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State Department Keystone XL Contractor ERM Bribed Chinese Agency To Permit Project

January 5, 2015 By Steve Horn Leave a Comment

Environmental Resources Management (ERM Group), the consultancy selected byTransCanada to conduct the environmental review for Keystone XL’s northern leg on behalf of the U.S. State Department, is no stranger to scandal.

Exhibit A: ERM once bribed a Chinese official to ram through major pieces of an industrial development project. ERM was tasked to push through the project in Hangzhou Bay, located near Shanghai.

Accepting the bribe landed Yan Shunjun, former deputy head of the Shanghai Municipal Environmental Protection Bureau, an 11-year prison sentence. Yan “allegedly took bribes of 864,000 yuan (126,501 U.S. dollars), 20,000 U.S. dollars and 4,000 euros from seven contractors,” explained Xiuhuanet. “Yan was also accused of illegally setting up a channel to speed up environmental impact assessment processes, which are essential for companies wanting to build factories.”

Filed Under: Environment, Foreign Affairs Tagged With: #NoKXL, Alaska, Alberta canada, Alberta Tar Sands, bitumen, Bloomberg Businessweek, carbon web, Central Asia, China, communism, Copenhagen, Denmark, dilbit, diluted bitumen, Doug Hayes Sierra Club, environmental resources management, ERM Group, Hangzhou Bay, Heavy Oil, Hopenhagen, Keystone Pipeline System, Keystone XL, Keystone XL North, Keystone XL Northern Leg, Keystone XL South, KXL, KXL North, KXL South, London, oil sands, People's Daily, People's Daily Communist Party, Peru, Shanghai, Shanghai Municipal Environmental Protection Bureau, Sierra Club, Sierra Club Doug Hayes, Sinopecerm, Sunday Times, Tar sands, TransCanada, U.N., unconventional oil, United Nations, Xiuhuanet, Yan Shunjunbp

Henry Miller’s “Air Conditioned Nightmare:” Battle Cry Against The Coming Nuclear Order

December 18, 2014 By Dennis Riches 2 Comments

When Henry Miller (1891-1980) returned from France to America in 1939, he was quick to identify air conditioning as both a metaphor and a real cause of a lamentable degradation of life. His first writing upon his return, published as “The Air Conditioned Nightmare” in 1945, was based on his road trip across America in 1939.

Looking at this book from the 21st century, it is surprising to read his tirades against Americans’ submission to technology. We have come to think of the 1930s as an economically depressed time when industry regressed and people were forced back to agrarian self-reliance. The contemporary perception is that the reaction to the excesses of materialism didn’t become apparent until the 1960s when baby boomers rebelled against the affluence and suburban culture of the 1950s.

But in every crisis there is transformation, and Miller was able to notice the changes going on in spite of the Depression. In the same way that iPhones became an embedded item in our economy regardless of the crash of 2008, there were similar changes in the 1930s.

Filed Under: Media & Culture, National News Tagged With: 1987 Montreal protocol, Air Conditioning, Arthur Miller, automobile, Before Air Conditioning, Black Spring, carbon, carbon emissions, Climate change, communism, Corporate America, democracy, Democratic Party, Denmark, economy, energy, fascism, France, Germany, Henry Miller, Hiroshima, history, How Air Conditioning Remade Modern America, Institutional Thinking, Jack Kerouac, Japan, Kentucky, Manhattan, Manhattan Project, materialism, Naomi Klein, New York Times, nuclear, nuclear bomb, nuclear energy, nuclear war, Occupy, Occupy Wall Street, OWS, ozone depletion, Paducah, Republican Party, Salon, Scientific American, smartphones, Southern China, Taiwan, technology, Thailand, The Air Conditioned Nightmare, the American South, The Great Depression, The New Yorker, Thorium, Tokyo, Tropic of Cancer, Tropic of Capricorn, uranium, Vietnam, War, World War II, WWII

The Truth About The Marshall Plan

November 26, 2014 By Burkely Hermann 3 Comments

For years, politicians and commentators have said that their policies are just like the Marshall Plan, officially called the European Recovery Program (E.R.P.), in order to tout their polices as positive.

Just a few examples: Al Gore called for a “global Marshall Plan” to combat global warming in 1993; writers for the Worldwatch Institute called a “Marshall Plan” to advance human security and control terrorism; history professor Charles Maier called for a “Marshall Plan” for Germany; and UNCTAD having a 62 page report describing how a “Marshall Plan” could be developed for the world’s poorest countries. Even Jeffrey Sachs, the economist who is known by environmentalists for opposing the Keystone XL pipeline, touted his vision for “shock therapy” in Russia, which hurt many Russians after it was implemented in 1995, as based on the Marshall Plan [1]. Another great example of this is Naomi Klein’s argument that George W. Bush’s Iraq reconstruction plan was the “anti-Marshall plan.” [2] This article aims to set the record straight about the Marshall Plan and to assess if it is right to invoke it today.

The view expressed by Jeffrey Sachs is a clear example of the common view of the Marshall Plan. This plan, which was simply the allocation of $2.6 billion for Europe “to reconstruct its infrastructure and industry after the Second World War” was described by Sachs as showing “how a modest amount of monetary infusion created a base for [Europe’s] economic recovery to take hold.” [1]

Learning the whole story and truth about the Marshall Plan is important. This article aims to contribute to that story and open up new ways of understanding what the Plan was really about.

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: Al Gore, Albert Einstein, Catholic Workers, Chalmers Johnson, Chris Harman, CIA, communism, Communist Party, Dean Acheson, Dwight MacDonald, European Recovery Program, France, George Marshall, George W. Bush, Germany, Harry S. Truman, Henry Wallace, history, Howard Zinn, imperialism, Iraq, Italy, Jeffrey Sachs, Keystone XL, Korea, Lance Selfa, Lawrence S. Wittner, Naomi Klein, Noam Chomsky, pacifism, Russia, socialism, Socialist Party, Stalin, The Marshall Plan, Tim Weiner, Tuskegee experiment, W.W. Rostow, West Germany, William Blum, William O. Kellogg, World War II

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