Trump
Declares War on The Planet in Real-Life Remake
of The Purge
Donald Trump is treating the health of the
planet as a short sell. The deadly game? Make as
much money for big oil as possible before the
planet goes up in flames.
By Jeremy Scahill
March
31, 2017 "Information
Clearing House"
- "The
Intercept"
- Donald Trump is treating the health of the
planet as a short sell. The deadly game? Make as
much money for big oil as possible before the
planet goes up in flames. This week on
Intercepted, Naomi Klein confronts the White
House’s declaration of war on the planet,
dissects the bizarre institution of “concierge”
disaster response for the ultra-wealthy, and
explores whether Trump’s administration is
producing the fourth Purge movie where we all
are unwitting cast members. The president does
not enjoy the new song from Snoop Dogg. Boots
Riley of The Coup discusses Trump and hip-hop
and performs. Murtaza Hussain talks about the
U.S. bombings in Iraq and Syria that have killed
1,000 civilians in one month. And we talk to
Josh Begley, the developer of an app that tracks
U.S. drone strikes that Apple has censored 13
times.
House Intelligence Committee
Chair Devin Nunes:
If I really wanted to, I could have snuck on the
grounds late at night, and probably nobody would
have seen me. I’m quite sure that — I think
people on the West Wing had no idea that I was
there.
Sen. Lindsey Graham:
He’s going off on a lark by himself, sort of an
Inspector Clouseau investigation here.
CNN Anchor Wolf Blitzer:
Why did you meet with a source on the White
House grounds the evening before you came out in
that news conference?
Inspector Clouseau:
I know when there is a trouble and when there is
not a trouble, and I can definitely tell you
that there is a trouble. You may rest assured of
that.
WB:
Did you think it might be conspicuous for the
Chairman of the House Intelligence Committee to
be visiting the White House complex at night?
IC:
Please, tell me nothing. I prefer to investigate
the scene of the crime spontaneously. That way,
it gives my trained instincts full reign, you
know?
WB:
By holding the meeting on the White House
grounds, it makes it appear that someone in the
administration was coordinating the release of
this information to you. Is that not the case?
IC:
It is my business to locate trouble. Monsieur,
all I require is a phone, my little bag of
tools, and some privacy in which to work. That
is all I require.
WB:
Why would you need to brief the White House on
what you yourself have called Executive Branch
documents?
IC:
[Laughing] Very ingenious. In this case, it is a
clue.
WB:
Do you understand why it might have been better
to avoid that kind of meeting at the White
House?
IC:
That is why I have always failed where others
have succeeded. For me, the greater the odds,
the greater the challenge. And as always, I
accept this challenge.
[Music
interlude]
Jeremy Scahill:
This is Intercepted.
[Music
interlude]
JS:
I’m Jeremy Scahill, coming to you from the
offices of The Intercept in New York City. And
this is episode 10 of Intercepted.
Donald J. Trump:
Perhaps no single regulation threatens our
miners, energy workers, and companies more than
this crushing attack on American industry. My
action today is the latest in a series of steps
to create American jobs and to grow American
wealth. We’re ending the theft of American
prosperity and rebuilding our beloved country.
JS:
Donald Trump wrapped himself in the cloak of
“America First” with a backdrop of coal miners,
and he bragged openly, for all the world to see,
that he wants to destroy the environment in the
name of corporate profits.
Reporter:
Rank and order, as you see it, the greatest
challenges facing the United States: Russia,
China, radical Islam.
DJT:
I’ll tell you the one thing I know isn’t is
global warming. That’s the one thing. Crowd
cheers] No, no. That’s the one thing I know
isn’t.
JS:
Trump has put a climate change denier in charge
of the Environmental Protection Agency, Scott
Pruitt. He put a buffoon, Rick Perry, in charge
of the Department of Energy. And Trump handed
the U.S. State Department over to Exxon Mobil’s
sort of former CEO, Rex Tillerson.
Rex Tillerson:
Words like “climate consensus” don’t mean
anything to us. They ring hollow because they
are — that’s an oxymoronic statement. You cannot
have a —you cannot have a scientific consensus.
JS:
On Tuesday of this week, Trump issued yet
another executive order, or as he calls it,
executive action, smashing to pieces the Obama
era initiative that was known as the Clean Power
Plan.
DJT:
We have a very, very impressive group here to
celebrate the start of a new era in American
energy and production and job creation.
JS:
And when Obama announced that in 2014, he said
that climate change was a national security
issue, and the point of that plan was to try to
move the U.S. away from energy sources that
would damage the environment. Now, radical
activists, environmental activists criticized
that plan as not going far enough, but it was
something. And we had a president that actually
acknowledged that climate change was real.
Now, at
the same time, Trump has begun issuing
construction permits for the Keystone Pipeline
that had been delayed, and Obama had intervened
at the end, and you had the uprisings at
Standing Rock. Now, Trump, gloating that he’s
gonna make the Pipeline great again, starts
issuing these construction permits. Now, there’s
no doubt that this pipeline has the potential,
the great potential to cause serious harm to the
homelands of indigenous people across swaths of
the United States where this pipeline is gonna
run. And it’s also going to put at risk the
environment, the drinking water of ranchers and
farmers and others in the path of this snaking
pipeline. This is nothing short of a declaration
of war on the planet that is coming directly
from the Oval Office, directly from the most
powerful position in the world. And they know
damn well that climate change is real. They know
it’s not a hoax. So, why do they lie, lie, lie?
Money. Money and profits. It’s as simple as
that. It is a necessary lie for their corporate
profits. They are treating the planet like it’s
a stock that they can short and then make a
killing on. And they know that one day, it’s all
gonna come violently crashing to pieces, but the
short-term profits, they’re worth more to these
bandits than the livelihood of the planet.
I’m
joined now by my colleague Naomi Klein. She has
investigated and reported on climate change and
its effects around the world, and she’s also
exposed some of the greatest corporate and human
vultures who have contributed to this war
against the planet and the war against our
health. Naomi’s latest book is “This Changes
Everything: Capitalism Versus the Climate.”
Naomi is now a senior correspondent for The
Intercept. Naomi, Welcome back to Intercepted.
