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The No-State Solution & The Case For Open Borders

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The No-State Solution & The Case For Open Borders

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The No-State Solution & The Case For Open Borders



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In the first half of the show, Eleanor Goldfield speaks with professor and author Mohammed Bamyeh about the no-state solution, an idea rooted in Palestinian and regional history that speaks of legitimate liberation in the face of continued state-imposed oppression and colonialist violence. Mohammed also explains the origins and outgrowth of fundamentalism, and the need to go beyond realism when reality has failed and continues to fail the people. In the second half of the program, Eleanor speaks with journalist and author John Washington about his book, The Case For Open Borders and the historic, economic, political and environmental reasons why and how open borders would not only be possible but beneficial to all. John also highlights the contradictions and hypocrisies of borders, the inefficacy of militarized borders, and the very real effects of the recent Biden administration move to essentially close the border.

 

Video of the Interview with Mohammed Bamyeh

 

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Video of the Interview with John Washington


 

Below is a Rough Transcript of the Interview with Mohammed Bamyeh

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Eleanor Goldfield: Thanks, everyone, for joining us at the Project Censored Radio show. We’re very glad right now to be joined by Professor Mohammed Bamyeh, who’s from the Department of Sociology at the University of Pittsburgh and is the author of Anarchy is Order, the History and Future of Civil Humanity.

Professor, thank you so much for joining us.

Prof. Mohammed Bamyeh: Thank you.

Eleanor Goldfield: So I’d like to start with some history to contextualize the idea of a no-state solution as something that’s not at all alien, particularly for the region in which Palestine is.

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And what struck me when you were talking about it was actually the West African idea of Sankofa, which is the bringing forward of an idea from a people’s own history.

And I was wondering if you could just start by talking a little bit about how the no-state solution is already woven in to the cultural and historical fabric of Palestinians, and also the larger region.

Prof. Mohammed Bamyeh: The Palestinians, as you know, do not have a state of their own. And for a long time, of course, the emancipation of the Palestinians had been conceived or imagined in the form of a state that is independent.

And that is fine, actually, I have no problem with that. And in fact, I have always supported the kind of Palestinian sovereignty, especially if it involves freedom of occupation and ability to determine the future on their own. The fundamental problem is that for most of their histories, Palestinians actually have accommodated themselves to living without a state.

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And they have rebuilt their society in the diaspora after 1948, both in the refugee camps, as well as through organizations that they formed, as well as in civil society that they built across the world, in the diaspora, all of that without a state. Now, Palestinians actually are not alone here because if you look at the entire region of what they call the Middle East, you also see that for most of the history of the region, people have actually also lived without a state, even though when they were governed formally by states, but most social life was actually kind of organized according to traditions that were voluntarily accepted, that were mutually understandable by the people.

And that was also the case in the time of empires. The only exception was in the modern states when they were kind of imposed in the region. And after World War One in particular, and those states were for the most part imposed by colonial powers, they did not emerge out of organic process of state building from below, nor as an outcome of actually people’s desire.

And, those states basically continue to exist until today. They were tolerated for a while in the post independence period because there was a hope that these states were of a modern nature. They would undertake developmental projects that would help people become prosperous, and free and sovereign.

And for a while, for a few decades, that kind of a promise was sort of believed in by many people in the region until we hit the neoliberal era, beginning with the 1990s in some places earlier, where, in fact, states went back to what they had always done historically, which is to do little or nothing for most people.

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And, so essentially, social life continued, basically, to evolve in the Middle East, for the most part, outside of the realm of the state, and independent of the state, and people take care of each other basically through again, traditions of mutual help, conflict management, et cetera, that are known to them at the local level.

So basically from my point of view, and if you link up to the war that’s going on in Gaza, as well as the war in Syria, the war in Libya, et cetera, all these wars that are raging in the region, it becomes clear that the modern state, Israel included, are simply murder machines. They are there to serve themselves as states and their elites and no one else.

And, they go to war against people that they control, or against each other, as a matter of course, because of the way they are designed. They are designed essentially as competitors, ultimately. And, they see each other as such, right? And they see their population also as a threat.

But I don’t mean the population that is only the citizens of those states, but also the population that they control as a whole, basically, right? So in the case of Israel, that would be including the Palestinians, basically, as part of the population that lives also under the control of the state of Israel, and that is considered to be part of the state of Israel, to be an enemy of the state, the whole population.

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 So, when you look at this history, you realize that first, the state and society in the Middle East are two distinct things. They’re often at odds with each other. Genocide, ethnic cleansing is part of the history we’re talking about. And essentially, states are superfluous. I mean, we can live without them. We actually have done that without them. So it’s not as though the idea of the no-state solution is something that is strange and far fetched idea. It actually does represent the historical and the ongoing kind of reality of social organization in the region.

Eleanor Goldfield: Yeah. Thank you so much for that historical context. And I’m curious then, with the idea of a Palestinian state, do you feel that it’s possible to create a Palestinian state that doesn’t fall prey to the same issues that you just mentioned? Or is it impossible because a state as a colonialist and violent construct will always have those problems even if it is created in order to push for the liberation of a Palestinian people?

Prof. Mohammed Bamyeh: If a state, if a Palestinian state comes into existence, I think that would be an improvement over the occupation. So it’s not as though the no state solution is the only solution that would improve the conditions that we have right now. A two state solution would be an improvement over the occupation. A one state solution in Israel Palestine would also be an improvement over the two state solution, because it would not require population movements, it would not require all kinds of unrealistic adjustments to the way people live, and it would be democratic and humane, ultimately.

But neither the two state solution nor the one state solution seem to be practical from today’s point of view or acceptable because of the, not just because of the way the Israeli state itself has been constructed, but also because the international community is not willing actually to exert the kind of political capital and the kind of pressure that will be required to force either of those solutions.

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So, I am actually not opposed to an independent Palestinian state, and I would be happy if that were to happen. I just don’t see this to be a realistic thing. Ultimately it is the Palestinians who have to decide, or who have to be given an opportunity to decide about their future in a sovereign kind of way.

So that’s where I would leave it, and I’m basically putting the no-state solution ultimately as another solution to think about, which is actually in the long run, this is not something that would happen tomorrow, of course, but in the long run would be actually adjustment to the continuous failures of the states as we have experienced them.

Eleanor Goldfield: Yeah. And I’m also curious because you mentioned, of course, the myriad issues with statehood. But you also mentioned the strengthening of the diaspora and the building of identity and Palestinian identity and collective selfhood all done without a state. And very ironically, I have also felt that Jewish identity is similar, that we have a strong identity and a sense of self, not in spite of not having a state prior to 1948, but indeed because we do not.

And now that there is one, in fact, I feel that the Jewish identity is ripping because of it. And you mentioned in a recent presentation that when we emancipate ourselves from this commitment to a national identity, that due to oppression and resistance to it has become our primary defining feature, this is what liberation looks like.

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And I was wondering if you could talk a little bit about how statehood actually deflates and kind of denies a collective selfhood, and a rich culture of multiple identities, and in many ways becomes kind of like a set of collective shackles.

Prof. Mohammed Bamyeh: I think the state especially the state that is based on collective national identity as a stand-in for that national identity rigidifies that identity that makes it a lot more rigid than otherwise it would be.

So if I say that I am a Palestinian or an Arab or a Jew or whatever it is, but I don’t have a state to actually represent, and stand in for that identity, I have a lot more freedom, basically, with that, with where to deposit that identity, hopefully. Of course, the formula is very different when you have a state that says, I represent you as a nation and you owe loyalty to me primarily, and all other potential loyalties, you have to actually get rid of.

And national conflicts emerged out of that kind of that we have constructed ourselves. So in the historical Middle East, you have large Jewish communities throughout the history of the Middle East. In Iraq, in Syria, in Egypt, throughout North Africa, especially Morocco, Algeria, Tunisia, all that, all of those places were full of Jewish communities that lived well with the Muslim majority, right, and had their own rights and they could live according to their own laws, right? None of those people went to Palestine, basically, or to the Holy Land, all these times before 1948, right? Even though there was nothing to prevent them from doing so, ultimately.

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So if you look at the history of coexistence, of various types of communities throughout the region, you notice that actually, the thing that made these relationships kind of war like, basically, was, in fact, the idea that each nation had to create its own exclusive community.

Which meant ethnic cleansing. You have to move people out of the territory, you conclude, or you have to take rights away from them. Of course, that causes unhappiness, problems of security that come out of that, and war. All of that has happened. So I think actually, I don’t have actually a problem with people having any specific identity and be attached to it in particular, so long as there is no power structure that actually deposits that identity into a violent system and puts it in contrast and against other types of identities in the same region.

 This is what we have right now. And this is, in fact, the fundamental factor behind the genocide that is happening in Gaza right now.

Eleanor Goldfield: Yeah, absolutely. I mean, while you were talking, I was thinking a little bit about the Umayyad caliphate in Al Andalus in Southern Spain, which was technically under the yoke of the Abbasids who were then governing from Baghdad.

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But in reality, they had their own form of governance, their own laws. And Jews, Christians and Muslims lived together without a problem basically until Ferdinand and Isabella came to power. And then, what we know as the inquisition and everything kicked off. So, when it was under Muslim control, technically, these people were able to live together without issues. And then as you said it, that you had to create the ‘other’ and you had to create those distinctions.

I want to dig into something that you’ve also discussed and I really liked the way that you framed this, what you call ‘organic anarchism,’ an anarchist method of rebellion that seems to be ingrained in familiar social traditions.

Could you talk a little bit about that? This organic anarchism, because anarchy is something that you’ve also discussed and how this moves itself towards a no-state solution and how this has shown itself to work within Palestinian communities.

Prof. Mohammed Bamyeh: When I began to think about what became my book, Anarchy as Order, actually, I sketched, there are two types of anarchy.

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The one was the self conscious anarchism, the anarchist movement that begins with the Enlightenment, in fact, Enlightenment thought, and becomes an organized movement in Europe as of the mid 19th century, and continues to be with us until today, ultimately, self conscious anarchism.

But I thought actually there is a larger global history of anarchism, that has little to do with the self conscious anarchism, and namely that is the large cluster of autonomous, self-organized societies that live underneath the state, but they have their own systems.

And this is something that my book actually tried to document historically that I talk about, not only in terms of social organizations, historically, before colonialism in particular, but also in terms of social philosophies that you see in the Muslim world. I mean, political philosophies that you see in the Muslim world, in the Hindu world, also in medieval Europe.

You even see it in Machiavelli as well, by the way, where the fundamental point is that state and society have nothing to do with each other. That the state has its own logic, its own kind of way of thinking, its own systems of management and rule. And society has its own kind of ways of organizing itself.

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That is something that you see across all these political philosophies across the world as well. That reflect, in fact, the awareness of historical political philosophers across various civilizations of the fact that society has its own kind of organization model and the state has its own mind, so to speak, right.

And that is where the idea of organic anarchism kind of comes in. The anarchism that is done by millions of people who actually have not read any books about anarchism, they may not even know what the term means, right? But practically, their life is organized around mutual help, basically, solidarity, known conflict management solutions.

Typically, they have very little in the way of prisons, for example, of coercive apparatuses. These are used by the state, but not really by society. And you see it in 2011 and 2019 in the Arab world, in the Arab uprising movements, where, in fact, you have revolutions of a new kind that had no leadership, that had no organization behind them and that seemed to nonetheless, be able to mobilize millions of people.

And that, in my analysis, of course, of that style of the revolution comes out of already known way of mobilizing and spontaneous action and so on, and that was, relatively speaking, a new way that was reawakened, familiar social traditions and mobilized them in a revolutionary direction.

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So we haven’t had that actually before, where this organic anarchism that I’m talking about actually becoming an incendiary material for revolution, that is relatively new. And that is the era I think we are going because if you look at other kind of protest movements around the world since 2011, you also see similar features.

