O que é este blog?

Este blog trata basicamente de ideias, se possível inteligentes, para pessoas inteligentes. Ele também se ocupa de ideias aplicadas à política, em especial à política econômica. Ele constitui uma tentativa de manter um pensamento crítico e independente sobre livros, sobre questões culturais em geral, focando numa discussão bem informada sobre temas de relações internacionais e de política externa do Brasil. Para meus livros e ensaios ver o website: www.pralmeida.org. Para a maior parte de meus textos, ver minha página na plataforma Academia.edu, link: https://itamaraty.academia.edu/PauloRobertodeAlmeida;

Meu Twitter: https://twitter.com/PauloAlmeida53

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/paulobooks

domingo, 2 de agosto de 2020

Leituras do Fim de Semana - New York Times

August 2, 2020

Welcome to the Weekend Briefing. We’re covering the spread of the coronavirus in the Midwest, Tropical Storm Isaias and high-summer gardening.

Kevin Winter/Getty Images

1. New coronavirus cases are picking up at a dangerous pace in much of the Midwest and in areas that had seen apparent progress.

The seven-day average for new infections is hovering around 65,000 for two weeks in what amounts to a second wave of cases. The U.S. recorded more than 1.9 million new infections in July, nearly 42 percent of the more than 4.5 million cases reported nationwide since the pandemic began and more than double the number documented in any other month, according to a Times database.

States like California, which became the first in the U.S. to report more than 500,000 coronavirus cases, and Mississippi and Florida thought they had already seen the worst of it, only to find themselves on a frustrating seesaw. Above, a testing center in Los Angeles.

And yet rapid testing, which many health officials say is critical to containing the virus, remains an obstacle. Dr. Anthony Fauci told lawmakers on Friday that the U.S. would most likely have a safe and effective coronavirus vaccine by the end of 2020 or early in 2021.

Have you been keeping up with the headlines? Test your knowledge with our news quiz. And here’s the front page of our Sunday paperthe Sunday Review from Opinion and our crossword puzzles.

AJ Mast for The New York Times

2. The first school districts in the U.S. reopened their doors this week. Greenfield Central Junior High School in Indiana, above, had to quarantine students within hours.

In most of the country, schools that reopen classrooms will quickly face the question of what to do when students test positive. To deal with that likelihood, many schools and some states have enacted contact tracing and quarantine protocols, with differing thresholds at which they would close classrooms or buildings.

A new report about a coronavirus outbreak at a sleep-away camp in Georgia provides fresh reasons for concern. Of the 600 campers and staff members, nearly half became infected within a week of orientation. The camp took precautions but did not require campers to wear masks. Singing and cheering may have helped spread the virus.

Saul Martinez for The New York Times

3. Florida, already reeling from the virus,faces a new threat from Isaias.

The tropical storm is expected to be upgraded to a hurricane again after a downgrade late Saturday and may hit Florida’s coastline. The storm raked parts of Puerto Rico — killing one woman — and the Dominican Republic before battering the Bahamas early Saturday. Above, Lake Worth, Fla.

And we’re only in the very beginning of hurricane season. Emergency management officials have drawn up new and special plans to deal with people who are fleeing or have been displaced by storms.

Up the coast, officials in Georgia, South Carolina and North Carolina were closely monitoring the storm and warned that hospitals could be strained beyond capacity with a flood of new patients.

Dado Ruvic/Reuters

4. ByteDance, the Chinese internet giant that owns TikTok, has offered to sell all of the popular video app’s American operations.

The potential divestment is a bid to save the business from being banned by the Trump administration, a person with knowledge of the matter said. U.S. officials have questioned whether TikTok is susceptible to influence from the Chinese government and poses a national security threat.

It was not clear whether the White House would accept the divestment as sufficient response to its concerns. Microsoft and other companies have been in talks to buy TikTok, but a deal has not yet been reached. TikTok has said it has 100 million users in the U.S.

How did the wildly popular app become embroiled in politics? Here’s a primer.

J. Scott Applewhite/Associated Press

5. The next election battleground: the post office.

President Trump’s long campaign against the Postal Service is intersecting with his assault on mail-in voting amid concerns that he has politicized oversight of the agency, leading to cost-cutting steps that appear to have led to slower and less reliable delivery. Above, a postal facility in McLean, Va.

Mr. Trump’s baseless claims about the potential for mail-in voter fraud led him to dangle the idea of delaying the election, a suggestion that lacks legal authority and could undermine confidence in an election that polls show him on course to lose. His Republican colleagues roundly dismissed the possibility of a delay.

