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Tag Archives: Transnational corporations

Father, where are you?

21 Sunday Jun 2015

Posted by Rosaliene Bacchus in Family Life, Human Behavior

≈ 8 Comments

Tags

Climate disruption, Destruction of human habitats, Father’s Day, Inequality, Patriarchal world, The father in society, Transnational corporations

Syrian Children outside UNHCR Tent - Jordan Refugee Camp

Syrian Children outside their UNHCR Tent – Refugee Camp in Jordan
Photo Credit: UN Refugee Agency (UNHCR) /M. Abu Asaker

We live in a patriarchal world. With relatively few exceptions, our fathers, our men, determine the direction and evolution of our societies. This Father’s Day—with persistent inequality, a permanent state of violence and war, climate mayhem, and escalating destruction of human habitats—I ask: Father, where are you?

Father, where are you when a son goes on a shooting rampage, killing other human beings because he believes he has the right to do so?

Father, where are you when the leaders of our governments send our sons and daughters to fight in illegitimate wars of domination? Continue reading →

Trans-Pacific Partnership Agreement – Fast-track to where?

08 Sunday Feb 2015

Posted by Rosaliene Bacchus in Economy and Finance, United States

≈ 8 Comments

Tags

Fast-track authority, International trade, International trade professional, Map of TPP countries, Multilateral free trade agreement, Regional trade block, Rep. Paul Ryan, Senator Elizabeth Warren, Trade Promotion Authority (TPA), Trans-Pacific Partnership Agreement (TPP), Transnational corporations, US Trade Representative Michael Froman

Trans-Pacific Partnership Countries with US Total Trade 2013Map of Trans-Pacific Partnership Countries
Showing Total US Trade in Goods for each Country, 2013
Source: Federation of American Scientists

UPDATE: 1 AUGUST 2015
Trans-Pacific Trade Talks End Without Deal, article by Jim Randle, Voice of America, August 1, 2015.

The Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP), a proposed multilateral free trade agreement between the United States and eleven other countries in Asia and the Pacific, is currently nearing the final rounds of negotiation. Some members, like Canada and Japan, still have unresolved issues. Accounting for around forty percent of global GDP, the TPP is a Big Deal. Given the lack of exposure in the national media, American businesses and the general population don’t appear to be concerned about what could become the largest regional trade block on the planet.

During his recent testimony before the House and Senate committees, US Trade Representative Michael Froman reported that the TPP is nearing the finish line. “We are not done yet but I feel confident that we are making good progress and we can close out a positive package soon,” he told Senate Finance lawmakers. He urged them to push for Trade Promotion Authority (TPA), also known as fast-track.

Armed with fast-track power, the administration can negotiate trade and other policies tied to the agreement. Once done, Congress can approve or reject the terms of the agreement but cannot make a single amendment.

Last Thursday, in a speech to the Washington International Trade Association, Representative Paul Ryan, now chairman of the House Ways and Means Committee which oversees trade issues, defended the urgency for Congress to pass fast-track authority.

“Here’s the issue: When the U.S. sits down at the negotiating table, every country at that table has to be able to trust us,” he said. “They have to know that the deal the administration wants is the deal Congress wants—because if our trading partners don’t trust the administration—if they think it will make commitments that Congress will undo later—they won’t make concessions. Why run the risk for no reason?”

Most Republicans are in favor of signing the TPP and granting fast-track authority. Senator Elizabeth Warren and many other Democrats oppose the deal. In a letter dated December 17, 2014, to Ambassador Froman, Senators Warren, Tammy Baldwin, and Edward Markey expressed concern that the TPP “could make it harder for Congress and regulatory agencies to prevent future financial crises. With millions of families still struggling to recover from the last financial crisis and the Great Recession that followed, we cannot afford a trade deal that undermines the government’s ability to protect the American economy.”

As a former international trade professional, I support and continue to promote the movement of goods across borders. But, like NAFTA and other modern-day international trade agreements, the multilateral TPP agreement goes far beyond eliminating tariffs and other trade barriers, and setting quotas. The TPP will affect everything in our day to day lives: banking regulations, food safety standards, energy policies, medicine patents, environmental protections, government procurement, and much more.

Passing Trade Promotion Authority will mean fast-track for greater global dominance by transnational corporations and greater inequality for the rest of us. What’s more, it will mean fast-track to climate disruption and ecosystem collapse.

State of Chronic Crisis

18 Sunday Jan 2015

Posted by Rosaliene Bacchus in Human Behavior, Nature and the Environment, United States, Urban Violence

≈ 14 Comments

Tags

Anthropogenic climate disruption (ACD), Charlie Hebdo, Fossil fuel industry, Global power elite, Globalized capitalist economic system, Greenhouse gas emissions, Transnational corporations, War on Terror

Police Special Force - Manhunt for Charlie Hebdo assailants - France - January 2015Police Special Forces – Manhunt for Charlie Hebdo assailants
Northern France – January 8, 2015
Photo Credit: Francois Lo Presti / AFP

 

Terror struck Parisians on January 8, 2015, when jihadist gunmen targeted the cartoonists and writers of the French satirical weekly magazine Charlie Hebdo for their profane depictions of the Prophet Muhammad.