They may be smaller in other parts of the world, but they have the same features like the loose network of activists, not centrally organized, being an art of movement. They speak in the name of the people as a whole or the 99% or something like that. But not in the name of something like the working class or any specific group, so to speak, right?

So organic anarchism is part of social traditions everywhere, historically speaking, right? And right now, it’s being reawakened, I think, right? That is, it is not called anarchism, right, by the people who actually do it, but it does have clearly a lot of similarity to what the philosophical kind of self conscious anarchist tradition does say.

And one more point about this is that when we talk about organic anarchism, I think it is in the minds of most people who may describe as such, it is mixed in with other elements, so it’s not as though this is actually pure ideology, so to speak, right? And that is, for example, you have lots of people in Egypt, for example, or Tunisia, who actually do rely on each other, live a pattern of everyday life that may be organically anarchist.

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But also, at other points, they may have no problem with something that we call enlightened despotism, for example, of someone who comes in and promises to help solve problems is perhaps given a chance to do so. So when talking about organic archism, we’re also talking about social ideology that is also mixed with other ideology in the same mind, so to speak. Over time of course, the difference between these different types of thinking about governing a social life become more and more distinct from each other with experience.

Eleanor Goldfield: Absolutely. Thank you for that. And I’m curious how you would see, for instance, the Intifadas. Would you see those as an example of organic anarchism?

Prof. Mohammed Bamyeh: Exactly. Yeah. I talk about especially the first Intifada as a good example of that. And it is actually the first, and especially in the larger Middle Eastern history of an event like that.

You had, of course, Palestinian resistance movement that was organized and happened before 1987 when the intifada broke, but the first intifada was, had the same characteristic that you see in 2011, namely it has a spontaneous character, it was collective, it did not have, at the beginning at least, did not really have leadership behind it. It happened at a time when the PLO was very weak at that time, was sitting in exile in Tunisia that had very little effect on anything that was happening in Palestine.

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The Arab world had forgotten about Palestine, but at that point as well, it was busy with the Iran-Iraq war. That was the main concern for all our governments at that point. So the Palestinians felt abandoned completely at that point, and weak.

And precisely at that point you have this organic anarchist social capital, right, exploding in the form of a revolution, that we call the intifada. And so the advantage, I think, right, of this organic anarchist culture is that it provides a way for people to mobilize with each other using social traditions, and at times when their social, or when their organizations are weak, when their leadership is absent or irrelevant, but their grievances are still there. So actually, they have to do something. And they do it with the help of whatever cultural resources that happen to be available to them. And that has happened earlier, of course, in Palestinian history, not in the form of intifada, but in forms of actually maintaining Palestinian alive and well connected.

Eleanor Goldfield: Yeah, absolutely. Thank you. And I want to dig into something also that you had spoken about in a previous presentation, which is the idea of religiosity. And you’d spoken before about what we call here fundamentalist Islam being an outgrowth of colonialist violence, basically, that it’s not something that comes from these organic, shared social and communal traditions.

And in that sense, to me it felt a bit like how we talk about how the US is responsible basically for the creation of ISIS, or the US’ strong ties to Wahhabism in Saudi Arabia, not least of all having Osama Bin Laden on the CIA’s payroll.

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Could you talk a little bit more about how these fundamentalist movements are actually outgrowths of that colonialist violence?

Prof. Mohammed Bamyeh: There are different origins of fundamentalisms. So it’s not actually all the same thing. So part of it has to do with, with the kind of fundamentalism that you see first established in a place like Saudi Arabia. And that fundamentalism was part of the state building project in a place like Saudi Arabia, where it had to be imposed by force. That is fundamentalism, the Wahhabism and the Wahhabi version of it always relied on state force to impose it on the population. It was not something that people believed voluntarily.

Of course, every time you see a phenomenon like that, a type, a variety of religion that requires force to be imposed, you know that it is weakly rooted in society. Otherwise, force would not be necessary.

Later on, you have another variety of fundamentalism that comes from the ground up. That is not necessarily related to a state, but actually often is an opposition to the state. And that is something that you see when you have social problems or political problems that persist and no one is resolving them. For example, Hamas. In 1948, there was no Hamas. In 1967, there was no Hamas either.

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It took 40 years, right? Of basically constant repression of the Palestinians for something like Hamas to emerge and say, Okay, well, these secular forces have not resolved your problem, right? So here is one force within your tradition that could help you. So fundamentalism or what we call fundamentalism actually is not a natural outgrowth of any, especially when it comes from below, it is not really something that simply bursts out without lots of social problems that no one else have been able to actually deal with.

And elsewhere in the region, you see that as well. So basically, the post independence period in most a countries, there was actually no fundamentalism anywhere.

The post-colonial elite, both political and cultural elite were entirely secular up until the late seventies, right. Then of course in 1979, you have the Iran Revolution which is impressive to a lot of people because that is the first time where Islam actually is mobilized in a revolutionary direction.

 And a lot of people who were before that were secular and had no connection to religion begin to think that maybe religion actually is our way out of this mess. For example, the founder of the Islamic jihad in Gaza, in 1979, actually was a Nasserite Pan Arabist nationalist.

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He had no connection to Islam at all, but then he saw many being successful in Iran and said, well, this could work. So fundamentalism often emerges out of this pragmatic kind of search for solutions, an experimental way, basically, right? Until, of course, the fundamentalist solution itself fails, in which case it to another type of ideology. So long as the problem is there and requires to be solved by someone who can promise to have an effective way of doing that.

There’s an older kind of version of everything that I just described, that is, in the early phases of colonialism in the Middle East, there was a debate in Arab intellectual circles about what caused our say, as they call it, backwardness. So the secular nationalist would say it was colonialism. Colonialism is the problem, and we had to fight colonialism. Those who are more religious argued, no, the problem is Colonialism came to us because we were weak, and we became weak because we had abandoned our tradition, and therefore we have to go back and strengthen ourselves through our traditions, and that is how you get rid of fundamentalism, by reawakening your culture.

And that debate continues until today, practically. So in a way, it is not as though fundamentalism, in either case, was the only kind of answer there, but it is one of the range of possible kind of answers to persisting problems, right?

Eleanor Goldfield: Yeah. And I mean, what you’re describing sounds a lot like what we see here in the US, the Christian fundamentalists who say, we have to go back to this past where, you know, we have these problems because we’ve strayed from the path. It seems like it’s the same script.

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So, wrapping up here, Mohammed, I’d really like to talk to you about your perspectives on reality and realism, because I found that to be a really fascinating and important argument that you made that when realism as a perspective is useless and when reality is unacceptable, you have to go beyond.

And I’m curious here also about the conversation about utopia because utopia literally translates to no place. And I’ve often felt that aiming for a utopia is largely a pointless endeavor, but rather to imagine worlds that not only can exist, but perhaps already do and have existed. So could you talk a little bit about that? That argument that you’ve made about realism and reality and going beyond.

Prof. Mohammed Bamyeh: Yeah, sure. I think that’s an important point because the problem that we have in Israel Palestine is because the realist solutions are not working and they cannot work. There’s a lot of history behind why they cannot work.

Now that means actually this reality that’s producing genocide today is unacceptable. And that the realists, meaning that the diplomats, those who think within the parameters of the states actually have become useless people. Now, so that means that we have to actually look beyond reality, and we have to look at historical examples where we have all kinds of revolutions, the Bolsheviks, Khomeini, etc, the Palestinian resistance movement itself, all of which were kind of undertaken by unrealistic people.

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Why do the weak attack the strong? That happens, of course, but it is also unrealistic from the point of view of those who highlight realism, but that is how revolutions happen, by people who actually do not know whether they have a chance of success or not, but they have to act.

And, much of grand historical change has happened that way, not by realistic people, but by people who had no connection to realism at all and rejected it. That does not mean that the result is always great. In fact, a lot of damage, of course, could result from actually ignoring realism. But from a sociological point of view, I think what matters more is not the result, but analyzing the situation to answer, say, actually in our history, and the global revolutionary history in particular, lack of realism has been an important kind of motivating factor. More so were will and vitality, rejecting reality altogether because it is not working, that simply be a lot more important than having actually a clear plan and realistic mindset.

And so that’s, and that’s where we are now. Because ultimately, if you look at the fact, at what is happening in Gaza right now, we see a reality that is completely unacceptable.

And we see actually that people who are trying to think of a realistic way to solve that problem are themselves unable to do anything about it. So that is an opportunity, I think, to think beyond the limits of what exists because what exists is unhelpful, basically, and not only unhelpful, but it’s also genocidal and criminal, right.

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And so that is where and part, of course, of the way of thinking beyond reality and realism is the no-state solution, in my mind. Because that is really the kind of a time when one has to think about something beyond what is possible.

Now, I don’t actually, I do not want to present any of this as utopia. Because I don’t think actually utopia is something that we can arrive at, but we actually need to understand, I think, the captivating power of the utopian imagination. People go to revolutions en masse in 2011, 2019, which are events that I have observed firsthand, because they have a utopian imagination.

And that is, they don’t have a plan, they don’t know if the revolution is going to work, but they go into the revolution, and within that revolution, they have a utopian experience, that it is actually the kind of camaraderie and solidarity and friendliness that they experience the revolution, perhaps, is the way future society is going to be after the revolution.

That is what moves people. So, it’s not as though what I’m describing here is going to lead to utopia. I think it would lead to a much better reality than we have right now, but it is not utopia. On the other hand, people who actually do reject reality and realism do often actually have this utopian impulse that keep them going, and that is important enough for the Revolutionary Act.

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Eleanor Goldfield: So it’s kind of like a utopian hope that’s the fuel, if not the goal.

Well, Mohammed Bamyeh, thank you so much for taking the time to sit down with us and lay out all of this important context and all of these ideas. Again, Mohammed Bamyeh is from the Department of Sociology at the University of Pittsburgh and is the author of Anarchy as Order: the History and Future of Civil Humanity.

Mohammed, thank you again so much for joining us on the show.““

Prof. Mohammed Bamyeh: Thank you.

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Below is a Rough Transcript of the Interview with John Washington

Please consider supporting our work at Patreon.com/ProjectCensored

Eleanor Goldfield: Thanks, everyone, for joining us at the Project Censored Radio show. We’re very glad to welcome to the show John Washington, who is a staff writer at Arizona Luminaria, a community focused media outlet where he writes about the border, climate change, democracy and more.

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He’s written for the New York Times, the New York Review of Books, The Atlantic, The Washington Post, The Nation, and others. And his most recent book is called The Case for Open Borders, and you can find his other writings at substack at johnwashington. substack. com.

John, thanks so much for joining us.

John Washington: Thanks for having me.

Eleanor Goldfield: Absolutely. So, I must congratulate you on, not just a really powerful book in terms of the research, but a really beautifully written book. I feel like sometimes, so often, books that are so stacked with information can feel like you’re reading Encyclopedia Britannica, but that was not the case at all.

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And, I mean, there are so many threads that I could pull on, but I want to start with the framing here and the conversation of borders being synonymous not only with violence, which we’ll talk about in a bit, but also a violent history and present of colonialism and of nation state building. And therefore with the inherent hypocrisy and arbitrariness in aid of that colonial nation state.

For instance, many tend to think of borders as these stagnant things that never move. And yet, as you write in the book, “the border can be moved to ensure its immovability. It can be violated to prove its inviolability. It can be crossed to prove its uncrossability.” And I think that that’s just such a beautiful way of succinctly highlighting the contradictions of the border. Could you talk a little bit more about what you mean by what you wrote there?

John Washington: I mean, I think there’s a number of inherent paradoxes in bordering.

We could list a bunch of them. You know, one is that the very idea of closing down a border or criminalizing border crossing, what it does is creates a crime. That crime would not exist if we didn’t look at human mobility the way that we do, which is as if it’s a problem, when we know that it’s not only inherent to our species, but it is a necessary means of survival.