Meanwhile, Joe Biden is getting closer to selecting his running mate, with Representative Karen Bass of California and Susan Rice, the former national security adviser, among the leading contenders. One possible advantage for Ms. Bass: She has assured Democratic officials that she has no interest in seeking the presidency herself, according to lawmakers.

Gordon Welters for The New York Times

6. The threat of neo-Nazi infiltration of Germany’s state institutions is more extensive than officials realized. Now they’re struggling to uproot such infiltration.

Last month, the government disbanded an entire company of the nation’s special forces that had been infiltrated by extremists. But a group called Nordkreuz, or Northern Cross, shows that the problem of far-right infiltration has penetrated multiple layers of Germany society over the years as the authorities underestimated the threat or were reluctant to confront it.

“Between us, we were a whole village,” recalled Marko Gross, a police officer and one of about 30 Nordkreuz members, including a man who owned a military accessory shop, above. They were plotting to round up and kill political enemies and those defending migrants and refugees before they were uncovered by the authorities three years ago.

Johannes Eisele/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images

7. Riding the New York City subway may be safer than you think.

In countries where the coronavirus pandemic has ebbed, ridership has rebounded — and there have been no notable superspreader events linked to mass transit, according to a survey of transportation agencies conducted by The Times. (One caveat: Ridership in major cities is still well below pre-pandemic levels).

If the risks of mass transit can be addressed, that could have sweeping implications for many large American cities, particularly New York, where one of the biggest challenges in a recovery will be coaxing riders back onto public transportation.

Leigh Wells

8. Oh, how far Karens have fallen.

In 1965, it was the third-most-popular baby name in the U.S. In 2018, it was the 635th — and today it’s even less popular. In 2020, Karen is no longer “an easy name” and instead has morphed into a symbol of racism and white privilege.

Why the name Karen? Robin Queen, a linguistics expert, points to, of all people, Dane Cook, a comedian who, on a 2005 album, used the name to describe “one person in a group of friends that nobody likes.” Ms. Queen said the label was unlikely to hold on forever. “I would be surprised to find it around a decade from now,” she said.

Jessica Norman, Untermyer Gardens Conservancy

9. “If you can’t enjoy weeding, you won’t be a happy gardener.”

That’s the wisdom of Timothy Tilghman, the head gardener at Untermyer Park and Gardens in Yonkers, N.Y., above, a 43-acre former estate on the Hudson River. It was an eerily quiet spring and early summer without visitors, a result of the pandemic, but there is still work to be done.

Our garden expert, Margaret Roach, spoke with Mr. Tilghman about his high-summer to-do list. It includes watering and weeding consistently (and observing and noting what needs fixing), removing deadheads and grooming, keeping edges tidy, mulching, and preparing future beds.

Leituras de verão - Foreign Affairs

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Illustration: Keith Negley

Many observers were declaring the end of American preeminence long before the COVID-19 pandemic. But the crisis has reinforced trends that potentially compromise the United States’ position, from the resurgence of

A few inconvenient truths about Africa, race and slavery - Philip Vander Elst

For BLM protesters, a few inconvenient truths about Africa, race and slavery



The Conservative Woman (UK), August 1, 2020
https://conservativewoman.co.uk/for-blm-protesters-a-few-inconvenient-truths-about-africa-race-and-slavery/


AT a time when Black Lives Matter and Left-wing ‘anti-racist’ activists are seeking to remove statues of Cecil Rhodes and other historical figures associated with what they deem to be the shameful colonial past of Western democracies such as Britain, there is a need to set the record straight and challenge the ignorance and double standards fuelling this movement.

Open-minded readers willing to study the controversial issues I raise in more detail should get hold of the books I mention. And to that list should be added Ghanaian economist George Ayittey’s seminal Africa Betrayed, an excoriating and copiously documented indictment of post-colonial African tyrannies.

As a classical liberal who is distrustful of government, I am the last person to take a rosy and uncritical view of Western colonialism. All too often it has been associated with the worst abuses of state power. But it is a disservice to historical truth to dismiss the entire colonial era as an unrelieved tale of imperial greed, racism and exploitation with no compensating achievements or benefits.

BLM supporters willing to consider a more balanced view of the Western colonial era and its impact on the Third World should study the writings of the late Professor Peter Thomas Bauer, one of the great development economists of the 20th century according to contemporary Asian scholars such as Deepak Lal, Parth Shah, and Razeen Sally.

They should also read the works of the African-American economist Thomas Sowell, particularly his books The Economics and Politics of Race and more recently, Conquests and Cultures: An International History. 

