“consuming” books or movies, but I think “absorbing” fits better.
A Russian about to be drafted shot the official that was trying to draft him.
California now gives all school students gratis breakfast and lunch. Students, no longer going hungry, are doing better.
It seemed to me that lunch in my schools in New York City was gratis in the 1960s. I certainly was never asked to pay for lunch. Could it be that my mother bills paid for my school lunches? It never occurred to me to wonder about this before, and it is too late to ask her now.
Some churches pressure members to install spyware so the church can shame them for what they look at on the web.
Westport, Connecticut, has set up a system to help its police department deescalate confrontations with people who are freaking out. The system helps them quickly find friends or relatives to calm someone down, rather than a cop who is a stranger.
British-Ukrainian Aiden Aslin describes the torture and brainwashing he was subjected to during 5 months as a prisoner of war, before he was exchanged. It ranged from solitary confinement to threats to murder him summarily.
It is interesting that the guards in the supposedly independent Donetsk People’s Republic forced prisoners to sing Russia’s national anthem, not an anthem of their supposed country. They seem not to take its “independence” more seriously than it warrants.
US citizens: tell Congress and state legislatures that no one should be jailed or imprisoned for an unintentional voting error.
Iranians are enraged at the state, and keep protesting around the country despite 35 killings — mostly protesters, it is clear, but not all.
They are angry about a lot more than the death of Mahsa Amini. Iranians, led by women, demand changes in laws to respect their rights.
*California to Ban Sale of Gas Heaters and Furnaces by 2030.*
Setting a sad precedent: a museum has bowed to the pressure of an indigenous group that demanded the “return” of four artifacts that the museum legitimately owns.
The group agrees that these artifacts were not stolen; that the anthropologist who gave them to the museum had acquired them legitimately. Why should the museum feel an obligation to give in? What justification can the group present for demanding to get them back? The article does not present any, it only cites someone who takes this for granted. The people in that group are not the only ones concerned here.
In general, should anthropologists obey demands to discard part of anthropological knowledge? I contend this should require a reason stronger than, “These artifacts are related to us so only we can have them.”
The Tories are adopting plans for greatly increasing CO2 emissions in the UK.
(satire) *Putin Stays Up Late Constantly Refreshing Website For Results From Rigged Elections.*
(satire) *U.N. Mysteriously Disappears After Criticising Russia.*
There is a secret legal dispute about whether the wrecker can use “executive privilege” to block some of his henchmen from testifying to a grand jury about what appears to be a conspiracy to overturn part of the 2020 election.
*To fix its broken welfare system, the U.S. must move away from its fixation on fraud, exclusions by design, and the stigmatization of people in poverty.*
Britain is ready to reform its broken electoral system, but the conservative leaders in control of the Labour Party refuse to advocate that.
Now that California has passed a law to protect fast-food workers pay and rights, the big fast-food companies want Californians to vote to restore the power to abuse those workers, in the name of low prices.
DeMentis now claims to have sincerely transported immigrants to Martha’s Vineyard to help them.
One could ask him, “If you really wanted to help them, why did you give them a false picture of the support they would find there?”
The head of the World Bank really is a global heating denialist, and it appears he was put in that position by the wrecker precisely to obstruct climate defense. The world needs to oust him.
The government of California, and local governments, took away black citizens’ land and houses systematically in various parts of the state.
*Corporate greed, not wages, is behind inflation. It’s time for price controls.*
Rigid price controls cause a different kind of market distortion. I wonder if there is a way to get a similar effect but less rigid. For instance, what if any increase of X in the price of a product resulted in an additional tex starting at .9X and decreasing linearly over the following year down to .1X, then ending after that year. This might discourage price increases that are not meant to be long-term.
The Crimean Tatars, those that remain in the Crimea, say that Putin is targeting them for conscription as a method of getting rid of them.
*Autumn has arrived in the UK — but the season is not [as] it used to be.*
*The US Must Ends Its Complicity in Illicit Financial Flows Out of Africa.*
*UK climate activists held in jail for up to six months before trial.*
If they are convicted, their sentences will probably not be as long as they were in jail. They are moved frequently from one prison to another, and their friends can’t find them.
I suspect this is an intentional practice of nonjudicial punishment.
The surveillance of employees by US employers is reaching levels reminiscent of Chinese repression.
We must establish the rule that by default surveillance systems are forbidden, aside from certain limited exceptions.
The Federal Reserve is raising interest rates too fast — not waiting to see the full effects of previous increases before moving on to another increase. This creates a risk of overshoot — of raising interest rates so much that it is producing a result bigger than the organisation wants. If you keep increasing a signal again and again, faster than results can possibly come back to you, you will overcontrol and cause a crisis.
The governors of the Fed ought to know this, since it is basic business economics.
*The Guardian view on the Tory trickle up policies: redistributing to the rich.*
An Australian mobile phone company suffered a data theft which took personal data about millions of customers. The company had lobbied against changes to laws about customers’ rights over that data.
The harmful consequences of this breach are partly the Australian government’s fault, since it required the company to collect and save various items of personal data for each customer. The reliable way to prevent the release of people’s personal data is not to possess copies of it, but Australia did not permit this company to use that method.
Labour proposes to stop giving government contracts to businesses connected with tax havens.
It would be a change for the better, but only a small one. It would be simple to require all companies that do business in in Britain to reveal their real owners, whereas this would only affect those businesses that get government contracts.
*Giorgia Meloni is a danger to Italy and the rest of Europe. The Brothers of Italy leader denies she is a fascist but clings to the Mussolini-era slogan “God, homeland, family.”*
*Meloni appears the most dangerous Italian political figure not because she explicitly evokes fascism or the practices of the black-shirted squadristi (militia), but because of her ambiguity.*
*Vanuatu makes bold call for global treaty to phase out fossil fuels.*
*Pope calls for courage in halting use of fossil fuels to protect planet.*
*Attempts by [the wrecker] to delay the criminal investigation into his unlawful retention of government secrets have been largely thwarted after the Department of Justice regained access to about 100 documents with classified markings that the FBI seized from the former US president’s Mar-a-Lago resort in Florida.*
Big businesses openly and shamelessly hire Congressional staff to lobby their former coworkers.
They hire former Congressional representatives, too, but they disguise that behind polite veils.
*80% of US Voters Want Congress to Enact National Paid Family Leave: Poll.*
Politicians that call themselves “centrists” are opposed to this, but they are nowhere near the political center of Americans.
*[The Tories] are borrowing big to fund tax cuts for the rich.*
UN investigators have reported evidence of many war crimes committed by the Putin forces, as well as a couple of instances of war crimes by Ukrainians.
US citizens: call on ShotSpotter to stop selling surveillance (and consequent repression).
Republican officials are trying to stop credit card companies from adopting a new merchant code for gun stores by threatening lawsuits.
I’d be surprised if laws say anything about the question of how to establish categories of stores for credit cards, so I suspect this is a way of threatening legal harassment.
The Justice Department succeeded in an appeal and can now examine the secret government documents that the wrecker took home to determine whether that was a crime.
1300 Russians have been jailed for protesting against the war.
Some of them were punished by immediate conscription.
Iran has sent thugs to crush protests against imposed religious codes, killing six protesters.
The injustice of this repression — which Iran has practiced for 30 years — has no effect on my support for resuming the non-nuclear deal, if any chance of that remains.
*The Tories spent a decade putting fossil fuel profits first [in the UK]. Now we’re all paying the price.*
Russian men are fleeing Russia to escape being drafted.
EU countries should resume admitting Russian men as visitors. Why help Putin by forcing them to remain in Russia and be drafted?
Schumer and Manchin’s deal to undermine environmental permitting requirements has been revealed, and it is is broader and deeper than we knew. It would be a disaster for the environment, including a massive increase in future fossil fuel extraction.
This deal was a dirty trick by Schumer and Manchin.
It would be much safer to let Republicans shut down the government than to pass this bill. A shut-down is a short pain in the neck; much better than a permanent disaster.
Artists have hacked many different airline advertising posters to highlight the effect of their carbon emissions.
Putin’s general mobilization threatens to destabilize the balance between his military supporters and his formerly-the-KGB supporters.
The cost of cleaning up the UK’s nuclear reactors and nuclear waste is now estimated at UKP 260bn. That would be around 300 billion dollars.
There is no way to avoid these costs, for the reactors that have already been operated. That suggests to me that it would be worth billions to cancel the two reactors now being build, even if that costs billions in indemnities, just to avoid the ever-increasing cost of cleaning them up after.
France has protected independent book stores with a minimum delivery fee of 3 euros.
It would be good to do this for all products. Physical stores normally offer the crucial right to buy anonymously (and this should be required by law).
*Pressure builds for Levi’s to protect factory employees.* The factories are in Bangladesh and Pakistan. In Bangladesh, unjust treatment of employees is rife. I wonder whether the factories in Pakistan still exist; they may still be flooded.
The practice of having many products delivered is increasing urban air pollution (as well as use of fuel).
The UK’s current prime minister was chosen by the members of the Tory Party. They include foreigners who don’t live in Britain and can’t vote in elections. They also include rich people who secretly buy a share in party decisions.
*The more loudly a politician proclaims [per] patriotism, the more likely [perse is] to act on behalf of foreign money. Every recent Conservative prime minister has placed the interests of transnational capital above the interests of the nation. But, to a greater extent than any previous leader, Truss’s politics have been shaped by organisations that call themselves thinktanks, but would be better described as lobbyists who refuse to reveal who funds them. Now she has brought them into the heart of government.*
Starbucks plans to replace the current system for Covid sick leave with a new one, and deny the new system to union workers.
Do you want your coffee to be made by someone who has a transmissible respiratory illness? Of course not. The law should require paid sick leave for all employees who, when working, can transmit a disease to others.
In the mean time, if you do business with Starbucks, tell the managers of the stores that you disapprove of Starbucks’s exclusion of sick pay for union workers.
US citizens: call on the Senate to pass the PRESS act, protecting reporters from searches to find their sources.
US citizens: call on the Federal Reserve to issue strong guidelines to stop greenwashing by Wall Street banks.
US citizens: call on Biden not to allow more offshore oil drilling.
*Deforestation is accelerating in Brazil as Bolsonaro’s first term ends, experts say.*
Forest destroyers are trying to pack in as much destruction as they can while Bolsonaro before Lula gets a chance to try to stop them.
Some Louisiana Republicans want to imprison females that get abortions.
(satire) *U.S. Landlord General Announces Plans To Fix Constant Flooding Sometime In Next Few Months.*
The head of the World Bank is a global heating denialist, appointed by the wrecker.
The wrecker is now the leader of the US Christian fascist movement, a sworn enemy of the flawed democracy of the United States and all the incomplete political freedoms the country champions.
The relatives of Shireen Abu Akleh have presented evidence that the shooting that killed her was difficult to do by accident or by mistake. They are presenting this to the International Criminal Court.
Venezuela arrested fugitive Leonard Glenn Francis at the request of the US.
It is interesting to see that the two governments still cooperate to this extent. It gives me hope that maybe the US can stop treating Venezuela as a monster.
Cheap add-ons can convert semiautomatic weapons that are lawfully sold into machine guns.
Why doesn’t Starmer, head of the UK Labour Party, criticize all the disastrous harm Tories have done?
My theory is because that would be too radical — almost something Corbyn might say — and anything that hints at such thinking is now unwelcome in Labour.
Qatar seems to have suggested to construction companies that they send most foreign workers home before the soccer world cup tournament. Many workers are being sent home early, denied expected earnings and robbed of some wages already earned.
Qatar can’t have it both ways. If it did not intend to have many workers sent home, it should tell the companies to bring those workers back and make restitution for the costs this imposed. Perhaps at state expense.
The practice of charging money to find someone a job should be strictly punished with confiscation of all the agent’s income, as well as prison — whatever it takes to end the practice. The companies that seek the employees should directly pay the cost of finding employees.
Ranchers near the Shasta river in California believe that keeping their ranches and pets going justifies drying up the river and wiping out the fish.
Ranching near the Shasta river is doomed. There may be occasional periods in the future with sufficient water, but they will be few and decreasing.
We cannot allow people to cause extra permanent damage in a futile effort to keep their doomed businesses going a little while longer. Such efforts will magnify the harm done by the increasing drought.
It’s not particularly those ranchers’ fault that sustainable ranching there has become impossible — not more than it is our fault. We (through our governments) should help them by buying them out and converting that land into parks.
At the same time, we should make it a crime punished by imprisonment to draw water for ranching in that region. Ranching sustainably there will not be possible for decades even in an optimistic scenario, and by that time we will have perfected vat meat and won’t need much ranching.
The US lead industry pooled funds to corrupt city governments and plumbers’ unions so that they would insist on the use of lead pipes. These rules continued in Chicago through the 1980s.
I would like to know what they did to promote lead paint and lead in gasoline.
A mother in Arizona was put on a 25-year blacklist which would cost her her job because she let her child play outside a store for half an hour with a friend. She figured that was safer than bringing them inside the store, where they might catch Covid-19 from customers or staff. (This was in November 2020.)
Some thoughts on how to progress towards nuclear disarmament.
The recent nonproliferation conference broke down because some countries put a phrase criticizing of Russia into the draft agreement which Putin then refused to accept. The criticism was valid, but there was nothing to gain by raising the topic in that context except to make the text unacceptable. It appears to me that this was intended to make the conference fail and blame Russia.
*Global fossil fuel subsidies almost doubled in 2021, analysis finds.*
Everyone: call on the New York Times to correct an article that called Stacey Abrams’ campaign a example of a bad campaign, citing a source who had in fact called it an example of a good campaign.
US citizens: call on corporations to keep their pledge, and stop donations to insurrectionist members of Congress.
Everyone: call on General Mills to reduce the plastic in its packaging.
*New Bill Would Protect Workers Who Walk Off the Job Because of … Disasters.*
It starts with the right to stop working or flee the workplace for safety from a disaster, without being fired or punished for doing so.
The bill refers earthquakes and tornadoes as “climate disasters”, which is certainly erroneous for earthquakes and perhaps also for tornadoes. It is right to include those disasters in legal protection for workers’ safety, but the law should use some other name for them all, one that isn’t flat-out incorrect.
When DeMentis (more precisely, people working for him) lied to migrants released by US immigration in Texas to convince them to get on a plane to Martha’s Vineyard, they committed a crime under Texas law.
Those migrants received a brochure that was deceptive, and was given out in connection with leading migrants to take the flight, but it’s not clear who published it or how it was given to those migrants.
Alas, I don’t think the Republican officials of Texas will prosecute Republicans for crimes committed while mistreating weak and powerless people in the name of the Republican Party. Mistreating the weak and powerless is what the Republican Party stands for. Closing the eye to right-wing hate crimes, even when much worse than these, is standard practice, hardly even denied.
Is there a Democratic prosecutor in Texas with the jurisdiction and guts to prosecute this crime?
*Don’t cheer for the Espionage Act being used against Donald Trump. It will backfire. Wishing to see Trump called to account need not make us champion a 100-year-old statute used to target whistleblowers.*
More or less all stain-resistant school uniforms in the US contain PFAS.
Putin has declared a partial mobilization, that will probably enable him to force more Russian soldiers to fight in Ukraine. I doubt it will make a big difference.
In addition he growled and grated his teeth.
Attorney General Letitia James of New York State has sued the corrupter, his family business, and some of his family for defrauding banks by misrepresenting the organization’s finances.
James stated that New York had presented information to the US government that could lead to federal criminal charges.
A fracker says that the geology of the UK makes it unsuitable for fracking, except on a small scale that would hardly be worth the trouble.
That is good news for the UK. Experience in the US shows fracking can poison aquifers, which is long-term damage that the balance sheets don’t count.
Because Truss is an ideological right-winger, I could imagine her as going all-out to push for fracking, even if it isn’t profitable.
*Poverty is a political choice.* In 2021, US government interventions to help poor Americans reduced the number in poverty by 45 million, even as millions lost their jobs.
*Republicans want to ban abortion nationwide, and they have the nerve to claim that this is a compromise.*
It may indeed be a compromise between what they really want, and what Americans want. But if that is so, what does it imply? It implies that what they really want is an absolute ban that would kill pregnant females who have medical problems.
*Russian nuclear sabre-rattling is designed to create fear in the west.*
The draft is provoking opposition and protest against the war.
Relatives of Shireen Abu Akleh have filed a complaint with the International Criminal Court about her killing (apparently intentional) by an Israeli soldier.
Spain has designated a lagoon called the Mar Menor as a “person”.
It is right to protect the lagoon and its wildlife, but that does not require proclaiming absurdities like this. Designating a lagoon or a river as a “person” is as absurd as designating a corporation as a “person”.
*Drought [caused by global heating] threatens UK government’s mass forestry scheme.* The scheme is intended to reduce global heating.
This is an example of an unexpected positive feedback in global heating.
The special master, specifically proposed by the bullshitter, is not proving subservient.
*How to beat a book ban: students, parents and librarians fight back.*
The article linked to just above displays symbolic bigotry by capitalizing “black” but not “white”. (To avoid endorsing bigotry, capitalize both words or neither one.) I denounce bigotry, and normally I will not link to articles that promote it. But I make exceptions for some articles that I consider particularly important. That article is one of the exceptions.
Plastic manufacturers seek to exempt incinerators from environmental laws by relabeling them as “advanced recycling”.
US citizens: call on Congress to protect the National Environmental Policy Act.
To sign without running nonfree JavaScript code from the web site, use the Salsalabs workaround.
The Capitol Switchboard number is +1-202-224-3121.
If you call, please spread the word!
US citizens: call on the Senate to support the Protecting America’s Wilderness and Public Lands Act.
To sign without running nonfree JavaScript code from the web site, use the Salsalabs workaround.
The Capitol Switchboard number is +1-202-224-3121.
If you call, please spread the word!
US citizens: call on Biden to use US diplomatic power to stop Israeli demolitions of Palestinian homes, farms, clinics, schools and businesses on the West Bank.
Truss’s plans for policy changes amount to an across-the-board attack on the non-rich, the dreams of an antisocialist ideologue.
I fear that they will include business-supremacy treaties that would be difficult for the next government to fix or escape from. Meanwhile, I suspect that Starmer, who is rather right-wing himself, like a US plutocratist Democrat, won’t seek to fix more than a fraction of them.
Protests in many parts of Iran continue, triggered by the death of Mahsa Amini, who seems to have been beaten by religious thugs on account of her clothing.
The thugs and the state take the usual authoritarian “We never do anything wrong, shame on you” stance, that we have seen in many countries before, including the US.
Israel is about to extract natural gas from an undersea deposit claimed also by Lebanon.
As with all international disputes about which country has the right to extract certain deposits of fossil fuel, the only acceptable answer is, “Leave it in the Earth!”
Burning all the currently known fossil fuel reserves would exceed the carbon budget by 7 times.
In the absence of some massively deployed future CO2 extraction system, that would bring certain disaster.
On a secondary issue, the fossil fuel industry claims falsely to employ 11 million Americans. In fact, jobs numbered roughly 700,000 in 2019, and only 500,000 today.
Obviously, destroying civilization and the ecosphere in a few decades is too high a price to pay to keep a few million people employed for a decade or two — even if it would really achieve that. There are lots of other ways for the state to support workers.
Biden pandered to Americans’ desire to forget the danger of Covid-19, by saying that “the pandemic is over.” For proof, he cited that Americans have stopped taking sensible precautions.
*”What’s ending here,” tweeted University of Washington medical anthropologist Nora Kenworthy, “is political commitment and funding, not cases or deaths.”* Or, let’s not forget, instances of permanent organ damage, short of deaths.
Republicans called for keeping college expensive to pressure poor Americans to join the military.