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A couple other paradoxes include the fact that people know that we need migrants. Just stick with the United States right now. There are really serious shortages in various sectors of the economy. Corporations, CEOs, politicians who are in the pocket of a lot of those corporations, they too know that our country, our economy, heavily relies and increasingly relies on relatively cheap labor, on new shots, new influxes of labor. And we know that if we actually do what now more and more politicians are saying, deport all of the undocumented people, close down the border, limit the both legal and quote unquote illegal migration, we can talk about why I’m putting scare quotes there, that it would tank the economy. It would be terrible. We know that.

And yet, we play this bizarre game where, especially politicians, where anti immigrant or immigrant restrictionists are speaking out of both sides of their mouth and say, We need to shut down the border, but we need people to get across the border.

It’s like, wait, what? You actually can’t have it both ways. And yet the border is having it both ways because what the border actually does is, you know, speaking in real terms, it kills people along the line who are trying to cross it or makes their lives much more difficult, makes the crossings much more dangerous, makes them suffer more as they try to cross it, and it immiserates people on both sides of the line.

So the people who have crossed, are not granted work papers or work authorization, they are subject to exploitation, lower wages, less worker protections. The people on the other side are stuck, again, sticking with U.S. Mexico. They’re stuck in very precarious labor situations, very precarious just existential situations. And they also are making less money, they’re being paid less for the same work that they would be doing on this side of the line. And they have less worker protections, less worker safety rights, all these things, they’re unionized at less rates. So the border doesn’t protect, just talk to an economist, the border doesn’t protect one side from the other.

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What it does is it creates the gaps that then push people from one side to the other. You know, the paradoxes just accelerate from here. So when I was writing that specific line, I think I was referencing, if I remember right, I was referencing that the border is malleable. We decide to enforce the border in different ways at different times.

We actually position the border in different places at different times. For the last number of years, number of decades, we have all grown accustomed to the United States, the border following the logo map of the United States. But you start peeling back decades before that, and the border line was changing dramatically.

And now, too, not in strictly juridical terms, but the border is still very much moving. We are co opting Mexico, other countries in Central America, to enforce what is essentially our border further and further south. This is happening in the EU too. No longer is it just the Mediterranean coastline or, you know, the Greek Turkish border or the Eastern European borders.

But you see that Frontex is, and even individual European countries, are pushing the border down by co opting Libyan Coast Guard, then Nigerian and Nigerian Border Patrol agents. And so you see that the border does actually move.

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And one more really concrete example here that is just, I think, so illuminating is I spoke or wrote at relative length at in the book about Australia, they actually decided to cut off a island that was part of the national territory of Australia, because asylum seekers were able to access it more easily.

It was a thousand miles off the coast of Australia. You know, through the logic of colonialism, they somehow claimed it was their own and migrants started showing up there and they’re like, well, what do we do? We have to legally process these people. Now, what do we do? How do we deal with it?

Like, oh, maybe we should just pretend that that’s no longer Australian territory. How convenient. And so, what they were doing by changing the actual borderline is trying to protect the border. So, yeah, paradoxes abound about bordering.

Eleanor Goldfield: Yeah, that example about Australia in the book is just so like, wow, you’re really proving the point here.

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And I want to get to the psychology of this, because you go into this as well, that what borders, especially militarized borders speak of with regards to what’s on the inside of them, and you write, “a border wall or a border gate reveals a nationalist fiction based on a mythologically constructed present and an often apocryphal past more than any geographic, cultural or political truth.”

So really, it seems that the borders, while a very physical aspect, it’s really a psychological aspect. And so when we’re talking about the case for open borders, it seems that you first have to break down a mythology, which is certainly not an easy task, I would say.

Could you talk a little bit more about this, like the psychology and the mythology of borders that we really latch on to?

John Washington: Yeah. I think an easy way of understanding the problem here is a quip that often gets used to defend borders. People say something like, well, you lock your doors at night, so wouldn’t you want to close your border to protect people from coming in? Because this is our little private sacred space, whatever, this is our home, and if people come in, it could be a problem for you. So we should lock our doors.

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Okay, that analogy breaks down for a lot of reasons. One, I actually addressed this in the book, like, comparing a nation state to a individual private home doesn’t make any sense. But there’s one other, I think, really crucial way that this analogy falls apart, and it is that, okay, probably if you’re a homeowner, you paid for your home, or are still paying for your home. You took out, you know, a mortgage, you’re paying the bank, or maybe you were able to buy it straight up. That was a legal process involving two consenting parties. That is not the way that borders are drawn. That is not the way that nation states, modern nation states have been created.

So if we were to actually analogize how nation states were created into a home, it would be like, these people burst into this house, evicted the people who were living there, tore it to pieces, completely remodeled it, and then put new locks on the door.

So is it just ethically, or from a moral perspective, or from a legal perspective, do you have the right to live in that home and block people from coming in? I don’t think you do. I mean, I don’t think anyone would really think you do. And that is the way that borders actually work.

And you need to break down the mythology. There’s obviously a pretty simplistic analogy there, but think about how borders were created, and when we hark back to, oh, you know, it didn’t used to be like this. Well, that also, I think is fault tripping into some sort of historical amnesia, but also just trying to understand how these borders were created.

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Like, the United States Mexico border, people came in and there was genocide that took place and was how now the United States is able to claim these territories for their own. They literally slaughtered and tried to put an end to multiple cultures. Then they, at gunpoint, stole land from another nation state, Mexico, and, now erected these borders. So, like, harking back to this idea of this pristine recent past is just blinding yourselves to a really bloody history.

I try not to only focus on the United States in the book because a lot of other borders are really telling and I think really important to understand, and I think maybe in fact, the Fortress of Europe is maybe one of the most important borders of the world right now.

There, too, is the same thing. It’s like, how were these borders drawn? How were these territories claimed by the people who now supposedly have control over them? It’s a very similar history. And then you look into different parts of the world and you notice that, well, in Africa, I think, I can’t remember the number right now, it’s like 80 percent of the African countries have straight lines as borders.

And it’s like, do you think that actually complied or represented the divisions of cultures? No, it didn’t. And like I said, because those cultures and many indigenous cultures throughout the world did not have exclusive lines of control. I’m not saying that it was a heyday. I mean, it’s not like there was no war and no incursions and no attempts at territorial conquest.

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But there was something very different along the edges of control, and it wasn’t exclusive militarized bordering, which cements some of those problematic pasts. Like, I think that actually some versions of tribalism that was prevalent throughout the globe are not the way forward and we shouldn’t be returning to that past before borders either but bordering actually exacerbates that tribalist mindset.

And so we need to be advancing beyond this idea of supposed ethnic exclusionary communities which are not realistic and never really have been, and thinking about actually a way that people can move about the globe or the world or whatever part of it in a safe, orderly, humane way.

Eleanor Goldfield: Yeah, absolutely.

And I’m glad that you mentioned the Europe border because it highlights another aspect, which is that Africa has been for quite some time, the colonialist playground of Europe, just as South and Central America is, thanks to the Monroe Doctrine, is the colonialist playground of the United States.

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And where do you see that migration coming from? Places that have been destroyed by these colonialist and imperialist policies. Well, maybe if you were less of the colonialist imperialist superpower, you wouldn’t have this problem.

John Washington: Yeah, I mean, and it’s ongoing too, of course. And neocolonialism or the shades of colonialism today are still uprooting people.

This isn’t something from the past either. And, even the proffered solutions, a lot of times…there was a much ridiculed proposal, I think it was an early Biden administration that they would inject all this money into Central America. There was like a number of different proposals. Actually, Biden was involved with it under the Obama administration as well. It was going to be a billion dollars of development aid. Then it was gonna be half a billion and not very much of it actually went through.

But that too, the way that it is designed or where that money is going to land, I mean, the legacy of Corporate extractivism in Central America has been a huge driver of immigration, so this is not going to stabilize the region and keep people at home in supposedly the way that it’s intended.

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And in fact, actually, even more intentioned development aid, let’s say it wasn’t given to corrupt government officials or corporate CEOs who were just going to basically institute more peonage in like the banana orchards or whatever. Actually, that too is probably going to spark migration.

There’s some really interesting studies showing that there is sort of a sweet spot for migration, and people from the most poor countries, the most undeveloped countries, they aren’t the ones who normally migrate. It’s more once people start achieving a certain level of economic stability they can actually afford to migrate and more people start leaving the country.

Should we not help these countries because we have laid waste to them in many regards economically and culturally so maybe we should be giving some form of like reparations, I think, is the better way of framing it instead of development aid.

But you have to also realize the consequences there, like true reparations and truly helping some of these countries grow their economies a little bit, or helping them cull their way out of just absolute abject poverty might actually spur migration, more migration.

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So we have to be ready for that and blocking them off, like letting them achieve a level of economic stability and so they can move and then block them off is actually, like again, another paradox that we see. It’s like, this is why, as we do all of the reparations necessary, as we try to tackle climate change and all these other factors that are making people move, we actually have to open borders, otherwise people are just going to be moving and they’re not going to have anywhere to land.

Eleanor Goldfield: Yeah, absolutely. And while you were talking, I was thinking about the intentionality here. And I recently read, following Biden’s not very shocking, but disgusting announcement about essentially closing the border to asylum seekers. There was an article in the Intercept that covered how this is a very Democrat thing to do.

And in 1994, at the very same time that then President Bill Clinton signed NAFTA, the Army Corps of Engineers began to fence the US Mexico border. And so it’s like, there’s this understanding that like, hey, we’re going to do this thing that is going to be very, very bad for the people that are involved in it. And they’re going to try to move because of it. And we have to make sure that they can’t. And so there’s this very clear understanding of how those borders work from the people who write these policies at times.

And I wanted to get into a little bit about migrants specifically because what you also highlight in the book is how much of a toss up this is in terms of who’s deemed unworthy or worthy, and at times how that’s often based on the need for labor or the fear that jobs will be, you know, swept up by the invading hordes.

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And something that I think is such a perfect example of this hypocrisy and the arbitrariness, is what you write about in the book, about the policy change with regards to Chinese migration.

Could you talk a little bit more about that 180, and how this selective othering also speaks to that nonsensical nature of these borders?

John Washington: Yeah, thanks for bringing up the Intercept article. That’s by Natasha Leonard, a friend of mine and a great writer, and people should go check it out. I can’t remember the title of it now, but it’s a good recent article. Just came out after Biden’s executive order, which is a moral disaster and will result in two really clear things, if it continues in effect. I mean, there’s a good chance that it’s going to be enjoined by the courts. We’ll see.

But it’s going to result in more people taking more dangerous journeys because they do not have access to safe or legal migration, and it’s going to result in family separations. And this is a thing that I think has gotten a little bit less attention, but it’s something I’ve been concentrating on the past year, ongoing reporting about family separations, and there is an exception in the new executive order that unaccompanied minors may still cross, but only them.

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And there are, of course, still migrants who are young or under 18 who are migrating all the way from their home countries to the United States alone. But most young kids are traveling with their parents or their family members. And I have seen this firsthand where because of these policies, because of the extremely long waits to do it in a supposedly what is deemed like the right way, which still takes months and still these people and leaves people in incredibly precarious places in northern Mexico, family members or parents decide to send their kids on alone.

 This is a coerced family separation. I witnessed late last year, a mom say goodbye to her two teenage children in northern Mexico. They had been waiting for months. They hadn’t gone to school in over a year. She was scared because of the security situation there. She saw no hope in actually being able to do it legally. Her home was impossible to live in. And she said goodbye to her two children and they crossed the border alone. We’re going to see more of this under this new executive order. That was a distraction from your question, but –

Eleanor Goldfield: Not at all. I’m so glad that you brought that up.