Naomi Klein:
Thanks, Jeremy. It’s great to be with you.
JS:
Okay, we’ve got a lot to cover on the
environment, on deregulation, on the insanity
that seems to be taking place 24/7 at the White
House. But I want to begin with the Keystone XL
pipeline.
DJT:
Today, I’m pleased to announce the official
approval of the presidential permit for the
Keystone XL Pipeline. It’s gonna be an
incredible pipeline, greatest technology known
to man or woman.
JS:
Trump is issuing construction permits and moving
forward with this incredibly controversial
pipeline that has sparked massive indigenous-led
protests in this country. Give us an overview of
what the stakes are here and what’s happening.
NK:
So, I mean, this isn’t a surprise. It was one of
his campaign pledges. It’s — he actually pushed
it ahead his first day on the job. Now, it’s
moving further along. They were waiting for
State Department approval, which they now have,
and they have —without any kind of environmental
assessment, they said they’d considered all of
the factors and then listed them. And not one of
those factors was climate change, which is
really significant, because when Obama finally
said no to Keystone after years of protests, he
said that one of the factors was that it would
contribute to climate change. And that’s because
of what is in the pipes. The pipe starts in the
Alberta Tar Sands, and it ends at Gulf Coast
refineries. That Southern leg is already
constructed, but it’s the Northern leg, coming
from Canada, going through South Dakota and
Nebraska. That’s what’s yet to be constructed.
Now,
the reason why this is relevant in terms of
climate change, it’s two-fold. One, because the
oil in Alberta is a particularly heavy,
carbon-intensive kind of oil. It has the
consistency of tar. So, what you have to do is
mine it. And so, there are many accidents
associated with it. It’s a particularly
dangerous form of fuel on a bunch of different
levels. But also, this process of mining takes
more energy than a conventional barrel of oil.
On average, it takes three times more fossil
fuels to extract one barrel of tar sands oil
than a conventional barrel of North American
crude. So, from a climate perspective, it’s a
disaster. This has been such a defining feature
of the Trump administration, this determination
to unleash a fossil fuel frenzy. It is a major,
major, major priority of Donald Trump. And it is
not the only way to create jobs. There are — you
can create many more jobs, exponentially more
jobs, if you invest in renewables, if you invest
in energy efficiency, if you invest in public
transit, than if you build a pipeline, right?
I mean
Keystone is going to create 35 permanent jobs at
the end of the day. But it is a very lazy way to
create jobs, right? And it should not be lost on
people that the company that will gain the most
if these pipelines, these various pipelines, are
constructed is ExxonMobil, the company that Rex
Tillerson, now Secretary of State, was head of
until a couple of months ago.
ExxonMobile Advertisement:
Oil sands projects like
Kearl and the Keystone Pipeline will provide
secure and reliable energy to the United States.
Over the coming years, projects like these could
create more than half a million jobs in the U.S.
alone. From the Canadian border to the Midwest .
. .
NK:
Exxon has around one-third of its fossil fuel
reserves tied up in the Alberta Tar Sands. Now,
if they can’t get those reserves out, if they
can’t dig it up because they don’t have the
pipeline capacity, which is the current
situation, then those become stranded assets.
And of course, they also become stranded assets
if there’s serious climate regulation. And of
course, the Trump Administration is waging war
on climate action on every front, most notably
this week’s attack on Obama’s Clean Power Plan,
which is the centerpiece of the Obama
administration’s plan to reduce emissions.
JS:
What are the long-term stakes of actions like
constructing the Keystone Pipeline or extracting
the Alberta tar sands? Like, why does this
matter to our planet? In plain terms, what is
this gonna do?
NK:
So, right now, we have warmed the planet by one
degree Celsius, and we are already seeing huge
impacts from that, from massive wildfires — and
this is happening right now under the Trump
administration, although you wouldn’t know it
from Donald Trump’s tweets. But the prairies
have seen huge wildfires that have killed tens
of thousands of cattle. Ranchers there are
calling this their Katrina because they’re being
completely ignored.
Reporter:
The wildfires have already swallowed dozens of
structures and millions of acres as they
continue to grow, marching across Texas,
Oklahoma, Kansas, and Colorado, where strong
winds and dry conditions have created a
tinderbox.
NK:
If we do not radically get — move very, very
quickly to get 100 percent renewable energy by
mid-century, which is very soon, then we will
have lost our chance to prevent warming at
double what we’ve already done. So, we’ve
increased temperature by one degree Celsius.
We’re already seeing the bleaching and die-off
of natural wonders of the world like the Great
Barrier Reef. We’re already seeing a huge
increase in drought and forest fires. We’re
already seeing sea level rise and super-storms
like super-storm Sandy. We will increase
temperatures more than that. That’s already
locked in. But if we do everything we can and
mobilize wartime efforts, we could move quickly
enough to prevent warming of more than two
degrees, or if we are we extremely lucky, 1.5
degrees Celsius.
But if
we do what we’re doing, which is known as
business as usual, i.e., pretend it’s not
happening and just keep digging up this stuff —
what that leads to is four to six degrees of
warming. Now, that comes from not 350.org or
Greenpeace. That comes from the World Bank. That
comes from PricewaterhouseCoopers. Four degrees
Celsius of warming is incompatible with anything
you could describe as organized, civilized life.
Even with two degrees warming, Jeremy, we may
well be losing coastal cities.
JS:
And so, how would that happen, if the base
temperature of the world increases by two
degrees or four degrees, as you’re saying could
potentially happen? Does it mean, then, we see
more tsunamis, we see more earthquakes, floods,
etc.? Like, what is — what would this look like
if we end up at four degrees or six degrees
increase in temperature?
NK:
Even thinking about two degrees, we will see
significant sea level rise that could
potentially threaten coastal cities like New
York, like Mumbai — major, major population
centers — at two degrees. The problem is, we’ve
waited so long that that is the only kind of
target that seems feasible if we do everything
possible. The centerpiece of the U.S.’s Climate
Action Plan is exactly what is being dismantled,
right now, by the EPA under Scott Pruitt, which
is the Clean Power Plan. And so, yes, it means
warmer ocean temperatures, which is what
superpower storms like Katrina and Sandy — you
know, you could never say, “Well, this one storm
was caused by climate change.” The storm
would’ve happened anyway. But what turns it into
a super-storm — and we’re seeing these sort of
once-in-a-century storms happening with greater
and greater frequency — is that added accelerant
of temperatures being that much warmer, and
also, the baseline sea level being that much
higher, so that the storms are reaching into
areas that — where they have never reached
before. The high water mark is changing.