Representative Bowers, a Republican and currently speaker of the Arizona state house of representatives, denounced the trumpery of most Republican candidates there as “fascism”.
More Perfect Union accuses Florida Republicans, starting from Governor Dementis, of handing control of the state’s electric utility into the hands of cronies who allow it to keep raising prices. That was in exchange for the company’s secretly funding sound-alike candidates, whose names would confuse voters so as to defeat some Democratic legislators.
I don’t know whether any of this is illegal, but it clearly shows Dementis’s real contempt towards the residents of Florida, and his country.
Republican-controlled states refuse to test sewage sludge for PFAs before spreading it on farmland.
A British-Pakistani novelist talks about corruption of democracy, in Pakistan and in Britain.
Boys and men today face a difficult situation — the flip side of the difficult situation that girls and women face. Men can no longer win respect by being the “bread winner” for a wife, not only because that role is no longer respected, but because most jobs don’t pay enough to enable a worker to support anyone else.
It is hard for me to empathize with people who want to be the “bread winner”, since I was repelled by that idea of the male role ever since I learned about it. I yearned for a relationship of love, not for one of being valued only for bringing in money.
But this problem is real enough for those in it, and the US right wing has taken advantage of this to recruit fanatics.
Prominent lawyers rip the “special master” decision to shreds and explain its partisan contempt for established law.
US citizens: Oppose new offshore drilling.
US citizens: call on Clarence Thomas to recuse himself from he case about the “independent state legislature theory.”
Here’s more info about that theory and why it would enable Republicans to steal the 2024 presidential election.
US citizens: call on Biden, Congress and the EPA to protect Americans from environmental carcinogens.
To sign without running nonfree JavaScript code from the web site, use the Salsalabs workaround.
The reappearance of polio in the US shows that vaccine refusal endangers everyone.
Republican senator Ron Johnson uses China as a target for posturing, but he has not hesitated to make millions from a company that works closely with China.
Where Republicans are concerned, we must deactivate our usual practice of supposing that a person at least to some extent means what person says.
*Meet the Members of Congress Who Traded Defense Stocks While Making National Security Policy.*
Refuting plutocratist bullshit arguments against cancelling student debt.
(“DeSantis” is is not a plural, and neither is “DeMentis“, so the “s” after the apostrophe should not be elided.)
Migrants shipped to Martha’s Vineyard and Washington DC from Texas state that they were induced to accept by promises of assistance, which the people who shipped them did not provide.
If people in the US want to travel, and you wish to give them a ride, you should be allowed to do so. (Ironically, Republicans are trying to prohibit that.) However, luring people to travel with false promises is fraud.
The Cult of Positive thinking teaches Americans whose lives are difficult that faith in success is all they need for reaching success. No need to condemn your employer for firing you and hundreds of others.
ShotSpotter analyzes microphone data using proprietary algorithms, and claims to report when and where shots occurred. Those reports can’t be trusted because courts cannot verify the validity of those algorithms.
In addition, thugs have the opportunity to falsify the reports later so as to inculpate the chosen suspect.
Congress published a report showing how the main US fossil fuel companies have been talking up their “investments” in renewable electricity while acting to perpetuate fossil fuels. They refused to attend the hearing afterwards.
Ukraine asks the UN to rule that governments can seize Russian overseas assets to use as reparations for Ukraine.
*Russian pop star Alla Pugacheva speaks out [patriotically] against war in Ukraine.*
The Tories plan to adopt another excuse to tax business less: to declare some low-tax “investment zones” and encourage businesses to move operations there from the rest of the UK.
Mahsa Amini’s funeral became an opportunity for the public to show anger at the religious “morality” thugs that killed her. A movement to condemn their brutal repression is growing.
The supreme leader, Ayatollah Khamenei, seems to be ill, and he might need to be replaced soon. That could be a turning point for Iran.
Research comparing various US universities shows a correlation between when Facebook started operating in each and when there was an increase in depression.
A new Texas law forbids web sites from deleting user-contributed hatred. If this prevents Facebook from operating there, the Republicans of Texas will, for once, have actually helped the well-being of most people in Texas.
Tying the ecological crisis (including global heating disaster) to Capitalism.
Communism is not the solution — it is based on repression, which we have seen in Tibet, Xinjiang and Hong Kong. (We have seen it in Ukraine too; Russia is not communist now, but Putin got his start in the secret police of a communist state.)
The solution needs to include Socialism, but a state which is pure Socialism will push everything into a uniform mold in the name of efficiency and security. The things that everyone depends on should be handled in a socialist way, including public transit, public schools, medical care, electricity, water, and some aspect of food production (but not small farms). However, other areas of life that should be decentralized so that they are not regimented or uniform.
Would a fully socialist country permit us to make or have computers that let us reject nonfree software? I think it is more likely it would legislate a requirement for a back door.
The corrupter publicly endorsed QAnonsense. Well, why wouldn’t he? He has already promoted insurrection in various ways.
John Deere puts locked-down nonfree software in its farm machines, arousing the right-to-repair movement among farmers. Nowadays it seems to be producing more de-tractors than tractors.
US citizens: call on your state legislators to adopt ranked-choice voting.
To sign without running nonfree JavaScript code from the web site, use the Salsalabs workaround.
US citizens: call on MGM to cancel its TV program “Ring Nation”, which would glorify and promote Amazon’s surveillance device.
*Australia must set higher climate ambitions “to avert impending disaster,” Pacific island leaders say.*
I agree completely, but it’s even more important to say this to China. China’s emissions dwarf Australia’s. These Pacific island leaders now have influence there; I hope they use it.
The same is true of the United States, and we Americans have to keep badgering the government about this.
*Hungary is no longer a full democracy, says European parliament.*
The structure of the EU gives it no way to take action against Poland and Hungary, because each one protects the other.
DeMentis lied to 50 migrants to convince them to board planes to Martha’s Vineyard.
Long Covid has especially struck cooks, teachers and medical workers, as their work made them particularly exposed. Now that echoes in the shortage of American workers for those jobs.
Long Covid could be responsible for up to one-third of the US labor shortage.
(satire) *Black Homeowner Receives Higher Appraisal After Displaying Pictures Of Klan Members.*
The Putin forces systematically took away Ukrainian military veterans that they found in Izium, especially veterans of previous fighting between Ukraine and Putin’s Donbas proxies, No one in Izium knows what happened to them.
The Putin forces tortured some civilians, and some of those killed themselves afterward.
There is a political battle in Detroit over whether to spend federal relief funds on a ShotSpotter microphone system, which purports to detect gunshots reliably but is less reliable than advertised.
The article explains that opponents warn that each false alarm will draw a team of thugs expecting more shots into an area filled with poor people, many of whom are black. That could be fatal for the latter. They also say that helping poor people deal with the great difficulty of getting through life under neoliberalism will reduce crime.
In addition, ShotSpotter microphones listen to the conversation of people talking on the street. That is tyranny, and ought to be forbidden.
We must not judge a system mainly by what it is nominally intended to do; we must judge it by all the things it actually does. If a system were only capable of detecting gunshots, it might be a good thing (supposing it worked reliably), but it might still be less desirable than other ways of spending the money.
*US court revokes permits for plastics plant in Louisiana’s “Cancer Alley.”*
With new technology, the harmful emissions of chemical processing can be greatly reduced. We should replace all the existing chemical plants that emit pollution.
*Fossil Fuel Industry Seeks to Expand Free Speech for Corporations and Limit It for Citizens.* (These are two separate, parallel efforts.)
Here’s more information about the latter: laws to stifle protests.
The Tories plan across-the-board deregulation, aiming to let businesses in Britain have their will. Mere human beings will be powerless to stop them.
One example is fracking.
Is the Labour Party doing anything to stop this? It could warn that it will restore the eliminated rights when it takes power in two years, and require all businesses that tried to take advantage to apply for re-approval. That might discourage businesses from trying to take advantage of the gap. It’s worth a try, but will it try?
Mississippi Republicans have seen the chance to ruin Jackson’s water system forever — by privatizing it — and they won’t let go.
Schumer will not allow a Senate vote on antimonopoly bills before the election. Progressives accuse him of doing this in exchange for their funds.
Conjecture: Dementis is using migrants as pawns to trigger outrage from Democrats. That builds him up in the eyes of Republicans.
This suggests we should downplay the importance of his stunts. I think that Martha’s Vinyard’s response will be helpful.
Republican officials tricked migrants into accepting flights to Martha’s Vineyard via false promises. The migrants’ lawyers are suing and calling for prosecution.
That’s more significant than mere helpless outrage.
When it comes to meeting people’s basic needs, the US is not number 1. It is now ranked number 41, ranking between Cuba and Bulgaria.
Those two are “developing countries”, but the US is an “undeveloping country.”
I suppose the reasons for specific faults are complex, but it is clear that plutocracy is the fundamental reason the US does so badly with so much money.
The bullshitter appointed a special investigator in 2020 to investigate alleged crimes committed by Hillary Clinton with Russia. The investigation is winding down and appears to have found little or nothing against her.
The bullshitter may choose not to notice the facts and continue repeating his accusations.
What will NATO do if Putin uses nuclear, biological or chemical weapons?
As long as Putin does not use weapons of mass destruction, even “tactical” ones, the reasoning remains valid that we should not have NATO troops fight in the war, so as to avoid direct fighting between NATO and Putin, since that fighting could turn nuclear.
However, that reason will lose its validity if Putin does use them. To deter him from using them, we should make it clear that his use of weapons of mass destruction could trigger NATO’s use of conventional weapons against the Putin forces and Russia’s military power, at least for a while.
After a week or two of that fighting, it would make sense to give him a chance to deescalate — offering to pull the NATO troops out of the fighting if Putin commits to ceasing use of weapons of mass destruction.
The Putin forces are using many levels of pressure to force children in occupied Ukraine to study a brainwashing curriculum, and force teachers to teach it.
When people don’t want the pain of resisting oppression, they tend to justify collaborating with it by claiming that by participating they can soften the oppression. In principle, that can be true. In practice, it is usually self-delusion. You can pretend you are resisting in a subtle way, while actually doing exactly what the oppressor wants.
Collaboration plus dragging your feet may seem like an opportunity to be neutral, but the occupying forces don’t stand for neutrality: they demand that everyone give complete support and participate in the repression.
Thus, the teachers who agreed to collaborate were compelled to do more than just teach the Putin curriculum. They also had to join in measures to attack and punish teachers who did not join in. The price of collaborating under these circumstances is to become totally corrupt and totally evil. Then how can you live with yourself?
Has Putin ever organized such complete dishonesty before? I have to wonder if he is getting advice on brainwashing from his Chinese allies.
The US is in a position to join the treaty to ban cluster bombs, and it ought to do so.
Internal documents subpoenaed by congressional investigation show that what companies publish to imply they are trying to curb global heating is pure bullshit. What employees say to each other goes directly against it.
Sviatlana Tsikhanouskaya, “defeated” in Belarus’s last election when Lukashenko stole it, says that additional western sanctions on Belarus can drive him out.
Morale is why Ukraine has a good chance of winning the war.
California’s new “privacy” and “transparency” bills, supposedly meant to “protect children”, are likely to subject everyone to surveillance and mysterious moderation/censorship policies.
The US Army sets a standard of excellence in winning battles, and its contrast shows the incompetence of the Russian Army. However, the US as a country shows similar incompetence ast the level of winning wars; it can get stuck in a losing war for years.
The US is to quick to assume that starting a war is a good idea.
Prime Minister Truss is a market ideologue, a deadly menace like Thatcher and Reagan.
*This doctrine insists that politics submits to “the market”, which means, when translated, that democracy must submit to the power of money. Any impediment to the accumulation of wealth — such as public ownership, tax, regulation, trade unions and political protest — should be torn down, either quickly and noisily or slowly and stealthily.”
Ukraine has found 440 graves in Izium made during the Putinite occupation. Those buried included civilians and soldiers. Some of each were murdered with their hands tied.
Republicans thought with glee that they could lie to penniless refugees and dump them on wealthy Liberals in Martha’s Vineyard. Instead, the people of Martha’s Vineyard organized to help the migrants, showing the contrast between good will and Republican hatred.
Why do poor people suffer more from heat and pollution? It’s not only that rich people compete for more comfortable neighborhoods. It’s also that they use their influence to direct municipal investment, making parks, beaches and trees on the sidewalls, to the areas where they live.
And direct highway construction and chemical plants into the places where poor people live.
(satire) *Apple Announces New iPhones Will No Longer Be Compatible With Human Hand.*
They have always been incompatible with natural human society.
*Louisiana woman carrying [totally unviable] skull-less fetus forced to travel to New York for an abortion.*
Bird flu has spread to additional bird species, so it has become endemic all year in parts of Europe.
It has evolved to infect some mammals too, which means infecting humans may not be far away.
*Health groups call for global fossil fuel non-proliferation treaty.*
Unusual heavy rains, and deadly floods, have now struck Italy.
The Sizewell B nuclear power plant, that the UK is paying exorbitantly to construct by the seaside, could be dangerous in the future as sea-level rise brings the sea up to it.
It is a terrible waste of money that ought to be spent on efficient decarbonization — with renewable energy.
US citizens: call on Congress to extend the Radiation Exposure and Compensation Act for another 30 years.
US citizens: call on Senator Schumer to reject Manchin’s fossil fuel deregulation bill.
*New UN Report Shows Fossil Fuel Addiction Is a “Recipe for Permanent Climate Chaos.”*
US citizens: call on Oklahoma district attorneys not to prosecute females for using marijuana while pregnant.
US citizens: call on Congress to pass the Roadless Area Conservation Act.
To sign without running nonfree JavaScript code from the web site, use the Salsalabs workaround.
The UK media project an image of rapt devotion towards the monarchy, but this is false. Even people who conversed outside Buckingham Palace presented various attitudes and opinions.
US freight railroads were facing a strike because workers demanded more control over when they would work. At the last minute, the railroads offered them more control, and this may have avoided the strike. President Biden’s pressure helped make the railroads give in.
In the US, a wave of unionization is being met with a wave of illegal retaliation.
Ask your Democratic candidates for Congress whether they intend to make the NLRB more powerful, so employers will fear to violate workers’ rights.
An analysis indicates that long Covid has taken at least half a million people out of the US labor force.
This is in addition to 250,000 working people that Covid-19 removed from the labor force via death.
Senator Graham has proposed a federal law to ban abortions after 15 weeks.
The law promotes several noteworthy confusions, such as calling that “late term” when the arbitrary stopping point is less than half the usual gestation period.
He surely knows that it will not pass, so I wonder what political motive leads him to propose something that most Americans disagree with.
US inflation is going down; the Federal Reserve should understand the danger of applying a harmful remedy to correct a problem that is correcting itself.
Pieper Lewis killed a man that she accused of raping her. She has been sentenced to 5 years’ probation, with the requirement to pay $150k to the man’s family.
She can’t possibly make that much money, because nearly good jobs are off limits to people with criminal convictions. So this would be an impossible demand, and that cannot be just. By luck, she raised the money by asking for donations, but that doesn’t excuse an impossible demand in a sentence.
In California, Jay Jordan has won a campaign to change that policy of excluding convicts from good jobs.
Biden has acknowledged the right-wing threat to US democracy, but he has not dared to call for solutions that would change it.
California will stop high school classes from starting at the insane hour of 7am. They will instead start at the painfully early hour of 8:30am.
Some large private equity funds are still investing billions in into increasing the use of fossil fuels.
* When overpaid corporate boneheads … substitute slogans and computer metrics for real solutions, they’re admitting that they are the problem; they simply don’t know how to motivate and manage a creative workforce. They should resign in shame.*
They have the power, so they won’t resign. We should demand laws to prohibit measuring workers moment by moment.
*EU proposes $140 billion windfall tax on energy companies.*
*More than half of Republican Senate nominees have rejected, cast doubt upon or tried to overturn the 2020 election results.*
Republicans are working very hard to take workers off the voter lists. Here are some of the excuses they employ.
You can check your voter registration to make sure it has not been cancelled. However, the article doesn’t say how to tell whether they are purging you by caging, or how to prevent that.
*Why did the Queen’s death receive saturation media coverage while the future of the Earth goes largely ignored?*
I conjecture that it’s because global heating implies a responsibility to try to stop it, whereas the death of the Queen does not imply any responsibility for most people.
*Ukraine mass grave with 440 bodies discovered in recaptured Izium.*
Several recent Supreme Court decisions will kill Americans at random.
This reality is not quite analogous to the mythical “death panels” that were not in Obama’s medical insurance scheme, neither as proposed nor as adopted. Those were supposedly going to decide whether individual persons were worthy of medical treatment. The Supreme Court decisions will lead indirectly to the death of victims selected by circumstances at random.
The US adopted the child poverty tax credit as a response to Covid-19. It lifted millions of children out of poverty. Now Republicans (with Manchin’s help) have brought it to an end.
I guess they figure that sloppy-thinking voters will blame Biden for the change, because it will happen while he is president.
*Nearly 100 Members of Congress Reported Stock Trades That Overlap With Committee Work.*
A protest camp for resistance against the Line 3 tar sands oil pipeline has won a protective order against harassment by local thugs.
The pipeline opponents are protecting more than their local water supply (though that is a valid reason to oppose a pipeline). They are fighting one of the local battles to curb global heating and prevent the early death of billions of people.
The local thugs are on the side of money. Probably because the local politicians are, too.
(satire) *Disney Wins Emmy For Best Profits.*
A Disney executive probably would deprecate all movies by calling them “content”.
The Putinite occupiers arrived in Izium believing Putin’s lie that they were liberating the people from “Nazis”. Civilians set them straight.
It appears that thugs in San Francisco take DNA samples they get from people reporting rape and compare them with a large database of DNA from crime scenes, looking for a match.
I doubt that San Francisco is the only place that does this.
The Department of Justice has sent subpoenas to many officials and associates of the wrecker, seeking communications that might be about plotting.
The US military is finishing up the first step of renaming bases, ships and other things whose names honor the Confederacy. This step is to recommend what to rename.
It is arguable that Matthew Fontaine Maury’s contributions to oceanography and navigation were more significant than anything he did for the Confederacy. I hope that people will not seek to deny him of civilian recognition for the former.
(satire) *New California Water Restrictions Limit Shower Sex To Once Per Week.*
Republican election saboteurs are overloading election officials with requests for many kinds of records about the 2020 election.
In the areas of Australia that global heating has made flood-prone, residents are systematically learning to use sandbags to protect their houses, stockpile food and potable water, and clear road blockages.
Can they put their houses up on stilts? That would protect more than sandbags could possibly do. Especially if a house needs rebuilding, they should not make it as vulnerable as the old one.
Indiana and West Virginia have banned abortion.
*Children whose [fathers] breathed cigarette smoke more likely to get asthma — study finds.*
The Putin forces fired missiles at a dam protecting the city of Kryvyi Rih, causing a river to rise 8 feet and flood part of the city.
The owner of Patagonia company has donated the whole company to a foundation that will use the income for curbing global heating.
California has sued Amazon for anticompetitive practices.
When the Putin forces captured Izium, they had a list of people to arrest and disappear.
LED bulbs for night illumination give out more blue light. This increases interference with sleep for humans and other animals.
The European Parliament voted in a vague way to reduce the felling of trees to make “renewable” fuel.
Making hydrogen by electrolysis using renewable electricity should now be cheaper than natural gas, at least in Britain.
Starmer says people have a right to protest at the ceremonies of the monarchy provided they do it in a way that will hardly attract any attention.
The UK’s two main parties are now the extreme wild right-wing (Tory) and the tepid right-wing (Labour).
US citizens: phone your congresscritter and ask for funding for Covid-19 treatment and vaccination, and likewise for Monkeypox, in the annual spending authorization.
Also insist on keeping Manchin’s sabotage of environmental impact regulations for oil pipelines out of this bill.