Even though, especially as a mother, I have a hard time with that. But I think it’s so important that you highlight that because I think that sometimes gets lost in people talking about, like, well, it can’t pass 1500. It’s like, we get lost in the kind of numbers game and forget that, like, this is somebody being torn apart from their children, which is absolutely…

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John Washington: Yeah. You know, Biden put out a tweet a day or so after the executive order last week, and he said, he was sort of trying to stand on principle, saying like, you know, I’m doing this supposedly to make the border more secure, or it’s not inhumane. And he said, here’s what I won’t do. I will not separate children. Again, we are dealing with one of these just, paradox isn’t the right word, just hypocrisies of the way that bordering happens, is, you can say that, but you’re also not stupid. I mean, whatever, people can argue otherwise, but you have teams, legions of policy makers who understand how this works.

They know. They know that people are going to be separated from their children. They absolutely know. You can say otherwise, but you have to look at the effects. You have to understand that this will result in death, and we know it because of ongoing and recent and now decades of evidence. So, they’re not stupid.

They know what is going to happen. They know that children are going to be removed, maybe permanently, from their family members, from their parents. And they know, psychologically, that that is going to have a devastating, lifelong effect.

You told me not to drop F bombs, so I, I swallowed one there.

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Eleanor Goldfield: This is, this is so much of my life on this show. It’s trying not to yell the F word very loudly. But I think that that also, that inhumanity there shows that part of this bordering project is to dictate who is a human, who is not. Necropolitics basically, like who deserves to live and who do we not care about?

And as you pointed out in your book, this has been kind of just like a whack a mole policy since the advent of the United States, like, who’s allowed: Jews, Irish, Italians, people from Central and South America, Chinese, it’s just so arbitrary and indeed fluid, a bit like borders.

John Washington: Yeah, so to go back to your question about the head-spinning, neck-snapping 180, multiple 180s about Chinese migration in the 19th century. So there was the Burlingame Treaty, which I think was 1868. Interesting era, a lot was happening in the United States at the time. If people forget, go look it up. 1860s Ameriaca.

And there was also amidst the fallout from a brutal civil war and manumission, there was a huge building boom and construction boom and the railroad, construction of the transcontinental railroad. And, Chinese laborers were able to get to the west coast of the United States in many regards more easily than people migrating slowly across land from the east coast.

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And they were welcomed because they were ready workers. The Burlingame Treaty, looking at the actual language is amazing. It’s like the mutual benefit, I don’t have it in exactly my head, but it’s like the mutual and beneficial exchange of labor, the friendship between our two nations and the celebration of open migration.

It was like, wow. This was like an open borders celebratIon. And a few years later, early 1880s, there was the Page Act, which was like the 1st federal immigration policy that was implemented and it was specifically targeting Chinese women. Following very quickly on the heels of that, there was a number of other, like a slate of anti Chinese, specifically anti Chinese legislation, which are collectively known as the Chinese Exclusion Acts.

And this was the first time that the federal government was taking from the states the power to enforce immigration. Before that it was the state’s rights. Again, thinking of the era, what did that imply? And this comes out of a brutal history. So it’s not just the language that sort of was overlapping here about the contention between states and federal rights.

But the reason that the federal government before that had allowed the states to enforce immigration, and they did. It was not complete open borders world that we were living in or open borders country that we’re living in was because in large part the same reason that states wanted to have their own rights. Because when an enslaved person was leaving a slave state, they wanted to be able to go and get that person.

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And so, we saw the rise of basically proto immigration laws with the Fugitive Slave Acts. But the states were worried that if the federal government had full control over immigration authority, they would not enforce some of those laws, or they would not comply with, because the northern states and whatever, their very wishy washy stance towards abolitionism.

They were worried that the states would not comply with returning their property there, which is an enslaved person. Also, some of the northern states, New York and Massachusetts, they were enacting deportation policies and even immigration policies in the early years of the Republic, early decades of the Republic.

But finally, when we had finished the transcontinental railroad, put in the golden spike or whatever, and they’re like, you know what, actually, we don’t need so many Chinese laborers. There’s also a number of, again, with the fallout of the war, there’s a number of economic depressions at the time so like, you know what, maybe we need to stop letting in more Chinese folks.

So first Chinese women and then Chinese people. And they were excluded until the 1940s. So Chinese exclusion laws were officially on the books until the 1940s. And then a number of really, really just, abysmal Supreme Court decisions cemented this authority of the federal government to enforce immigration law.

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This is pertinent right now. So let’s fast forward into the 2020s when supposedly Texas Governor Greg Abbott is having these standoffs with the feds in Eagle Pass, in some parks along the border in Texas, saying like, I’m going to block off Immigration agents, federal immigration agents from accessing the water.

Some people actually drowned and died because they weren’t given access to federal immigration agents. The Biden administration, meanwhile, is pushing back and saying, Oh, Abbott’s the bad guy. He’s not treating migrants right. It’s our authority to enforce immigration policy.

These are not two sides to the issue. This is really important to understand. The government, the federal government is not on one side, and Texas, and now probably Arizona, are not on the other side. They are on the same side. They are vying for control to enforce and expel and block migrants. There is not one party who is in favor of migrants here.

They’re both trying to keep them out and push them out. And the federal government is claiming the authority to do so based on those Supreme Court decisions allowing explicitly racist anti Chinese policies to go into effect. That is where the Biden administration is citing those cases right now.

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 They’re not our saviors in Texas to come in and push back at it. They’re trying to do it themselves. But yeah, so just to put the final point on your original question, it’s so transparent. I mean, it’s clearly transparent. How can you go from celebrating the mutual exchange of labor and this policy of friendship between two nations to a decade later a complete ban on folks from trying to come in? Oh, it’s just about labor. Just stop.

Eleanor Goldfield: Yeah. I mean, capitalism. And with that, I want to shift to one of the arguments that you make because in the book, there are powerful arguments for opening borders based on history and economics, which you touched on a bit, but I really appreciate that you bring into the spotlight the environmental argument and make a powerful case that rather than a militarized border saving us from the fallout of climate catastrophe, it actually blinds us to it and worsens it.

Could you talk a little bit more about that aspect?

John Washington: Yeah, so this is my favorite stat, as in my least favorite, that in a very recent five year period, the United States spent 11 times more on border enforcement than it did on climate change mitigation. Enforcing the border doesn’t affect climate change, actually has nothing to do with climate change. So knowing that vast swaths of the globe are being rendered uninhabitable, you aren’t going to fix that by erecting a higher wall.

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And here’s one other point that is not exactly relevant to the environmental argument, is that one of the things I looked at in the book too is that we have decades upon decades of evidence showing that walls don’t work, that people get through that immigration enforcement, the most draconian immigration enforcement, doesn’t work.

Doesn’t work in the United States, doesn’t work in Europe, doesn’t work anywhere. It changes the way people migrate a little bit, it makes it harder, it makes it more deadly, but it doesn’t stop people. So, your wall isn’t going to stop the people who are fleeing climate change from coming. So, you can either address the underlying cause, or you can not stop them from coming, but spend billions of dollars trying.

Like, again, people know this. This isn’t a revelation that I am exposing. People who study this, people who enact these policies know this. So I think it is a real problem. We don’t know the numbers of what it will look like, but all forecasts point to doubling, tripling, quadrupling of the current population who are forcibly uprooted, and you know, those numbers reach a quarter billion, a half a billion in the next decade or so. We’re looking at orders of magnitude more people who can’t live where they’re living. And they’re going to move, absolutely. And so we need to think about how to respond to them.

And as I just said, like trying to wall them off doesn’t work. And let’s say it did, like, let’s just play this out for a second. What is your end game? Okay. Let’s say walls did work. So let’s look at the country of Honduras or Guatemala, which they have faced devastating hurricanes. There’s two that hit in just recent years, back to back, basically. Decade long drought. Let’s say you could wall them off. Is this what we’re agreeing to? That we’re just going to wall off a population of people in an unlivable territory and just let them slowly die there? How is this a legitimate policy that people are agreeing to?

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I think that you have to understand that people are going to move and you have to understand that much of the world is going to be different than it is right now in coming decades because of climate change. Let’s come to terms with that. And let’s think about a mutually beneficial way of dealing with it because it benefits us none either. And we’re not immune to the effects of climate change.

People in the Western world, people in the United States are paying out trillions of dollars in climate related disasters. They are themselves uprooted in the millions, you know, mostly temporarily, but not only.

There’s one other, I think, important point here that goes to the way that we think about borders and the way that we think about the environment. And it’s something that’s sort of increasingly dear to my heart. I’ve been doing a lot of reporting on jaguars in Arizona, where I am now, and in Northern Mexico. I’m working on a long piece right now. I spent some time in a jaguar reserve in Southern Sonora. And jaguars, they evolved in the area exactly where I am right now, in Southern Arizona and Southern New Mexico.

This is the original place where the species developed and then migrated south they found that they had abundant prey and they proliferated there. We have been, a number of environmental organizations have been trying to reintroduce or think about reintroducing jaguars or letting them roam north from Mexico. We have currently in arizona, one maybe two jaguars, wild male jaguars that are roaming here. This is a beautiful apex species, predator species that is incredibly important for our ecosystems.

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We know now that if you do not have an apex predator in an ecosystem, the entire ecosystem falters. We see this in Yellowstone with the wolves. We see this in Arizona with the jaguars. If we could finish the wall, most of Arizona is now walled. There are lots of gaps. So there’s 40 some gaps in the wall and species, especially the ones who can’t fly are able to walk through those.

If we wall off Arizona from Sonora, jaguars will not be able to survive. They need the room to roam. They need the genetic diversity that would happen if they had that extra space. So what we’re doing is we are accepting the fact that we will never have a Jaguar population again and in the United States. And that has effects on, as I’m just saying, not only on the ecosystem, but on humans. To think that we are removed from our natural environment is why we got into this problem in the first place with climate change.

No, we are going to see the effects of this. Maybe they’re not going to be as, I don’t know, cataclysmic as what’s going right now with climate change. But it does affect us. And to think that we can just like, oh, we’ll just take that as a loss and just like carry on. No, we have to think about what walling off our country is going to do to the environment.

It’s going to have enormous effect. It is already having enormous effects.

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Eleanor Goldfield: Yeah. And I appreciate that because as you said, we are not separate from nature, we’re a part of it. And if these animals have a right and an ecological, like evolutionary need to move, so do we. And as you write in the book to try to stop humans from moving is to try to stop humans from being humans.

And I think, kind of wrapping up here, I want to, I know that we’ve talked about some history and we’ve talked about some present, but I think it’s important to highlight how recent some of this is.

As you point out in the book before the 1990s, there was almost no physical infrastructure along the U S Mexico borderline. ICE was founded in 2003. And you also write that there are more closed borders today than at any other time in human history.

And so wrapping up here, John, I know that it looks bleak, I have to say. Things have gotten worse very quickly, domestically and globally. And there’s that case for open borders, which is to me, it’s kind of like earlier in the same show this week, I spoke with Mohammed Bamyeh about the no-state solution in Palestine, and one of the things he says is that when reality and realism are unacceptable, you have to go beyond.

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And it feels to me like the case for open borders is that. The reality of this situation is so unacceptable, we must think of something beyond what we have. And so that is that beyond.

And also, in the here and now, what kind of ways can we act, should we act, to make things better in the face of these literal and figurative walls and blockades that we face?

John Washington: Yeah, good, daunting question.

You know, I think the history is important, and I think actually the history is one of the necessary ingredients for moving forward towards a more just future. You pointed out some really key moments that somehow we forget. We are a society of amnesiacs, especially around border immigration enforcement.

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Yeah, ICE is 21 years old. The Border Patrol is 100 years old. Like, we have had a country before both of those institutions. Absolutely. In the year 2000, there were about 12 enforced closed borders throughout the world. Now there’s about 80. It’s a very short time. That is a fast proliferation of walling.

You know, I think I’m interested in this idea that we need to imagine a better future. We need to really sort of stretch our minds a little bit. One way as a reporter here, as like a local reporter, one way that I think, a necessary first step is actually something like the opposite of imagination.

We have so much disinformation, misinformation, and refusal to hear information right now that before we can just come to terms together, before we can get back on the same plane of reality with each other, we’re not going to be able to move forward. You know, there are so many people, especially on the right, who are claiming right now that we have open borders.