We continue to kill each other in defense of our gods and our freedom.

How long will we persist in feeding on half-truths and fabrications dished out by the global minority power elite? How long will we persist in allowing them to manipulate tragic events to perpetuate fear of The Other? How long will we persist in responding to violence with more violence that makes our lives more insecure?

Our global “War on Terror” foments terror in distant regions under fire and propagates new generations of terrorists. In the name of our homeland security, we in the West now live in militarized police states under electronic surveillance of our movements and communications. Only those freedoms that serve the agenda of the global power elite are tolerated and promoted.

When are we going to wake up from our stupor? When are we going to realize that we are disposable pawns of the global power elite? When are we going to take action to end our state of chronic crisis?

While we are manipulated to fear, hate, and kill The Other, the profit-driven transnational corporations, run by the global power elite, are destroying our planet’s ecosystems that support human life. In pursuit of continual economic growth – which means more money in their coffers – they destroy natural habitats and contaminate our air, water, and soils. We are not without guilt. As voracious consumers, we are collaborators in their plunder and destruction.

We delude ourselves that we can continue on the path of our globalized capitalist economic system without self-destructing. We delude ourselves that we are not responsible for Earth’s climate disruption. We delude ourselves that we are separate and above the natural world.

We have come to a period in our civilization when we must end dumping greenhouse gases into our atmosphere. We urgently need to come together as members of the human species to work towards transitioning to life-sustaining societies. We cannot allow the power elite of the fossil fuel industry to frame laws intended to phase out our use of fossil fuels and transition to clean renewable energy resources.

In February, I will introduce a new weekly blog feature: Climate Disruption – Thought of the Week (up to 50 words). My goal is to spread awareness of the greatest challenge of our times, share success stories at home and abroad in addressing anthropogenic climate disruption (ACD), and offer resources for individual involvement in making the transition.

To fail to act now is to condemn our children, grandchildren, and future survivors (if any) to a world of widespread chaos.

 

Year 2014: Reflections

28 Sunday Dec 2014

Posted by Rosaliene Bacchus in United States

≈ 9 Comments

Tags

2014 Dundee International Book Award, Climate Change, Emerging Caribbean novelist, Happy New Year 2015, Inequality, This Changes Everything: Capitalism vs the Climate by Naomi Klein, Transnational corporations

Happy New Year 2015Happy New Year 2015
Source: Vishava.com

 

Another yearly cycle comes to an end. A big thank you to each one of you who dropped by and shared your experiences and insights. New friendships forged have been a blessing in my life. Regardless of our differences, we all share the same humanity and the same Earth on our journey together through time and space. Continue reading →

When will we learn?

27 Sunday Jul 2014

Posted by Rosaliene Bacchus in Human Behavior, Immigrants, Save Our Children, United States

≈ 14 Comments

Tags

CAFTA-DR Free Trade Agreement, Central American Refugees, Choices and consequences, End violence and wars, Human extinction, Humanitarian Crisis, Importance of history, Refugee children in the USA, Transnational corporations

American Protesters in Murrieta

Illegal Immigration or a Humanitarian Crisis?
American Protesters against influx of Central American Refugees
Murrieta – California – July 2014
Photo Credit: Politicus USA

 

Our choices, our behavior, our actions have consequences. Some good. Some bad. Some consequences take more than a lifetime for manifestation. That’s why it’s important to study history. History that distorts the truth is useless and harmful for learning.

In high school, I hated studying history. I saw no connection to my life. I finally get it. Everything that’s assailing us today has its roots in the distant and recent past. Not only have America’s foreign policies supported dictatorship governments that heap hardships upon their citizens, but we also have trade policies that affect local economies and peoples’ livelihood.

Consider the current overwhelming number of unaccompanied refugee children arriving at America’s southwest borders. The majority of them are fleeing gang and state violence in their homelands in Central America: El Salvador, Guatemala, and Honduras. These three developing countries are part of the six-nation CAFTA-DR Free Trade Agreement with the United States, fully implemented in 2006.

Inconsequential? Coincidental?

The world we live in is of our own making. We set the course decades ago. Securing our borders with more troops will not resolve the humanitarian crisis we helped to spawn. Continue reading →

Community Gardening: Transforming Urban Food Deserts into Food Forests

14 Sunday Apr 2013

Posted by Rosaliene Bacchus in United States

≈ 20 Comments

Tags

Corporate control of government, Corporate personhood, Equitable and humane society, Gun control reform, Transnational corporations

Community Gardening - Oakland - California - USACommunity Gardening – Oakland – California
Source: www2.oaklandnet.com

For yet another week, I have watched with mounting frustration our dysfunctional government’s failure to pass legislation needed to resolve the myriad and pressing problems facing our nation. Disenchanted am I to witness the leadership of the world’s greatest nation handcuffed and in stranglehold.

