Hi.  Because the calendar item is on-air today at 3pm, I place it's notice
at
the beginning of this email.  Sounds very interesting, especially since
close
friends have just returned from Europe with reports and analysis of the
issue.
It may sound like a stretch, but the subjects of this mailing are related.
Ed

Radio Intifada
Voices from Kolkata to Casablanca
Voices of struggle, Voices for change

Thursday, January 6, 2005,  3-4pm

KPFK 90.7 fm and worldwide www.kpfk.org

The French ban on Religious Symbols: Impact on the Muslim community


In March 2004, France passed a law banning students from wearing religious
symbols in public schools including Islamic headscarves or hidjab, Jewish
skullcaps and Christian crosses. This program will examine the impacts of
this law on the French-Muslim community focusing on the recent debate in
France on the Islamic headscarf.

Featuring interviews with:

-Farid Laroussi, Assistant professor at Yale University

-Sarah Ettantawi, Founding member of the Progressive Muslim Union of North
America (PMU-NA.).

Produced by Jamila Allouane and co-hosted by Nyma Ardalan and Jamila
Allouane,
SWANA (South and West Asia and North Africa) Collective.


We urge our listeners to support the programs produced by other community
collectives: American Indian AirWaves (Weds 3pm), Some of Us Are Brave (Th
2-3), Aziatic Rythms (Sat 1-3am) and the Spanish language programs
(Mon-Thurs 9-10:30pm)

NOTE: Via Campesina, the global alliance of peasant, family farmer, farm
worker, indigenous and landless peoples organizations is collecting funds
that will go directly to the Acehnise to enable them to reconstruct their
communities/lives: www.viacampsenia.org.

***

Toronto Sun January 2, 2005

U.S. dollar's freefall to have global effect

Add China's banking system to the mix, Eric Margolis writes, and it's a
recipe for disaster

By Eric Margolis -- Contributing Foreign Editor

Here are what will be the big stories of 2005, according to my cloudy
crystal ball:

- The killer tsunami that struck Indonesia, Sri Lanka, and India a week ago
will cause years of ongoing economic damage and human tragedy. Damage
to Thailand will be quickly repaired. But Indonesia and Sri Lanka, both rent
by decade-old civil wars, will particularly suffer.

- The biggest problem the world faces this new year is the continuing fall
of the U.S. dollar. The Bush administration's reckless spending, ruinously
expensive wars in Iraq and Afghanistan (now costing as much as the
Vietnam War), America's galloping trade deficit and credit spending frenzy
are creating the perfect economic storm.

Japan and China's central banks may give up trying to artificially shore up
the U.S. dollar by buying U.S. currency and securities. A plunging dollar
could cause foreign investors to start dumping U.S. securities and assets.
The result: A potential worldwide financial crisis that could collapse the
housing bubble, cause interest rates to soar, and send securities markets
into freefall.

- China's banking system is a house of cards. Uncontrolled credit expansion
has fuelled China's property boom and international buying spree. Banks are
swamped by bad, non-performing loans made to huge, money-losing state-
owned corporations. Collapse of China's insolvent banking system would
threaten world financial markets.

- The U.S.-led occupation of Iraq is a disaster for all concerned. The war
is slowly being lost. The big question in 2005 is if and how President
George W. Bush will extricate the U.S. from this catastrophe, which is
costing $6 billion US per month. The elections in Iraq four weeks from today
won't resolve this huge mess.

- "Terrorism" -- the insurgency against U.S. domination of the Muslim world
and its resources -- will intensify even after Osama bin Laden is killed. He
has created a new, powerful ideological movement that will continue to
shake the Muslim world and challenge its corrupt, autocratic rulers and
their foreign masters.

- As the U.S. gets sucked ever deeper into its disastrous crusade against
the Muslim world, it may -- possibly with Israel -- attack Iran's nuclear
infrastructure, or invade Syria. An attack on Iran would leave the U.S.
garrison in Iraq trapped amid a sea of hostile Shia -- as well as Sunnis.