And we
are already going to be dealing with a rocky
future, which is why the Trump administration’s
war on the public sector is so dangerous. I mean
it’s so dangerous and so profoundly cruel on so
many levels. But from a climate perspective, the
very fact of collecting data that this is even
happening is being attacked at NASA —satellite
programs that tell us that Arctic ice is
melting, leading to sea level rise. So, they
want us to be blind, [laughs] and they want to
do nothing about it. And I think part of what
we’re going to see under Trump is the rise of
very privatized disaster response. You and I
reported together from New Orleans in the
aftermath of Katrina and saw that the corporate
states descend on the city, the Blackwater
Private Security, and Bechtel, and Flour, and
Halliburton, and the whole Baghdad Gang coming
into profit from it. And this is what frankly
worries me most, because I think, you know,
there’s — I think we’re paying too much
attention to these minor schisms within the Bush
administration of, you know, whether not —
JS:
You said Bush. It’s Trump. But okay, point
taken.
NK:
Oh no, I’m sorry, Jeremy! [Laughs] This has been
happening to me.
JS:
Fair enough. Fair enough.
NK:
I realized that the incredible similarities
between Donald Trump and Paul Bremer, you know,
locked up in the Green Zone issuing executive
orders.
JS:
He hunkered down in the White House this weekend
and made a big deal about how he was staying in
town to actually work instead of going golfing —
not golfing at Mar-a-Lago. I wanted to —
NK:
The sacrifice! It’s incredible.
JS:
And one other — you know, you were talking about
the privatized disaster response. I mean, even
on a kind of micro-level in cities around the
country, we already see privatized fire forces,
firefighting forces where if there are wildfires
that break out, including because of climate
change, the ultra-wealthy have contracts with
privatized firefighters that will go and put out
the fires for them. If you’re poor and the
budget has been gutted and there is no fire
department, well, your land’s just gonna blow.
You know, it’s — the fire’s gonna blow through
it, and, and you’re finished.
NK:
In California, we heard a few years back that
AIG had pioneered what they were calling a
concierge service for their higher-end customers
where, you know, if a fire was coming to your
area, they would rush in with these private
firefighters and spray your home in fire
retardant.
AIG Advertisement:
Some of the most beautiful places to live are
prone to natural disasters. That’s why AIG
created the Wildfire Protection Unit. This
complimentary service helps our customers
prepare their homes to withstand wildfire
season.
NK:
Meanwhile, 4,000 of California’s state
firefighters are prison inmates being paid
between one and two dollars an hour to fight
fires. So, this disaster apartheid is here. You
know, and that’s the phrase I used when I wrote
“The Shock Doctrine,” but it’s accelerating
quickly. And this is why I think we can really
overstate the importance of whether or not Rex
Tillerson and Ivanka believe climate change is
happening versus Trump, who says it’s a hoax,
and Pruitt, who denies the science. What they
all share in common is that they think they’re
gonna be fine. And that is what is so scary
about this.
The New
Yorker had a really good piece a month or so ago
on high-end survivalism, right? The people in
Silicon Valley and Wall Street building gilded
bunkers, buying land, — elevated land, in New
Zealand, and really, you know, luxury prepping
for the disasters to come that are the
intersection between social collapse and climate
change. So, what we’re seeing is the loss of an
incentive to solve these problems. And that’s
what’s really worrying. You know, what matters
is not what an individual person in the Trump
administration says or doesn’t say about the
science of climate change. The problem is, they
think they’re gonna be okay.
JS:
Right. I mean, it’s sort of like their version
of “The Purge.”
The Purge:
This is not a test. This is your emergency
broadcast system announcing the commencement of
the annual Purge sanctioned by the U.S.
government.
JS:
Where — except, like, climate is the killing
fields, and lack of appropriate disaster
response, lack of evacuation — evactuation plans
from the public sector, the kinds of abandoning
of cities like you saw in New Orleans. I mean,
in a way, this is the most twisted version of
their idea of social Darwinism mixed in with a
Hollywood horror-esque scenario, like “The
Purge.” It’s really, like, kind of “The Purge”
for the climate. I don’t know if you watched
that movie — those movies — that movie series.
NK:
And this is happening, right? I mean, Rex —
coming back to Rex Tillerson, right, who — his
company —
JS:
Before you go to Rex Tillerson, can I just ask
you, Naomi Klein, have you seen any of the Purge
movies?
NK:
I’m sort of feeling badly that I have not seen
them. But I’ve seen many dystopian sci-fi films.
You know, and I feel like part of the problem
that we have is that —
JS:
But do you know what “The Purge,” what the basis
of “The Purge” is? Can I just tell you?
NK:
What is the basis?
JS:
Okay. So, “The Purge” is set in our world, but
slightly in the future. And the policy in the
United States that the government has set is
that for 24 hours once a year, murder is legal,
and anyone can go out and murder, or maim, or
attack anyone they want, and it’s perfectly
lawful, and you have exactly 24 hours to do it.
And it’s a trilogy of movies. And in the first
film, you see that wealthier families have very
sophisticated security systems to protect them
from the Purge, and that you have a lot of poor
people or people without resources being
subjected to either random murder, or neighbors,
or gangsters, or what have you, settling scores.
And also, the ultra-wealthy pay to go to clubs
where they can actually kill poor people that
have been abducted by a private company that
then delivers them to the gathering for the rich
people to murder in a kind of burlesque show.
The Purge:
Don’t force us to hurt you. We don’t want to
kill our own. Please just let us purge.
Toodle-oo, Sandins.
NK:
Are they good?
JS:
No.
NK:
[Laughs]
JS:
No. But the fact that I’m talking about them
means that they’re relevant —
NK:
Yeah.
JS:
Because in a way, it’s sort of prescient. I
mean, it’s — I really do feel like if they’re
not intending to implement the Purge here, this
is a very brilliant, unintentional plagiarism of
those films that Trump and his team are engaged
in.