If they do this, they will find that whilst both Bauer and Sowell are often extremely critical of the colonial authorities, they emphasise two basic historical facts: the material backwardness and barbarism of much of the pre-colonial Third World and the role of the Western colonial powers – especially the British – in establishing peace and order, and with it, the material and organisational infrastructure of modern economies and societies – roads, railways, ports, factories, schools, hospitals and universities.

Sub-Saharan Africa offers the clearest illustration of these truths. According to Sowell, the development of pre-colonial sub-Saharan Africa was gravely handicapped by the lack of navigable rivers and natural harbours, the ravages of the tsetse fly (whose parasites are fatal to draught animals) and numerous tropical diseases which debilitated and killed humans.

As a result, almost no pre-colonial African community south of the Sahara managed to harness animals to pull ploughs and wagons. ‘The pre-colonial technology of the region,’ writes Sowell,‘was incapable of using wind or water power for milling grain. Tribal warfare, military raids, slavery and serfdom were widespread throughout the area.’

Western colonialism brought progress. To quote Bauer, who spent many years living and working in Asia and Africa:‘The basic ingredients of modern social and economic life, including public security and health, wheeled transport, modern forms of money and scientific agriculture, were brought to sub-Saharan Africa by Westerners in the 19th and early 20th centuries.

‘They were introduced by the colonial administrations, or by foreign private organisations or persons, under the comparative security of colonial rule and usually in the face of formidable obstacles.

‘The coercion and the hardships, though far from negligible, seem slight when we think of both pre-colonialand post-colonial Africa . . .  the number of Africans who lived longer, more securely, in materially better conditions and in peaceful contact with their fellow men was much greater, probably by several orders of magnitude, than the numbers who were harmed.’

Sowell reaches a similar conclusion to Bauer. Whilst acknowledging that not all parts of the colonised world were primitive, and that the coming of Western civilisation did not always represent progress in all aspects of life, he concludes that, by and large, European colonialism brought to the Third World what Roman imperialism had brought to Britain:

1. A reduction or cessation of internal fighting that had plagued these regions for centuries, holding back economic and social progress;

2. A unified system of law as a framework for stable expectations and the security and individual planning that law makes possible;

3. Features of a more advanced system of technology and organisation;

4. Contact with a wider world, enabling creative potential to emerge from the restrictions of insularity.

The current politically correct demand for Western reparations is not only based on a distorted and one-sided evaluation of Western colonialism. It is also morally compromised by double standards, as well as being backward-looking and unfair to contemporary Western taxpayers.

It involves double standards because it overlooks the fact that nearly all ethnic groups, tribes and nations have engaged, at one time or another, in wars of conquest, land seizures, slavery and genocide.

If Western taxpayers are expected to pay for the sins of previous generations of Western colonialists, for which they were not responsible, should modern-day Zulus and Apaches pick up the bill for the tribal wars and massacres perpetrated by their ancestors in southern Africa and North America?

Should the present-day inhabitants of Mongolia and the Arabian Peninsula offer financial compensation for the wars of conquest waged by Genghis Kahn and Arab-Islamic rulers in Asia and the Mediterranean?

Anti-Western double standards about the past are particularly absurd when it comes to the subject of slavery. 

As Asian-American scholar Dinesh D’Souza points out in his massively documented 700-page critique of politically correct multiculturalism, The End of Racism, ‘slavery was widespread in Africa from antiquity’ and also existed among the native Indian tribes of North America, many of whom also owned black slaves.

‘The three powerful medieval kingdoms of Ghana, Songhai and Mali all relied on slave labour. Nor were these slaves exclusively black Africans . . . the Ashanti of West Africa customarily enslaved all foreigners.’ 

African complicity in the slave trade, states D’Souza,was ‘epitomised in the proposition advanced to Europeans by an African chief in the early 19th century: “We want three things: powder, ball and brandy; and we have three things to sell: men, women and children”.’

Perhaps the most poignant comment on African participation in the slave trade are these words of Zora Neale Hurston, the great American black feminist writer of the Harlem Renaissance in the early 20th century: ‘The white people held my people in slavery here in America. They had bought us, it is true, and exploited us.

‘But the inescapable fact that stuck in my craw was: My people had sold me . . . my own people had exterminated whole nations and torn families apart for a profit before the strangers got their chance at acut.’

By contrast, what is important to note about the West is that principled opposition to the historically universal institution of slavery primarily emerged from within Western culture.

Starting with the Quakers and the Methodists, and continuing with the great anti-slavery campaign of William Wilberforce and his evangelical friends, a vast humanitarian movement came into existence in the 18th and 19th centuries, which not only stamped out slavery in most places, but established the foundations of that very concern for human rights and national self-determination to which everyone pays at least lip service today.