The Capitol Switchboard number is +1-202-224-3121.
If you call, please spread the word!
People in Balakliia said that the Putin forces committed some war crimes, but not massively as in places near Kyiv.
They also say that a fair number in Balakliia collaborated with the occupation, and most of those have gone to Russia. The supporters of Putin, all across Ukraine, have been fleeing to Russia, shaken by the Putin forces‘ sudden collapse.
I am sure many collaborated with the occupation to a limited extent because they were terrified of refusing, and expected the occupation to be permanent. Except for those who informed on others or did considerably more than the minimum, it would be wrong to punish them.
The military-industrial complex has captured the US Congress, which hardly even tries to resist funding waste and fraud by weapons companies.
I am all in favor of spending government funds to make jobs in the US, but which jobs should they be? Any job will support a worker, if its wages are decent. So let’s choose the jobs that also produce things that the US needs or that Americans can use.
Congress resists spending money on cancel all student debts, but it has poured the same amount of money into the failing F-35 without hesitating.
Why the difference? One can guess that Congress values the military-industrial complex more than mere people.
Australia sees a battle of wits between humans and sulphur-crested cockatoos. Humans currently seem to be winning.
Must the two species be adversaries? Why not cooperate? What people dislike about the cockatoos seems to be that they screech.
Could some hacker design a device that offers a button for cockatoos to open the bin door so they can eat, but closes the door slowly if it hears a nearby screech? After closing, it could keep the door closed for 30 seconds, responding to the button during that time with “No, no, no.” They might learn to stop screeching in order to get at the food.
When the 30-second closure period ends, the device could speak, “Hello, Cockie!”
Another question is, what is a good way to minimize the scattering of waste outside the bin while they pick through the bins? Perhaps just leaving a foot of empty space at the top of the bin would do the job.
*The two main parties may not support striking workers, but the [UK] Green party does.*
The US is now being hit by the patents that endanger Covid-19 vaccines and other mRNA vaccines.
(satire) *Delta Lifts Pandemic-Era Restrictions On Abusing Flight Crew.*
Planet roasters in the US have launched 150 campaigns of legal harassment against climate-defense activists.
The biggest culprits were Chevron and Exxon.
Starbucks is offering some new benefits to workers who don’t join the union.
They can’t be very large benefits, because the company expects to increase profits by fighting unionization.
An interview with Symon Hill, who was arrested for briefly heckling at a kingship ceremony in England.
The bullshitter‘s claims of “executive privilege” over government documents that he wrongfully took home start from something that the Supreme Court said in a case against Nixon’s claims, but distort and exaggerate it.
The court only avoided insisting that a former president could not possibly have executive privilege in some situation regarding some documents.
The bullshitter has exaggerated this vague hypothetical possibility in several dimensions at once.
Sanders rebuked the medical industry for spending billions to prevent the US from moving to universal medical care.
*Russia has spent $300m since 2014 to influence foreign officials, US says.*
Australia has weakened the influence of planet roasters in its Climate Change Authority.
Next it should change the name to Climate Defense Authority. Defending the Earth’s climate from human attack is its mission.
To remove a lot of CO2 from the air, we need to preserve the large, mature trees that continue to do so.
Rebuking Palestinian leaders for focusing on armed war against Israel, and using their arms to just so they can say they are fighting.
Palestinians in the West Bank have made considerable use of nonviolent resistance, but they don’t have nonviolence discipline. There tends to be a crowd of stone-throwing youths alongside protests; Israel cites them as an excuse for its repressive treatment of protesters.
That excuse is not truly valid, but Israel makes it seem valid.
*The UK needs better insulated homes to free us from Putin and the fossil fuel giants.*
US citizens: call on Congress not to give any handouts to the cryptocurrency industry. Let regulators do their jobs and protect consumers now.
The Capitol Switchboard number is +1-202-224-3121.
If you call, please spread the word!
US citizens: urge the DOT to finalize a strong rule requiring states to reduce transportation emissions.
Some local officials in Russia have called for impeachment of Putin, and have been charged with a crime for that.
It’s one small addition to his long list of crimes against Russia.
China has sentenced some Hong Kongers to 19 months in prison for publishing a book. The book can be interpreted as suggesting criticisms of Chinese rule in Hong Kong.
A new merchant code for credit card charges will eventually make it easier to see who is purchasing a lot of arms or ammunition from firearms stores with a credit card.
It seems that a substantial fraction of people who commit a massacre spend a substantial sum to buy weapons for it, and a credit card is the only way they can pay.
Some Africans blame Queen Elizabeth II for the evils of the British Empire.
Since the British monarchs did not make policy decisions in the 20th century, I don’t see that they were to blame for injustices that the British Empire committed then. It’s the elected officials that we must blame.
In the US, UK, Mexico and China, non-rich people who have been shafted and cannot possibly afford the payments they are compelled to make are starting payment strikes.
I am puzzled by the concept of “energy bills” used in articles about the UK. What is an “energy bill”? I have never received one. I get bills for gas and bills for electricity. Some people use fuel oil and get an oil bill. Is the term “energy bill” an oversimplified way of generalizing about various kinds of bills? Does the system in the UK send people just one bill for all kinds of energy?
The US “Business Roundtable” represents businesses that claimed to promote decarbonization, but secretly lobbied against measures that would achieve it.
Shortages and crises trigger food price increases, then banks and giant food companies take advantage to push the price up.
*Coalition Tells FTC to Curb Amazon ‘Surveillance Empire’ by Blocking Purchase of iRobot.*
It is a good reason to do so, but Amazon is simply too big and should not be allowed to buy any other companies.
The latest Apple spy-watch uses sensors to monitor when you ovulate; it doesn’t need to ask you. And it will give that data to various companies and governments.
With that data, governments can tell that you probably had a miscarriage or an abortion. That will provides grounds to subpoena more data so as to decide whether to prosecute you.
The device may offer you the choice to disable the feature, but since the software is non-free, which implies it is controlled by Apple rather than by the users, it could be drawing those conclusions and showing them to companies and governments, while pretending that it does not.
Brittany Martin was sentenced to four years in prison for talking back brashly to some South Carolina thugs while she was in a Black Lives Matter protest.
In November 2020, the bully insisted to his aides that he had won the election and would refuse to leave the White House.
Britons who call for elimination of the monarchy, even just by holding signs, are being arrested.
The Tories officially eliminated many human rights this year. This could be the way Britons learn what has been taken from them.
I don’t care much whether the UK is a monarchy or a republic provided it is democratic and respects human rights. But that’s precisely what Tories are destroying.
*A federal judge blocked an Arizona law that restricts video recording of police.*
That was obviously what ought to happen. But we must worry whether the Supreme Court will allow it to stand.
*A low-carbon chemical industry “could create 29m jobs and double turnover.”*
The Ukrainian operators of the Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant have shut down the last operating reactor there, as a safety measure.
Is this actually an improvement in safety? I have doubts.
While one reactor was operating, the plant had three options for obtaining the electricity needed to prevent meltdowns in the shut-down reactors: electricity generated by the one operating reactor, electricity obtained by cable from a distance, and the diesel backup generators.
With all reactors shut down, the first option is gone, and the other two are no more reliable than before.
The number of people living in slavery today is estimated at 50 million, including 10 million who have been forced into slavery (including involuntary marriage) in the past five years.
*Why is Liz Truss sacking top civil servants? Because she wants to suppress dissent.*
*Alabama is jailing pregnant marijuana users to “protect” fetuses.*
This also has the effect of preventing them from getting an abortion, which they ought to do if pregnant and using marijuana.
What about pregnant tobacco users? Pregnant alcohol users? The same logic applies to them, but tobacco and alcohol are not illegal, so the state has no basis to arrest them. If the US government legalizes marijuana, it might protect the victim of this law.
The London thug department has a new commissioner whose job is to teach the thugs to be police officers: not to be cruel or racist towards the public, and to stop protecting elected officials who break laws.
Some Republican candidates are running on the platform of “I won’t try to restrict abortion in this state.” But it’s not enough to stop the advance of the anti-abortion movement — we must liberate the states they have taken.
The Republican Party, overall, is the party of lies and cheating, and most Republican politicians support stealing the next election.
*Princeton University is now [gratis] for families making under $100,000.*
The article said “free”, but I’ve decided to use that word only in regard to freedom, not in regard to price.
*To Win in November, Democrats Must Listen to Citizen Groups.*
US citizens: call for strengthening the protection of North Atlantic right whales.
An inexpensive new malaria vaccine is reportedly 80% effective in preventing malaria.
Although it is comparatively inexpensive, 200 million doses will still cost 2 billion dollars to make and administer in Africa.
Malaria can’t continue to exist in a mosquito for longer than a mosquito’s short life span. If we can prevent it in humans, we can get rid of it entirely — if we can overcome vaccine denialism. There is a lot of vagueness in “80% protective,” so I don’t know whether this vaccine could eventually eradicate malaria over time. Perhaps in combination with modern genetic engineering that can greatly reduce the mosquito population in an area.
Bucks County, Pennsylvania, near Philadelphia, has rejected an attempt to privatize the sewer system.
Private ownership of water and sewer systems should be illegal. No matter how much money the city or county gets for selling one, it will always lose in the long term.
San Francisco has adopted a policy of not enforcing drug laws against psychedelic drugs made from “plants”, which appears to include drugs made from fungi even though fungi are not plants. (The higher fungi are more closely related to animals.)
Many US thug departments systematically purchase access to the Fog Reveal “service” which provides access to an enormous data base of people’s movements.
*Tell Congress to Stop Big Oil. Tax Windfall Profits Now.*
Biden has proposed firmer policies for making the results of federally-funded research, and the experimental data, available to the public(PDF).
This is a good step in the right direction, but we also need to do something about the harm done by trade secrecy for science and engineering that isn’t federally funded. This harms medicine and denies users’ right to repair hardware and program free software to run it.
The proposal has one small problem that is potentially disastrous: the new systems of publication don’t have to take effect until 2025. If a right-wing government is elected in 2024, it could cancel them before they even take effect. Yes, that election would cause bigger disasters — but why enable it to cause another one?
A mother writes about swapping household roles with her three children for five days, seriously, and how her children became more mature and responsible and developed better relationships with her and each other.
Environmentalists are suing the US Forest Service for approving a new railroad through a protected “roadless area”, for the sake of opening up a new oil field. The Forest Service paid no attention to the danger of exacerbating global heating disaster.
Amory Lovins argues that most existing nuclear power plants are so expensive to operate that we would be better off in just a few years by shutting them down and investing the savings in constructing renewable electric generation.
When British people mourn the queen, they may be mourning the safety of their lives, as they watch Tories destroy the social welfare state that their lives depend on.
Vague state laws prohibiting abortion, under criteria that are not entirely clear, can kill patients who need medical care that may be prohibited, because doctors are afraid to do it.
*Two [of the wrecker’s] officials subpoenaed for fundraising to undermine elections.*
Ukraine launched an attack to the east near Kharkiv and has captured the strategic rail junction of Kupiansk, which the Putin forces have been using to send supplies to a substantial part of the front.
The Putin forces soldiers who are cut off may have to surrender. That would be a very good thing — more victory with less bloodshed.
Reportedly Ukraine’s army advanced 30 miles along a narrow route. That exposes them to the danger of counterattack from the flank, but perhaps the Putin forces are not capable of doing such a thing.
Jackson, Mississippi, now has running water, but making it safe to drink will take lots of money, spent on decades of work.
Some employers monitor workers minute by minute. Some won’t pay for work that wasn’t recorded by the monitoring software.
To prevent competitive advantage (or the belief that there is competitive advantage) from stampeding all businesses into intrusive monitoring of workers as if they were machines, we should legislate rules that limit monitoring. When a business argues that “We will be at a disadvantage if we don’t do this to our workers, we will have two responses: (1) your competitors can’t do this either, and (2) respect for human beings is more important than how much profit you make”.
Shelling at the Zaporizhzhia nuclear plant has destroyed part of the fossil-fuel power plant which provided power to keep the nuclear plant cool if it were to shut down. This is a step closer to a nuclear disaster that would affect the whole region.
I have seen no conclusive evidence that proves which side is doing the shelling, but Ukraine has nothing to gain from it, whereas Putin has made a strategy of outrageous threats. It is plausible that he would say, “I’ll poison this land if I can’t have it. And some of my own land at the same time.”
Bluffing is also part of his strategy. That he would say that does not imply he would actually do it.
Greenpeace dropped boulders into a “protected” area of the sea to physically protect it from bottom trawling. The UK government responded with unusual vigor to block plans to drop additional boulders.
Most “protected” maritime areas in UK waters are not protected from much. But at least they are now protected from slowly falling boulders.
Debunking Manchin’s bogus reasons to build the Mountain Valley Pipeline.
*One in 10 US households struggles to afford enough food, study finds.*
Activists are pressuring big western banks to stop supporting Russian oil companies.
After several failures, one 14th Amendment case has succeeded in knocking a participant in the Jan 6 insurrection off a ballot.
See how US representatives and senators voted on bills(PDF) to defend and assure voting rights.
Republican poll worker training in Michigan urged trainees to break rules and hide it.
A judge overturned the rule that employer-funded medical insurance must cover medicine to control HIV.
Requiring employers to pay for employees’ medical care gets the job done, but has bad side effects. For instance, it gives employers an incentive to replace workers with robots. And people who don’t have an employer to fill this role get left out.
Instead, the state ought to pay directly for medical care, and raise income by taxing the rich. That would avoid all these problems, including the issue of whether the employer’s religion should govern the employee’s medical care.
However, there is no chance of passing the laws to do this unless we elect many more progressives to Congress, and in the mean time, this decision will be a setback for preventing further cases of HIV in the US.
*Oil and gas firms’ green investments fail to match promise of adverts.*
Legal experts rebuke the “special master” decision.
It has never made sense to me that an ex-official could claim “executive privilege” over the use of public documents to investigate per for possible prosecution. Surely the current officials are the ones who decide whether privilege applies.
However, I’ve seen claims, from people it seemed ought to know, that it is accepted that ex-presidents have a certain amount of executive privilege over the documents from their activities.
I wish I understood how to reconcile this disagreement.
*The Democrats are gaining because Americans want jobs, not Capitol mobs.*
*US farmers face plague of pests as global heating raises soil temperatures.*
The Oath Keepers’ leaked lists of members include over 80 public officials and candidates, 370 thugs, and 100 soldiers.
Not everyone in the lists is or was a real member.
Michigan will vote on an initiative to legalize abortion.
Activists have looked through federal laws and found many executive powers that can be used to move the US away from fossil fuels.
In the UK, motorists that want to park are in many places forced to choose between one kind of oppression and another.
In some places, they are required to pay through a snoop-phone. That is unjust because it identifies them, and makes them run nonfree software.
In others, they are charged for parking by a system that recognizes car license plates. That spares them the nonfree software, but it is unjust because it identifies them,
There should be a law requiring all charged parking spaces to allow cash payment and not record who parked there.
Everyone: call on CEOs of GM and Ford: stop funding candidates that promote voter suppression.
US citizens: call on your senators to pass the Pregnant Workers Fairness Act.
The Capitol Switchboard number is +1-202-224-3121.
If you call, please spread the word!
The wrecker’s effort to make Georgia officials arbitrarily replace Georgia’s electors could put him in prison. It seems that prosecutors are working to assemble a solid case.
California plans to subsidize some women from anti-abortion states to travel to California to get an abortion.
Prime Minister Truss has appointed the head of a lobbying company as her chief of staff, and he now has her office entirely trussed up.
As minister, she gave farmers permission to dump large amounts of agricultural waste, polluting the rivers. Rules and inspections serve a crucial purpose, and deregulation can cause disasters, sometimes permanent ones.
She plans to push ahead with fracking in the UK.
She also plans to rescue fossil fuel companies and cut taxes for the wealthy, while probably making working people bear the burden. Perhaps not by coincidence, she got a lot of campaign funds from planet roasters.
The wrecker’s dream wall on the border with Mexico is the perfect symbol of the spirit of trumpery: claiming to protect working-class whites against notional threats, while actually screwing and cheating them (and the other working-class Americans too).
Ginni Thomas has close relationships with various anti-abortion organizations that called on the Supreme Court to reverse Roe v Wade.
Tajikistan has forcibly deported hundreds of the Afghan refugees that came there a year ago after the Taliban took over Afghanistan. It seems to be trying to deport many more.
Many will find life difficult as they have none of the identity papers that people there are now required to have.
After the superflood in Pakistan, famine will follow. As continued global heating smashes into the increasing human population, disasters get ever larger. Eventually the world’s capacity to help stricken regions will prove insufficient. Maybe that is happening now — several drought-caused famines are happening in Africa, and they are getting insufficient aid.
Even if we do our best to decarbonize, global heating will continue for many years. We need to limit the human population or it will be limited by disasters that kill millions.
*Big oil companies are spending millions to appear ‘green’. Their investments tell a different story, report shows.*
Sea-level rise will destroy 100,000 buildings in the US by 2050, and perhaps a million by 2100.
US citizens: call on your congresscritter to ban use of sewage sludge, contaminated with PFAS, as fertilizer.
The Capitol Switchboard number is +1-202-224-3121.
If you call, please spread the word!
Everyone: call on TV networks to show the final January 6 committee hearings in prime time.
California has passed a law empowering the state to set minimum pay rates and working conditions for fast food workers.
Iran has found a new repressive use for facial recognition: punishing women who violate imposed religious dress codes.
Stalkers are using AirTags to track people. Apple will warn you if someone is tracking you with an AirTag, but only if you allow Apple to track you — all the time, for certain. (Tracker Detect surely works by telling Apple where you are — and what more data does it send?)
That does not fix the problem, it just replaces one tracking system with another.
Making the AirTag give a sound is a step towards a real fix, but it should also give off radio waves that allow you to find it using a portable radio receiver nearby to get a fix on it.
A real solution would be to require AirTag-like products to emit radio waves that one could detect with some non-computerized receiver.
Putin is formally eliminating the independent newspaper Novaya Gazeta, which in practice has already been forced to shut down by jailing its reporters.
Israel admits that a soldier “probably” shot Shireen Abu Aqleh, but claims it was a mistake.
I don’t consider “mistake” an acceptable excuse for shooting an unarmed person at a substantial distance away when no fighting is going on. That is not a natural mistake, it is one you’d have to go out of your way for — meaning, not really a mistake.
So why did it happen? Israel does not try to explain.
A Chilean thug shot Fabiola Campillai in the face with a tear gas cannister, and the resulting injuries caused brain damage: she can no longer see, taste or smell. He has been convicted for this attack and is now awaiting sentence.
Such attacks are not unusual in Chile (nor indeed in many other places). Chilean thugs blinded 400 people during the 2019 wave of protests. Thugs anywhere tend to have right-wing views, and may hate leftist protesters to the point of killing or framing them. This thug shot someone who was not even protesting.
Sra. Campillai did not let these injuries crush her. She ran for the Chilean Senate, and I’ve been informed that she won.
*Russian journalist facing 24-year jail term for treason refuses to sign “confession.”*
Psychotherapy must consider the external situation that makes people depressed or anxious.
Can some sort of change in your mind help you cope with the external situation? I think it can, because different people respond differently to the same external situation. Some can face up to the bad situation and try to help deal with it, while as others succumb to counterproductive rage, despair, or jealousy.
A study found that being a parent (or even imagining being one) tends to encourage social conservative views. Furthermore, when that effect is controlled, age does not correlate with social conservative views.
(satire) *Shocking Video Captures Calm Police Officers Handling Situation Nonviolently.*
After seeing the basic plan for Australia’s proposed “indigenous voice to Parliament”, I think it is ok.