And it’s like, what are you talking about? Have words lost their meaning? People talk about an invasion. Like, actually that’s just patently, factually untrue. They talk about numbers, like there are people who throw out numbers that are wildly off base by the millions.

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And, you know, I have been talking, giving a lot of book presentations here, and then I just, as a reporter, I talk to people on both right and left, pro and anti immigrant, and there is such a huge disparity in the basic understanding of the reality right now that I think we need to close that gap before we’re able to even start talking about solutions.

And I think that one of the key ingredients is just understanding our basic reality right now. That would be a good step. And then, yeah, we need to shake out of this status quo bias. Like, we think that, oh, without the way that things are now, we wouldn’t be able to exist.

And there’s a lot of other factors at play here. We are being told that the extraordinary income gaps or inequality gaps in the world are just how the world is, we take it as a given. Oh, unfortunate, I guess. Or that, yeah, millions of people are unsheltered and living in our communities in alleys and washes in the Southwest, and that’s just the way things are.

Or that there’s this crazy and deadly opioid epidemic killing a hundred plus thousand people. And it’s like, if we think that this is just the way that it is, and that this is what we have to deal with, it kind of makes sense when people come in and scapegoat somebody. And say oh, if we close the borders, things will get better when actually they have nothing to do with each other.

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But if we can think, like, if we realize or remember that it doesn’t have to be this way, that we can provide housing, that we actually can deal with medical and mental health crises, that we can fund our schools to a degree that people are literate or media literate again, you know, all of these basic things, like we can break out of this really atrocious or ugly status quo, then we don’t have to scapegoat and start just thinking about like, Oh, these problems are impossible to address internally, so we’re going to have to try to address them externally.

So I think just kind of opening up our minds to knowing that a lot of this stuff is relatively recent history or relatively recent phenomena based on very bad decisions that we’ve been making. We can make other decisions.

You know, a solution to the border, a solution to the misery enacted by borders is actually not that hard. We just have to stop doing something. You know, it is really hard to run a marathon. Like, can I do it? I don’t know. But you know what I can definitely do? I can stop running a marathon. That’s easy. I could stop it in like five minutes. That’s the same, it’s the same thing. We could just stop doing this.

It’s not hard. We don’t have to create, it’s not this incredibly complex system that we need to either erect or dismantle. It’s just like, nope, we can just stop it. And that, that is not the ultimate solution to a lot of the underlying causes, but that would alleviate all of these other problems in an enormous way.

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Eleanor Goldfield: Yeah, absolutely. I love that. And as you said, when you create the border and make it a crime to cross it, well then you’ve created the problem. So you could just not.

John Washington: Yeah, you could just not. And I’ve actually talked to some people who are policy wonks. And I ask: what would it actually take to enact legislation that was open to borders?

Oh, it’d be simple. You just write a law to undo the Immigration Naturalization Act, the INA. You could do that. You can pass a law. I actually mentioned this in the book. You can pass a law, like, the fastest ever done is like a day or two. It was some of the post 9 11 legislation.

So yeah, we could have open borders tomorrow, maybe the day after tomorrow.

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Eleanor Goldfield: Oh, would that would be the case.

John, thank you so much for giving so much context and indeed, giving people some things to imagine beyond the reality. Again, folks can check out the book, which is called The Case for Open Borders. And John’s other writings are at johnwashington.substack.com.

John, thank you again so much for taking the time to sit down.

John Washington: Thank you. Really enjoyed the conversation.

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Federal Reserve puts on enormous party hat

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This is an audio transcript of the Unhedged podcast episode: ‘Federal Reserve puts on enormous party hat

Katie Martin
A great moment in history has arrived. Rob Armstrong was right about something. Quite against the run of play — shush, Rob — quite against the run of play, the Federal Reserve has cut interest rates — hurrah — from the highest level in decades, and for the first time since the pandemic. And what’s more, it went large, cutting by half-a-point, precisely as my esteemed colleague had predicted.

What kind of voodoo is this? Does the Fed know something horrible we don’t? Cutting by half-a-point is normally a crisis measure, a cry for help. Should we panic about a recession? And really, Rob was right. End times.

Today on the show, we’re going to explain how come investors are ignoring the usual script and taking this bumper cut as a good thing. This is Unhedged, the markets and finance podcast from the Financial Times and Pushkin. I’m Katie Martin, a markets columnist here at FT Towers in London. And listeners, I must tell you, the saddest of things has happened. I’m joined by Rob Armstrong, lord of the Unhedged newsletter. But the sad thing is he’s dialling in from his sickbed. Rob, I’m sorry, you’re poorly.

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Robert Armstrong
I am poorly. It’s terrible. But on a 50-basis-point day, the dead shall rise from their graves. The angels shall sing. And we all . . . we’re all gonna talk about it.

Katie Martin
Yes. Good, strong Barry White vibes I’m getting from this voice you’re busting out today. So, as you say, half a percentage point from the Fed; that’s 50 basis points in market money. Normally central banks love being super boring and they normally move by quarter-point increments. So, I mean, was it the shock of being right about the 50-basis-point thing that pushed you over the edge into sickness?

Robert Armstrong
It could have been. I’m so accustomed to getting this wrong now that it was really paralysing. However, I think, you know, you mentioned earlier, why is the market kind of taking this in stride and seeing this as a good thing? And I think it’s a bit of a communications success by the Fed in that they told the story about this, that they’re not doing this because they have to, because it’s an emergency. They’re doing it because they can.

Katie Martin
So gangster.

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Robert Armstrong
And the reason they can is because they’ve kind of beaten inflation. Right?

Katie Martin
So for people who, unlike us, have a life and don’t sit around watching central bank press conferences, the way this works is they do the decision, they say, here you are, here’s your 25 or 50 whatever basis points, or we’re on hold. This time around, it was 50 basis points.

And then just a little while later, there’s a press conference where the chairman, Jay Powell, gets up in front of like all of the kind of most pointy headed Fed journalists in the world and fields whatever questions. There’s a statement, and then he field whatever questions they want to throw at him. And this for him was the point of highest danger, because the risk of giving the impression somehow that . . . 

Robert Armstrong
Yes.

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Katie Martin
Yeah, we’re really worried. That’s why we’ve done 50. That was a serious risk, right? But instead, what happened?

Robert Armstrong
Well, right from the press release announcing the 50 basis cut, they tweaked the language in the press release so that it was more affirmative and strong on the topic of inflation. We’re really pleased how it’s going on inflation.

Katie Martin
Right, right.

Robert Armstrong
And then in the press release, I mean in the press conference, he just reinforced that point again and again. The line he repeated was the labour market is fine, it’s healthy. It is at a good level. We don’t need it to get any better. We’re not trying to improve it, but we have the freedom to make sure it stays as good as it is.

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And that message seems to have gone through. Markets didn’t move yesterday afternoon. And as a very, you know, opening minutes of trading this morning, stocks are up. So that message seems to have gotten through.

Katie Martin
Yeah. That is skills, actually. You know, I will hand it to them. Because, you know, it’s . . . we’ve said this before on this podcast. Like, it’s so easy to like throw stones and peanuts at the Fed or the European Central Bank, the Bank of England or whatever and say they messed this up. But, like, this stuff is hard. Getting the markets to come away with that sort of impression is not to be taken for granted.

Robert Armstrong
It’s not to be taken for granted. I agree. However, I will note any time you’re trying to spin a narrative and you want people to believe it, one thing that really helps is if the narrative is true. And in this case, I think it broadly is.

I think inflation really does look like it’s whipped. It’s really either at or very close to 2 per cent. And look, with an unemployment rate of 4.2 per cent and basically no increase in lay-offs and the economy is still adding jobs, I think the economy is pretty good. So it’s not like he had to spin a magical tale of unicorns and wizards here. He just had to, you know, make a case based on the facts.

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Katie Martin
Yeah. And and that kind of goes back to the fact that the Fed is not quite like all the central banks in that it has to look after inflation, but it also has to look after the jobs market. And so, you know, again, the risk is that you come away from a decision like this and think, well, you know, those little cracks that we’ve seen in the jobs market, maybe they’re the start of something really big and hairy and awful, but he seems to have massaged this one away.

Robert Armstrong
Indeed. Impressive performance.

Katie Martin
And so the other thing they do in this press conference is they give the general public and sad nerds like us a little bit of a taster about what’s coming next from the Fed, right. So they’re always, like, central bankers are at pains to say none of this stuff is a promise. This is just our kind of best current understanding of the state of the universe. But so, then you end up with this thing called — drumroll — the dot.

Robert Armstrong
The dot plot.

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Katie Martin
The dot plot. Explain for normal people what the dot plot is.

Robert Armstrong
OK. So it’s kind of a grid. And along the bottom are the years 2024 through 2027, and then another column for the infinite future. And then there’s a range of interest rates going up and down on the side. And every member of the monetary policy committee puts a little dot in each year column where they think the rate is gonna be in that year. Cue much speculation about what all this means, how they’ve changed their mind since the last dot plot and, you know, the implications of all of this.

Katie Martin
Whose dot is whose? We’ll never know.

Robert Armstrong
They don’t reveal whose dot is whose. That’s an important point. And by the way, Katie, according to everything we hear out of the Fed, having invented this device, which was supposed to increase clarity and make everyone’s life easier, everyone in the Fed now hates it and wishes it would go away . . . 

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Katie Martin
Damn you, dot plot!

Robert Armstrong
Because it just causes endless, idiotic little niggling questions from people like me and you. But once you’ve invented something like this, if you take it away, people get upset.

Katie Martin
So you look at the dots and you look at what Jay Powell was saying at the press conference and what does it all add up to? Does it mean that, like, OK, they’ve started with 50 basis points, so like 50 is the new 25? Get used to it, boys and girls?

Robert Armstrong
If you look at the dot plot and their kind of aggregate expectations of where rates are gonna go, it is not that 50 is the new 25. The implication is that the rate of cuts is going to be very measured — or might I say stately, from here until they reach their target.

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Katie Martin
Right, right.

Robert Armstrong
And, you know, another point to mention here is where they think they need to go is very important. That’s the kind of last part of the dot plot is, like, where should interest rates be when everything is normal again?

Katie Martin
Because that will happen one day. And . . . 

Robert Armstrong
Yeah, that will happen. They think it’s gonna happen sometime around 2026, 27. We’ll get to where it’s about normal and they’re looking for about 3 per cent rates in the long run and that . . . so that’s where we’re going to. Just to set the context, we cut from 5.5 per cent to 5 per cent yesterday. And the map of the dot plot shows us moving towards a little under 3 per cent over time. And it’s a matter of how quickly are we going to get there, and along the way, are we going to change our mind and decide we have to go somewhere else?

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Katie Martin
Yeah. So is there a kind of joyful hope that maybe the Fed could be, like, boring again and it can just sort of do 25 basis points here and there and just take this kind of glide path lowering rates that doesn’t get people excited any more?

Robert Armstrong
Well, this is the problem about the future is that it is hard to predict and particularly hard to predict with interest rates. The issue is that the economy, the structure of the economy has changed a lot in the last couple of years because of the pandemic and for other reasons. So that final destination point I talked about, which economists call the neutral rate, which is the just normal, everything is boring and steady rate of interest in the economy where everyone has a job, there’s no inflation, everything’s cool, the neutral rate. We don’t know what that number is.

And Jay Powell has this line about it. We know it by its works. And what that means, stated less calmly, is we know it when we screw it up. In other words, we hit it, we go past it. We push interest rates above the neutral rate and stocks have a big puke and the economy starts to slow down and people get fired or we travel too far below it and inflation starts again. So like the Fed over the next couple of years is like walking down this passage in the complete dark and it knows it can’t touch the wall on its left or the wall on its right. Right? But it doesn’t know the shape of the passageway, what direction it’s supposed to go. So it’s just like, well, I sure hope we’re going this way. Dee-dee-dee. And hope it doesn’t hit too low or too high along the way.