NK:
The feeling that I think so many people had
during the aftermath of Katrina, which was like,
this is too sci-fi. It’s too sci-fi that
Blackwater is here. It’s too sci-fi that this is
being seen as a site for profit. Let’s not
forget that the other thing that was happening
in New Orleans is that white vigilantes were
hunting black people on the streets. Let’s not
forget that the New Orleans Police Department
has had to pay settlements because their police
officers were shooting black people to keep them
from getting to safety. That future is already
here.
JS:
You know, and just one other note. I remember,
when we were in New Orleans, seeing Israeli
security guards that had been flown by
helicopter from Texas into New Orleans, and they
deployed outside of a gated community. And when
I interviewed them, they were from a company
called ISI, Instinctive Shooting International.
And they were there. Some of them were, you
know, veterans who had been in Lebanon, you
know, of the Israeli Intelligence or Armed
Forces—been in Lebanon, been in Palestine, and
here they were with semi-automatic weapons
deployed in defense of the rich in New Orleans.
DemocracyNow! host Amy Goodman:
We’re joined now by two journalists who’ve just
returned from New Orleans. On the line from
Canada is writer and author Naomi Klein. Her
piece in The Nation is called “Purging the
Poor.” And we’re joined in our studio by
Democracy Now correspondent Jeremy Scahill.
NK:
I remember those days. We need to look really,
really closely at these models, right? This is
not about the future. This is about the present.
If we want — and this is where the road we’re on
leads, right? So, Rex Tillerson, now Secretary
of State, when he was CEO of Exxon, after this
company conducted their own climate change
research in the 1970s, cutting edge climate
change research: They were taking C02 samples
off of their oil tankers, publishing articles —
their own scientists saying, “Yes, this is
happening, yes this is a real”— does this
about-turn in the ‘90s and pours money into
climate change denial. Exxon knew all about
climate change. They knew about it before Hansen
testified on Capitol Hill in 1988 and said,
“Yes, it’s happening. Humans are causing it.”
They
knew all about it. They were already rejigging
their operations, thinking about — and this, you
know, has come out in investigative reporting by
Inside Climate News, by the LA Times. So now, we
know what they knew when they knew it, or some
of it, right? That they were looking at the
opportunities that would come from melting
Arctic ice and the ability to drill for oil.
They were planning to raise their drilling rigs
to compensate for sea level rise. They knew all
about it, and yet they poured millions into
very, very strong lobbying to keep the U.S. from
signing the Kyoto Protocol. Full-page ads in the
New York Times taken out by Mobil saying, “The
science isn’t clear.” They knew the science was
clear. Pouring money into climate change denial,
spreading doubt. We lost decades because of this
company.
Finally, Rex Tillerson, I think it was in 2011,
publicly says, “Yes, climate change is
happening, but humans will adapt.” Right? So, if
you can’t grow food in one place, humans have
always adapted. Now, how do humans adapt to not
being able to grow food, Jeremy? They move. They
seek safety. They do what humans do and have a
human right to do.
But we
now are in this era of fortressed continents —
continents fortressing themselves using these
same private contractors. I mean, this is Erik
Prince’s new business, right? What’s it called,
Frontier Services something?
JS:
Yeah. Frontier Services Group.
NK:
So, he pitches himself to the European Union as
the guy who’s gonna keep the boats from ever
getting there. These privatized camps on
islands, on Nauru, on Manus, where the
Australian government intercepts ships, flies
migrants fleeing war zones to these camps that
are run by private contractors. By the way, this
is what caused Donald Trump to hang up on the
Prime Minister of Australia, ‘cause there was a
deal made between Obama and Malcolm Turnbull,
the Prime Minister of Australia, to take some of
those refugees because the Australian government
is so determined not to let them into their
country. You know, Rex Tillerson says humans
adapt, but yet he’s working for an
administration that understands, actually, how
humans are adapting is by turning people who
dare to try to find safety into criminals.
JS:
Now, shifting to — I just wanted to briefly
touch on the Clean Power Plan. This was the
Obama administration initiative that began in
the summer of 2014 that was aimed at reducing
carbon pollution from power plants. And the
Obama administration portrayed it as this very
strong stance on climate change. So — and we
know now that Trump is right now initiating the
dismantling of that. So, explain what the Clean
Power Plan was under Obama, ‘cause you were
critical of Obama as well, and what this means
that Trump is dismantling it.
NK:
So, this was about getting off coal-powered
energy. And so, it would have shut down a lot of
coal-powered refineries. And the reason why I
was critical is that far too many of them were
being replaced with natural gas from fracking,
with all of the environmental risks associated
with that. You know, we keep learning more and
more about how much methane is being leaked, how
much methane is produced in the fracking
process, and also just in the burning itself.
And one of the things that the Trump
administration is doing, by the way — at the end
of the Obama administration, they started to get
serious about this and were requiring much
better monitoring and reporting to find out how
much methane was being released and leaked — and
one of the first things that the Trump
administration has done is said, “Oh, we don’t
want to know — not only do we not want to know
if climate change is happening, we don’t want to
know what you’re polluting.” So, this is part of
their “Don’t ask, don’t tell” policy around
climate change. It was not good enough, but it
was important. It was important. It just wasn’t
enough. And this is why a lot of us thought
that, you know, we were gonna be having to push
very hard under a Clinton presidency to try to
get much more ambitious climate policies. But
this is much, much worse to get rid of it,
obviously.
And I
think it needs to be understood as part of a
broader war on the poor and on people of color
in the United States by the Trump
administration. Because of the fact of
environmental racism in the United States, it
means that the communities that have had the
dirtiest coal powered fire plants are
overwhelmingly communities of color, where you
have very, very high rates of asthma and over
respiratory illnesses, cancer clusters, because
of the siting of these dirty industries in their
backgrounds. The EPA under Scott Pruitt is
completely eliminating the Environmental Justice
Program, which was the program dealing with this
very, very unequal siting of where the most
pollution is happening and who’s having — whose
bodies are dealing with the impacts. So, you
know, I think that this is both a climate
disaster —it’s also a human rights disaster
because of the enormous health risks associated
with coal. Which is not to say natural gas is
great, but coal is particularly noxious for
human health.
