand alone forever with bows & arrows against ruthless military arsenals. The increasing & very high suicide rate among their young shows the toll this struggle for survival is taking on them. Their struggle is not just for their land rights but in the interests of global ecology. An active solidarity with them is in the interests of all humanity & we need to start looking for effective ways to assert that solidarity.

(Photo by Lunae Parracho/Reuters)

Reposting this from a year ago as part of campaigning against the use of pellet guns on unarmed protesters in Kashmir.

A forlorn Kashmiri child blinded by pellet munitions.

–a digital work by artist Masood Hussain

It’s estimated that about 14-percent of pellet victims in Kashmir are under 15 years of age & as young as four. Probably most are in their 20s & teens but there have been reports of seniors near protests who were injured by pellets & other munitions. A huge percentage of them will never regain their vision; they will suffer permanent pain & health problems from lead pellets that cannot be excised from internal organs; most will suffer some measure of disfigurement.

The use of pellet guns is a human rights crime, illegal under (albeit unenforceable) international laws governing the use of excessive force against unarmed civilians. In response to legal action against their use in Kashmir, the Indian military argued that if pellet guns were banned there would be more civilian fatalities because the army would be forced to use live ammunition–a defense that documents the short political & psychological distance between militarism & derangement.

If we do not collaborate internationally in banning the use of pellet munitions, we will all be dealing with them as the militarization of policing continues to grow.

Apparently some think it pandering when Muslims show solidarity with the Pittsburgh synagogue since so little solidarity is shown the millions of Muslim victims of war, occupation, genocide. The disproportion is indeed stark, if not grotesque. It could be said that by such human kindness Muslims are showing the rest of the world the very essence of solidarity. This can only serve to undermine the seemingly impenetrable edifice of Islamophobia & indifference.

http://www.atimes.com/article/why-india-looks-the-other-way-on-myanmar/?

This is a useful article about Indian investment in Burma which is substantial. The Burmese economy is a military model of capitalism—run top to bottom by the generals, their families & their cronies. To overcome economic stagnation & get rid of sanctions imposed after 1988, the military is trying to create an amalgam with neoliberal economic policies (without relinquishing control of the economy) which require foreign investment for major mining & hydroelectric projects. India, Japan, China, Canada, Europe’s countries, & the US are all part of that. Genocide against the Rohingya is not primarily due to these neoliberal programs but dispossession of their lands in Arakan state is certainly involved.

There are already protests in several states against environmental ruin & dispossession of farmers to accommodate these projects. Before her election, Suu Kyi was actually booed out of one town when she represented the generals to defend a joint mining project of China & the military. Such resistance is the Achilles heel of the new economy

Anti-Assadists clamoring for US humanitarian bombing in Syria claim it’s necessary because the Assad regime is genocidal. So is the US. Just ask the people of Vietnam, Iraq, Yemen, Afghanistan, Palestine, the prisoners at Abu Ghraib & Guantanamo, & for that matter, people in the US Black, Latino, & Native American communities. And that’s just the short list. This is a photo of Iraqis fleeing US bombing of Mosul earlier this year. The stories of that several month siege & the aftermath of bodies rotting in the streets are too horrific to describe.

Syria & the US don’t stand alone condemned as genocidal. So are Burma, India, Israel, China, & several European countries. You don’t hear the Rohingyas, Uyghurs, Kashmiris, Dalits clamoring for the US Pentagon to come in with its bombers to save them because that isn’t how they see the US or their freedom struggles against tyranny. They understand the struggle for human freedom in very different terms–in terms that involve their own participation without relying on the bombers of a genocidal nation.

When you align yourself with the US Pentagon on the stage of world history today, you align yourself with one of the most reactionary, destructive military & political forces in the world & you betray solidarity with the people of Vietnam, Iraq, Yemen, Afghanistan, Palestine, the prisoners at Abu Ghraib & Guantanamo, & the Black, Latino, Native American communities.

(Photo by Goran Tomasevic/Reuters)

https://www.youtube.com/watch?

Don’t be daunted by the length of this talk in Japan by Maung Zarni. He’s not a somnambulant speaker & will give you deep insight into the character of the Burmese government & the Rohingya genocide. As long as millions of Rohingya are living in refugee camps, unable to move freely around the world to seek asylum, & unable to safely return to Arakan state, they will remain at the center of world politics. It’s essential we understand their struggle.