To quote Thomas Sowell’s tribute to what he describes as Britain’s leading role in the destruction of the international slave trade, and then of slavery itself: ‘The magnitude of this achievement is hard to appreciate without first recognising that slavery was a worldwide institution, entrenched on every inhabited continent, subjugating people of every colour, language, and religion, and going back thousands of years.’

And before we leave the subject of the slave trade, it should be noted that it was particularly destructive in East and Central Africa. There, its cruelties and massacres, mainly the work of Arab slavers and their Muslim African allies – and exposed to international opinion by Dr David Livingstone and other eyewitnesses – depopulated whole regions of the Congo.

It is estimated, according to Dinesh D’Souza, that between the 7th and 19th centuries, Arab traders transported about 14million black slaves across the Sahara and the Red Sea, to supply the slave markets of the Muslim world.

Nor were black Africans the only victims of the Arab and Islamic slave trade. As Thomas Sowell points out in The Real History of Slavery, the third chapter of his book, Black Rednecks and White Liberals: ‘At least a million Europeans were enslaved by North African pirates alone from 1500 to 1800. And some European slaves were still being sold on the auction block in Egypt years after the Emancipation Proclamation (1863) freed blacks in the United States.’

Sowell further underlines the involvement of non-white societies in the slave trade by emphasising that: ‘Slavery was also common in India, where it has been estimated that there were more slaves than in the entire Western hemisphere.’

Exaggerating the evils of colonialism also evades the glaringly obvious fact that so much of what has gone wrong in the Third World since the 1960s has been due not to Western exploitation, but to the aggrandisement and abuse of state power by corrupt and frequently incompetent post-colonial ruling elites. This has been true of countries such as Algeria, Burma, and others in Asia and the Middle East. Above all, it has been true of Africa.

To quote George Ayittey:‘One word, power, explains why Africa is in the grip of a n

ever-ending cycle of wanton chaos, horrific carnage, senseless civil wars and collapsing economies; the struggle for power, its monopolisation by one individual or group, and the subsequent refusal to relinquish or share it.’

That is why, as Ayittey, points out, more than 13million Africans have been killed by their own leaders since 1960.That is why, of the 180 African heads of state who held power between 1960 and 1998, only 20 relinquished it or retired voluntarily. That, too, is why the African Union itself estimated in 2007, that Africa loses $148billion (£114billion) a year – a quarter of its entire GDP– to corruption.

Some years ago, the distinguished Guinean novelist Camara Laye lamented that all too many African leaders ‘do not serve Africa. They make Africa serve themselves. They are far from being builders, organisers, city administrators, but are rather jailers who deal with the men, women and children of our people as if they were cattle’.

As you ponder these words and reflect on the way dictators such as Robert Mugabe and his successors have used and continue to use anti-colonialist rhetoric as an excuse for their crimes against their own people, ask yourselves whether giving credence to the demand for Western reparations would really help the poor and the oppressed of the Third World.

sábado, 1 de agosto de 2020

Meu dever de lealdade para com a instituição à qual pertenço: o Itamaraty - Paulo Roberto de Almeida

Meu dever de lealdade para com a instituição à qual pertenço: o Itamaraty 

Paulo Roberto de Almeida

Brasília, 1/08/2020


O governo dos novos bárbaros se prepara, aparentemente, para introduzir uma legislação destinada a punir funcionários públicos que se revelem, pelos seus critérios, “desleais” para com a instituição à qual pertencem, segundo a matéria que transcrevo abaixo de Ricardo Noblat. 


Uma Nota Técnica da CGU (1556/2020) já foi publicada a esse respeito, que eu já comentei neste mesmo espaço.


Eu DESAFIEI, no mesmo momento, o sentido da abjeta nota, ao demonstrar como os verdadeiros desleais para com os objetivos estatutários da minha instituição são aqueles mesmos que a estão deliberadamente conspurcando e violando, ao fazê-la enveredar por caminhos espúrios, inclusive inconstitucionais e anti-constitucionais (as duas coisas se aplicam).


Essa legislação provavelmente não vai passar pelo Congresso, e se passar, será vetada como inconstitucional pelo STF.

Em qualquer hipótese, eu continuarei denunciando os novos bárbaros como DESLEAIS aos princípios e valores do Itamaraty histórico de quase dois séculos e respeitador de nossas mais altas tradições de defesa da nação e de acatamento estrito aos interesse nacionais.


Pois é EVIDENTE que SUBORDINAR nossa política externa e os altos interesses da nação a um dirigente estrangeiro representa deslealdade não só à instituição, mas ao país como um todo. Antigamente isso se chamava traição à pátria: é o que fazem alguns desses novos bárbaros, que pretendem determinar nossa diplomacia e que envergam o boné de reeleição desse dirigente que já demonstrou desprezo por todos os demais países da comunidade internacional.