After conquering the world market and becoming powerful transnational behemoths capable of toppling governments of developing nations that fuel their growth, America’s great and admired innovative corporations are now intent in dominating the government of the Fatherland and commanding its armies. Think not that I exaggerate. Consider our current struggle against the National Rifle Association (NRA), lobbyists for our weapons manufacturers, to get common sense reform for gun control in our communities. Reform demanded by the majority of Americans, including gun owners and NRA members. Reform that will save lives. Our children’s lives. Your life. My life.

Our transnational corporations have morphed into Franken-corporations, feeding and fattening themselves until all is consumed, contaminated or destroyed. Despite obtaining personhood status, through their political clout, they have neither heart nor soul. Atop the heap of human deprivation and waste they leave in their wake – the underpaid, unemployed, homeless, sick, and hungry – they live in a world of excess and self-indulgence. They learn not from history. How could they? Corporations are not people. They are incapable of self-introspection.

On Friday, the unexpected happened to dispel my gloom. I watched two TED Talk videos, posted on the Guyanese Online Blog. I learned about the work of Ron Finley and Stephen Ritz in transforming their communities through community farming. This new urban garden revolution in America is a surprising development. I grew up in a poor developing nation where we maintained kitchen gardens out of necessity.

Ron Finley, a community activist in South Central Los Angeles, started growing his own food when he couldn’t buy healthy food in his neighborhood. As one of the founders of L.A. Green Grounds, he transforms neighborhoods once considered Food Deserts into Food Forests.

Stephen Ritz teaches at-risk kids in the South Bronx, New York. Starting in his classroom with an indoor edible wall, he works with students and their families in growing their own vegetables through community gardening, thereby transforming their lives and community. With growing interest in his green project, he founded the Green Bronx Machine to grow, re-use resources and recycle our way into new and healthy ways of living; complete with self sustaining local economic engines.

The seeds of transformational change have been planted and will continue to spread. I am now considering adding vegetable plants to my flower garden. Many more individuals across our nation are working to bring about real change in their battered communities. Others, through organizations like Public Citizen, are working to purge our government of corporate control. Given their social predatory nature, Franken-corporations will eventually self-destruct. In the meantime, we can each do our small part in building a more equitable and humane society.

Hope lives!

Earth Day 2012: Mobilize the Earth

22 Sunday Apr 2012

Posted by Rosaliene Bacchus in Nature and the Environment

≈ 17 Comments

Tags

Earth Day Network (EDN), Environmental movement, Record hot temperatures, Transnational corporations, World population

Planet Earth: Our Home

Source: technologybloggers.org

Today is Earth Day.  It’s the day of the year that the Earth Day Network (EDN) mobilizes people worldwide to appreciate our planet and to do our part to protect it (www.earthday.org).

Forty two years ago, on 22 April 1970, the first Earth Day roused 20 million Americans to the plight of our planet that provides us with food and shelter. The new awareness of how our actions were affecting and destroying our environment led to the environmental movement.

Since then, the Earth Day Network works with over 22,000 partners in 192 countries to broaden, diversify and mobilize the environmental movement. This expansion has led to the yearly participation of more than one billion people in Earth Day activities.

Planet Earth is in distress. Record hot temperatures are affecting animal and plant life. Tornadoes and hurricanes are increasingly more intense and ruthless in their destruction. Melting ice caps are re-shaping our coastlines. While some regions of Earth experience years of drought, other regions face devastating floods.

The simple truth is that we humans have grown too much and too fast for our planet. The US Census Bureau estimated that the world population on 12 March 2012 had exceeded seven billion (www.census.gov). When mankind learned to utilize and appropriate the natural wealth of our planet for building and supporting our great cities and nations, we embarked on a race to self-destruction. Modern man has failed to learn from the excesses of ancient civilizations.

To quench the world’s ever-growing need for food, water, energy, and the trappings of modern life, large-scale producers and transnational corporations – with no allegiance to any nation, seeking only to maximize profits – lace our soils, groundwater, rivers, lakes, oceans, and the air we breathe with toxins.

It’s up to you and me to continue demanding responsible actions in utilizing and exploiting the Earth’s natural resources. You and I must also look at our own behavior to put an end to our waste; to learn to conserve and re-cycle. If you already do so, Mother Earth thanks you.

Gravity keeps us rooted to the earth. With gravity of mind, we have to re-think the way we live or suffer the consequences: an inhospitable planet.

UPDATE 20 FEBRUARY 2013

Watch “Spaceship Earth” in the movie Overview by Planetary Collective, released on 7 December 2012 (duration 19:02 minutes).


Dear Reader, my debut novel, Under the Tamarind Tree, is now available at Rosaliene’s Store on Lulu.com and other book retailers at Amazon, BAM! Book-A-Million, Barnes and Noble, Book Depository, and Indie Bound.

Learn more about Under the Tamarind Tree at Rosaliene’s writer’s website.

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