The reticence about stating any specifics made me wonder what it was they did not want to talk about. I was concerned, specifically, that the plan might incorporate racial distinctions into Australians’ political rights. Australia did just that for most of the 20th century, to the detriment of the indigenous people, but two such wrongs would not make a right.
I’m relieved that there is none of that in the proposal. So I’m in favor of it. Indigenous Australians suffer from racism and its effects, and this may help them encourage measures to improve the situation.
Rich countries (and rich businesses) are responsible for most of the greenhouse emissions that have destroyed nearly all of the food growing in Pakistan, as well as a large fraction of its housing. They ought to be held liable.
However, as experience with Covid-19 vaccines shows, rich businesses don’t hesitate to drive people to death for their profit, and rich country governments mostly serve those rich businesses. Even when it comes to saving the lives of their own future citizens from the consequences of global heating, those governments are paralyzed.
Biden has started using the US Petroleum Reserve to stabilize oil prices, which ideally ought to regulate the rate of oil drilling and maintain a strong incentive to conserve.
This plan will do some good, but I think it will not, by itself, bring about fast enough decarbonization. And it certainly won’t prevent busting the carbon budget. We need to accompany it with a carbon tax that will increase yearly on a predefined schedule. However, the Republicans plus Sinema and Manchin block that, for now.
If the public has an incentive to conserve fossil fuels, that doesn’t make it practical for people to do so. That requires investment, and most Americans have no money to invest, in this or in anything. We need governments, at whatever level, to make this investment.
School closures, and “remote learning”, did considerable harm to the education of a generation of American children.
They were necessary, but they lasted longer in the US than in other wealthy countries. That was partly because US plutocratists had eliminated the incomplete social safety net that had existed in the 1970s (“Why waste our money on those poor people?”), and partly because of politicized sabotage of other methods of reducing disease transmission, and only school shutdowns were available to compensate.
The damage it did was more than most people recognize — it pushed most people into use of unjust software such as Zoom.
A positive feedback in the climate system: hot weather encourages right-wing hatred, and right-wing politics supports more global heating.
*Body of British aid worker captured by Russian proxies shows “signs of torture”.*
Michigan’s ban on abortions has been overturned based on the state constitution.
The wrecker brought documents to Mar-a-Lago that discuss US spies in foreign countries. There was little security there against foreign spies who might have sought to identify them.
Earth is approaching five major climate tipping points.
Research identified 11 more major climate tipping points that are further in the future. If we don’t get our act in gear, we will fall over them too.
A number of right-wing Russian bloggers lambaste the Putin forces as a failure.
Why, I wonder, does Putin let them continue to say these things? He has to have a reason. I speculate that it is because they are building support for Putin to declare war and start forcing lots of Russians into fighting it.
The US Army discovered one of the many rabid right-wing fanatics in its ranks in the process of investigating him for another reason.
*Serbia and Kosovo reach free movement agreement.* This is a first step in reducing the hostility between those two countries,
The mainstream media, in covering Biden’s speech about the Republican attack on America’s system of government, treated truth and lies as equivalent.
*Trader Joe’s broke labor laws in effort to stop stores unionizing, workers say.*
The UK as “regulatory state”: government no longer believes it can, or should, actually do anything, but only regulate the procedures used by businesses that actually do things. And it does not try to ensure that jobs are done right, or that they are done at all.
Once the state is seen not to be doing enough in some area, it rations out whatever capacity happens to exist.
Bernie Sanders calls on working class Americans to stand up to dooH niboR.
The wrecker’s motive for taking home secret documents may have been to threaten the government so it would not prosecute him for other, bigger crimes, such as trying to falsify the election’s results.
If the US charges him with the crime of taking those records home and leaving them in an insecure place, that will appear to be a political act. If it does not, that too will appear to be a political act. Faced with the choice, it should take the bold choice.
As we have seen, the Espionage Act needs to be amended to allow a public interest defense so heroes such as Chelsea Manning and Julian Assange will not be convicted. That would have no effect on the wrecker’s trial; he cannot point to any public interest purpose for taking those secret documents home.
Los Angeles is in a heat wave worse than that of a few weeks ago. This is causing acute danger, especially to homeless people, but also to firefighters and people who work in food trucks.
A museum is going to “repatriate” many artifacts (and some remains) excavated in archaeological digs. A campaign has convinced the museum’s administration that rationally exploring humanity’s past is “theft”.
One advisor is quoted as citing supernatural beliefs as the basis for that claim, asserting that “ancestors” have a “home” and can “return” to it. A living person can cherish a home, or miss a cherished former home, but a former person (former because deceased) is no longer capable of either one. And only a living person can go somewhere. Remains can only be put here or there.
Were those long-dead people anyone’s ancestors? Presumably, some had descendants and some did not, but the person cited calls them all “ancestors.” We are not dealing with rational belief here. Can anyone relate some of those deceased in a concrete way to anyone living? The article does not say so, and I think it would have said so, if that were so.
Living people have the right to believe what they wish, and it’s kind to cater to anyone’s belief when that doesn’t sacrifice anything important. However, their belief, no matter how much certainty they feel, is not a compelling reason for society to adopt policies that interfere with science.
In 2020 I signed a form to donate my body to medical research and/or teaching after I die. The office that handles these donations was closed in 2020, but I recently determined that it was open again, and mailed the form. I suppose my organs will be too old to be worth transplanting, but I’ve kept that option open too. This way, my dead body will be able to do some good for humanity. Too bad about those that won’t.
The Minnesota Nurses Association will go on strike against private hospitals in the state.
(satire) *Mississippi Governor Sends Emergency Workers To Contain Jackson Flood To Black Areas.*
Elections in Texas and Kentucky are at risk as many election officials quit in response to threats of violence.
An out-and-out planet roaster is now the minister in charge of the UK’s decarbonization.
Chileans wanted to replace Pinochet’s constitution, but rejected the new one that was drafted. What next?
Kiribati’s government has “suspended” all the judges of its appeals court, causing a constitutional crisis.
On a hunch, I pose the question of whether that government is negotiating with China.
Some states have amended their constitutions to grant people the right to a “healthful” or clean environment. Some now require regulators to apply much stricter standards for potentially polluting activities.
Making an extrovert Q: How can you make your child grow up to be an extrovert? A: Feed per lots of extroversion olive oil.
Calling on the Democratic Party to ban the use of SuperPAC funds in its primary elections.
* There is a fatal disconnect between a political system that promises democratic equality and freedom while carrying out socioeconomic injustices that result in grotesque income inequality and political stagnation.*
As long as rich people can effectively manipulate elections, we effectively have plutocracy rather than democracy. That’s why I have called so many times for Americans to recognize plutocracy as the enemy and fight to restore democracy.
*Facebook Accused of Fueling Bolsonaro’s Coup-Mongering.*
Having reduced Jackson’s water supply to a fragile state by under funding it,
right-wing politicians in Mississippi now want to use that as an excuse to privatize the system.
This is the same thing that the Tories are doing to the British National Health System.
There are of course differences in detail; it is possible to privatize the NHS a little at a time by encouraging first the wealthy, then the not quite so wealthy, and eventually anyone not abjectly poor, to move one by one to private medicine, but it is not so easy to do that with the municipal water supply. But I don’t think they are greatly important.
Basically, this is a standard right-wing plan of operation to achieve their goal of reducing most people to poverty so that the rich (who fund the right-wing campaigns) will get richer.
*The [wrecker’s] officials who took children from their parents should be prosecuted.*
That includes the wrecker himself, as the one who planned those actions.
An idea for how the government should help the poor pay for fuel and electricity: pay for all of it up to a certain necessary level, then tax purchases beyond that much.
Legislators have proposed a bill to add a defense for whistleblowers to the Espionage Act.
This could save Julian Assange, and other heroes in the future.
The IAEA inspectors at the Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant report that the damage from shelling of the plant did not create a danger of nuclear disaster, but this was due to luck. They called for establishing a “nuclear safety and security protection zone,” which would demilitarize the plant.
*195 Election Deniers [supporters of the bullshitter‘s Big Lie] Are on the Ballot in November — And Many Are Expected to Win.* 195 Election Deniers Are on the Ballot in November—And Many Are Expected to Win
(satire) *U.S. Escalates Campaign Against Spotted Lanternflies By Arming Praying Mantises.*
Queensland, a state in Australia, states that it has “returned” several national parks to indigenous “traditional owners”.
What does it mean, practically speaking, for these parks to be returned to an owner other than Australia? Does this mean they aren’t national parks any more? Will people from other groups face interference in visiting these parks?
Labour will almost certainly win the next UK election; Prime Minister Truss has little that can inspire voters.
The doubt is whether the Labour Party, as it is now, will go beyond just taking the harshest edge off Tory policies.
Facebook engineers testifying to Congress said that nobody is capable of saying where Facebook stores its useds’ data.
*Sudan accused of trying to ‘bury the truth’ with mass graves for protesters.*
In Hong Kong, metaphors that could mean criticism of China now lead to conviction in court.
US citizens: call on your state representative to help end the construction of new natural gas infrastructure.
To sign without running nonfree JavaScript code from the web site, use the Salsalabs workaround.
US citizens: call on the Federal Reserve to protect our economy and communities from Wall Street funded climate chaos.
EU citizens: call on your MEPs to vote to stop classifying “forest biomass” as a “renewable energy source”.
Burning wood on a small scale is renewable, but it tends to get out of hand and result in destruction of forests. Lots of small-scale users in Haiti eliminated most of the forests in that country. Nowadays, the EU policy encourages industrial-scale burning of wood, and the deforestation at industrial scale.
There isn’t time, before the disaster we need to try to avoid, for new trees to grow. We must stop the cutting and burning of the existing trees.
*South African court bans offshore oil and gas exploration by Shell.* This has a good chance of keeping some fossil fuels unextracted, which is what we need to do world-wide to avoid global heating disaster, given the fact that we have used up the carbon budget.
New York State has passed new gun control rules to replace those that the Supreme Court ruled against.
Pressure from China — threats of noncooperation — delayed the UN report on repression of Uyghurs in Xinjiang for a whole year.
Bad as racism, plutocracy and media bias are in the US, we must not forget that things can get far, far worse — and China shows what that is like.
The US bullies some Muslims to act as spies on their friends. China bullies all Chinese to act as spies and agents of pressure, and bullies international institutions to serve its will.
Putin has recently reshaped Russia into a sort of quasi-China. He engages in cruelty massively, but in a more emotional fashion than China’s machine-like callousness; meanwhile, his grip on Russians is still not as tight as Chairman Xi’s. There is a chance to defeat Putin before he can reach that point.
A Tory minister has surprisingly acknowledged that a good family is any group of people that make children feel loved and supported.
I did not have a good family — after age 8 or so, I did not feel that either parent’s house was my home. The next time that I felt I had a home was when I lived in Currier House at Harvard. After I was expelled for passing too many classes (I was too grief-stricken to attend the graduation ceremony), I felt that the MIT AI lab was my home, for a few years. Perhaps the support I felt there is what enabled me to develop the strength to begin, in the late 70s, to stand up against wrongs I saw around me.
Tory strangulation of the National Health Service has left 10% of staff positions unfilled.
Patients who have money are turning to private doctors. When they have all given up on the NHS, plutocratist politicians will dare to render the NHS totally ineffective; non-rich Britons will get little medical care, and some will die, and Tories will be satisfied.
A government ready to spend more money on making life easier for the non-rich would find it easy to fix this problem. Perhaps that would call for taxing the rich, instead of “trickle down” economics.
Russia’s fossil fuel industry has been hit by a series of mysterious deaths in the past few months.
I don’t have proof that any of them was murdered, but it is implausible that they were not. I am sure Russian repression agents, as well as gangsters, remember the Defenestration of Prague, iteration 2, in which Soviet agents murdered Czech foreign minister Jan Masaryk.
Amazon and Starbucks are refusing to negotiate with newly unionized employees.
At the Starbucks at 874 Comm Ave in Boston, the company put in a new manager who cut the hours of many of the staff so that they could no longer make a living. Rather than give up, they went on strike. The store has been entirely closed for many weeks.
*Ginni Thomas lobbied Wisconsin lawmakers to overturn 2020 election.*
*[The corrupter] says he plans to pardon US Capitol attack participants if elected.*
Finally, one case in which he actually demonstrates loyalty to someone who is not rich.
*Top [Guatemalan] corruption prosecutor held in jail as Guatemalan elite bids to purge foes.*
Carbon capture and storage can’t be a path to ending fossil fuel emissions if the CO2 that it captures is pumped into oil fields to squeeze out more oil. It becomes just another way to extract more oil.
*Burning native forest wood waste for electricity shouldn’t be classed as renewable energy, [Australia] report suggests.*
Planet roasters search constantly for excuses to bend the definition of “renewable energy.”
The likelihood of Bolsonaro’s defeat in the next election has inspired a rush to cut down the Amazon forest as fast as possible.
Several major economies are planning to impose a limit on the price paid to Russia for oil, starting in December. The price limit could apply to imports by other countries when the shipping involves EU countries in some way.
Russia says it will refuse to sell at that low price, and that will continue the contest of economic muscle. So far, Putin has come out ahead in this contest. The question will be whether other customers will buy all the oil Putin needs to sell.
Ukrainian prosecutors have charged a specific Russian soldier with joining in the murder of two civilians. The soldiers talked with the civilians, then shot them in the back as the latter were walking away.
Biden proposes to spend 13 billion dollars to hire 100,000 more cops, supposedly to reduce the danger of violent crime. But it might not achieve anything on that dimension, and it would ramp up repression in the form of arrests for drug possession.
It would be more effective to put that money into social programs and low-rent housing.
FEMA’s director acknowledges that FEMA’s maps of flood danger need to be updated to reflect changes due to global heating.
Chileans rejected the draft constitution written by the constitutional convention.
Pinochet’s constitution was designed for repression; it needs to be replaced. But with what? I suggest asking the public to vote on several questions about which of the major changes they like or dislike. Those answers might help in writing a constitution that a substantial majority of the public will support.
New and old unusual ways to raise funds for critical infrastructure to help farms and people cope with drought.
South Africa has banned seismic blasting in the ocean off the Wild Coast area.
Shell was going to do the blasting to search for fossil fuels that humanity cannot afford to extract anyway.
The blasting itself would have
harmed whales and other wildlife. I celebrate the outcome of this case, but I think that the views of people living near the proposed area of exploitation are a weak foundation for something as important as limiting fossil fuel extraction. The dangers of the extraction are global, and the ban should be global too.
Fiji’s government has bounced from coup to coup, and the current prime minister rules in an authoritarian and vengeful way.
Meanwhile, competition with China for influence blocks Australia from using its influence to promote human rights in the Pacific. Governments would respond to that by jumping to China’s side; China does not seek to promote democracy.
Gentrification is driven by powerful business forces, often supported by the state. If you oppose the change, focus on those forces, not on the visible symptoms.
Some people are prepared to pay thousands of dollars for “just the right” puppy, without ever actually seeing it. Sometimes they pay the thousands and never even get the puppy — it is a scam.
Nothing can excuse swindling, but the victims would never have fallen prey to this scan if they had not started with a foolish approach. An adult ought to know better than to believe that one specific puppy, that perse has never met, is the one and only right one.
There is a certain tendency for people to believe that spending a lot of money on something unusual and different in your life will make it better. But it doesn’t usually have that effect.
The Credible Messenger Mentoring Movement helps teenagers from disprivileged groups avoid the temptation of gangs and drugs by offering them mentors: adults who grew up in the same community and succeeded in meeting that challenge.
The mentors are credible in that they personally experienced the situation that they guide the teenagers in coping with.
Artist Ken Lum made two sculptures, a bison and a fur trader (perhaps also a bison hunter), to display in the city of Edmonton so as to provoke thought about the extermination of the bison. The city cancelled their display in the name of hyper concern for some people’s hypersensitivity.
Hunters did not kill 100.000000 percent of the bison — the species still survives in some protected places.
Starbucks carefully cultivates a let’s-be-kind-to-each-other image while treating employees like dirt and punishing them illegally for organizing.
I too stopped by the strike site at 874 Comm Ave, Boston, and I found out how the workers have been able to keep the picket going 24/7 for months: it’s not just the workers! Volunteers from the community help out.
I wish I could post a link to more information, but that site won’t show anything unless the visitor runs nonfree JavaScript code, and I will not direct people to such a site. Is there a web developer who would be interested in setting up a freedom-respecting site to show the same information? The strikers might be happy to adopt that site if some developers set it up.
Recommending that the abortion rights movement take inspiration from the 80s/90s organization Act Up, which campaigned for AIDS patients’ rights and medical care.
Scientists conclude that parts of the Amazon rainforest in Brazil and Bolivia have already reached a tipping point, and will not regrow as forest if left alone.
We can’t be sure just how big a disaster this will be, but it will be big.
*Doomscrolling linked to poor physical and mental health, study finds.*
The Tory Party has selected a plutocratist extremist as the new prime minister.
The nation mostly opposes her already. As most Britons are forced into poverty, her program is to cut taxes (a benefit for the wealthier Britons) and cut spending (more Tory cruelty).
Perhaps recognizing her unpopularity, she intends to delay elections as late as possible. Two years in power will allow her and the Tories to do no end of harm.
Identitarians may rejoice that, for the first time, none of the four principal ministers in the cabinet will be a white man. Perhaps being forced into poverty, and allowing the government to get away with mistreating people illegally, will hurt less this way than if white men had done it.
US citizens: call on Congress to pass the No Tax Breaks for Union Busting Act. This would eliminate the tax deduction for the money that companies spend on union-busting. I think this won’t be enough to eliminate union-busting, but I think it will convince some companies to do less of that.
The Capitol Switchboard number is +1-202-224-3121.
If you call, please spread the word!
US citizens: call on the Department of Education to take legal action against Florida’s law that tries to censor discussion of uncomfortable topics in school.
US citizens: call on Congress and the White House to make Afghanistan’s fund reserves available to the Afghan people.
To sign without running nonfree JavaScript code from the web site, use the Salsalabs workaround.
US citizens: call for stopping Florida law that is designed to intimidate and censor university professors and students.
US citizens: call on the Federal Reserve not to raise interest rates on working people. Government must fight corporate greed instead.
Raising a child through high school now costs $310,000 in the US.
That is for a middle-income married couple’s second child. (The first would presumably cost more.)
This doesn’t count the breakup of the relationship, which is a frequent result of having a child.
One Republican senate candidate used to claim on his web site that the Democrats stole the 2020 election — for the Republican primary. Now that he has won that, he has deleted the claim.
For Republicans, deceit is habitual.
Some thug departments in the UK require each thug to list any reporters perse knows.
US court cases are considering whether litigation insurance policies for oil companies include lawsuits for damaging the climate.
*Greece to launch parliamentary inquiry into spy scandal* about government spying on political leaders.
*Sudan journalists defy military rule by forming first union in 30 years.*
The head of World Vision International (a charity)’s work in Gaza, Mohammad el Halabi, has been convicted by Israel of supposedly routing aid funds to Hamas, but the trial appears to have been bogus.
Human Rights Watch, the government of Australia, and others have concluded that the conviction is not based on evidence.
* Once-in-a-decade plans to protect the natural world and halt its destruction will be decided in Canada in December.*
Salafi Arabia has sentenced Nourah bint Saeed al-Qahtani to 45 years in prison for some unstated acts of dissent.
Americans are catching on to the threat that right-wing extremists pose with their persistent dishonesty and violence.
Advocating attacks on our system of government, or on Americans who disagree with them, is far beyond merely holding views about policies — even major policies — that we disagree with. Those are citizens, whose freedom we must respect even as we try to convince them.
The attackers hate our freedoms, and have declared their intention to use dishonest and/or violent means to eliminate them. We must prepare to fight them, and we can’t be nice about it.