- A real, viable peace between Israel and the Palestinians seems unlikely.
Israel's PM Ariel Sharon already has everything he wants, and, according to
U.S. National Security Adviser Brent Scowcroft, has "wrapped Bush around
his little finger." So why make concessions? Palestinians will remain
trapped
in their giant open-air prison.

- Now that Vladimir Putin has crushed all domestic political and business
opposition, his control over Russia is absolute. Only the courageous
Chechen mujahadeen have resisted Putin's restoration of Kremlin autocracy.
Putin is determined to rebuild the old Soviet Union. Watch for him to put
increasing pressure on Ukraine in the wake of last week's election.

The Bush-Putin alliance will strengthen. By regaining state control of
Russia's oil industry, Putin is poised to become a kingpin of world oil,
even an equal to the Saudi royals -- if he can raise enough cash to tap his
nation's vast but remote deposits.

- The European Union, for all its growing pains, economic doldrums, and
bureaucratic obesity, has replaced the United States as the world's
champion of human rights and support for civilized world order.

By contrast, under Bush, the U.S. has become a reactionary power devoted
to protecting the status quo in league with Britain, Russia, China and
India.
In short, a re-run of the Holy Alliance of 1815 in which Europe's autocrats
sought to protect their power and privileges, and halt the rise of bourgeois
democracy.

- Look for an increasingly independent-minded Europe and China to draw
closer strategically as a result of the Bush administration's aggressive
policies. Russia will play both sides, backing the U.S. in its "anti-terror"
campaigns, and, discreetly, China, in opposing U.S. influence in East Asia.
European arms may begin to flow to China in 2005.

- Revolution is under way in Saudi Arabia. The U.S.-backed royal family will
be increasingly besieged in 2005. As for U.S. claims it will promote
democracy in the Muslim world, any honest votes there will produce
pro-Islamic parties advocating opposition to Israel, higher oil prices, and
eviction of U.S. influence from the region.

So no true democracy, just U.S.-implemented "guided democracy" in Iraq,
meaning a Vichy regime that keeps U.S. bases, sells oil cheap, makes nice
to Israel, and allows U.S. firms to exploit Iraq's wealth.


http://www.canoe.ca/NewsStand/Columnists/Toronto/Eric_Margolis/2005/01/02/80
5674-sun.html

***

http://www.nytimes.com/2004/12/26/weekinreview/26kapl.html?oref=login

The New York Times    Sunday 26 December 2004

China Expands. Europe Rises. And the United States . . .

By Fred Kaplan

It's a risky business to predict the decline of the American empire. Ask
Paul Kennedy, the Yale historian, who issued such a forecast in his 1987
book, "The Rise and Fall of Great Powers," only to witness an almost
immediate American resurgence.

Yet the signposts, at the end of this year, are ominous. As an economic
power, the United States no longer sets the rules, much less rule the game.
As a military power, it vastly outguns the rest of the world, but has a
harder time translating armed might into influence.

On March 1, the European Union announced that it was raising import tariffs
on a long list of American products, and would go on raising them each month
until Congress repealed a subsidy for American exporters that had been ruled
illegal by the World Trade Organization. Congressmen railed against this
intrusion but finally gave in. Americans realized that, in the global
economy they largely created and for 60 years dominated, they could no
longer do whatever they wanted.

Last month, China's president, Hu Jintao, embarked on a 12-day tour of Latin
America, and wound up making commitments to invest $30 billion in the
region. China is now Brazil's second largest trading partner and Chile's
largest export market. In trade, technology, investment, education and
culture, China has been displacing the United States all across Asia, and is
now starting to do the same in America's backyard.

There is nothing necessarily alarming about an expansive China or an
emergent Europe, except perhaps that they coincide with a growing American
dependence on both.

The United States government spent $650 billion more this year than it
raised in revenue, and financed the deficit largely by borrowing from
foreign central banks, mainly those of Japan and China. They have been
willing creditors because American consumers send much of the money right
back by purchasing foreign-made products. It's a neat balancing act, to a
point. But the American accumulated debt to foreign investors has now
swelled to $3.3 trillion - 28 percent of gross domestic product, nearly
double the share of four years ago.