JS:
I wanted to talk for a moment about Jared
Kushner — this is Donald Trump’s son-in-law and
by many accounts, the central figure, along with
Steve Bannon, wandering the West Wing. And this
is the guy that Trump has — the kid — that Trump
has put in charge of the Israeli-Palestinian
negotiations.
DJT:
I actually think he likes politics more than he
likes real estate. I’m gonna tell you. And he’s
very good at politics, so.
JS:
But he recently created a new position for Jared
Kushner, heading up what they’re calling the
“White House Office of American Innovation,”
which is staffed entirely by former corporate
executives, of course, from Goldman Sachs, and
General Motors, and Microsoft, etc. They’re
calling them the SWAT team of strategic
consultants. And of course, at the heart of this
is deregulation. Your response to the role of
Jared Kushner — but also the mission of this
Office of American Innovation? I mean, it really
is kind of a horribly, violently ironic name to
be given to this department worthy of Orwell.
NK:
It is, and also just kind of honest, right?
Because this is a war on the public sphere, and
now they have a SWAT team. And the SWAT team is
gonna be looking for more things to cut. Bush
announced — sorry. What am I gonna do, Jeremy?
[Laughs] I keep doing it. Trump announced, I
believe it was his first day on the job, that
there would be a 75 percent cut in regulation
under his administration, so I think probably
what they’re gonna be looking for is any way
they can to cut regulations. I mean, this is
gonna have huge implications for food safety,
for water safety — and they’re also looking for
privatization opportunities.
JS:
Right. And recently, Jared Kushner sort of put a
fine point on what you’re saying when he told
the Washington Post, “The government should be
run like a great American company. Our hope is
that we can achieve successes and efficiencies
for our customers, who are the citizens.”
NK:
I mean, the really chilling part, of course, is
what Donald Trump has done as a businessman. You
know, how he has run his incredibly opaque
company, the number of bankruptcies, the number
of ripped off workers and contractors. I mean,
he so consistently sacrifices his own investors,
his — you know, his own partners, and just looks
out for number one, you know? This has been —
the expansion of his business model
internationally has been based on just leasing
his name, right? I mean this is what his sons
are out doing. They’re not building buildings
themselves. For the most part, they’re selling
the Trump name. One Trump development project in
Panama, they got $50 million from in licensing
and branding fees. So, it’s incredibly
lucrative.
But
when there are problems, and there are very
often problems with Trump developments, whether
— if it’s not on time; if it’s — if people
aren’t able to — these are often revenue
properties. If they feel that they’ve been lied
to, whatever happens — and there have been
several collapses — Trump is not responsible,
right? The liabilities are held by these
business partners to whom he’s just leased his
name. So, if the U.S. government is run anything
like the Trump organization: Expect to be
looted.
JS:
[Laughs] All right. On that very uplifting note,
we’ll end it there. Naomi Klein, who is the
author of “The Shock Doctrine,” of “This Changes
Everything,” and of “No Logo,” working on a
forthcoming book, and now is a reporter,
columnist, writer for The Intercept. Thanks a
lot for joining us, Naomi.
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Advertising - No Government Grants - This Is Independent Media
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NK:
Thanks, Jeremy. Great talking with you.
[The
Coup, “Five Million Ways to Kill a CEO”]
Help me
out
Yo, yo,
yo, yo
We’ve
got 5 million ways to kill a CEO
Slap
him up and shake him up and then you know
Let him
off the flo’ then bait him with the dough
You can
do it funk or do it disco, y’know how this go
(Yo,
yo, yo, yo)
JS:
“Five Million Ways to Kill a CEO.” That is The
Coup. The group’s emcee, Boots Riley, is a
legendary Bay Area hip-hop artist, and he’s also
a dedicated activist. The Coup’s albums include:
“Steal this Album,” “Genocide and Juice,” “Party
Music.” And more recently, Boots has teamed up
with Tom Morello, who of course rose to fame
with his band Rage Against the Machine. And they
have a group that’s called Street Sweeper Social
Club.
Boots Riley:
Hey, hello?
JS:
Hey, Boots. It’s Jeremy.
BR:
How’s it going?
JS:
All right. So, Boots Riley, welcome to
Intercepted.
BR:
Thanks for having me on the show.
JS:
So, Boots, we recently had this kind of crazy
situation where the President of the United
States was engaged in a Twitter battle with
Snoop Dogg and some other hip-hop artists.
Snoop Dogg:
Yeah, nigga, fuck Donald Trump. We ain’t voting
for your punk ass. Go get you a new hairdo, you
bitchass nigga.
[Remix
of BadBadNotGood’s “Lavender” (featuring
Katranada and Snoop Dogg)]
Snoop Dogg:
My dogs don’t bark, but they get off
Fuck
around and get your whole face bit off
Sinister, spit truth like a minister
JS:
Way, way back in the day, you actually had a
song where you were taking on Donald Trump.
[The
Coup, “Pimps (Freestylin’ at the fortune 500)”]
I’m
Trump Trump check out the cash in my trunk
Trump
Trump check out the cash in my trunk
I am
Donald Trump me think you mighta heard about me
How me last wife Ivana come and
catch me money
JS:
What’s your analysis of the Trump presidency and
also his little mini beef with Snoop Dogg?
BR:
The reason that we talked about Trump even back
in those days is because we were always
analyzing our problems in terms of how our
problems are created by the economic system that
we’re in: Capitalism. And in that analysis, we
understand that the primary contradiction in
this system comes at the point of exploitation.
And so, our critiques are not just of the
government. They’re of the ruling class. And the
ruling class are the puppet masters that the
government works for. So, in the sense that
Trump has been part of the ruling class for a
while — that’s why critique of him was needed —
whereas most public schools and private schools,
for that matter, teach us that capitalism is the
way to some sort of freedom and some sort of
power individually. Our culture mimics that.