Breathing nitrous oxide too much and too often can cause grave nerve injuries, if you don’t protect yourself with supplements of vitamin B12.
This is a job for … public health education!
In some cities in France, people now need to put a sticker on the mailbox if they wish to permit delivery of junk mail. This is intended to reduce waste of resources and waste to be disposed of.
*Polling shows that US voters favor climate bills — yet assume fellow Americans don’t.*
I suspect that the propaganda term “centrist” is part of the cause of this. Plutocratist Democratic politicians discourage firm climate defense action to serve the plutocrats who fund them, and the mainstream media refer to them as “centrist.” This is designed to, and often does, convince most Americans that those plutocratists represent the political “center” — but the real political center is well to the left of there.
Many folders intended for secret files were found empty in the corrupter’s possession.
I wonder whether the government knows what documents were in those folders. The article does not clearly say.
*Arkansas [thugs] suspended after bystander films savage street beating of shoe less man.*
I would like to suggest suspending them by the neck, but not seriously — I oppose the death penalty, without exception. What those thugs deserve is a long prison sentence — longer because they betrayed the duties of their job as police officers.
*GOP operative wants LGBTQ community put in “isolation camps for their own protection”.*
A right-wing manipulation group, the Tea Party Patriots, undertook to sabotage the US efforts to resist Covid-19. It may have been substantially effective.
I do not believe anyone is entitled to the “freedom” to go unmasked indoors, risking spreading Covid-19, from mere preference.
500 deaths per day adds up to around 180,000 per year. That is around a 4% increment in the death rate.
The number of people developing long Covid per day is likely to be in the thousands, and the number of people unable to work is estimated as on the order of 2.5% of the entire working population.
When Dubya released some British prisoners from Guantánamo, his officials asked the UK government to jail them arbitrarily or through unjust trials. The UK government refused to do this.
New York City is suing Starbucks for firing a union organizer. Rather than using federal labor law, which generally prohibits this too, it is using a New York City law that is stronger.
*Columbus [thug] shot Donovan Lewis within a second of opening the door to his room, and then, while he was dying, told him to ‘stop resisting.'”*
I have a hunch that thug said “stop resisting” to a man who was not resisting as a way of pretending that he was resisting — to create a fake excuse to use later.
*There can be no middle ground in the fight between democracy and authoritarian fascism.*
Right-wing extremists make threats of domestic terrorism in the hope of intimidating the defenders of democracy. We must not be intimidated out of defending it.
Ralph Nader invites people to help form an organization to defend the right (and the option) of using cash to pay.
Proposing a progressive price system for electricity and fossil fuels, as a way of helping the poor without subsidizing fossil fuel for the rich.
That would be much better than giving rich people the same subsidy as the poor, but I’ve already explained that a subsidy for energy is a terrible mistake.
(satire) *Hawaiian Travel Ad Boasts Sandy White Tourists As Far As The Eye Can See.*
Don’t worry about the resources — tourists pay high prices for those.
*Global Fossil Fuel Subsidies Nearly Doubled in 2021.*
Protests are planned against the US banks and insurance companies that make fossil fuel expansion possible.
Here is the full list of events, viewable without Javascript.
I am very glad that the campaign has made the info available in this way. It means I can promot the campaign without promoting nonfree software
*The ‘Green Revolution’ Has Failed in Africa and It’s Time for a New Direction.*
I have no special knowledge about on this field — this seems plausible, but I can’t be sure whether it is true.
*Schools must teach the history of strategic non-violent campaigns that won civil rights and women’s rights.*
US citizens: call on Congress to keep censorship of abortion advice illegal.
The Capitol Switchboard number is +1-202-224-3121.
If you call, please spread the word!
*Chipotle Workers in Michigan Vote to Form Fastfood Chain’s First Union.*
Officially forming a union is just the first step. A bigger hurdle follows: getting the company to negotiate with the union in good faith.
*Irish farmers say they will be forced to cull cows to meet climate targets.*
Most of us will have to make sacrifices in the effort to avoid total disaster. Would those farmers prefer collapse of civilization?
Let’s just make sure that the billionaires don’t dump their share of the sacrifices onto the rest of us.
*The Violence at the Heart of [Republican extremism].*
A feminist recognizes that having women elected to office is not going to help women’s rights, if the women who are elected are right-wing.
*Invasions and illegal exploitation of indigenous lands in Brazil tripled under Bolsonaro, says advocacy group.*
Darya Dugina, who was killed by a car bomb recently, was reportedly an important figure in Russian disinformation campaigns.
Perhaps the car bomb attack was aimed at her rather than her father, but I think it would have been an unreliable plan. I don’t think Ukraine would have burned such a capability on a propoagandist or a philosopher.
A US judge ruled that the US government cannot seize the funds of the Afghan central bank, and that they belong to the Afghan people, but not (if I understand correctly) to the Taliban.
The arguments cited are legal arguments, not moral ones. Nonetheless, I’m happy with the outcome — I hope it will not be reversed.
Greenland’s ice will melt enough to raise sea level about one foot. It is too late to prevent this, but we may be able to prevent further melting in Greenland.
Ice is melting elsewhere too, so the actual rise that is now inevitable will be more than one foot.
Bogus Johnson is trying to arrange a comeback, aided by the fact that the two contenders from which Tory Party members will soon choose a new prime minister are inclined to make poor people suffer, and likely to lead to a big Tory defeat in the next election.
Ukraine has built wooden imitations of US HIMARS missile launchers, to use as decoys. The Putin forces fire expensive missiles at them.
It was a good hack, but I’m afraid that whoever revealed it has ruined it. What a pity.
*California approves landmark bill to give fast-food workers more power.*
Restaurant owners argued that improving low-paid workers’ pay and treatment would increase the prices of restaurant food. I am sure that will happen, to some extent, but we restaurant customers can live with that. I also expect that the restaurant owners are exaggerating.
The water supply of Jackson, Mississippi, has broken down and is out of service. The immediate cause was flooding that affected the water purification plant.
Mississippi is a Republican-controlled state, and many of the residents of Jackson are black. I suspect that the state has underfunded all civic systems in Jackson for a long time, and that this is the underlying reason for the failure.
An excavation in Norwich, England, found the bodies of 17 Jews murdered in a pogrom in 1190. Antisemitism in medieval Europe often led to murder.
* The European Union’s power sector is a good example of what market fundamentalism has done to electricity networks the world over.*
The teachers of Columbus, Ohio, went on strike and gained important victories.
The Federal Trade Commission is suing a data broker for selling location data and including data about visits to “sensitive” locations. This shows how fundamentally weak the US approach to privacy is.
Any location data record can be sensitive for some people. The way to truly protect people’s privacy is to ensure that people’s locations are not tracked.
*Prevent tree extinctions or face global ecological catastrophe, scientists warn.* Over 1/4 of tree species are endangered.
US citizens: call on Congress to block any new fossil fuel handouts, including the Manchin deal.
Bernie Sanders: *The US has a ruling class — and Americans must stand up to it.*
California’s worst heatwave yet is making firemen collapse, even as it sparks wildfires.
*”They are human beings”: Chicago mayor welcomes migrants bussed by Texas.*
What a delightful way to highlight Republicans’ inhumanity and cruel spirit.
A Canadian spy inside PISSI helped Shamima Begum and two other British girls get to Syria to join PISSI. The British government reportedly decided to cover this up as a favor to Canada.
The fact that the girls received assistance from a surprising source does not reduce the gravity of the crime they had already gone to great lengths to commit. However, aiding volunteers for PISSI rather than stopping them made the British and Canadian governments partially responsible for their arrival in Syria and participation in PISSI.
To punish Shamima Begum for that crime may well be justified, but exiling a citizen is not a legitimate punishment even as a sentence. To do it as an administrative decision is punishment without trial, and that is never acceptable.
Statistics on long Covid in the UK. 400,000 people still have it two years after their acute infection.
I wonder how many people in the UK had been infected, by that point in time.
*Hawaii to close its only coal power plant in a step toward renewable energy.*
*Democrat Mary Peltola wins Alaska special election over Sarah Palin.*
Peltola will be a representative until the end of this year, and will have to run for reelection in November along with everyone else in the House of Representatives.
A US diplomat says that Libyans have mostly given up hope that the two factions that rule parts of Libya can ever make peace and unite the country.
Michigan has a body, with two Democrats and two Republicans, whose approval is needed for ballot initiatives. The two Republicans voted against the abortion rights initiative and the voting rights initiative, causing a tie which blocked both initiatives.
An official UN report describes China’s torture and brainwashing of Uyghurs.
Watering flowers while black can get you arrested in Alabama.
Jackson’s water supply has been slowly failing for years because of a lack of funds to maintain it. This was decided by the state’s Republican government.
The Republican Party has been going all out to help its [richest] backers avoid paying taxes..*
Recent observations of Greenland’s melting ice show that climate models have underestimated the rate of sea-level rise.
I’ve been predicting for years that models underestimate the effects of future global heating. They forecast disaster, but the real disaster will be worse.
(satire) *More MLB Teams Trying To Attract Younger Audience With Free Prostate Exam Day.*
(satire) *Casting Director Can Tell That Child Actor Doesn’t Have The Abusive Parents It Takes To Make It In Entertainment.*
(satire) *Solar Power Investment Skyrockets Upon Discovery Of Massive Underground Deposit Of Sunlight.*
How activists in Los Angeles blocked a program to build a lot more jails, and instead won programs to help people avoid committing crimes and stay out of jail.
Bernie Sanders comments on today’s alignment of unions with progressives, and other political issues.
US citizens: call on your congresscritter and senators to pass the bills to establish Medicare for All.
To sign without running nonfree JavaScript code from the web site, use the Salsalabs workaround.
US citizens: call on Congress to pass the Afghan Adjustment Act which will treat Afghan refugees better.
US citizens: call on Congress to overhaul the US credit reporting system.
Google canceled a man’s account on seeing he sent a doctor photos of his baby son’ injured genitals.
Despite the publicity, Google has not reinstated his account.
This highlights well-known dangers of automated detection of possible child sexual abuse images. Beyond that, it also shows that having humans involved in making the decision is not guaranteed to correct an erroneous automated detection.
Furthermore, it shows the danger of having various different digital services provided by a single company, or by companies that have agreed to work together to kick “offenders” off the services of all of them.
Child sexual abuse is a real problem, but people accused of doing that are entitled to have a trial before they are punished. We cannot allow online disservices to implement unofficial punishment without trial.
US citizens: call on Biden to declare a climate emergency.
(satire) *[The bullshitter] Claims Seized Classified Documents Had Been In His Family For Generations.*
1/3 of Pakistan could be flooded by later this year.
If India were governed by statesmen, they would offer aid to rebuild Pakistan. That could end the long hostility between the two countries. Alas, instead of statesmen it has the BJP.
Over 40,000 prisoners in the US are held in long-term solitary confinement. That is a form of brainwashing.
Putin plans to disconnect the Zaporizhzhia nuclear plant from Ukraine’s power grid. This would create the risk of reactor meltdowns if anything goes wrong with local electric generation, because keeping the reactor cores cool requires electricity.
One can see, from this, that the existence of a nuclear reactor creates a risk whenever anything else goes wrong. Earthquete? Tsunami? Air attack?
This is one of the reasons why building more nuclear power plants is foolish. The other reason is that for the same amount of money you could build far more generating capacity using renewable generation, and power storage too.
Britons might appreciate Corbyn’s policies more now than they did in 2019, now that those opposed to them have discredited themselves at every level.
The challenge is to overcome the power of Starmer, who has made it his goal to marginalize Corbyn’s supporters within the Labour Party. If they are ever the majority, the party will ignore them.
Would-be vaccine monopolists Moderna and Pfizer are fighting over vaccine patents.
Meanwhile, they are both using trade secrets to keep most of humanity unvaccinated. Shame on both of them! And shame on the World Trade Organization, that has made most of the world surrender to this deadly regime.
*Corporate PACs Have Lavished $22 Million on ‘Big Lie’ Republicans Since Jan. 6.*
In poor countries, many practical obstacles impede vaccination and treatment of Covid-19.
Six of these obstacles are not a matter of “hesitancy”. One of the obstacles is a historical cause of understandable distrust, and thus hesitancy.
Republican candidates that won Republican primaries by professing bellicose opposition to abortion are trying to disown those views to win the final election.
So, did they seriously mean the positions they took before the primaries? Or do they seriously mean the positions they take now? Or neither one?
The Federal Reserve plans to keep increasing interest rates until inflation goes down.
Low interest rates are not causing today’s inflation, so this tactic is not going to achieve the goal until it creates lots of unemployment.
It strikes me that Powell’s real goal may be to undermine the wave of unionization. His business cronies will surely appreciate that.
Recognition of the apartheid-like nature of Israels occupation of Palestine is spreading around the world, among human rights organizations, world leaders, and even some former Israeli officials.
New sensors are being developed to determine a person’s emotional state from per skin.
Based on recent fashion, I forecast that the sensor will connect to a snoop-phone, and the data will all be sent to some cloudy company from which many companies and governments will get it.
Virtual reality, backed by high computational power, makes possible subtle forms of manipulation that influences people but that they won’t notice.
For instance, a political speech can be altered slightly for each person watching, making the speaker’s face subtly resemble the viewer’s face. This has been proven to make viewers, on the average, have a more favorable attitude toward the speaker.
The author proposes developing systems for detecting the use of this technique and other manipulation techniques.
I fear that nonfree software, combined with remote attestation, will be used to make it impossible to run the software to do this. It will be “unauthorized.”
*France to blame for refugees risking Channel crossings, say NGOs.*
*Bernie Sanders rebukes GOP for backing corporate tax breaks but not student debt relief.*
An uncontacted indigenous tribe in the Brazilian Amazon has been murdered one by one. None remain alive.
The massacre may have started when murderous colonizers got the tribe used to eating gifts of sugar, then gave them poison (mixed with sugar?).
The last survivor refused all contact. We do not know the tribe’s language, or even its name.
*Invasions and illegal exploitation of indigenous lands in Brazil tripled under Bolsonaro, says advocacy group.*
*Turkish pop star Gülsen arrested over religious schools joke.* The joke clearly suggested religious schools have undesired effects on some students, but is not a direct accusation of wrong, Nonetheless, she has been denied bail.
Do female politicians have a right to go to a small party with friends and dance?
“Some critics of Marin have said a leader who is drinking would be unable to take important decisions for their country,” Never mind that Marin denies being drunk. More important is that they never seemed to apply that rule to male politicians. Those could get as drunk as a lord, in a party or a club, without criticism like this.
Flooding disaster hits Pakistan: 700,000 homes severely damaged or destroyed, 33 million people gravely affected.
Pay attention! Floods like this are coming to a place near you, if you don’t campaign to decarbonize.
*Low Covid [vaccination] rates in poorer countries falsely blamed on “vaccine hesitancy.”*
Under funding of the National Labor Relations Board is interfering with its ability to deal with the increased union-busting that accompanies the increased efforts for unionization.
*Louisiana[n] denied abortion despite fetus’s fatal abnormality [will] travel to North Carolina.*
The affidavit released by the FBI shows why some of the bullshitter‘s supposed excuses are irrelevant,
It also shows the broadness of the Espionage Act, and why it threatens whistleblowers and the public’s right to know.
*Six of 43 missing Mexican students were kept alive in warehouse for days.*
Then executed by the army.
*Balls, gowns, marriage pressures. Jane Austen was basically Pakistani.*
This article helped me to truly feel the oppressiveness of woman’s social role in Britain in the 1800s, and in Pakistan today.
*How migrant workers get trapped in debt to recruiters.*
A federal court has defended the right to hand out information about jury nullification: the possibility for a jury to find a defendant not guilty because they disapprove of the law that was used to charge the defendant.
As I understand it, the reason for the right to be tried by a “jury of your peers” is so that they can protect you from prosecution under an oppressive law.
Republican anti-abortion laws threaten to criminalize press coverage of abortion, and nationwide publication of information about getting an abortion where that is lawful.
The EU will not ban Russian tourists; rather, it will make getting tourist visas more effort for them, as a message.
This seems like good decision. It will avoid the closure that an outright ban would have caused.
*Desperate times need radical solutions. Even Churchill [a Tory] knew when it was time to tax the rich.*
Everyone: call on Costco to move beyond single-use plastic packaging.
US citizens: call on Biden to fire I.R.S. Commissioner Rettig, who was appointed by the corrupter, and replace him with someone trustworthy.
In the US: support American railroad workers.
Everyone: call on Tyson foods to roll back its price increases.
The Pentagon has published a sensible plan for developing new rules to prevent military operations from harming civilians. When the rules are finished, in 2025, they will become part of “military doctrine”, so soldiers will be required to follow them.
A crucial part of the plan is a policy of taking seriously civilians’ reports of casualties, instead of rejecting them bullheadedly.
The plan to connect the Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant to Russia’s power grid is supposedly a backup plan to prevent a meltdown, if connections to Ukraine’s grid are damaged.
Preventing a meltdown is important, But doing so that way would also enable Putin to steal the generated power. And the danger of a meltdown exists only because Putin stations troops in the plant.
Putin should demilitarize the plant and let someone repair the damaged redundant connections to Ukraine’s grid.
Starbucks has now fired over 80 workers illegally. In one unionized store, it sent a new manager to harass workers over little excuses.
The rate of shootings has decreased 4% in the US since last year. But death threats from Republicans are increasing.
46 countries have eradicated at least one “neglected tropical disease”. Togo has now eradicated four of them.
There is a long way to go, and further progress depends on donations from rich countries.
Canberra now allows people to get recreational drugs tested to see what substances they really contain. In addition to discovering adulterants, they may find there is none of the drug they thought they had bought.
A quarter of the people who test a sample of drug product decide not to use the product after all.
Around half of the inhabitants of former Yugoslavia — or perhaps more — are nostalgic for that no-longer existent country.
I wonder if they will decide to reunite most of that country, this time as a democratic federation.
China and Europe are suffering from persistent heat and drought, which are causing many kinds of harm to the economy.
The US drought is approaching that point.
It will be much worse ten years from now. And afterwards it will be disaster, unless we take big steps to avoid it.
*Northern Australia could have dangerously high heat most days of the year by 2100, study finds.*
*Southern regions of Australia may experience deadly heatwaves annually,*
The UK Green Party calls for nationalizing the largest gas and electric utilities, and for taxing the rich to pay part of poor people’s bills.
The first step is very good. The second is half good. Taxing the rich to help the poor is very important, but each poor person should get the same amount of aid regardless of how much energy perse uses. That way, poor people who can reduce their energy use will have more money to spend on other things.
Rwanda does not allow journalists to meet refugees: all communication with them is forbidden. All inquiries about their conditions are blocked.
That is not only unjust in its own right, it is also a hint that the refugees have something really bad to criticize.
I’ve read reports of repressive treatment of dissent in Rwanda for many years.
*Under global [heating], the frequency and intensity of wildfires is expected to increase, which would lead to “more stratospheric warming”, said one expert.*
*Nearly 700 Civilians Killed or Wounded by Cluster Munitions So Far in Ukraine War.*
There is a treaty that prohibits use of cluster bombs, but since Russia has not signed it, I think that is not very persuasive as a reason to condemn the Putin forces for using them.
The cogent reason to condemn the use of them what the article tells us about their effects: they mainly hurt civilians. Using them is one indication that hurting Ukrainian civilians is something Putin wants.
All countries should sign the treaty to prohibit them; that includes the US.
Dangerous heat waves could be three times as frequent by the end of this century.
This will have enormous impacts on farming in tropical regions, as it is not safe to do strenuous work in such heat.
A school in Nebraska abruptly eliminated its 54-year-old student newspaper based on objections to what the paper published about the rights of queer people.
