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Posted by Dr. Manzer Durrani in Global Issues on July 15th, 2012
The greatest nation in the world?
Dr. Niaz Murtaza
Which is the greatest nation in the world? A distinguished writer in ET bestowed this title on the USA arguing that the election of Obama reflects an absence of prejudice in America since he is a descendent of black slaves. Actually, Obama is neither a slave descendant nor fully black. However, there are other more fundamental issues with this argument. First, does Obama’s election really reflect an absence of racial discrimination in America? Second, is the absence of discrimination sufficient criteria to coronate a country as the greatest nation globally? Finally, is it even meaningful to speak of a greatest nation?
Obama’s election was a seminal event for America given that all but one of its 43 earlier Presidents had been white protestant males. The exception, Kennedy, was a white catholic male! Even though Obama is a non-typical black, his election has partially healed the racial scar which afflicts American society because of slavery and segregation. However, it would be naïve to suggest that there is consequently no discrimination against blacks in America. Such discrimination is institutionalized in many forms, the most devastating of which is the manner in which American basic public education, the bedrock of human advancement, is financed.
Unlike most developed countries, large metropolitan areas in America consist of dozens of small cities, each of which finances its own elementary education systems through city-level property and sales taxes. Since property values and sales volumes are higher per capita in richer cities, they have much better public schools than poor cities where most blacks reside. While federal grants help close this gap somewhat, there remains a huge gap in educational quality across cities. The quality of education in a city is a major factor when Americans make residential choices. Stuck in low-income school districts, black children do not have the same access to quality education as white children. Such educational disparities do not exist in most developed countries. Racial stratification also continues to occur in employment, housing, lending, and government in America, certainly less so than in countries like Pakistan and India but more so than in other developed countries which represent a better comparison base for a country like America.
Secondly, should absence of discrimination be the sole criteria for judging the greatness of a nation and if not what should it be? In comparing countries, one must consider a broad range of factors instead of getting fixated on only one measure, such as discrimination. Some people may measure national greatness by scientific, economic military prowess. For me, all these represent intermediate variables and the real criterion is actual final human outcomes. Such outcomes include the quality of life opportunities that a country provides to its own citizens as well as how it treats people in other societies. They are reflected in measures like the crime, poverty, economic inequality, life satisfaction, environmental pollution, gender equity, health and educational levels in a country. While America obviously does much better than countries like Pakistan and India in terms of the opportunities it provides its own citizens, it clearly lags behind Scandinavian countries, especially Sweden, along almost all these measures. Sweden also compares favorably and even does better than the USA on many intermediate variables, like technological innovation, economic competitiveness, economic growth, inflation, budget and trade deficits and unemployment. Finally, Sweden also does not have the checkered record that countries like the USA, Japan, Germany, UK, and France have had over the last hundred years in terms of mistreating other nations. Nor have Sweden and other Scandinavian countries faced the same economic turmoil recently as America and many other European countries. Thus, personally, I would rate Sweden and other Scandinavian countries higher than the USA as national role models. While these countries have higher tax rates than America, their superior social and economic performance validates their higher tax policies.
So, does this make Sweden the greatest nation in the world? Personally, I find such titles analytically meaningless and melodramatic. I would just present Scandinavian countries as better role models than America, India or Pakistan for other countries to study.
The writer is a political economist at the University of California, Berkeley.
Posted by Dr. Manzer Durrani in Global Issues on July 14th, 2012
The British hate the Pakistanis for two reasons:
Posted by Dr. Manzer Durrani in Global Issues on July 13th, 2012
In response to his widely discussed Esquire article entitled “The Lethal Presidency of Barack Obama,” Tom Junod received a telephone call from someone he describes as “a person with intimate knowledge of the executive counter-terrorism policies of the Obama administration.” This unnamed person called Junod specifically to defend the administration’s refusal to provide any minimal transparency or even acknowledgment about these policies, even when drone attacks ordered by the President kill innocent American teenagers such as 16-year-old Abdulrahman Awlaki. Junod summarizes the defense he was given by this source as follows:President Obama has taken an extreme view of executive authority and cloaked it in veils of secrecy. (AP/Carolyn Kaster)
“You seem to think that more transparency would help rectify some of the moral problems,” he said, and then told me that “the political people in the administration, including the president himself,” would probably agree with me.
And then he proceeded toexplain why transparency was a goal difficult , if not impossible, to achieve, even when a simple acknowledgment would go a long way toward expiating the sin of killing an innocent American teenager in the course of a counterterrorism strike.
State secrecy, the man on the phone said, exists for a reason, and it’s generally not the reason that the Glenn Greenwalds of the world think it is — it’s not to cover up wrongdoing. It’s to protect two essential things: the sources and methods of the intelligence community, and something called “the requirement of non-acknowledgement”. . . .
Secrecy isn’t always the main driver here. Sometimes diplomacy is. “The requirement of non-acknowledgement” is. It’s very common for cooperation and consent to be drawn from other countries only if you don’t acknowledge something. They say, You can do this, but you can never acknowledge that you’re involved.
So there are deals — deals that have already been made. And part of the deal is that you don’t acknowledge the deal. If you do, then the country you made the deal with is obligated to do react [sic], because now there’s been a violation of sovereignty. The problem is that there are a lot of these kinds of deals, because they are so easy to make. They’re a little like allowing a source to go off the record in journalism. If the source asks, Can I go off the record?, you’ll say, Of course you can, because you want the source to talk. It’s the same in statecraft. You make the deal because you want there to be a deal.
It might sound trivial, he said. It might sound as though large principles are being sacrificed to the sensitivities of small nations. But everyone in the political branches considers non-acknowledgement to be the lifeblood of diplomacy.
Posted by Dr. Manzer Durrani in Global Issues on July 13th, 2012
Posted by Dr. Manzer Durrani in Global Issues on July 13th, 2012
What the US is doing in Balochistan
The most effective way to defeat a conspiracy is to expose it. The people should know what is the reality.
Most of our media talks about “the rights of Balochistan,” “deprivation of Balochistan,” “use of force against the people,” “the missing of innocent persons,” etc. Some channels, newspapers and media persons harp on these themes because America pays them to do it. They interview the terrorist leaders as if they are heroes. Some media people, with herd mentality, also follow them but without any monetary benefit. (We already know about $50 million allocated for use on our media but there is much more. Then there are paid-for daily programs of VOA.)
It was not without reason that all members of the Balochistan Assembly were taken in the cabinet. It is also not without reason that there is so much noise about “missing persons,” who are actually terrorists or their supporters. Provincial Government does not take any action against them and America wants them to be free again to resume their activities. FC (Frontier Constabulary) is portrayed as a villain, while it is the only force fighting the enemies of the country.
The following article, US Attempting to Trigger Color Revolution in Pakistan, by Tony Cartalucci, April 13, 2012, will help you understand what the US plans are how it is implementing them.
محمّد عبد الحمید
مصنف، "غربت کیسے مٹ سکتی ہے" (کلاسک پبلشر، لاہور)
References
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