So,
we’re told that to get rich, it takes merely
rugged individualism, and that that is something
to be looked up toward. So, many hip-hop songs
have looked up to Trump, not because people are
stupid, but because people are going off the
information that we’re taught in elementary,
junior high, high school, and college, and
making that into song. But we need to take
advantage of this clarity that’s happening right
now and show people that it’s not just — it’s
not a personality contest, that Trump being in
office is a development that has come from years
of the Democrats rolling it slowly towards this
direction, and the Republicans, obviously.
JS:
All right, Boots. Well, we appreciate you taking
the time to talk to us on Intercepted. Thank you
very much.
BR:
Aight, thank you. Peace.
JS:
Hip-hop artist Boots Riley. Boots sent in some
verses for Intercepted. The track is called
“Ghetto Blaster.”
[Boots
Riley, “Ghetto Blaster”]
Listen
to the shotgun sonata from personas non grata
With a
plot to rock harder than the second intifada
I do,
drink firewater but I’m more like Hiawatha
and
will slaughter, slaughter, slaughter, your
armada
Inform
your scholars that our alma mater’s squalor
So my
squad’ll pull your collar at your
black-and-white gala
We’re
canon fodder for dollars both under Trump and
Obama
I’m not
a baller I’m a brawler callin’ y’all to come
harder
I’m
from the land o’ the free labor that planted the
plan of the
black-and-branded to scram it over to Canada
A fan
of radical bandits and bandanas
who
slammed in the banana clip and
rat-a-tat-tat-tatted-a
They
spat the grammar to scam y’all to clamber up
The
damn ladder to grab for Excalibur
Not a
rap battler, but the next caliber
Catch
the program, not just my pentameter
JS:
When we come back, we’re gonna discuss the
intensifying U.S. bombings against Iraq and
Syria. They’ve killed upwards of a thousand
civilians just this month alone. This is
Intercepted. Stay with us.
[Music
interlude]
JS:
Okay, we are back here at Intercepted. And
Donald Trump claimed on the campaign trail that
he was against the U.S. invasion of Iraq back in
2003. Now, that’s in dispute, but he claimed it
over and over and over.
DJT:
We should have kept the oil when we got out.
And, you know, it’s very interesting — had we
taken the oil, you wouldn’t have ISIS.
JS:
And now, Trump seems to be getting his own Iraq
War. I mean, the Iraq War has been going on for,
you know — you could say for decades, but
certainly since 2003. But Trump is sort of
initiating a new campaign. There are more U.S.
ground troops moving to the region and onto the
ground in Syria and Iraq. They’re still calling
them advisers, but it’s clear that they are
gonna be in a combat role. Trump has also taken
moves to give military commanders much greater
authority to conduct strikes, even when they
know that civilians are gonna be killed. And
it’s important to be clear. You know, Barack
Obama authorized both overt and covert wars and
military operations that killed tremendous
numbers of civilians. And at least Obama on
numerous occasions paid lip service to the idea
that killing civilians is wrong, and that the
U.S. doesn’t want to be doing it.
Barack Obama:
And for the families of those civilians, no
words or legal construct can justify their loss.
For me and those in my chain of command, those
deaths will haunt us as long as we live.
JS:
Trump, though, appears to believe in scorched
earth. And on just one day earlier this month,
U.S. airstrikes in Mosul, Iraq and the north of
Iraq killed around 200 people. And there are
some reports that suggest that in just one
incident, that 80 civilians may have been killed
as they huddled in a basement trying to get
shelter from these air raids. While all of this
is happening in Iraq and Syria, Saudi Arabia’s
continuing to just utterly destroy Yemen.
Defense Secretary General James Mattis is
reportedly pushing Trump to try to expand the
U.S. military’s role inside of Yemen and to
directly go after the Houthi militias that rule
parts of that country in it’s civil war. And
part of what we’re seeing happening here is a
proxy war with Iran. That could quickly morph
into something much worse.
To
discuss all of this, I’m joined now by the
Intercept’s Murtaza Hussain. Murtaza covers
these wars and other issues for us at The
Intercept. Maz, welcome to Intercepted.
Murtaza Hussain:
Thanks for having me.
JS:
Maz, it seems like wall-to-wall coverage right
now in the United States on cable news and
online is all about whatever palace intrigue
exists in the Trump administration, and the
battle between Trump and the Republicans over
healthcare, and what’s happening with Trump’s
inner circle. And yet, we had strikes that have
killed more civilians and more people in a small
amount of time since the U.S. invaded Iraq in
2003. Why do you think this story is not getting
more attention in the broader news media?
MH:
Unfortunately, Iraqis and other have become
simply numbers. These numbers are very hard to
even humanize at this point. The past 26 years,
the United States has been bombing Iraq almost
continuously, or at war with Iraq in some form
almost continuously. This attack in Mosul is
perhaps one of the deadliest mass —single mass
casualty attacks in the past few decades, but
it’s not the only one. There was a very
devastating attack during the first Gulf War,
which killed upwards of 400 people in a bomb
shelter in Amiriyah. Unfortunately, Iraqis have
become dehumanized in American discourse. And
the death of 200 people barely even registers.
They’ve become merely statistics. And it’s
depressing, but it’s become unsurprising that
the news media and the public at large has just
tuned out of these terrible, terrible massacres.
JS:
Right. And we do know that at the end of Barack
Obama’s time in office, they were already
ratcheting up the strikes. But what Trump did
early on in his administration was to lift some
of the — I don’t want to say restrictions — but
some of the rules in place that the military
was, at least on paper, supposed to be governed
by concerning potential civilian deaths. That
seems to now be radically either reduced or
altogether obliterated under Trump.
MH:
Yeah. It’s no secret that there were a huge
number of similar deadly airstrikes under the
Obama administration. But Obama did attempt to
at least introduce some constraints on rules of
engagement for the U.S. military to minimize
those deaths. Because, if nothing else, they’re
strategically costly and they’re bad for the
image of the United States and they’re not
conducive to achieving goals, even in these
theaters. Trump made no secret about his
intention to conduct U.S. wars in a more brutal
fashion. He campaigned specifically on a
platform of taking the gloves off against all
U.S. enemies.
JS:
Well, he put it very eloquently when he said, I
believe it was —
DJT:
ISIS is making tremendous amount of money
because they have certain oil camps, right? They
have certain areas of oil that they took away.