Publishing a newspaper no longer requires the expensive and specialized equipment that it needed 54 years ago. The students can, and surely will, move it to the internet. I hope they will make sure people can read the newspaper without running any nonfree software, by not sending Javascript code to run in visitors’ browsers.
Biden illustrates the default approach of “centrist” Democrats: when trying to help the poor in some way, take a small step so as not to be called “extreme”.
A new study estimates that 2 to 4 million Americans are being kept out of work by long Covid. That has a substantial economic effect, though it’s not responsible for this year’s inflation. Wage increases this year are not big enough to be the cause.
*Energy Giants Spending Millions to Block [Maine’s] Effort to Create Consumer-Owned Utility.*
Big US banks are investing 23 billion in Russian development of carbon bombs.
The history of political corruption in the US. Around 1900 it had reached a level of blatant excess that spurred progressive politicians to enact strong campaign finance limits.
Since 1980, plutocratist politicians have swept them away, absurdly claiming that giving money to politicians’ campaigns doesn’t buy them. Americans need to eliminate plutocracy in order to bring back democracy.
California is considering a plan to revamp math education, whose first draft aimed to reduce the advanced courses available now (only in some schools) for students who were good at math. The idea was to prioritize equality of outcomes over helping each student to go as far as possible.
If the goal is to help nonwhite students on the average to do better in math, how about making sure calculus courses are taught in all high schools? The lack of these is one factor in holding them back, and it has an obvious remedy in the school system. Meanwhile, the article suggests that San Francisco has a way of encourage more diversity of students to advance to calculus without holding anyone back.
Another aspect of racism that contributes to the problem is that people in disprivileged groups are more likely to be poor. The math curriculum can’t fix that, but the government can reduce poverty. We did it before; it isn’t hard to do, if the government spends the requisite sum. If we defeat the plutocrats, we can do it again.
Here are the details of what Biden announced about partial student loan forgiveness. Some aspects will have to wait for lawsuits to conclude, but in the mean time nobody will have to make payments.
This describes some other incrementally helpful provisions.
A formerly private 2019 legal memo from the Department of Justice used questionable arguments to protect the corrupter from charges of obstructing justice.
A House investigation found that the wrecker’s officials harmed the US response to Covid-19 in 2020 through pressure on the FDA.
Egypt excluded “undesirable” Egyptian civil society groups from the coming Cairo climate conference by not informing them about how to apply.
(satire) *Big Ben Undergoes Routine Cleaning To Remove Hapless Tourists Dangling From Minute Hand.*
Japan plans a return to nuclear power.
Restarting idle nuclear power plants might be reasonable, if they can take adequate precautions against future tsunamis and earthquakes. Building new nuclear plants is absurd even if they are safe, because they cost too much and take too long. They are a bad strategy for decarbonization.
Arizona Republicans have passed a law to impede making video recordings of thugs in action, creating an imaginary presumption that this somehow impedes them in acting lawfully. Various defenders of freedom of the press are suing.
The Twitter whistleblower says that Chinese, Russian and Indian government agents are getting special surveillance cooperation from Twitter.
The article talks in a vague sense about “intellectual property rights” that Twitter would need license for in order to train AI systems on various databases. Because that term is a misguided over generalization, the statement gives us no clue about which law it is actually talking about. None of the various laws that are foolishly lumped together under that term would be relevant to this. Maybe the statement is garbled, or has been confused by the use of the misleading generalization.
Right-wing politicians and organizations rebuke Biden’s partial loan-forgiveness, saying that it would encourage “irresponsible behavior”. It turns out that many of them recently benefited from forgiveness of much larger loans, or other sorts of business bailouts.
Right-wingers believe it is wrong for the government to help the poor, because they assume that the poor are poor because they are bad people and therefore deserve to be poor.
One of Reagan’s advisors warned him in 1970 that if college were gratis, it threatened to produce an “educated proletariat” which would endanger the power of the rich. So Reagan set about making college more expensive.
Everyone: call on Facebook to encrypt all messages end-to-end.
Normally my approach to bad things done by Facebook when it uses people is to urge people to refuse to be used by Facebook at all. To campaign to change one of the many ways it mistreats people is a distraction.
However, this particular mistreatment is so dangerous that I make an exception for it.
US citizens: call on Congress to limit the President’s ability to launch nuclear weapons.
US citizens: call on Congress to end disenfranchisement of people convicted of felonies.
I am not sure that the federal government has the power under the constitution to do this; but if it can do this, I support it.
US citizens: call on Biden to insist to Israel: human rights advocacy is not terrorism.
Georgia governor Kemp has arranged to remove local election officials who he thinks would resist pressure to alter election results.
The article starts with a theory of why he is trying so hard to avoid testifying to a grand jury.
The use of drones, controlled from far away, means that US presidents can fight small wars that the public is hardly aware of. So they no longer need to convince the public to support any given war.
A herbal “medicine” seems to have killed Lori McClintock, wife of a member of Congress.
The “Enough is Enough” movement, of and for poor people, demands that the UK government do the opposite of what Tories want: help the non-rich.
Predictions about the next 6 months of war in Ukraine.
I think Ukraine can win, with enough western arms. And we had better provide them, or Putin will emerge triumphant and set on preparing another war.
An infographic to explain what the increased IRS funding will be used for, and that non-rich Americans will not have an increased chance of being audited.
Those selling “ghost gun” kits in the US will now have to put serial numbers on certain parts, and carry out background checks.
Abortion rights and democracy are winning elections for Democrats.
*Idaho librarian resigns over “atmosphere of extremism” and “intimidation tactics”* of the right-wing Christians.
At this state of the fight, resigning in protest can be a powerful gesture. However, as time goes on, it will be necessary for librarians to find ways to fight that don’t involve taking themselves out of the battle.
*Identitarianism is Incompatible with Humanism.* The Council for Secular Humanism declares opposition to the campaign to judge and treat individuals and their ideas based on the group identities each is assigned to.
On the importance of remembering slavery and commemorating its history.
The article is about slavery and Britain, but even though the history in the US is different in detail, the point is basically the same.
*Real Estate CEO: Recession Could Be “Good” If “Unemployment … Puts Employers Back in the Driver Seat.”*
In a purely journalistic site, “Executive will not regret suffering for the masses if it increases rich people’s power” might not count as news. It is too much like, “Dog wants to bite man.” But I’m publishing political notes, not news.
A Tory activist is on the BBC board and decides what counts as “impartial” in the news.
Australia has prepared a plan to save the swift parrot from extinction, but it was designed not to protect against the biggest threat, which is logging.
New Zealand calls on the world’s nuclear powers to get serious about nuclear disarmament.
It is a valid argument that, if countries have nuclear weapons, sooner or later some country is likely to use them. By the same argument, if it is possible to build nuclear weapons, sooner or later some country will build some.
Thus, abolishing nuclear weapons globally will take us one step further away from a nuclear war, but not in an irrevocable way. We will be in a less acute variant of the same dilemma we are in now.
So I think global nuclear disarmament calls for a strategic plan: if after global nuclear disarmament one country builds nuclear weapons again, how should the rest of the world respond?
- What if China is that country?
- What if Russia is that country?
- What if the US is that country?
- What if India is that country?
- What if Pakistan is that country?
- What if Israel is that country?
- What if Iran is that country?
- What if Saudi Arabia is that country?
- What if North Korea is that country?
- What if South Korea is that country?
- What if Burma is that country?
- What if Ethiopia is that country?
- What if Hungary is that country?
Along what lines should the world respond?
- Ignoring the nuclear weapons, acting as if they did not exist?
- Pressuring that country to get rid of them?
- Building nuclear weapons and making that country back down?
- Some other approach?
I pose these questions but I do not have answers for them.
US citizens: call on Biden to agree to the non-nuclear deal with Iran.
More information about the situation.
To sign without running nonfree JavaScript code from the web site, use the Salsalabs workaround.
US citizens: call on Democrats to combat the lies Republicans tell about increased IRS funding.
The CIA couldn’t find any connection between the Palestinian human rights groups and terrorism, but Biden refuses to criticize Israel for forcibly shutting them down.
Three Arkansas thugs are being investigated after a video showed them holding a man down and punching him.
I welcome public denunciation of non-fatal instances of violence by uniformed thugs. If that becomes widespread, it could potentially end official tolerance for violent thugs.
They accuse the victim of having started the fight. One can hardly believe thugs as witnesses for such a thing, as they are accustomed to testilying, but it might be true. But that question doesn’t change anything significant. To teach everyone not to engage in violence is too much to hope for, but we must teach that to official thugs.
*Herewith the 6 rules for getting a second (or third or fourth) chance to sell a giant con.*
Some Michigan Republicans, including officials, got their hand on some voting machines in Michigan and did various “tests” on them.
I can’t be sure what those machines actually do. It turns out that the term “tabulator” is used for all sorts of machines that generate total vote counts. It is possible that voters vote directly on those machines, and the machines output only totals. Using that kind of machine with a computer in it makes the voting system vulnerable. If so, the state should eliminate their use.
However, those vulnerabilities don’t spontaneously exploit themselves. They can be exploited by people. The people most likely to rig an election through voting machines, are those who are (1) their manufacturers (because they have opportunity), (2) given to wild conspiracy ideation such as QAnonsense, or (3) willing to break any law for their cause. Each of those three groups is mainly Republican.
I would not put it past those conspirators to have inserted a back door into the machines they got control over. But it could also be the common Republican play, Blow Smoke Then Cry ‘Fire’.
Making things even more shocking and dangerous, one of the conspirators is now running for Attorney General of Michigan, endorsed by the corrupter. I’d expect him to quash the investigation if he is elected.
If you find any reliable information on what part of the election these machines actually do, I would appreciate it if you send it to me with its URL.
*It’s high time the free world realised that it is not fighting a mad dictator but an autonomous and self-regenerating aggressive power system.*
Dementis is trying to remove the elected Tampa prosecutor from office, but he couldn’t directly do this. He had to ask the state senate to support it. However, the prosecutor is challenging the move in federal court. For the moment, he remains in office.
*[Ukraine] says Russia has transferred more than 1,000 children from Mariupol for illegal adoptions in Siberia.*
Studying Big Oil projections for future use of fossil fuels finds that they expect/plan not to achieve the (weak) Paris agreement targets.
*Imagine a repeat of Jan 6th [the coup] — but with tanks, soldiers, and guns.*
I would suggest federalizing states’ national guards, perhaps one state at a time, and giving direct orders that will provoke coup supporters to quit.
Why forgiving student loans should not be limited to people with under a certain limit:
*[It] isn’t that people with high incomes will be denied student debt relief; it’s that people eligible and desperate for relief will get lost in the bureaucratic maze that income-based restrictions inevitably create.*
The four big global grain companies are using the global food shortage to gouge. This calls for a windfall profits tax.
Instead of doing this one industry at a time, how about applying it to all businesses that are making big profits — counting bonuses and stock buybacks and part of those profits?
This article asserts that Dugin, the apparent target of the car bomb that instead killed his daughter, is a fierce right-wing critic of Putin and has demanded a much harsher war against Ukraine.
I can’t have full confidence in what CNN reports about this, any more than I can have full confidence in the rest of the mainstream media. But I don’t think Russian government agents would assassinate someone for being more Putinite than Putin himself. It does not sound like he is Putin’s enemy.
Amazon warehouse workers have walked out of the job, saying that the wages are too low to live on, and that management is demanding that they work ever harder and faster, discarding safety precautions.
For more reasons to refuse to buy from Amazon, see amazon.html.
The corrupter’s White House officials tried to “bully” the FDA to authorize hydroxychloroquine as a treatment for Covid-19, counter to the evidence.
The Solomon Islands is moving step by step towards autocracy. Now it has announced it will ban foreign journalists based on what they write.
“Racial profiling” means applying laws to people in a prejudiced way based on their race. A central part of that unjust practice is that the person acting has real, direct power over others. To apply the term to journalists’ writing, even racist writing, is twisting its meaning.
Racial profiling can’t be seen directly in one instance; it takes a set of instances to see such a pattern, and then it’s a judgment call. To use this as a criterion to admit or exclude a journalist makes no sense — unless it’s simply an excuse for arbitrary censorship.
The movement towards autocracy began when the government made a “security” deal with China. I suspect that is no coincidence.
Argentines are protesting, demanding the government help them obtain food.
As it generally does, the International Monetary Fund is “helping” Argentina pay its debts by limiting government spending to help people in difficulty. In effect, the IMF converts supposedly sovereign countries into colonies of the foreign banks, with their governments focused on extracting money for them.
This is disappointing, since the deal with the IMF was supposedly a new form, designed to avoid this result.
Oil-prospecting companies plan seismic testing in wide areas of ocean near Australia’s coasts.
Surely there is no room in the carbon budget to actually extract oil from any new oil fields they might discover. So it makes no sense to let them search.
A former thug pled guilty of falsifying the search warrant that led to the shooting of Breonna Taylor by thugs.
*Anti-Union Companies are Anti-Worker and Anti-American.*
Examples described include Amazon, Apple, Google and Microsoft. As well as Home Depot, Ikea, Lowe’s, Target and Walmart. And Costco and Trader Joe’s. Also Chipotle, Starbucks, and McDonalds.
And don’t forget Tesla.
The assassin that attacked Salman Rushdie was influenced by bizarre interpretation of Islam. Well-educated Muslims condemn such acts. This article explains why.
I think what we can learn from this is that fanatical leaders can distort any religion into a murderous cult.
Compare, for instance, with the Christian fanatics that murder abortion doctors, and the Christian fanatics that want to imprison women for abortions. It would be wrong to conclude that Christianity advocates killing doctors or imprisoning women. What we should conclude is that Christianity has the potential to be a basis for fanaticism.
So does Islam, and so do various other religions.
The US faces a shortage of teachers, partly caused by demonization of teachers and government policies blaming them for bad outcomes. Together with low pay.
China is suffering from wildfires, like many other countries, and they are sending smoke into the megacity of Chongqing.
*50+ Israeli Organizations Blast ‘Baseless’ Attacks on Palestinian [human rights organizations].*
Continuing to wreck the climate as we do it now could wipe out 90% of species that live in the seas.
Biden plans to cancel just a part of Americans’ student loans — not enough to rescue them from debt trap.
I think the income test is ok. People who make over $125k a year are not trapped by their student loans. But Biden ought to rescue the people who are trapped.
Mick Lynch, head of a rail workers’ union in the UK, has galvanized politics with his activist stance. “You don’t think strikes are the answer? What is?”
US citizens: call on the FTC to investigate the Amazon-One Medical merger.
US citizens: tell Congress, “AIPAC doesn’t speak for me.”
US citizens: call on Congress to pass the Martha Wright Act, to reduce the price of calls with family for prisoners.
Starbucks workers have been on strike since June at a store in Boston. Bernie Sanders visited Boston to show support for them.
The UK’s former spy inside al-Qa’ida accuses a British school of treating his daughter with hostility because other students’ parents vague-mindedly associated him with danger.
Dean supported al-Qa’ida for local war, but when it turned to terrorism, he condemned that based on Islam.
Ilhan Omar calls on Democrats to *Give Working Folks a Reason to Turn Out to Vote for Us.*
Democrats in Congress are starting to consider legislating workers’ rights for domestic workers, following the lead of various states and cities.
Syrian refugees in Turkey fear that Erdoğan will hand them over to Assad. And Rojava fears Erdoan will attack.
Italy’s right-wing party that is likely to win the next election is sabotaging abortion access in the region where it has control.
Global heating disaster has struck China, drying up the Yangtze River much as droughts elsewhere are drying up the Rhine and the Colorado.
Can this convince the Chinese governments of the need to stop building more coal-fired generators?
CNN appears to have decided to triangulate between Republican insurrectionists and Democratic plutocratists, and fired a long-time show host, Brian Stelter, who made a practice of denouncing right-wing falsehoods.
Robert Reich explains the reason behind this
By the way, what the first article says about Toobin is a misrepresentation of the actual events.
A New York City prison thug shot and killed a young man who was engaging in a watergun fight with a clearly identifiable watergun.
A foreign oil company is suing Peru to block the creation of an indigenous people’s reservation.
That would convert the reservation into a carbon bomb.
I wonder whether the lawsuit is based on a business-supremacy treaty.
Who set the car bomb in Alexander Dugin’s car?
Ukraine’s “false flag” accusation seems implausible to me. A Russian false flag operation would not target Putin’s friend, or the friend’s daughter.
Russia’s claims about a Ukrainian underground bomber seems implausible to me, for the reasons stated in the article. They make more sense as disinformation.
That Ukraine did it in some other way is less implausible, but Ukraine generally targets things that support Putin’s war effort, and for good reason. Why risk inspiring disapproval by attacking a civilian?
The underground anti-Putin group possibility seems more plausible than those.
*Duo found guilty over plot to kidnap Michigan governor Gretchen Whitmer.*
They did this because the wrecker had encouraged it.
* [US] state department says it does not want to close off pathways for Russian dissidents and victims of human rights abuses to get visas to go to the US.*
I agree with this decision, but I can’t tell from the article where the US will draw the line in giving visas to Russians. Do you have to be an active dissident or demonstrably persecuted, or is it enough to have no special connection with the government?
*Lula vows to protect Amazon [forest] if returned to power in Brazil elections.*
A court ruled that the Ben & Jerry’s founders can’t legally make Unilever stop selling ice cream under that name in Israel’s colonies in Palestine.
Everyone: call on CVS to publicly and permanently stop blocking Medicare for All.
Everyone: call on airlines to invest in people, not Wall Street.
US citizens: call on Democratic leadership in Congress to stop overdraft profiteering by Wall Street banks.
US citizens: call on Congress to make Starbucks CEO Howard Schultz testify about blatant union-busting.
A court ordered Starbucks to rehire seven employees that it fired, apparently as punishment for union organizing.
Some Britons are moving back to cash payments to help themselves avoid unnecessary spending.
This side benefit of using cash is well-established. But even if you don’t need to economize, paying cash is a step against mass surveillance. This very recent trend back to cash goes against a long-term trend of surrender to surveillance.
Please join the resistance! While others reject surveillance technology for the sake of valuable short-term benefits, you can reject it for the sake of freedom, whether you need those side benefits or not.
The first step is to make sure, when you leave the house, that you have enough cash for what you might want to buy that day, plus some extra.
If you don’t have enough, don’t identify yourself to a merchant! Get cash from an ATM, then come back to the merchant and pay cash. Giving a little data to your bank is not as bad as giving more data to a store as well as your bank.
(satire) *Texas Schools Require Clear Bags To Prevent Students From Bringing In Books.*
Pavel Filatyev, Russian paratrooper, has published a forbidden memoir about his experiences in the Putin forces.
His unit was sent to help capture Kherson. He saw how badly the army treated the troops. (Paratroops are generally thought of as elite units, which normally would get the best equipment.)
Then he figured out he had been forced into a war of conquest — recall that Putin lied to Russia about that — and was in the Putin forces. After being wounded and sent home, he published his memoir.
After hiding for a couple of weeks in Russia wondering when he’d be arrested, he decided to flee the country
I disagree with him on one point. If he had escaped the front, and surrendered, that would have been a step toward ending Putin’s invasion. He could have continued by writing the memoir, and it would have done the same good, while being less dangerous.
But I don’t mean that as criticism of him. Filatyev did a heroic deed, and it may help end Putin’s invasion. Bravo, Filatyev!
*Eliminating invasive species on islands has high success rate and big benefits [for protecting native wildlife].*
*The Climate Movement’s Fight to Undo the Worst Provisions in the IRA Begins.*
Louisiana is punishing the city of New Orleans for refusing to cooperate with the state’s ban on abortions by cutting off bonds for improving the city’s flood defenses.