In the 1990's, the United States admonished Mexico and Argentina to get
their economic houses in order. This month, the Chinese premier gave
Washington a strikingly similar lecture.

These imbalances are not inherently disastrous. The Chinese get something
out of the deal, a ready consumer market for their overheated production
lines. If they stop lending to the United States, it would cause a deep
recession here, but then Americans could not buy as many of their goods, and
the recession would ricochet right back to Asia.

It's a variation on the old joke: If you owe the bank $1 billion, the bank
owns you; if you owe the bank $1 trillion, you own the bank.

But what if another trillion-dollar customer walked into the bank? The
bankers might be more willing to foreclose on the debtor, knowing that they
could pick up business from the new tycoon.

The European Union, in many respects, is looking more and more like this new
tycoon. Its currency, the euro, has risen in value by 35 percent against the
dollar in the last three years.

Again, that is not necessarily bad. In theory, a falling dollar makes
American exports cheaper, attracting demand that then boosts the dollar; a
rising euro crimps European exports, which then lowers the euro; equilibrium
is restored. In reality, this process unfolds slowly and shakily: in
October, for instance, American exports rose, but American imports soared,
too.

A more serious consequence of the dollar's fall is that the euro has become
more rewarding for foreign investors, and they are reacting accordingly. In
2001, Middle Eastern oil-producing countries kept 75 percent of their
currency reserves in dollars; now the figure is 61 percent, with much of the
rest in euros. Chinese and Russian central bankers are also shifting
reserves. This trend, at some point, could set off a spiral: the dollar
declines, causing further sell-offs, leading to a further decline, and so
on.

When the dollar has fallen in the past, the United States was a net creditor
and there was no serious rival currency. Neither condition holds true now.
As The Economist recently put it, "Never before has the guardian of the
world's main reserve currency been its biggest net debtor."

Financiers and diplomats are beginning to ask: How much longer will the
dollar remain the world's principal reserve currency? One could also ask,
how much longer can the United States remain, as Madeleine Albright put it,
"the indispensable country" of world politics?

This year, the United States spent nearly as much on its military as all
other countries combined. No other nation possesses, or aspires to, anything
like the reach of American armed forces.

Yet, if someday the United States finds that it can no longer count on
foreigners to bankroll its deficits, it may also find that it can no longer
afford a globe-spanning military. The war in Iraq has already stretched
America's forces to the limit. In the 1970's and 1980's, when Pentagon
strategists spoke of a two-front war, they envisioned having to fight
simultaneously in, say, Germany and Korea. Today, they mean Mosul and
Falluja.

About 40 percent of the American troops in Iraq are from the National Guard
and Reserves, "weekend warriors" who never figured on serving long combat
tours. As a result, Guard recruitment has fallen by 30 percent. If there is
no large Guard and Reserve, there is no large Army. In short, not only has
the Iraq war been harder than many imagined, it has also made going to war
elsewhere a less practical option - and a less credible threat.

The economic trends are worrisome because they stem not just from market
forces but also from politics. As T. R. Reid notes in his new book "The
United States of Europe," the euro "was specifically designed to challenge
the global hegemony of the dollar." Similarly, China's rivalry with the
United States in Asia and Latin America isn't a side effect of economics;
it's an explicit ambition.

These challenges will take decades to unfold, and may not succeed. China may
recoil from its manufacturing boom and its excesses; Europeans could revert
to age-old continental tensions. The United States may revive itself through
changes in policy.

Meanwhile, power is not transferring so much as dispersing. It may turn out,
if trends continue, that no country or bloc of countries possesses the
combination of economic and military power needed to reward the good, deter
or punish the bad and impose international rules, order and security.

A multipolar world can be a chaotic place. The danger is not so much that
the United States may lose power, but that the globe's new rivals may fail
to strike and manage a balance of power. End-of-the-year Cassandras
traditionally predict doom, gloom and anarchy. This year they're looking
less preposterous.

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