They have some in Syria, some in Iraq. I would
bomb the shit of ‘em. [Crowd cheering] I would
just bomb those suckers. And that’s right. I’d
blow up the pipes. I’d blow up the refi —I’d
blow up every single inch. There would be
nothing left. And you know what? You’ll get
Exxon to come in there in two months. You ever
see these guys, how good they are, the great oil
companies? They’ll rebuild that sucker brand
new. It’ll be beautiful. And I’d rig it, and I’d
take the oil.
MH:
He was very stark and blunt about what he was
gonna do. And people voted for him based on
that. He was applauded at debates for these sort
of statements. And now, what you’re seeing since
he was elected are numerous — what can’t be
called anything other than massacres, which have
happened by U.S. forces not just through
airstrikes, but also that deadly raid in Yemen a
few weeks ago, which killed dozens of civilians.
Iraqi forces have said that they have noticed an
increasing laxity in U.S. targeting standards in
the past few weeks in the Mosul operation. And
the U.S. military has not conceded it’s changed
its rules of operation. But the proof seems to
be — or the indication seems to be in these
staggering civilian death tolls in these strikes
in the last few weeks.
DJT:
Well, and it seems as though we’re — well, we
are witnessing an increased deployment of U.S.
personnel on the ground. I mean, they’re still
kind of grooming the media to refer to them as
advisers, but the reality is that there are both
conventional and Special Operations forces that
are being deployed on the ground in both Syria
and Iraq right now. Where is this headed, in
your view?
MH:
Well, Trump, one of the mainstays of his
campaign was he was going to escalate the war
against ISIS, and he’s escalating it. He’s
sending ground troops in to fight. I think we’re
gonna see major battles in Raqqa and other
territories held by ISIS, and maybe even U.S.
ground troops in Mosul, if the Iraqi operation
stalls, which it seems to be at the moment. I
think that you’re seeing an escalation of U.S.
involvement in all these theaters, and not just
in Iraq and Syria, but also in a totally
separate conflict in Yemen against the Houthis.
You’re seeing very strong indications the U.S.
is gonna be more directly involved in supporting
Emirati and Saudi aggression against the
Yemenis.
JS:
What’s the endgame here?
MH:
That’s a very good question.
JS:
I mean, from the U.S. perspective or from some
of these Gulf monarchies that are financing
these wars, who stands to gain from the policy
as it currently is unfolding on the ground?
MH:
Well, there seem to be two goals the U.S. is
trying to achieve. And neither of them are very
well defined goals. The first one is to, okay,
degrade ISIS and take the territories out of its
control, which is fine, but then you’re setting
up what’s the day two after that? How do you
prevent this group from reemerging, or an even
more vicious group from reemerging out of the
defeat — the very brutal, it seems, defeat of
their territories right now? Secondly, you have
a broader campaign by the Trump administration
as Gulf allies to roll back Iranian influence in
the region. The thing is, the reason Iranian
influence increased in the region in the first
place is in large part a product of U.S.
actions, like the war on Iraq and the war on
Afghanistan, which took out two major Iranian
enemies and allows Iran to spread influence much
further.
So now,
the intention is to roll back Iranian influence
starting in Yemen. But that can only be a very
long, very costly, and very involved effort by
the United States. It will be a year’s-long
effort. Very bloody and very uncertain to roll
back Iranian gains in the last few years. So, I
think what you’re seeing is a new era of warfare
throughout the region, and not just with the
U.S. and Iranian-backed forces, but also — it
could also involve Israel, too, because Israel
is threatened by developments in Syria and
elsewhere in the region. And you could very well
see in the near future a war between Israel and
Iran or Iranian-backed forces.
JS:
All right. Murtaza Hussain, Thank you very much.
MH:
Thanks for having me.
[Music
interlude]
Apple commercial:
Here’s to the crazy ones. The misfits. The
rebels. The troublemakers. The round pegs in the
square holes. The ones who see things
differently. They’re not fond of rules, and they
have no respect for the status quo.
JS:
Apple is certainly one of the most powerful
companies in the world, not just because of its
financial position, but because of its central
role in so many peoples’ private lives. And yet,
Apple, this huge, powerful corporation — yeah,
they seem to be afraid of one of my colleagues
here at The Intercept, Josh Begley. Five years
ago, Josh created an app that would ping you
whenever the U.S. conducted a drone strike. And
of course, those happened a lot under President
Obama. But over these years, Josh has discovered
that Apple does not seem to be a very big fan of
his app. I’m joined now by Josh Begley. Welcome
back to Intercepted.
Josh Begley:
Thanks for having me.
JS:
Before we get into the whole situation now
between you and Apple over your app, why don’t
you take us back to when you first created this
drone strike tracking app, and what was the
purpose that you wanted it to serve?
JB:
So, the original idea for the app was really
simple. I could not think of anything that felt
further away than the drone war, and so, I
wanted to be in touch with it a little bit more
closely. And so, I was sort of wondering what it
would mean if I received a notification every
time one of these drone strikes was reported in
the news. Say I’m walking down the street and my
phone buzzes. Maybe I think it’s my friend
texting me, and then I’m sort of surprised by
this unsettling news. Would that change my
relationship to the drone war at all? —
JS:
Did it?
JB:
It did, certainly, because the last five years
have been this sort of ongoing process of
submitting and resubmitting an app that I never
thought I would continue to update, because of
the particularities of Apple’s secrecy. And it
has actually made me learn a tremendous amount
about the geography of Pakistan and Yemen and
Somalia, and where these drone strikes take
place.
JS:
And when you created it—just kind of walk people
through how it worked.
JB:
Mm. So, it was dead simple at first. I really
just wanted it to ping your phone every time one
of these reports was mentioned in the press. I
didn’t really want it to have much
functionality. But originally, Apple said that
that was not useful, so I added a map, and I
added a newsfeed. And then, it ended up getting
through the App Store after three rejections
because they said it was, “excessively crude or
objectionable content.” The fifth time I
submitted it, it actually was accepted, and it
was in the App Store for about a year. And so,
for about a year, I was sending out these alerts
every time a drone strike was reported in the
news. It definitely changed my relationship to
it.
JS:
Wait, wait, wait. Back up a second here.