A flood in New Orleans could kill hundreds of human beings, even thousands. Anti-abortion fanatics don’t particularly care about them because they are post-birth. However, some fraction would be pregnant, and many of those would have brought those pregnancies to term if they had survived. Do the fanatics care about the survival of those fetuses?
*Over 70 Economists Call for Biden Administration to Return Afghanistan’s Central Bank Reserves.*
Robert Reich: *America used to regulate business. Now government subsidizes it.*
This is one aspect of plutocracy. Our political system gives business unjust power over the government, and it has used that power to reorient the government to solve all problems by giving more to business.
I’ve criticized a related aspect of plutocracy by calling for punishing companies that act in harmful ways, rather than rewarding companies that don’t.
*Stop telling gen Z to relax — we have to fix the mess left by your generation.*
Arguing that we should not allow a desire for revenge to play any part in how we treat criminals.
Lawrence Freedman: “[Putin’s] war against Ukraine has been hampered by failings experienced by autocratic states during conflict* due to *the inability of those at the top to take responsibility for mistakes.”
But, he adds, “It’s not that democracies always make better decisions.”
The US is still bombing Somalia, after starting in 2011.
US citizens: call for repeal of Florida’s law to monitor the political views of every student and every professor.
Biden got the court’s approval to end the persecutor’s “Remain in Mexico” policy for asylum-seekers coming from Mexico.
The “power of stories” may be inadequate to deal with problems or injustices of global scale, such as a pandemic, or the coming global heating disaster.
*… some of the most urgent and lethal challenges our society is facing are too giant and unwieldy to fit into the little patterns our human minds are used to making. Our present pandemic response policies suggest some people don’t get to be “heroes” on a “journey”, and many traditional western storytelling conventions aren’t up to the task of understanding a climate emergency that defies any sort of conflict-resolution arc.*
Texas has passed a law requiring every public school to display a poster with religious statement of belief in a god that intervenes in human life. This ought to be unconstitutional.
Perhaps the state hopes to take advantage of a previous loophole by not spending public money on the posters. A proper understanding of the prohibition of “establishment of religion” would consider that question irrelevant.
A black family was denied a loan because of an apparently racist low appraisal of their home. They showed the home to another company, covering up indications that the inhabitants were black, and got an appraisal of almost three times as much.
A leaked video shows Russian military vehicles inside of a turbine building at the Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant.
Hackers have figured out how a farmer can take control of the computers in many John Deere tractors.
It is true that “malicious actors” could also use these jailbreaks to take control of the tractor. But don’t exaggerate the significance of that danger! These tractors have been under the control of a malicious actor (named John Deere) ever since they left the factory.
Farmers, like motorists and other computer users, are entitled to full control over their computers.
John Deere has done various secondary bad things that add to the basic wrong. This includes bad development practices and GPL violations. In addition, its security against unknown third parties is ineffective.
Danger: *Election deniers have claimed nearly two-thirds of GOP nominations for positions with authority over elections.*
CVS is trying to increase its power over US medical care by expanding into many other business aspects of medicine. Now it plans to buy some medical treatment company.
I don’t think we should tolerate the size of CVS. We should make it split up so that there are additional competing pharmacy companies.
Amazon shouldn’t be allowed to acquire any other company.
The US government wants to make Americans pay individually for Covid-19 vaccines and drugs.
That will make poor people much more likely to die of Covid-19, like 2020 again.
(satire) *[Right-wing Americans] Explain Why They Do Not Trust The FBI.*
It is customary to describe right-wing Americans as “conservative,” and there was some truth in that back when progressives/liberals had powerful campaigns for changes. Today’s followers of the corrupter are in no way “conservative.”
If an Onion page appears blank, try disabling JavaScript entirely or telling LibreJS to blacklist all scripts in the page, then right-click and select item “Reveal hidden HTML”. Or use a browser such as lynx that doesn’t implement JavaScript and CSS.
Liz Cheney’s strong resistance to the wrecker crowns a long career of supporting lies and injustice.
P&O Ferries will not be prosecuted for abruptly firing 800 union workers so it could replace them with unskilled offshore workers.
The owners are quite happy with the outcome.
President Ortega of Nicaragua has crushed all political dissent, so now he has attacked the Catholic Church by arresting a bishop and other clerics. There are no specific charges, but it may have to do with giving sanctuary in he past to protesters that Ortega’s men were attacking.
A Greek intelligence agency used spyware on the phone of an opposition party leader, and is under pressure to resign.
Greece should have laws and mechanisms to stop this sort of thing. So should the US, whose laws and mechanisms seem to have been effectively negated.
The government of Gujarat released 11 prisoners convicted of raping a Muslim woman and murdering her relatives.
Gujarat is a center of powerful hatred against Muslims. In 2002, Hindi extremists with support from the Gujarat government carried out major pogrom against Muslims there, with support from Modi himself.
These rapes and murders were part of that pogrom. One must suspect that the release of these prisoners represents the Hindu extremists’ endorsement of support for pogroms against Muslims.
The Putin forces make a point of kidnapping Ukrainians with a significant social media following, and torturing them to get passwords to post lies in their names.
The ripper made a habit of tearing up memos he didn’t like, disregarding the Presidential Records Act for the whole of his term as president.
Minutes show that the Federal Reserve will keep on raising interest rates, preferring poverty to inflation.
Progressives warned Biden that reappointing the wrecker’s chairman of the Federal Reserve could lead to things like this.
The search of Mar-a-Lago will not directly interfere with the corrupter’s plans to run again for president. It could lead to a criminal conviction, if it finds evidence to convict him. That could — let’s hope — make it harder for him to cheat his way to victory again the way he did in 2016. On the other hand, it won’t protect us from Governor Dementis.
*Mexico’s ex-attorney general arrested over disappearance of 43 students in 2014.*
Warrants have been issued to arrest 83 others, including soldiers, thugs, and local officials, as well as gang members,
I am curious about the evidence which led to these conclusions about the case.
*Tigray: almost one in three children under five malnourished, UN says.*
How President Petro’s coalition seeks a lasting civil peace in Colombia.
Bogus Johnson invented a “jobs” program designed to pressure unemployed people to apply for jobs outside their careers. Low-paid jobs, that would be. The change led to a decrease in Britons’ finding work.
The UN is considering regulations to prevent small plastic pellets (“nurdles”) from getting into the ocean.
Nancy Davis of Louisiana is pregnant, but the fetus has a fatal defect. Nonetheless, Louisiana will not allow her to abort it.
US citizens: call on Congress and President Biden to stop DeJoy from slashing USPS jobs.
US citizens: call on Congress and the President to support a Green New Deal now.
To sign without running nonfree JavaScript code from the web site, use the Salsalabs workaround.
Walden Bello, socialist candidate in the Philippines, has been charged with libel and arrested, for criticizing President Marcos and running mate Duterte.
This is a sign that they are going to be as evil as people have feared.
Google workers are calling on Google to stop donating to antiabortion politicians.
The US just gave Intel a pile of money, supposedly so it could manufacture more chips in the US. Instead it has announced a plan to reduce investments and pay big dividends.
Intel is famous for making processors with malicious hardware, the Management Engine back door, that users cannot turn off.
*Watchdog: Secret Service Didn’t Notify Capitol Police of Threat to Pelosi Until After Jan. 6 Attack.*
It seems natural that it should have passed along the warning. Whether this was just a screw-up, or criminally suspect, depends on background information I don’t know.
*Allen Weisselberg, longtime Trump Organization loyalist, pleads guilty to tax fraud.*
He will testify about the company, but not about the corrupter personally other than that.
EU countries support the work of some of the Palestinian organizations that Israel has declared “terrorist”. They reject the accusation.
*Police call for Bolsonaro to be charged for spreading Covid misinformation.*
Chemical pollution is wiping out the animals in England’s rivers, by killing small animals that the larger ones eat. Most of this pollution is from pesticides used in farms.
29 Hong Kong democracy defenders have plead guilty to political charges after a year in jail.
The west needs to mine lots more rare earth metals, to end China’s domination of that market; but if it isn’t careful, the mining process will cause disastrous toxic pollution, as it did in China.
The dispute about which country gets gas from the Timor Sea is heating up again. Australia, or East Timor?
There is only one acceptable decision: nobody. There is no room in the carbon budget for that gas. It must stay under the sea.
Other countries should support East Timor so that this step, necessary for civilization’s survival, does not cause a bigger disaster to East Timor than is going to hit world wide.
A new app for reporting dissidents has magnified the threat from Crown Prince Bone Saw to anyone who criticizes the government.
This article doesn’t mention the most grave statement that Salma al-Shehab made while at school in the UK: she stated support for the women’s rights activist, Loujain al-Hathlou, who has been punished for that.
To imprison someone for so little shows repression carried to an almost Chinese extreme.
A large study of medical records shows that, for people over 65 years old, Covid-19 leads to an increase of almost 5% in the probability of having brain fog or dementia in the next two years.
That is a big risk, worth considerable effort to avoid.
The previous mayor of London — Bogus Johnson himself — gave thugs access to license plate camera images for the inner parts of London. The current mayor wants to extend this to a much broader area.
The injustice of this is the same regardless of how big an area it covers. Indeed, tracking cars through their license plates is wrong in itself. Surveillance of everyone is the soil for repression to grow.
The International Criminal Court is operating, but handicapped because the world’s main powers have not signed the treaty for it. That includes the US.
Big Pharma’s condemnation of the bill that allows Medicare to negotiate bulk drug prices with pharma companies (for some drugs only) shows the central bogus assumption: whatever increases those companies’ profit is automatically best for patients.
This is the faith of the cult of the Invisible Hand: “the market knows best,” no obey it sheepishly, no matter how much big businesses use their clout to arrange for bad results.
Israel arbitrarily labeled six Palestinian civil society groups as “terrorist,” without a trial, by passing a law saying, “They are terrorists.”
Then state agents raided the offices of those organizations.
Ask yourself, if Israel stops Palestinians from organized peaceful defense of their human rights, what alternative they would naturally turn to.
I greatly miss Uri Avnery, who would have explained the links between the events, and the newsletter The Other Israel, which would have given more information.
The story of a 30-year-old man who returned to his old high school, pretending to be a teenager, and graduated a second time.
I wonder what grounds the medical school cited for expelling him after that. His giving a false name and age may have been irregular, but they did not harm anyone, including the medical school. If he was doing well enough in his studies there, why not regularize his status instead?
*[London thugs] stop and search powers to target protesters, suggests data.*
A Texas thug threw Christopher Shaw down on the concrete in jail, and this paralyzed him below the chest. Permanently, it seems.
It is absurd to claim that having an abortion requires more “maturity” than having a baby, but that’s what a judge in Florida ruled.
That teenager needs to get herself to a state which will let her have an abortion. I hope her guardian will help.
*Hundreds of Google workers demand abortion care protections.*
Hundreds of Google workers called on Google to fund abortions for contract and part-time workers. Also to stop collecting data that would expose people to abortion repression.
They also called on Google to stop all lobbying activities. I think it would be good to stop all businesses from lobbying.
Scientists set out to develop a way to use a computer to follow references from printed books. But instead of doing this the natural and general way, they want a way that will only work on books that are printed in a special, extra expensive way.
The probable Republican candidate for attorney general of Michigan is suspected of stealing vote tabulator machines, a felony which carries a 5-year prison sentence.
That probable Republican candidate is a supporter of the wrecker, and his lies that the 2020 election was stolen.
*Biden can still stop Trump, and Trumpism — if he can find a bold plan and moral vision.*
The law to subsidize semiconductor manufacturers in the US is an unjust transfer from working people to rich companies and their owners. It’s an example of the bad trend in the Democratic Party that Reich writes about further on.
An empirical study found children were much more likely to develop the most common kind of lymphoblastic leukemia if they had been near a frackwell during gestation.
Black residents of Lexington, Mississippi, are suing the city and its thugs for persistent racist harassment that goes as far as repeated false arrests. The former thug chief was fired for boasting about killing blacks, killings done by predilection and preference, not necessity or justification.
The article linked to just above displays symbolic bigotry by capitalizing “black” but not “white”. (To avoid endorsing bigotry, capitalize both words or neither one.) I denounce bigotry, and normally I will not link to articles that promote it. But I make exceptions for some articles that I consider particularly important. That article is one of the exceptions.
Textile company Saint-Gobain published data about its use of PFAs, but hid them in plain sight in a stack of 90,000 documents.
US Republicans support Orbán’s racist nationalism.
*Putin is banking on a failure of political will in the west before Russia runs out of firepower.*
The Putin forces‘ casualty rate is so high that I think Ukraine will be able to push them out of Ukraine next summer, We must keep supporting Ukraine that long.
The UK plans to use a snoop-watch to track the movements of some convicted criminals, The system includes facial recognition to verify that the intended person is carrying the snoop-watch.
Since this system tracks and recognizes only a specific person, and is imposed on that person as part of punishment after conviction for a crime, it is one of the exceptional legitimate uses of facial recognition and location tracking.
This example also highlights, by the contrast it makes, the injustice of imposing facial recognition or location tracking on anyone other than a convict. They are typically imposed combinations of businesses that are so powerful that they can shape our society. They receive help from various laws designed to give those companies power.
Carrying a snoop-watch is easier than wearing an ankle-chain, and is much less painful than being in jail.
The Solomon Islands government is showing various signs of tyranny. The latest one is direct censorship of the country’s public TV/radio station.
Its secret “security” deal with China is another.
Some countries plan to attack the Inflation Reduction Act’s EV credit with the help of the WTO.
The World Trade Organization is a business-supremacy treaty; it prioritizes catering to business over all other goals.
The city of Manteca, California, has cancelled a statement it made in support of the Hindu Swayamsevak Sangh, which is a foreign auxiliary to the RSS in India.
* The biggest fallacy in the online privacy [issue] is that there is a [real] difference between “state surveillance” and “commercial surveillance.”*
In fact, government surveillance operates through commercial surveillance. Both wholesale (surveillance of the whole net) and retail (think of Amazon Ring cameras).
We need to restrict the deployment of massive surveillance systems regardless of who operates them.
The Tories will cut anything to reduce government spending that doesn’t go to businesses. They have cut 1/5 of the firefighters in the UK since they took power in 2010.
Finland may stop issuing tourist visas to Russian citizens, to punish them for Putin’s war.
I think it is misguided to punish Russian tourists for Putin’s war. It’s not their fault, and excluding them is counterproductive. Putin maintains an information blockade; any Russians who visit Finland will come in contact with non-Putinized news.
It also gives Russians an opportunity to leave Russia and not return.
The FBI invited Aswad Khan, a Pakistani who was visiting the US after attending a university there, to become an informant and go to mosques to spy on people. Aswad, who was not particularly religious and was more interested in getting a well-paid job, said no. After that, the FBI harassed his friends until they cut off all ties with him.
FBI whistleblower Terry Albury says that the FBI regularly does this.
Many American men are getting vasectomies before the Supreme Court gets a chance to interfere.
Puerto Rico is suffering from widespread official corruption. Mayors and governors have been charged with crimes.
The article doesn’t mention the crushing debts, but I believe they are the root cause. The US Congress has given Puerto Rico no debt relief, so it is forced to squeeze the people (even poor people) to pay the loans. The result is that most everyone who can leave does leave.
I suppose the creditors hope eventually to take control of the island’s land and turn it into tourist resorts and corporate-owned plantations.
They won’t stop with Puerto Rico — they will move on to other parts of the US.
CIA whistleblower Jeffrey Sterling’s thoughts about the prosecution of Julian Assange. He endorses Rashida Tlaib’s proposal to amend the Espionage Act with a public interest defense.
*One-third of the food we eat is at risk because the climate crisis is endangering butterflies and bees.*
Before the September 2001 terrorist attacks, the Taliban were offering to make a deal with the US which involved chasing out al-Qa’ida. If Dubya had accepted the deal, we would never have invaded Afghanistan.
Now US newsmedia — even NPR — are covering up this history.
Why didn’t the US accept the deal? I don’t know, but whatever the reason was, it is likely to be the same reason that motivated the US to reject the Taliban’s surrender offer, later in 2001.
Meanwhile, al-Qa’ida is still not very effective in Afghanistan.
I gather that the Taliban consider al-Qa’ida as a troublesome and unfriendly rival. Next time the US identifies a leader of al-Qa’ida in Afghanistan, it might be wise to try helping the Taliban deal with him, rather than attacking him directly.
Poor people in Britain whose pets die feel incomprehensibly attached to spending money they don’t have, for funerals for those pets.
Overattachment to pets, and pets’ corpses, leads to a perverse sense of values. If you are rich and you feel like burying or cremating a pet, it’s harmless. But we must not stand for the idea that people have an obligation to spend so much on pets that they ruin themselves. That way of thinking leads to enormities such as abandoning refugees in Kabul to evacuate a planeload of dogs.
I would feel sorry for Freya when her dog died, but I would not cater to her mishigas.
The broken aspects of US society are damaging the physical and mental health of young Americans to the point that military recruiters can’t find enough soldiers.
It may also be the realization that a lot of the fighting the US does is not justified or not necessary.
Assange’s lawyers have sued the CIA for violating their attorney-client privilege — by spying on their discussions.
The former Australian prime minister, Morrison, bizarrely appointed himself minister of health, minister of finance, minister of industry, ministry of science, minister of energy, minister of home affairs (policing), and minister of the treasury — without informing the public, or even the officially appointed ministers of those issues.
Apparently this meant that the officially appointed ministers remained ministers, but Morrison could override them at will. When he actually did so, did the officially appointed ministers find out what he had done? Or was that concealed from them somehow?
I wonder if Morrison was inspired by the wrecker’s practice of dismissing the heads of agencies and departments and leaving those to be run by acting heads. This might have had an equivalent effect.
In Australia, the governor general (representative of the British crown) is responsible for swearing in ministers. He quietly participated in this abuse of the Australian governmental system. There is a movement in Australia to cut its tie with Great Britain and become a republic. I have a feeling supporters will point to this as a reason to remove the British crown from the process.
Morrison, who apparently couldn’t keep track of all the things he was personally the minister of, said there was “no sense of bad faith in it.” That may be true — he may be so inured to practicing bad faith that he has no conscious awareness of it.
*Britain has been avoiding its biggest problems for decades. Now we’re paying the price.*
It has been avoiding these problems because correcting them required rich people’s money, and those rich people refused to participate in saving the country.
Psychotherapists and other practitioners of mental health are on strike against Kaiser Permanente.
This seems to be a consequence of the increasing frequency of psychological problems in the US.
Marjorie Taylor Greene and a defeated Republican congressional candidate advocated voter fraud at a rally.
This makes a bizarre contrast with her attacks on supposed Democratic voter fraud, whose existence can’t be found anyway. Does she believe fraud is wrong only for Democrats?
60% of Americans that rent housing are worried about whether they can pay the rent in the coming year.
The governor of Mississippi (a Republican, or course) cancelled the state’s federally-funded rent assistance program. He said, though in different words, that helping poor people pay rent made their lives too easy.
Drought in the US west will require big cuts in water use for Arizona, California, Colorado, Nevada, New Mexico, Utah and Wyoming. For now, they must reduce usage 15%, but the drought may get worse and they may have to cut more.
The drought will surely get worse if we don’t curb global heating.
Bolsonaro is trying to use the Evangelical Taliban to attack democracy in Brazil. Lula has responded by saying that Bolsonaro is possessed by the devil.
That would be entirely plausible, if there were a real devil that could really possess people.
(satire) *City’s Primary Investment In Community Comes Through Police Department’s Wrongful Death Settlements.*
If an Onion page appears blank, try disabling JavaScript entirely or telling LibreJS to blacklist all scripts in the page, then right-click and select item “Reveal hidden HTML”. Or use a browser such as lynx that doesn’t implement JavaScript and CSS.
