A Promised Land

America as a Developing Country

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January 25, 2023

Guns: Here We Go Again…

and again...and again...

Unhappy New Year

California has kicked off 2023 with a bang: two mass shootings in 72 hours. (Mass shootings constitute events in which four or more people are injured or killed, not including the murderer.) This has probably been the country’s most massacre-intensive January ever – and certainly since the Gun Violence Archive started tracking this data in 2014. Only a small fraction of these nearly twice-daily horrors (647 in 2022) gets much media coverage. Still, this seems like a nightmarish Groundhog Day.

Over the course of nearly nine years, the satirical, fake news outlet the Onion has regularly summarized such slaughters 30 times with the same headline,  “‘No Way To Prevent This,’ Says Only Nation Where This Regularly Happens.”

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November 22, 2022

On Thanksgiving, Let’s Be Thankful for What We Don’t Have

Reflections on Cambodia, Ukraine and a Post-it Note

“Boys Will Be Boys”

Back in 1985, fresh out of law school, I was dispatched to Thailand by a U.S. human rights group. I went there to document a torrent of abuses against the 370,000 Cambodian refugees in camps dotting the Thai side of the border following the 1979 Vietnamese invasion of their country.

The savagery these souls faced took many appalling forms: murders, torture, beatings, rapes and robberies by the Thai soldiers assigned to protect them; similar mistreatment of Cambodians fleeing to the camps, carried out by their own countrymen belonging to rapacious resistance units fighting the Vietnamese occupation; vicious raids on the supposed places of refuge by gangs of Cambodian bandits, 20 to 30 strong; shelling of the camps by Vietnamese artillery based just across the border; and brutal, suffocating repression in the few sites controlled by the remnants of the genocidal Khmer Rouge regime, which had killed at least a million people during its 1975-79 reign of terror in Cambodia before the invasion forced their flight to the border.

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November 20, 2022

Bring on Your Wrecking Ball: Americans Defy Election Deniers

They'll be back. And so will we.

Not all it’s cracked up to be.

A tale of two summers

In the summer of 1983, I visited an old friend who was a young foreign service officer in Manila. Sitting in his living room, sharing beers and shooting the breeze with a few of his colleagues, we discussed the Philippines’ future. One colleague granted that its then-dictator, Ferdinand Marcos, was a repressive ruler. But he insisted that the dictator was “the only game in town.”

Less than three years later, Filipinos’ “People Power” ousted Marcos.

Pro-democracy Americans’ summer of discontent in 2022 obviously differed from that of Manila in 1983. But there was something similar in the despair in the air here.

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November 13, 2022

It Takes a Village

A Small City Takes on an Oil Giant

A Great Day by the Bay

Three years ago, my wife Betty and I moved to the small Bay Area city of Benicia, 45 minutes north of San Francisco. We were enticed by its waterside setting, balmy breezes, safe streets, affordable housing (by Bay Area standards), thriving art scene, civic pride, and small town celebrations such as wine walks and dog festivals. Its catchphrase, to attract visitors, is “A Great Day by the Bay.”

The town has an unusual political history. It served as the state capital from 1853 to 1854. According to local lore, during Prohibition its bars and hotels provided an off-the-beaten-track escape where politicians, judges, and the like could engage in, ahem, apolitical indulgences.

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June 11, 2022

The Coup Attempt I Witnessed 35 Years Ago

Can we take heart from our political heart attack?

In 1987, I witnessed a violent, nearly successful coup attempt in the Philippines. If someone had told me back then that a U.S. congressional committee would investigate an insurrection of our own 35 years later, I would have scoffed.

I knew that our own democracy was flawed. I never dreamed it might be fatally so.

But here we are.

[Continue Reading]
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About A Promised Land

A Promised Land explores the enduring grind of U.S. politics, fresh takes on policy debates and the long-term promise of viewing America as a developing country. Its perspective partly flows from Stephen Golub’s many years of international development work with leading aid agencies, foundations, policy institutes and advocacy groups.

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