JB:
Yeah.
JS:
So, you create the app. The initial criticism
from Apple was that it was so stripped down that
it didn’t serve a real purpose.
JB:
Mm-hmm.
JS:
You then upped your game. You created a map,
etc. And it was rejected on what grounds?
JB:
On “excessively crude or objectionable content.”
JS:
Did you ever get any understanding of what it
was that they found crude or objectionable?
JB:
You know: No. The process for approving apps is
somewhat labyrinthine, and there have been a
number of people that have had the experience of
having apps rejected a bunch. But they never
really comment and tell you why. They’ll just
say, “Oh, it was under this 2.1 or 1.1.” I
forget the actual technical term. But it’s
“excessively crude or objectionable content.”
They said it would be either not useful, or not
enough people would be interested in it, and
then finally, that it was objectionable.
JS:
Well, and let’s remember here that there are all
manner of stalking apps that are available on
the App Store. There are apps with an overtly
racist theme in some of the games. Not to
mention all the shit that’s happened with
companies like Uber. And, you know, Uber’s app
has led to a lot of objectionable content —
actions in some part committed by their drivers
and the CEO toward the drivers. But somehow,
your app, which is intended to put people in
more touch with what their tax dollars are being
used for and their foreign policy, was declared
“crude and objectionable.” Now, I woke up on
Tuesday morning this week, and when I looked at
The Intercept, I saw an article that you wrote
saying after, you know, numerous — a dozen, I
think — rejections, Apple had finally accepted
your app in the App Store. And you did an
article about it, and people start downloading
it. And then, we start getting messages from
people saying, “It’s not working for me.”
JB:
Right.
JS:
What happened?
JB:
So, on Tuesday morning, the app was in the store
for about five hours, and I sort of was
thinking, maybe Apple changed their mind. Maybe
they were gonna let it be there, and maybe they
were gonna stop blocking it. And around 2
o’clock, I received a push notification on my
iPhone that told me that it was removed from
sale. And then there were some people tweeting
about how it had not been available in the store
when they tried to download it.
JS:
And when you say sale, it was free?
JB:
It was free.
JS:
Right.
JB:
Totally free.
JS:
And what was the name that you registered the
app under?
JB:
It was called Metadata. About in 2012 or 2013,
when I was submitting it a bunch of times,
Metadata was the name we went with because it
really was metadata about English language news
reports. There isn’t a whole lot of data to
speak of about a lot of these reports. So,
that’s why the app is so barebones. It’s really
just sending you a sentence, maybe, or a small
little bit of narrative about what happened in
one of these drone strikes that’s reported in
Pakistan, Yemen, or Somalia. And so, I received
a notification that told me it was not in the
store. And I suppose that that was to be
expected on the one hand, but at the same time,
I kind of thought Apple might have come around.
JS:
Now, with the Trump administration relaxing —
it’s such a strange phrase to use, but that’s
how it is — relaxing some of the restrictions on
operations that will kill civilians or the
likelihood of killing civilians, and with the
pummeling that we just talked about with Murtaza
Hussain that we’re seeing in Iraq and Syria with
these increased airstrikes, have you considered
expanding the app to not just be exclusively
about drone strikes, but to include all sorts of
U.S. airstrikes?
JB:
Yeah, I think my own biggest critique of the app
is that it’s in some ways too narrow, because
the distinction between a drone strike and an
airstrike by a manned aircraft is pretty
insignificant if you’re on the ground, right?
The missiles land sort of in the same way. And
so, I think expanding it to include both
unofficial and official war zones perhaps would
be a more accurate reflection. If you really
want to be in touch with our foreign policy and
with the drone war, what does it mean to be in
touch with all airstrikes that the U.S. launches
or that the Saudi campaign sort of backed by the
U.S. launches? What would that mean? Would that
change our relationship to our own foreign
policy in any sort of meaningful way?
JS:
You know it sucks that they pulled it down for a
number of reasons. But one thought I had is if
somehow Donald Trump discovered this, and he
learned that the U.S. was doing all these drone
strikes around the world and other airstrikes
around the world, maybe he would tweet against
these strikes if he was aware that they were
happening. I mean, ‘cause that’s — that really —
he gets a lot of information from social media.
So that, I think, is the grand disappointment:
That you do not fall into the category of
Breitbart in briefing the President.
Josh
Begley, thank you for creating the app. We’ll
continue to follow this saga. And, you know, if
people feel so inclined, I think they should
reach out to Apple and let them know that this
kind of censorship undermines the democratic
spirit of our society because it strips us of an
ability to understand the actions of our
government. So, Josh Begley, thanks for being
with us.
JB:
Thanks for having me.
[Music
interlude]
JS:
And that does it for this week’s show.
Intercepted is a production of First Look Media
and The Intercept. We’re distributed by Panoply.
Our producer is Jack D’Isidoro and our executive
producer is Leital Molad. Rick Kwan mixed the
show. We had production assistance from Elise
Swain. Our music, as always, was composed by DJ
Spooky. A couple of announcements here: One is,
we now have our own dedicated Twitter feed for
the Intercepted podcast. It is simply:
@Intercepted. We would love to start hearing
from listeners. What do you like about the show?
What would you like to see more of? Do you have
any questions for us? Check us out on Twitter.
Our handle is @Intercepted.
And
also, I want to give a shout-out to my friends
here at First Look Media and their incredibly
funny, but also smart podcast: Politically
Reactive. The show is hosted by Hari Kondabolu
and Kamau Bell. You should check it out.
Politicallyreactive.com. They kick off a new
season this week.
If you
like what you’re hearing on Intercepted, we
would love it if you make sure you’re
subscribing to the show, however you do such
things. Also, when you rate us or you give us a
review, it helps spread the word about our show.
And we really do enjoy hearing from all of you
if we can. And the best way to do that right now
is on our Twitter feed, @Intercepted. Until next
week, I’m Jeremy Scahill.
[Music
interlude]
Rep. Trey Gowdy:
Whether it’s the White House or Waffle House,
what difference does it make if the information
is reliable and authentic? It just so happens
Devin had to do it this way.
The
views expressed in this article are solely those
of the author and do not necessarily reflect the
opinions of Information Clearing House.