“George. Ukraine Is Not Even a Country”

Useful 2014 background from the Belfer Center clarifies how long Russia has been planning an invasion of Ukraine and why.

‘You Have to Understand, George. Ukraine Is Not Even a Country’. Thus spake Vladimir Putin to the second George Bush, the man who once said that he had looked into Putin’s eyes and decided he could work with him.

Perhaps the United States and the West did not fully comprehend how closely intertwined the histories of Russia and Ukraine are. Perhaps the spectacle of Assistant Secretary of State Nuland and Ambassador Pyatt walking through the Maidan in Kiev with packets of bread for the anti-government demonstrators was not fully perceived in Washington for the provocative gesture that it was.

However mishandled the U.S. and the EU initiatives toward the Ukraine were, we should now look upon Putin’s recent actions — including and especially his abrogation of the 1994 Budapest Agreement, to respect Ukraine’s territorial integrity — as something beyond the pale.

Last year, President Putin wrote a long piece describing Russians and Ukrainians as “one nation”.

And on that note it’s reasonable to assume the artificially inflated price of bitcoin is related to long-term planning by the Russian government to bypass the impact of sanctions (which rely on banking systems for enforcement).

Update March 2, 2022: “Four Democrats have asked Treasury officials to explain how they’re overseeing digital assets while Russia is largely frozen out of traditional commerce.”

American Revolutionary War Was About Profit, Not Liberty

A Smithsonian exhibition lays bare the fact that America was granted independence by Britain as a global business decision, rather than ideological conflict.

…the American Revolution was largely a war about trade and economic influence—not ideology. France and Spain, like Britain, were monarchies with even less fondness for democracy. The Dutch Republic was primarily interested in free trade. The leaders of all three countries wanted to increase their nations’ trade and economic authority, and to accomplish that, they were willing to go to war with their biggest competitor—Great Britain.

To the French, Spanish and Dutch governments, this was not a war about liberty: It was all about power and profit. If American colonists won their independence, that would cause harm to British interests and open new trade opportunities in North America and elsewhere for those who allied themselves with the colonists.

This helps explain why George Washington was so obviously wed to the idea of preserving and expanding slavery as his means towards personal enrichment, when it directly contradicted any ideological purposes of freedom from tyranny.

Parkinson reveals how the system’s participants constructed a compelling drama featuring virtuous men who suddenly found themselves threatened by ruthless Indians and defiant slaves acting on behalf of the king. Parkinson argues that patriot leaders used racial prejudices to persuade Americans to declare independence. Between the Revolutionary War’s start at Lexington and the Declaration, they broadcast any news they could find about Native Americans, enslaved Blacks, and Hessian mercenaries working with their British enemies. American independence thus owed less to the love of liberty than to the exploitation of colonial fears about race.

Did you catch that? White men “threatened by ruthless Indians and defiant slaves acting on behalf of the king” brings to mind an inversion of liberty, a ruthless economic conflict over profit from the exploitation of land and people.

Interesting to think of Washington trying to rally his troops by arguing that liberty was tyranny, based on the fear of the British king setting Black Americans free from men like… Washington. Don’t forget the colony of Georgia had banned slavery in 1735 and America would have seen abolition at the beginning of the 1800s had it stayed under British control.

Washington worked so hard throughout his life to ensure none of his slaves were given freedom, even illegally detaining them with the help of powerful lawyers… more Americans should naturally seek to know whether Washington intended to generate wealth through things other than slavery. Carter very clearly made this distinction and criticized Washington as such in the 1790s.

He counted Washington’s half-brother, Lawrence, James Madison and Thomas Jefferson as friends; he regularly dined with and loaned money to the latter. Washington himself was a neighbor…“Carter’s plans look more like a pilot for mass emancipation,” Andrew Levy, a professor at Butler University, told CNN.

Not only was Washington differently aligned from what most Americans are taught, his role may have been overstated.

The Americans are barely noticeable on the sidelines, while the victors appear to be French. […] The last battle in this global conflict known in the United States as the American Revolution was not fought on the fields of Virginia in 1781: It occurred two years later at Cuddalore, India.

Green Lining: Black and Hispanic Neighborhoods Get Fewer EV Stations

A study from early 2021 reports how public electric vehicle (EV) charging stations are installed away from Black and Hispanic neighborhoods in California.

Controlling for distance to the nearest highway or freeway, multi-unit housing unit rate, and median household income, we find that Black and Hispanic majority block groups are the only race and ethnicity group that is significantly less likely to have access to any public charger in their block groups compared to the rest of the state.

Wired Magazine: “History of Black Androids”

Virginia Heffernan, writing for Wired, has published an “ideas” piece for the March 2022 issue that calls out the Tesla bot as “a racist phenomenon dating back to the 18th century.”

I couldn’t agree more, and in fact am quoted in the article.

At least one observer, Davi Ottenheimer, a digital ethics expert, likened the robot’s appearance and loose-limbed dance number at the unveiling to a minstrel show. [Edward Jones-Imhotep, a historian of science and technology at the University of Toronto] concurs: “Musk’s presentation seems doubly regressive … It obviously evokes minstrelsy and blackface. And in doing so it also returns the Black android to some of its late 19th-century forms under the guise of progress.”

At 5′8″ and 125 pounds—programmed to be “friendly” and built so you can “overpower it,” in Musk’s words—the Tesla bot, Ottenheimer proposed, seemed to express a white male fantasy of being waited on by an uncomplaining and entirely controllable Black woman whom he can dominate without conscience.

I have been pleased lately to hear so many people say they’ve seen my name in this article. However, I never spoke with the author.

She is making a reference to an August 2021 blog post I wrote called “Tesla’s Blackface Robot: Promoting Slavery As Fantasy“, which unfortunately didn’t get a link from Wired now shows a direct link from Wired.