É EVIDENTE que abandonar os caminhos e métodos do MULTILATERALISMO - pelos quais o Brasil se bate desde os tempos do Barão e de Rui Barbosa na II conferência da Paz de 1907 -, na igualdade soberana das nações, representa uma violação e uma deslealdade em relação às nossas principais ferramentas de atuação externa, método que aliás é conforme à evolução do sistema contemporâneo de relações internacionais, cada vez mais marcado pela interdependência geral dos Estados na busca do bem comum, em lugar do velho nacionalismo bilateralista, fautor de conflitos e de guerras.


É EVIDENTE que apoiar moções de potências estrangeiras que tendem a legitimar ações UNILATERAIS são contrárias ao Direito Internacional - um conceito desprezado pelos novos bárbaros - e absolutamente contrárias aos interesses nacionais, pois que se está admitindo que elas possam ser utilizadas contra o nosso próprio país. 


É EVIDENTE que a intromissão de critérios IDEOLÓGICOS ou RELIGIOSOS na avaliação de políticas ou propostas inseridas na agenda internacional ou externa, com que tem de lidar o Itamaraty, representa uma violação das bases técnicas, isentas, desprovidas de preconceitos ou vieses com as quais trabalha a diplomacia profissional, atualmente constrangida pela ação deletéria dos novos bárbaros.


É EVIDENTE que SUBORDINAR toda uma instituição, dotada de altos padrões de isenção profissional e de cuidadoso trabalho de análise técnica de todas as propostas de ação externa em benefício da nação, aos preconceitos ignaros de um bando de amadores despreparados e incapazes de um julgamento abalizado sobre o cenário internacional representa uma SUPREMA DESLEALDADE para com essa instituição, e como tal deve ser denunciada e combatida por todos aqueles que se comprometeram com a defesa de seus altos princípios de atuação e de seus nobres valores morais ao nela ingressar. 


É EVIDENTE que eu continuarei a defender lealdade à instituição à qual pertenço, CONTRA A DESLEALDADE dos novos bárbaros que a estão destruindo em seus fundamentos de atuação, mas sobretudo em seus tradicionais princípios e valores.


Paulo Roberto de Almeida



Livre expressão de pensamento, desde que a favor do governo, por Ricardo Noblat

1/08/2020


O direito à livre expressão de pensamento é sempre invocado pelo presidente Jair Bolsonaro toda vez que seus seguidores nas redes sociais sentem-se ameaçados ou tolhidos. Mas é bom saber que o que ele defende para sua gente não vale para os que possam criticá-lo. Nos últimos dias, acumula-se uma série de fatos de que o negócio é diferente para uso interno do governo.


O Gabinete de Segurança Institucional da presidência da República, segundo o GLOBO, prepara norma que permitirá ao governo processar servidores públicos pelo que eles publicarem nas redes sociais em sua vida privada. Minuta da norma diz que servidores e prestadores de serviços devem compreender “que suas atividades nas redes podem impactar a imagem da organização”.


O servidor público federal poderá ser processado desde que os atos ou comportamentos praticados nas redes guardem “relação direta ou indireta com o cargo que ocupa, com suas atribuições ou com a instituição à qual esteja vinculado”. Na mesma linha, a Controladoria Geral da República baixou uma norma em que defende a punição do servidor que critique o governo nas redes.


Se o fizer, de acordo com a norma, ele terá descumprido o “dever de lealdade”, uma vez que o que disse atingiu a imagem e feriu a credibilidade da instituição que integra. Em meados do mês passado, servidores do Ministério da Saúde foram obrigados a assinar um documento em que se tornam sujeitos à Lei de Segurança Nacional caso vazem informações sensíveis.


O ministro André Mendonça jura que não sabia que a Secretaria de Operações Integradas do Ministério da Justiça monitora 579 funcionários públicos federais da área de segurança que se declararam antifascistas nas redes sociais. Não soube explicar, ou então não lhe perguntaram, por que a secretaria não faz a mesma coisa com funcionários públicos federais fascistas.


Mendonça, bom de bico, enrolou, enrolou, e tentou sair de fininho: “Tomei conhecimento desse possível dossiê pela imprensa. [...] É de rotina que se produzam relatórios para se prevenir situações que gerem insegurança para as pessoas, com potenciais de conflito, depredação, atos de violência contra o patrimônio público, então não é uma atividade que surgiu agora".


Dito de outra maneira: liberdade de expressão para servidor público só a favor do governo. Contra, a porta da rua é a serventia da casa.