Katie Martin
Hope it doesn’t just walk into a wall.

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Robert Armstrong
The history of interest rates is history of feeling your way along in the dark.

Katie Martin
Rob, that’s the most lyrical thing I’ve ever heard you say.

Robert Armstrong
Isn’t it? It’s poetry. It’s because I’m so ill. These could be the final words of a dying man.

Katie Martin
What meds are you on for this cold you’ve got?

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Robert Armstrong
This could be my legacy, Katie. (Laughter)

Katie Martin
I feel like we should kind of wrap up quite soon before you just like expire during the recording.

Robert Armstrong
I do. As much as I like you, I’d like to have a few words with my wife before I shove off.

Katie Martin
But I will ask you, are we ever going back to like zero interest rates, do you think? Or are we gonna look back on that…

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Robert Armstrong
I feel like I’ve been asking a lot of questions. This is a great question, Katie, but let me push it back on you. We had this wild period in the last decade where there was like a gajillion dollars of sovereign bonds issued at a negative interest rate.

Katie Martin
I think that was something like $18tn or something.

Robert Armstrong
Money was free. It was bonkers. And it was like the Fed funds rate was up against zero. Money was free. We were all in Silicon Valley inventing start-ups whatever, doing our thing. Do you think we’re going back to that? Like once this incident, the pandemic and everything after is over, are we going back?

Katie Martin
I mean, I can’t see it. I buy the narratives that are kicking around about inflation now being structurally higher, right? There’s a climate emergency. There’s a global defence emergency. There is all sorts of things that governments need to spend lots of money on, borrow lots of money for, all things being equal. And then there’s the whole supply chain thing after COVID and with geopolitics yada-yada.

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Robert Armstrong
And the world is getting older, right? And so when old people create demand for savings, that drives interest rates up, right?

Katie Martin
Ah, old people. Yeah.

Robert Armstrong
Old people.

Katie Martin
But I think also before we wrap up, we should note that although you were right, about 50 basis points, I was right about the timing. I said on this here very podcast back in, I think it was June 2023, the . . . Not 24. 23. That the Fed is not gonna cut rates till the third quarter this year. So what I’m saying is I’m the genius here. You’re just like a (overlapping speech) took a coin flip.

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Robert Armstrong
You’re basically Cassandra. Doomed to see the future and not be believed.

Katie Martin
I’m going to . . . 

Robert Armstrong
Do I have the right mythological figure there? I think that was Cassandra.

Katie Martin
Absolutely no idea. But I’m going to set up a hedge fund called like hunch capital where I can invest your money for two and 20. (Laughter) Based on nothing but pure hunches. Do you want in? Because like my hunch on that, your hunch on the other. I think we’re going to make good money.

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Robert Armstrong
We could. We could be rich people, Katie. But I will answer your question seriously. I think interest rates are higher now. We’re not going back to zero. I will end on that serious point.

Katie Martin
Yeah, yeah.

Robert Armstrong
Governments are spending too much. They have to spend too much. There’s loads of old people. There’s the green stuff has to be funded. Productivity might be rising possibly because of AI. We are going into a higher interest rate world. And by the way, the Fed thinks that. If you look at the history of the Fed’s view of what the long term normal interest rate is, that has been steadily ticking higher over the last year and a half or so.

Katie Martin
So rates have come down already pretty hard, but don’t get yourself carried away with thinking that we’re going back to zero, because ain’t . . . I mean.

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Robert Armstrong
No. Ain’t gonna happen. Nope.

Katie Martin
Ain’t gonna happen.

[MUSIC PLAYING]

On that bombshell, we’re going to be back in a sec with Long/Short.

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[MUSIC PLAYING]

OK, now it’s time for Long/Short, that part of the show where we go long a thing we love, short a thing we hate. Rob, I feel like you should go first before you completely lose your voice. (Laughter)

Robert Armstrong
Well, I’m going to go short wellbeing. And I say this not because my wellbeing is poor right now, but because of an article our colleague Joshua Franklin, wrote in the Financial Times yesterday that says, I’m quoting here, JPMorgan Chase has tasked one of its bankers with overseeing the company’s junior banker program, a response to renewed concerns about working conditions for young employees. And it goes on that this poor person is gonna have to make sure all these young investment bankers are happy and have work-life balance. I think investment bankers owe it to the rest of us to be miserable.

Katie Martin
Right.

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Robert Armstrong
They make a lot of money. They are the lords of the universe. They should not be happy. Their wellbeing should be awful. And that’s what you’re getting paid for. So I think JPMorgan Chase is doing the wrong thing here. And they need to appoint a banker to oversee the what’s the opposite of wellbeing. Unwell being of their junior bankers.

Katie Martin
You’re a very, very mean person and you just want everyone to be sad like you.

Robert Armstrong
No, if you want to be happy, become a journalist and make no money. If you want to be rich, become a banker and like get divorced and have your kids hate you. It’s just the normal way of life. (Laughter)

Katie Martin
Well, I am long European banking merger drama. So if you’ve missed it, the German government is, like, quite scratchy and unhappy about a potential takeover of Commerzbank by Italy’s UniCredit. It’s the talk of the town. Everyone is kind of, you know, huddled around in bars in the city asking like, how the hell did UniCredit manage to amass like a nine per cent stake in this thing? Like that doesn’t seem like a good strategic move. There’s a lot of excitement over the motives. My interest here is that this is just like the good old days of European banking mergers with like very important European bankers wearing gilets under their jackets going around in like big fast cars and, you know, chatting away on their mobile phones and being masters of the universe.

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Robert Armstrong
I just wish they would get along with it. As far as I know, in continental Europe, there’s actually more banks than people.

Katie Martin
Yeah, it’s like sheep in New Zealand. You’ve just got . . . (Laughter)

Robert Armstrong
They just need. I mean, as long as I’ve been in finance, people have been rattling on about how banking in Europe was going to consolidate. The industry was finally going to make some. They just need . . . I mean, as long as I’ve been in finance, people have been rattling on about how banking in Europe was going to consolidate. The industry was finally going to make some money and it was going be able to compete with the US. And then it’s like, you know, some Germans get mad at some Italians, it never happens and the cycle turns again.

Katie Martin
Yeah, it’s like we want consolidation, but no, no, no, no, no. Not like that.

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Robert Armstrong
Not like that.

Katie Martin
Anything but that.

[MUSIC PLAYING]

And I am here for the drama is all I’m saying.

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Robert Armstrong
Right on. I love it.

Katie Martin
OK, listeners, we are going to be back in your feed on Tuesday if Rob makes it that long, but listen up anyway, wherever you get your podcasts.

Unhedged is produced by Jake Harper and edited by Bryant Urstadt. Our executive producer is Jacob Goldstein. We had additional help from Topher Forhecz. Cheryl Brumley is the FT’s global head of audio. Special thanks to Laura Clarke, Alastair Mackie, Gretta Cohn and Natalie Sadler. FT premium subscribers can get the Unhedged newsletter for free. A 30-day free trial is available to everyone else. Just go to FT.com/unhedgedoffer. I’m Katie Martin. Thanks for listening.

[MUSIC PLAYING]

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Republicans assess potential fallout for Trump from North Carolina bombshell

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Republicans assess potential fallout for Trump from North Carolina bombshell

Republicans in North Carolina and nationally are assessing the potential fallout for former President Donald Trump from a bombshell report alleging that Lt. Gov. Mark Robinson, the party’s gubernatorial nominee, posted disturbing and inflammatory statements on a forum of a pornographic website.

CNN reported Thursday that Robinson, behind an anonymous username he allegedly used elsewhere, made the comments more than a decade ago, including supporting slavery, calling himself a “black NAZI” and recalling memories of him “peeping” on women in the shower as a 14-year-old.

ABC News has not independently verified the comments were made by Robinson, and he insisted in a video posted to X prior to the story’s publication that “those are not the words of Mark Robinson.”

But Robinson, a Donald Trump ally, already has a history of incendiary remarks about Jews, gay people and others, and elections in North Carolina, one of the nation’s marquee swing states, rest on a knife’s edge, raising questions of how much the latest news will impact his race and other Republicans on the ballot with him — including the former president.

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“I think this only heightens the level of toxicity that the Robinson campaign has, and the real question becomes, what’s the radioactive fallout at the top of the ticket along with down the ballot for Republicans here in North Carolina?” asked Michael Bitzer, the Politics Department chair at Catawba College.

“This cannot be something that the voters aren’t going to recognize and probably play more into softening the Republican support. Is it isolated only to Robinson’s campaign, or does it start to impact Trump? Does it impact other statewide executive Republicans as well? We’ll just have to wait and see, but this feels like a pretty significant event in North Carolina politics.”

MORE: Republicans step up effort to change Nebraska’s electoral vote process to benefit Trump

Robinson, who casts himself as a conservative family man and is running for North Carolina’s open governorship against Democratic state Attorney General Josh Stein, is already behind in the polls.

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PHOTO: Lt. Gov. Mark Robinson, R-NC., speaking on the first day of the Republican National Convention, July 15, 2024, in Milwaukee. (J. Scott Applewhite/AP)

PHOTO: Lt. Gov. Mark Robinson, R-NC., speaking on the first day of the Republican National Convention, July 15, 2024, in Milwaukee. (J. Scott Applewhite/AP)

While he holds statewide office and has broad name recognition, Robinson boasts a highly controversial record, including calling the Holocaust “hogwash” and homosexuality “filth,” and he drew claims of hypocrisy when he admitted this year that he had paid for his wife to get an abortion, seemingly in contrast with his stated opposition to the procedure, which he’d previously likened to “murder” and “genocide.”

North Carolina’s gubernatorial race is still considered competitive given the state’s tight partisan divide, but Republicans in the state told ABC News they had already viewed him as trailing, and that Thursday’s report won’t help.

“He’s already got a lengthy history of publishing comments like that on the internet. These are perhaps a little more graphic. In terms of does this by itself serve as a guillotine, I don’t know. But it feels like the cumulative weight is starting to add up now,” said one North Carolina GOP strategist. “It flies in the face of everything he presents of himself publicly. So, cumulatively plus the hypocrisy of this, it’s obviously hurtful to him.”

Republicans were more divided on what it means beyond Robinson’s own candidacy.

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North Carolina is a must-win state for Trump, and losing it would impose significant pressure on him to perform in other swing states.

Trump is already running ahead of Robinson — while polls show Robinson trailing, they also show a neck-and-neck race in the state between the former president and Vice President Kamala Harris. The main question now is whether the news depresses Republican turnout in a state where even a small nudge in turnout one way or the other can make decide the victor.

“[Robinson] was already toast. The question is if it hurts Trump, something the campaign is very worried about,” said Doug Heye, a veteran GOP strategist with experience working in North Carolina. “It doesn’t directly cost him voters, but his endorsed pick continues to be a big distraction and has no money to drive out the vote.”

“He’s a baby blue anchor around Trump’s chances in the Tar Heel State,” added Trump donor Dan Eberhart. “This is not good news for Trump’s campaign at all.”

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PHOTO: North Carolina Lieutenant Governor Mark Robinson speaks at the Faith and Freedom Road to Majority conference at the Washington Hilton on June 21, 2024 in Washington, D.C. (Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images, FILE)

PHOTO: North Carolina Lieutenant Governor Mark Robinson speaks at the Faith and Freedom Road to Majority conference at the Washington Hilton on June 21, 2024 in Washington, D.C. (Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images, FILE)

Democrats are already seizing on the news to try to connect Robinson to Trump, who has repeatedly praised him, even calling him at one point “Martin Luther King on steroids.”

Kamala HQ, an X page that serves as one of the Harris campaign’s rapid response tools, posted a slate of videos featuring Trump speaking positively about Robinson.

“His campaign was toast before this story, so the real impact is on all of the Republicans who have endorsed and campaigned alongside him,” said Bruce Thompson, a North Carolina Democratic fundraiser.

However, Trump has been able to navigate his own headwinds, including felony convictions in New York, questioning Harris’ race and more to remain the leader of his party and a viable presidential candidate, leading some Republicans to doubt that Robinson’s struggles will impact the presidential campaign.

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MORE: Uncommitted movement declines to endorse Harris, but encourages against Trump, third-party votes

“Doubt it impacts at all down-ballot,” said Dave Carney, a GOP strategist who chairs a pro-Trump super PAC.

“I don’t think it helps, but it won’t hurt,” added Sean Spicer, Trump’s first White House press secretary.

PHOTO: Mark Robinson, Lt. Governor of N.C. and candidate for Governor, delivers remarks prior to Republican presidential nominee former President Trump speaking at a campaign event at Harrah's Cherokee Center on Aug. 14, 2024 in Asheville, N.C. (Grant Baldwin/Getty Images)

PHOTO: Mark Robinson, Lt. Governor of N.C. and candidate for Governor, delivers remarks prior to Republican presidential nominee former President Trump speaking at a campaign event at Harrah’s Cherokee Center on Aug. 14, 2024 in Asheville, N.C. (Grant Baldwin/Getty Images)

Trump campaign spokesperson Karoline Leavitt sounded a confident note, saying in a statement that the former president’s team would “not take our eye off the ball.”

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“President Trump’s campaign is focused on winning the White House and saving this country. North Carolina is a vital part of that plan. We are confident that as voters compare the Trump record of a strong economy, low inflation, a secure border, and safe streets, with the failures of Biden-Harris, then President Trump will win the Tarheel State once again,” she said.”

Still, sources familiar with the matter said the Trump campaign was bracing for a story to come out about Robinson and is planning on putting more distance between the former president and the embattled nominee Robinson — but initially did not have plans to call on him to drop out.

“He seems to not be impacted by what’s going on down-ballot underneath him,” the North Carolina Republican strategist said of Trump. “There’s no way it helps him. But does it hurt him? I don’t know, I think that’s an open question.”

Republicans assess potential fallout for Trump from North Carolina bombshell originally appeared on abcnews.go.com

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A Global Crackdown on Freedom of Expression

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By Robin Andersen, Nolan Higdon, and Steve Macek

According to a 2022 report by Article 19, an international organization that documents and champions freedom of expression, 80 percent of the world’s population lives with less freedom of expression today than did ten years ago. The eradication of basic freedoms and rights is partly due to the pervasive normalization of censorship. Across media platforms, news outlets, schools, universities, libraries, museums, and public and private spaces, governments, powerful corporations, and influential pressure groups are suppressing freedom of expression and censoring viewpoints deemed to be unpopular or dangerous. Unfortunately, physical assaults, legal restrictions, and retaliation against journalists, students, and faculty alike have become all too common, resulting in the suppression of dissenting voices and, more broadly, the muffling and disappearance of critical information, controversial topics, and alternative narratives from public discourse.

We collaborated with an accomplished group of international scholars and journalists to document this disturbing trend in Censorship, Digital Media and the Global Crackdown on Freedom of Expression (Peter Lang 2024). Our collective work analyzed contemporary and historical methods of censorship and anti-democratic impulses that threaten civil society, human rights, and freedoms of information and expression around the world today. The collection explains how a rising tide of political tyranny coupled with the expansion of corporate power is stifling dissent, online expression, news reporting, political debate, and academic freedom from the United States and Europe to the Global South.

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The Assault on Press Freedom

Our volume reveals an epidemic of censorship and attacks on journalists and free speech around the globe. Although completed prior to the horrifying atrocities of October 7, 2023, in Israel, the text provides context for understanding that Israeli violence against Palestinians since October 7, including the murder of journalists, has been decades in the making. This strategy initially took hold with the assassination of the veteran Al Jazeera reporter Shireen Abu Akleh, a Palestinian-American, as she documented Israel’s occupation of Jenin. The world has now witnessed the full flowering of the Israeli-state aggression against Palestinians that led to her murder. To date, Israel has killed more than 100 media workers in Gaza, raising the concern and outrage of numerous press freedom organizations and seventy UN member states that have now called for international investigations into each one of the murders. As the International Federation of Journalists reported, “Killing journalists is a war crime that undermines the most basic human rights.”

Journalists around the globe are repeatedly targeted because their profession, which is protected constitutionally in many nations, exists to draw attention to abuses of power. Thus, it is no surprise that the rise in global censorship has entailed the targeting of journalists with violence, imprisonment, and harassment. In Russia, journalists are jailed and die in custody, as they do in Egypt, Saudi Arabia, China, and Hong Kong. In Mexico, there are “silenced zones,” controlled by a deadly collaboration between drug gangs and government corruption, where journalists are routinely killed. In 2022, Mexico was the most dangerous country for journalists outside of a war zone.

The assault on press freedom has also been normalized in self-proclaimed democracies such as the United Kingdom, where WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange has been imprisoned for more than five years, and in the United States, which has targeted Assange with espionage charges simply for promoting freedom of information. Although US presidents and other national figures often refer to the United States as “the leader of the free world,” the United States now ranks 55th in the world on the Reporters without Borders 2024 World Press Freedom Index.

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Repression of Artists and Academics

News outlets and their workers are not the only targets of the current wave of repression. Hollywood has long been shaped—and censored—by government and corporate power. For example, our book includes a chapter on the Pentagon’s long-standing influence on Hollywood, which has resulted in the film industry abandoning production of hundreds of films deemed unacceptable by the military.

In addition to media, educators and academics are increasingly subject to repressive measures that muzzle freedom of information and expression. Scholars and institutions of higher education sometimes produce research that challenges the myths and propaganda perpetuated by those in power. And even when they don’t, autonomy from micromanagement by government authorities and private funders is a prerequisite for the integrity of scholarly research and teaching, which tends to make elites exceedingly nervous. This is why universities and academic freedom are increasingly under siege by autocratic regimes and right-wing activists from Hungary to Brazil and from India to Florida.

Alarmingly, the latest Academic Freedom Index found that more than 45 percent of the world’s population now lives in countries with an almost complete lack of academic freedom (more than at any time since the 1970s). In Brazil, the government of right-wing president Jair Bolsonaro attempted to ban education about gender and sexuality,  slashed budgets for the country’s universities, and threatened to defund the disciplines of philosophy and sociology. In 2018, Hungary’s conservative Fidesz government shut down graduate programs in gender studies, forced the country’s most prestigious university, the Central European University, to relocate to Austria, and sparked months of protests at the University of Theater and Film Arts in Budapest by making unpopular changes to the school’s board of trustees. Something similar happened in Turkey, where, since 2016, the ruling regime has suspended thousands of professors and administrators from their university posts for alleged ties to the outlawed Gülen movement and shut down upwards of 3,000 schools and universities. Meanwhile, in the United States, several Republican-controlled state legislatures have enacted draconian laws prohibiting or severely limiting teaching about race, sexuality, and gender in college classrooms. Under the influence of its arch-conservative governor, Ron DeSantis, Florida eliminated sociology as a core general education course at all of its public universities.

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Big Tech Censorship

Censorship is nothing new, but the pervasive influence of the internet and the development of so-called artificial intelligence (AI) have created new, more nefarious opportunities to crack down on freedoms around the globe. So-called smart platforms and tools have created new forms of Big Tech control and content moderation, such as shadowbanning and algorithmic bias. Regimes have set up a form of quid pro quo with tech companies, demanding certain concessions such as removing unfavorable content in exchange for government access to otherwise private information about tech platforms’ users. For example, in the United States, tech companies depend on large government contracts and, as a result, often work with government officials directly and indirectly to censor content. Nor do they block only false or misleading content. Social media platforms have also been found to censor perfectly valid scientific speculation about the possible origin of COVID-19 and instances of obvious political satire.

These restrictive practices are at odds with Big Tech PR campaigns that trumpet the platforms’ capacity to empower users. Despite this hype, critical examination reveals that privately controlled platforms seldom function as spaces where genuine freedom of information and intellectual exchange flourish. In reality, Big Tech works with numerous national regimes to extend existing forms of control over citizens’ behaviors and expression into the digital realm. People are not ignorant of these abuses and have taken action to promote freedom across the globe. However, they have largely been met by more censorship. For example, as social media users took to TikTok to challenge US and Israeli messaging on Gaza, the US government took steps to ban the platform. Relatedly, Israel raided Al Jazeeras office in East Jerusalem, confiscated its equipment, shuttered its office, and closed down its website.

Our book also details the complex history and structures of censorship in Myanmar, Uganda, and the Philippines, and popular resistance to this oppression. To this catalog of examples, we can add India’s periodic internet shutdowns aimed at stifling protests by farmers, the blocking of websites in Egypt, and the right-wing strongman Jair Bolsonaro’s persecution of journalists in Brazil. Each of these cases is best understood as a direct result of a rise in faux populist, right-wing authoritarian politicians and political movements, whose popularity has been fostered by reactionary responses to decades of neo-liberal rule.

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What Is to Be Done? 

Censorship is being driven not only by governments but also by an array of political and corporate actors across the ideological spectrum, from right-wing autocrats and MAGA activists to Big Tech oligarchs and self-professed liberals. Indeed, when it comes to censorship, a focus on any one country’s ideology, set of practices, or justifications for restricting expression risks missing the forest for the trees. The global community is best served when we collectively reject all attempts to suppress basic freedoms, regardless of where they emerge or how they are implemented.

To counter increasing restrictions on public discourse and the muzzling of activists, journalists, artists, and scholars, we need global agreements that protect press freedom, the right to protest, and accountability for attacks on journalists. Protection of freedom of expression and the press should be a central plank of US foreign policy. We need aggressive antitrust enforcement to break up giant media companies that today wield the power to unilaterally control what the public sees, hears, and reads. We also need to create awareness and public knowledge to help pass legislation, such as the PRESS Act, that will guarantee journalists’ right to protect their sources’ confidentiality and prevent authorities from collecting information about their activities from third parties like phone companies and internet service providers.

Moreover, widespread surveillance by social media platforms and search engines, supposedly necessary to improve efficiency and convenience, ought to be abandoned. All of us should have the right to control any non-newsworthy personal data that websites and apps have gathered about us and to ask that such data be deleted, a right that Californians will enjoy starting in 2026.

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In addition, we should all support the efforts of organizations such as the American Association of University Professors, Article 19, and many others to fight back against encroachments on academic and intellectual freedom.

Supporters of free expression should also vigilantly oppose the ideologically motivated content moderation schemes Big Tech companies so often impose on their users.

Rather than trusting Big Tech to curate our news feeds, or putting faith in laws that would attempt to criminalize misinformation, we need greater investment in media literacy education, including education about the central importance of expressive rights and vigorous, open debate to a functioning democracy. The era of the internet and AI demonstrates the urgent need for education and fundamental knowledge in critical media literacy to ensure that everyone has the necessary skills to act as digital citizens, capable of understanding and evaluating the media we consume.

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How the EU can reset foreign policy for the western Balkans

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Steven Everts makes numerous important and laudable points on the need for the EU to seriously recalibrate both its capacities and posture in foreign policy (Opinion, September 12).

It’s worth adding that in a foreign policy area on the bloc’s very borders, the EU has led the west into a dead end of failure, in which official pronouncements have never been more at variance with the on-the-ground reality.

The western Balkans is the only region in which the US consistently defers to a democratic partner’s leadership — that of the EU.

Nowhere else does the west, if united, wield greater leverage or have a wider array of policy instruments. Yet for far too long, the EU has addressed the region almost solely through its enlargement process, neglecting its foreign policy commitments — including a deterrent force in Bosnia and Herzegovina mandated by the Dayton Peace Agreement and authorised under Chapter 7 by the UN Security Council.

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This force remains well below the brigade-strength required to pose a credible deterrent to threats to the peace and territorial integrity. In addition, the EU states it will support local authorities, who have primary responsibility to maintain a secure environment — defying the reason the mandate exists to begin with: namely to thwart attempts by local authorities to upend the peace.

The desire to maintain the fiction that the Belgrade-Pristina Dialogue is still alive compels the EU into all sorts

of contortions which in effect reward Serbia, despite allegations of Serbian involvement in recent violence, and periodic (and ongoing) threats of invasion. By straying from its original declared purpose to achieve mutual recognition between Serbia and Kosovo, as well as serving as a shield for Serbia’s authoritarian president, Aleksandar Vučić, the dialogue serves as a diversion from genuine problem- solving.

Incoming EU foreign policy chief Kaja Kallas has demonstrated leadership and vision for Europe and the wider west as Estonia’s prime minister, particularly with regard to the response to Russia’s war of aggression against Ukraine.

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One hopes she will undertake the overdue task of making the policies of the EU and the wider west more consistent with the values of democracy and human dignity we proclaim to hold dear. She can begin by leading the west to a restoration of credible deterrence in the Balkans, and start to counter the backsliding of democracy long visible there.

Kurt Bassuener
Co-Founder and Senior Associate, Democratization Policy Council, Sarajevo, Bosnia and Herzegovina

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An Amazing Site With Rich History

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man

It’s early summer in Moldova, and the cherries are already ripe. Fellow journalist Marian Männi and I pick and pop them into our mouths as we follow our chosen tour guide up a hill. We are exploring Old Orhei, a famous Moldovan landmark and archaeological site. It consists of three villages: Trebujeni to the north, Butuceni to the west and Morovaia to the east. The area is built on a green field, and the Răut River runs through it.

Following the guide’s lead, we climb a hill to find one of many cave monasteries. This one is rather hidden, so most tourists miss it entirely. 

My guide showcases a cave monastery above the Răut River, where tourists rarely find their way. Author’s photo.

A picture from the inside of the cave looking out. Author’s photo.

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The surrounding area is an unusual sight. The sloping bank of the Răut River emerges from a perfectly flat field, looking almost man-made. However, it is a natural reminder of how landscapes evolve. You can find perfect seashells on the limestone bank in a country with no coastline, much like on a sandy beach. Millions of years ago, the Răut River was part of the ancient Sarmatian Sea, just like the lands of today’s Moldova.

Scenic views of Old Orhei. One can barely see the river under the hill. Author’s photo.

My guide, Professor Sergiu Musteață, knows this site incredibly well. He is a renowned historian from Moldova and a professor at the Faculty of Philology and History at “Ion Creangă” State Pedagogical University. He has worked to educate locals about the history of Old Orhei and how to develop tourism businesses. He has also guided them in creating guesthouses and writing proposals for funding to build flushing toilets in their homes.

Old Orhei has been one of the main subjects of his research since 1996. “I know everyone in Orheiul Vechi [the Romanian version of the name]!” he laughs. He also knows all of the approximately 300 caves in the area and has personally researched many of them.

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Professor Sergiu Musteață says that people working in Moldovan tourism need to understand that the basis of it is history and heritage. Author’s photo.

A scenic journey through unknown sites

Musteață leads us along a hidden path lined with cherry trees from an old student’s base. Researchers have been excavating this area for decades, as the unique landscape reveals layers of settlements dating back to prehistoric times.

“When we come here with students, we usually clean the neighborhood and cut the grass first,” Musteață says, pushing branches away from the path. If only tourists knew about this shortcut hidden in nature.

Professor Musteață peers through a rustic gate. Author’s photo.

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“We have organized 20 years of summer camps for the locals during the excavations, including summer schools for local kids. Lots of students, both locals and internationals, participated!” he states emphatically.

Despite many efforts, only a few locals have made a name for themselves in the tourism sector. “I don’t know why. There is not so much interest. It should be the most prominent place among tourists,” Musteață comments.

Unlike other visitors, we walk past the Peștera cave monastery, the main tourist attraction of Old Orhei. The current underground tunnels date back to 1820. However, the caves in these limestone hills have existed since the 14th century. Orthodox monks found solitude and a place for spiritual retreat in this isolation.

“There is another cave monastery here. Locals know about it, but only a few tourists will visit it,” says Musteață. This is where we are heading.

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We walk past the Peștera cave monastery and head off-road to find another lesser-known monastery. Author’s photo.

We walk on the bank, passing through the Church of Ascension of St. Mary. The view of the valley and fields is breathtaking. Turning left, the professor leads us onto an almost unrecognizable road downhill from the bank. Our slippers aren’t ideal footwear for this leg of the journey, but nevertheless, we climb down the limestone bank to a land of grazing cows.

Musteață guides us onto a new path, leading down the limestone bank. Author’s photo.

After walking, we climb again to another obscure cave monastery of Old Orhei, built above the Răut’s waters. There isn’t a single soul up here now, but historically, monks isolated themselves in this cave. As a result, the monastery is covered in signs of human habitation.

The church’s facade is engraved with Slavonian writing: “This church was built by the slave of Bosie, pircalab (Chief Magistrate) of Orhei, together with his wife and his children, to cherish God, to forgive his sins.”

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The professor shows us around. We see where the monks would sleep and where they built their fireplace. All the caves are in remarkably good shape, with few signs of dripping rocks.

We view the monastery’s exterior, which has endured for centuries. Author’s photo.

This structure often goes unexplored by tourists. “It’s a bit too far and difficult to access. That’s why people don’t know much about it and wouldn’t end up here,” Musteață explains.

Musteață teaches us about the monastery. Author’s photo.

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On the whole, Old Orhei is a fascinating, history site. And its antiquity is richer than one might expect.

Mankind has loved this region since ancient times

The surroundings have been populated since the Paleolithic era due to good location — the river protects Old Orhei from three sides. The land is suitable for agriculture and flowing water is nearby.

Archaeological findings suggest that the Getians built some fortresses and settlements in this region during the 4th to 3rd centuries BCE, taking advantage of the natural fortifications provided by the rocky outcroppings and riverbanks.

In the 14th century CE, Old Orhei became part of the medieval state of Moldova (Țara Moldovei) after the collapse of the Golden Horde, a Mongol-Tatar state that controlled this territory as well.

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After the Tatar period in the 12th to 14th centuries, an Orthodox Christian community developed during medieval times. Political stability and the protective embrace of nature made Old Orhei an important center. Moldovan hero and ruler Stephen the Great, whose rule lasted from 1457 to 1504, appointed his uncle, Peter III Aaron, to rule there. The area was fortified with strong defensive walls and towers.

Life in Old Orhei slowly faded in the 17th century. The administration moved to neighboring New Orhei, and gradually, the monastic community began to disappear. The last monks are believed to have left Old Orhei at the beginning of the 19th century. By this time, many monastic communities in the region faced significant challenges due to political changes, invasions and pressures from the expanding Ottoman Empire. The decline in monastic life at Old Orhei was part of a broader trend affecting many religious sites in the region.

At the beginning of the 20th century, a new Virgin Mary Church was built atop the bank near a cave monastery to revitalize the area’s spiritual significance. It serves as a symbol of Old Orhei’s continued religious heritage, even after the original monastic community dispersed.

Though the region’s religiosity remains, Old Orhei’s authenticity, unfortunately, has recently declined.

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The loss of authenticity in a historic land

Many historical sites in Old Orhei face the problem of random preservation efforts, which are not concerned with preserving the site’s authentic look.

In 2023, the road from Butuceni village in the Cultural-Natural Reserve was asphalted, which led to an investigation by the Ministry of Culture. It ruined the village’s authenticity but gave locals more logistical freedom.

Climbing on the bank, we notice a brand-new red-roofed dwelling that, from a logical viewpoint, should not have been built in the reserve. But there it is, like the newly constructed path to the Peștera cave monastery and the asphalted road in Butuceni village.

This modern tampering is one thing preventing Moldova from having its first United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) World Heritage Site.

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“There is too much industrialization in a place where authenticity is worshiped,” Musteață laments. The Old Orhei Reserve has been on the UNESCO tentative list for years but is not moving forward any time soon. “I don’t think there is much hope at the moment,” Musteață admits honestly.

The situation saddens him. He and other researchers have worked for years to put this site on the world map as a part of humanity’s historical cradle, to no avail.

“The landscape and the density of settlements since prehistory is special. You can see the changes in this part of the world, moving from East to West. The Golden Horde, the Islamic period, Christians — there is a huge variety of artifacts describing how people lived in this area,” Musteață explains.

Life has moved on from this relic. The Orthodox Church still holds significant power in the small country of Moldova, but only traces of the glory the church once had in Old Orhei remain. In the 1940s, the Soviet Union started excavations in the region, which also disrupted the old sites; they built a new road through the Golden Horde citadel and cut it in half.

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“A historic road should go around the citadel. It’s completely doable,” Musteață says.

The professor feels that many of Moldova’s stories remain untold, even that of such a landmark as Old Orhei. “It is frustrating. We need to tell our story!” Musteață suggests.

He thinks the country itself should put Orhei at the top of the list of tourist destinations in Moldova. After all, it’s the most important tourist site in the country. “It should be declared a state priority, a national strategy,” he says. “People working in this field in Moldova need to understand that the basis of tourism is history and heritage.”

That is another reason why Moldova’s Old Orhei is not on the UNESCO list. “Our country overall is underrepresented,” Musteață believes.

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According to UNESCO, the organization is not in a position to comment on what is missing for Old Orhei to receive its World Heritage Site title. Moldova first proposed the area as a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 2008 but withdrew its nomination the following year.

In September 2015, Moldova submitted a new version of the nomination dossier as “Orheiul Vechi Archaeological Landscape,” a cultural site. Following the evaluation process and a recommendation by the International Council on Monuments and Sites, Moldova withdrew the nomination again.

Luckily, Moldova appears on the UNESCO list as part of a group of countries with the Struve Geodetic Arc, a chain of survey triangulations spanning ten countries and over 2,820 kilometers. This chain reaches from the world’s northernmost city — Hammerfest, Norway — to the Black Sea. The listed site includes 34 points across all ten countries, one of which is in Moldova. The country is eager to earn its very own World Heritage Site title, even if it isn’t Old Orhei.

[Lee Thompson-Kolar edited this piece.]

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The views expressed in this article are the author’s own and do not necessarily reflect Fair Observer’s editorial policy.

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Illegal settlements have been encouraged for years

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Neri Zilber’s piece “Far-right minister accused of politicising Israeli police” (Report, September 17) eloquently describes the crisis in the West Bank. Israel’s current government and its unsavoury allies in the settler movement stand accused, but in truth every government since 1967 has favoured illegal settlement.

The first settlements — the so-called Nahal settlements — in September 1967 were supposedly military and so did not, Israel argued, contravene international law. The west did nothing, so Israel then went ahead with brazen colonisation. When the first Oslo Accord was signed in 1993, there were in the order of 110,000 settlers in the West Bank.

A central principle of Oslo was that neither party would takes steps that would prejudice final status talks five years later. But Israel’s so-called moderate leaders, Yitzhak Rabin and Shimon Peres, immediately inaugurated the most intensive phase of settlement to date. By January 1996 settlers numbered 140,000. Rabin told his electorate not to worry — the Palestinians would not get a state. Meanwhile, Rabin and Peres accepted the Nobel Peace Prize. Butter wouldn’t melt in their mouths. The west did nothing. The Palestinians knew they had been stitched up.

So we should be under no illusions. This isn’t simply Benjamin Netanyahu and his associates, it is the long-standing thrust of the majority of Israelis across the political spectrum. Western governments have known this all along and even now appear unwilling to ensure respect for international humanitarian law as they have undertaken to do.

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The UN General Assembly is likely to agree that the July 19 advisory opinion of the International Court of Justice, which spells out Israel’s lawbreaking in detail, must be applied.

If it isn’t, in the Middle East the killing will continue while in New York the UN may face an impasse given the unwillingness of the US and its allies to uphold the international order they themselves helped put in place.

David McDowall
London TW10, UK

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