An empirical test found that Facebook systematically accepted election disinformation ads for Brazil’s upcoming election.
(satire) *New Texas Law Requires Gun Buyers To Show Proof Of Mental Illness.*
If an Onion page appears blank, try disabling JavaScript entirely or telling LibreJS to blacklist all scripts in the page, then right-click and select item “Reveal hidden HTML”. Or use a browser such as lynx that doesn’t implement JavaScript and CSS.
Republican state officials are going to extreme lengths to punish businesses that recognize the danger of global heating.
Ricardo dos Santos, a black man, was stopped in a car by British thugs for the third time in two years, for no obvious reason.
He alleges racial profiling and threatens to sue.
US citizens: call on your senators to prioritize judicial nominations when they return from recess.
Peru is recruiting fire prevention brigades to supervise farmers’ fires and make sure they do not get out of control.
code.org’s new high school course in programming involves stricter-than-ever monitoring of teachers.
The motive for this is another bad practice: running the students’ and teachers’ programs on servers, rather than on local computers.
Since 1980, Americans have tended overall to die younger than people in other developed countries; since then, the problem has grown. In 2019, 2/3 of a million more Americans died than would have died if the US had been like those other countries.
Part of the problem is that the US lacks the national universal medical system that other developed countries have. Another part is that the US lacks the welfare system that other developed countries have. Also contributing is the plutocratist politics of the US, which impoverish an increasing fraction of Americans. Other social problems in the US contribute too.
*A universal healthcare system utilizing a single-payer model in the state will save California families and businesses over $100 billion per year.* That is in addition to thousands of lives, of people who under the current system go untreated.
When cars record locations, the data is available to advertisers, insurance companies, and uniformed thugs. Cars must offer a dashboard switch to stop them from determining their locations.
Cars must also offer a dashboard switch to stop the car from sending out signals by which other systems could track them.
Toll payment systems must offer an anonymous method so that they don’t track you either.
In Britain it is not unusual for people present at a murder to be convicted of murder on the basis of a weak association with the murderer.
Some US states do this too.
America does not owe Manchin anything, and especially not cooperation with his plan to undermine environmental protection. He has broken deals with Biden.
In addition to maintaining environmental regulations, we should reject the idea that gutting them would be “reform”.
*”Dictatorship Never Again”: Massive Pro-Democracy Protests Sweep Brazil.*
This after a million Brazilians signed a petition against the return to dictatorship which Bolsonaro threatens.
US citizens: call on Congress to stop the Pentagon’s unmonitored proxy wars.
Here’s a description of unmonitored proxy wars. The US has built up a world-wide secret program of training military proxy forces in many countries. The US sends them on missions to fight anyone that the US considers enemies.
Europe’s wildfires have burned 2500 square miles so far this year, breaking the record.
*Weeks of heat above 100F will be the norm in much of US by 2053, study [predicts].*
Putin is using westerners in the Ukrainian army as hostages, employing his sock puppet regime, the “Donetsk People’s Republic”, to threaten to kill them.
If it goes ahead with this, those responsible, from Putin on down, should face charges of murder. In the mean time, it would be appropriate to send commando teams to seize officials involved in this hostage plot, so as to offer to trade them for the hostages.
US citizens: call on Congress to make Starbucks CEO Howard Schultz testify about blatant union-busting.
Congress has failed to extend the increase the child tax credit, which is about to expire. Millions of Americans whose income is insufficient will suffer terribly from this.
Republican followers of the wrecker are making lots of threats against the FBI and other federal agencies. And against individual agents.
I think they are nerving each other for another violent fascist uprising, with the wrecker leading them on again.
Actions that Biden could take to reduce the enormous salaries that corporate CEOs often get nowadays.
Here are technical details.
Kaspersky discovered this example by chance, but is unable to check in general for the presence of such rootkits in computers.
Nonfree software does not make your computer secure — it does the opposite: it prevents you from trying to secure it. Sadly, computers today are typically sold with nonfree UEFI software, required for booting, which is impossible to replace: in effect, a low-level rootkit. All the things that Intel has done to make its power over you secure against you also protect UEFI-level rootkits against you.
Instead of allowing Intel, AMD, Apple and perhaps ARM to impose security through tyranny, we should legislate to require them to allow users to install their choice of startup software, and make available the information needed to develop such. Think of this as right-to-repair at the initialization stage.
PFAs have spread through the world to the point that they are present in rainwater everywhere. There is nowhere on Earth that rainwater meets the new EPA standard for acceptable levels.
Proposing that all election-related news stories should be gratis to read.
I’d add that they should be viewable with wget and lynx.
An assassin attacked Salman Rushdie with a knife as the latter was about to give a talk.
Rushdie is seriously injured, and may lose an eye. But he can still think, and still speak.
Senator Warren has launched a Senate investigation of the danger that Republican abortion persecution poses to pregnant Americans, including those that do want to have a baby, and those that don’t.
*Even low levels of air pollution can damage health , study finds.*
Don’t panic, though — a tiny concentration of air pollution will normally do a tiny amount of harm, which is hard to measure without a sample of millions.
In the absence of any standard of perfection (keep air pollution under level L and it will do exactly zero damage), how should we decide how much to work to reduce air pollution? It’s a matter of how the danger from air pollution stacks up against all the other dangers we face. Suppose we decide to spend a billion dollars on public health, which allocation of funds would we rationally expect to make the biggest improvement? Part of that plan could be spending to reduce air pollution.
*The Democrats’ climate bill is a historic victory. But we can’t stop here.*
The bullshitter’s supposed defenses for taking the secret government documents home are bullshit. That does not imply he will be prosecuted. The government may be satisfied with having recovered the documents. But it is important for him to be prosecuted.
Three members of Congress propose to block using the Espionage Act against journalists.
However, their bill would not offer a public-interest defense to protect whistleblowers.
(satire) *[Thugs] Claim Unarmed Black Man They Shot Was Attacking Them With Psychic Hallucinations.*
If an Onion page appears blank, try disabling JavaScripts entirely, telling LibreJS to blacklist the scripts that it accepted by default, or using a browser such as lynx that doesn’t implement JavaScript.
The attack on Salman Rushdie demonstrates the need to fight censorship from any and all directions.
See my article about Hrant Dink, who was ready to fight censorship from all directions.
A senior Hungarian judge condemns the government’s interference with courts.
Some Taliban officials sneakily send their daughters outside of Afghanistan to get an education.
Thugs at an Arizona school, which they had “locked down”, attacked parents who were trying to get their children.
The UK used torture and murder systematically in the 1950s to fight the Mau Mau movement in Kenya. Then it blocked and suppressed an investigation into this.
*”You often hear people say in Britain that it was acceptable by the standards of the time. And I think documents like this really illustrate that, no, people at the time knew this was wrong as well.”*
(satire) *FBI Sent Itemized Bill For 12-Hour Stay At Mar-A-Lago.*
If an Onion page appears blank, try disabling JavaScript entirely or telling LibreJS to blacklist all scripts in the page, then right-click and select item “Reveal hidden HTML”. Or use a browser such as lynx that doesn’t implement JavaScript and CSS.
Delta Airlines fired Leondra Taylor for posting a cartoon showing the corrupter with a Ku Klux Klan hood. The company called this cartoon “disrespectful, hateful or discriminatory”, which is quite a distortion. Taylor is suing.
In the 20th century, many US amusement parks practiced excluded blacks, in some cases violently. This was not only in the south; it occurred even in New York City.
Nowadays, black customers face hostility from staff at some amusement parks, as at Sesame Place. With so many racists in the US, that is going to happen randomly. But is it more than that? It could be that that particular park has a habit of bigotry among its staff.
A report examines the specific way Cheniere Energy’s greenwashing bends the facts about the methane it trades in.
The anti-anti-racist Republican governor of Oklahoma is harassing the Tulsa city school department. One thing she did was label it as “deficient” for allegedly showing a video that shamed white students for being white, which is prohibited now.
The school department replied that the video (1) didn’t try to shame anyone alive today and (2) was shown before that law was adopted anyway.
Republicans have made it standard practice to stretch laws and twist facts. With a little private pressure and harassment on the side, they can hope to win a victory for injustice.
Women protested again in Kabul, chanting “bread, work and freedom.” Taliban thugs hit them with rifle butts.
As we remember the death threat Ayatollah Khomeini made against Salman Rushdie, we should also show our disapproval to those who call for retreating in the face of bullies that try to ban books.
Nowadays, Muslim extremists are not the only group that tries to bully people into banning books. For the sake of freedom of thought, we need to resist all such campaigns.
Here is the inaugural address of Gustavo Petro, President of Colombia.
The new 1% tax on stock buybacks will make those corporations pay a little more tax. That is a step forward.
It also sets a precedent: if we can tax them 1% today, we can tax them 25% next year. If we keep raising that, eventually the percentage will get big enough to discourage buybacks.
*Four Key Climate Questions About the Inflation Reduction Act.*
One of the wrecker’s Jan 6 coup mob attacked an FBI office with guns, and was eventually shot dead.
I expect the wrecker and his followers to praise the gunman.
A team of scientists concludes that Sars-Cov-2 almost certainly entered humans in the wild animal market in Wuhan.
I think the question of how the virus started infecting humans is interesting, but not morally important. Its importance is only to affect precisely what we might learn about how to prevent future epidemics.
It could be that we already know the crucial lessons for preventing pandemics from starting from wild animals, and for preventing pandemics from starting from lab leaks, and all we need not is to put them into practice. Regardless of which path this virus followed, we know both dangers exist.
The Mediterranean Sea ecosystems are threatened by marine heat waves.
An activist campaigning against voter fraud in Wisconsin ordered mail-in ballots for other people, found it was easy to do, then went public.
It would be wrong to file charges against the activist. He did not try to vote using those ballots. But what should the state do instead?
In effect, he tried to demonstrate that the state doesn’t have much security against this sort of fraud. Apparently that is true. Is that a real problem?
If people actually use this “security hole” for fraud, I think it is a real problem and the state should fix it.
On the other hand, if nobody really does this, maybe the system is not really broken and there is no need to fix it.
Australia holds hundreds of people in prison without a conviction for any crime, and has no statistics about why, or how many.
*The strategy that worked in Kansas [for defending abortion rights] — countering misinformation, building a broad coalition — offers lessons for [other states].*
Republicans defeated the bill to limit the price of insulin.
California’s approach, manufacturing insulin to compete with the giants, may work better. Forcing the established companies to tolerate more competitors could work too.
My proposed giant-splitting and competition-boosting tax scheme could do it also.
*An Accused War Criminal Trained Florida [Thugs] in “New Concepts of Shooting.”*
EU countries are helping France fight large wildfires.
Of course, they ought to help each other. But that won’t be enough in 20 years when they all face large wildfires at once.
The interaction between waves and shore is a complex system; a sea wall can prevent erosion at one point while exacerbating it elsewhere in the region. Scientists are developing permeable obstacles that slow down the ocean waves, to protect shore and land from erosion.
These measures can be effective against erosion, but not against inundation. Therefore, they are temporary expedients, presuming that we curb global heating and prevent the coming inundation.
Inland wetlands can buffer against floods and drought (and therefore also against fire).
I am skeptical of the “biodiversity net gain” requirement. Constructing a new wetland is surely not as simple as it sounds, so it is likely that businesses will often follow the rules but produce no real new wetland. If a development has destroyed an old wetland and failed to create a new one, what does the government do?
The FBI raid on the corrupter’s home was looking for secret documents that nobody was allowed to take home, and it found quite a few.
California could experience a series of atmospheric rivers that would add up to an enormous flood, that could flood millions of people’s homes.
As global heating continues, the likelihood of such a flood will increase.
The Markup investigated 80,000 popular web sites and reports on how much they snoop on users. Almost 70,000 had third-party trackers. 5,000 fingerprinted the browser to identify users. 12,000 recorded the user’s mouse clicks and movements.
A natural gas company urged Australia to forget its climate defense target so that the company can drill.
A journalist describes how she learned to break away from right-wing Christianity, and how she copes with the resulting breach with her family.
Massachusetts residents: call on Governor Baker to sign the abortion access bill.
Nixon talked with the South Vietnamese generals in 1968, urging them to obstruct President Johnson’s peace negotiations. Both parties expected progress towards peace would help the prospects of Nixon’s Democratic opponent.
Nixon even discussed this with the bankers that backed him.
Nixon’s actions may have been a violation of the Logan Act, so having the FBI investigate was proper. Even supposing they were not illegal, they were treacherous in spirit.
Ultimately, Johnson decided to keep the secret reports that proved Nixon’s treachery, so as to avoid stimulating distrust of the US government when Nixon was at its head. That was well meant, though we would today consider it naive and foolish.
Johnson also had one of his officials take those secret documents away rather than leaving them in the White House. The article says nothing about the motivation for this, but perhaps it was to make sure that Nixon’s treachery would be revealed some day — decades in the future. He may have been afraid Nixon would destroy them.
Some Louisiana Christians hate same-sex couples, but interestingly many other do not.
I think it is unfortunate when children are taught a religion. but I still appreciate the good news that some Christian schools reject the usual Christian hatreds.
*Koch Network Uses National Philanthropic Trust to Conceal Transactions.*
Coercive control (among individuals) is based on threats to cause pain. Often these involve physical violence, but it takes different forms from violence in other contexts.
*Election lies [and therefore the Republican Party that encourages those lies] pose physical threat to US poll workers, House report warns.*
* Officials at the DHS’s office of inspector general said their attempts to inform Congress [about deleted text messages] in April were thwarted [by its leaders].*
* [The author has] documented 61 cases from the years 2000 to 2020 in which people have been criminally investigated or arrested for self-managing their own abortion or helping someone else do so; the majority of these cases exclusively involved abortion medication.*
Despite the climate bill (which was passed), Biden must still declare a climate emergency and stop approving fossil fuel projects.
(satire) *China Threatens To Retaliate For Pelosi’s Taiwan Trip By Letting Her Return Safely.*
Shell is using every spare pound for stock buy-backs. Investing in renewables, it is not interested in.
Stock buy-backs used to be illegal in the US. There is no reason to permit them now. But we should not depend on fossil fuel companies to invest in renewable energy. We should charge them a lot of tax, and have the government fund investment in renewable energy.
To actually do that depends on electing more progressive legislators; talking about this is the way we get there.
The House passed the climate/tax/drug price bill, so it will soon be law.
If Democrats increase their lead in the Senate, maybe they can get rid of the bad parts next year.
On the obstacles to having a serious political discussion about future human population.
Just as discussion of reducing the human population is insufficient without discussing reducing per-capita consumption, so discussion of reducing per-capita consumption is insufficient without discussing reducing the human population.
Climate disaster will eventually reduce the human population with millions of deaths, but if we want to do it by reducing births instead, we need to plan it.
*On Their 57th Anniversary, Medicare and Medicaid Remain Under Threat.*
*Since 2021, Big Oil Has Spent Over $200 Million to Sabotage Climate Action: Analysis.*
*Facebook and Anti-Abortion Clinics Are Collecting Highly Sensitive Info on Would-Be Patients.*
The “Inflation Reduction Act” is a good start at climate defense, but only a little in other areas.
More on what it does to do Medicare.
Academic luminaries praise the new Chilean constitution.
*Yellen directs IRS not to use new funding to increase chances of audits of Americans making less than $400,000.*
There are limits on the amount of fossil fuel energy that we can effectively extract and usefully combust.
If we decarbonize rapidly, those limits may not matter. Otherwise, we may actually hit peak oil.
About 5% of the people who catch Covid-19 have problems with taste and smell for at least 6 months afterwards — bad enough to make life horrible.
Waiting 6 months for my enjoyment of food to recover, I could live with. Waiting years would be a fate worse than death. I wonder what fraction suffer loss of taste and smell for years?
Australia’s new government has undermined its climate defense plans by encouraging new natural gas extraction projects and describing natural gas as an “ally” of decarbonization.
A precipitous gas shortage and price spike would cause a crisis; that is not desirable. What Australia needs (like the rest of the world) is a planned, steady and predictable rise in the price of gas. That’s easy to do with a tax, scheduling tax increases annually until decades from now.
*[Australian] Greens urge Labor to reject international carbon offsets as “accounting tricks.”*
Sometimes they are accounting tricks; sometimes they are outright fraud. Sometimes they are mere gambling. We can’t predict global heating well enough to know which “carbon offsets” will really deliver emissions reductions in future.
UPS drivers face intolerable working conditions, including 14-hour shifts working in heat that endangers their health.
European countries have given the US and Iran a “take-it-or-leave-it” final text for the non-nuclear deal.
Let’s hope they take it, because that will be a victory over nuclear proliferation. And a step towards reducing hostilities between the US and Iran.
*Koch-Controlled Organizations Spent More Than $1.1 Billion During the 2020 Election Cycle.*
Ukraine has fought the Putin forces to a standstill. Some American progressives want to stop the fighting before Ukraine can retake any of the conquered provinces.
That would pull Ukraine’s defeat from the jaws of victory.
The article speaks of using diplomacy to make Putin return captured territory, but it would never work. Putin is doing very well at standing up to western diplomatic pressure and sanctions.
Chronicling the corrupter’s campaign to reduce US military leaders to give their loyalty to him personally, rather than to the United States.
When the corrupter demanded a military parade in Washington DC, General Selva (who grew up in Portugal under the rule of a dictator) told him, “That’s what dictators do.” Alas, I doubt that convinced the would-be autocrat the parade was a bad idea.
After this, various officials worked hard repeatedly to block the wrecker from launching a coup, a war, or bloody repression in the streets.
Guber is still running at a loss, even after raising its prices.
Guber is unjust to workers because it pay them peanuts. It is unjust to customers because it
Please join in wiping out Uber!
More information about the FBI raid that seized government records from the corrupter’s home.
In Australia, powerful senators are demanding that the government erase the housing aid debts of states.
“private equity” parasites gave Senator Sinema $500 million in campaign funds this year, to pay her to protect their low income tax rate.
Even worse than their low tax rate is the way these so-called “investors” destroy companies. Years after the demise of Pay less Shoe Source, which I used to be a customer of, I have found no physical stores that sell the things I used to buy there. That is just one example of many.
The two Tory contenders to replace Bogus Johnson stand for neoliberal-ism. Their ideology says that the government should do nothing to correct Britain’s devastating problems, because interfering with the market is a sin.
Laissez faire, laissez mourir.
In practice, that means they do nothing to stop businesses from squeezing money out of the non-rich. The billionaires that fund the Tory party must find that convenient.
Google said it would “delete” location data that show visits to “sensitive” locations, which include abortion clinics and some other places.
In regard to location data, it is a good first step, but limited. It is limited because
Most crucially, it doesn’t include the places where you might someday arrange to meet a reporter to disclose a crime committed by the state.
I am not sure what it means to say they “delete” this data rather than not storing it. Is it just another way of saying the same thing? If it really means something tangible, it seems like a risky mistake.
US citizens: call on the eight Democratic holdouts on minimum wage to raise wages for working Americans now.
US citizens: call on the SEC regulate corporations to impede greenwashing.
The new, effective treatment for Hepatitis C is so expensive that 2/3 of the Americans who catch it don’t get treated.
This failure of the medical system used to happen only in poor countries, but now even the US is becoming a poor country (for most of its inhabitants).
Tennessee has made it a crime to camp on the street in a tent.
Is it permissible to camp without a tent and get wet and sick?
(satire) *SNAP Recipients Now Required To Prove Need [i.e., hunger] By Eating All Their Groceries On Spot.*
If an Onion page appears blank, try disabling JavaScript entirely or telling LibreJS to blacklist all scripts on the page, then right-click and select the item “Reveal hidden HTML”. Or use a browser such as lynx that doesn’t implement JavaScript and CSS.
(satire) *Prison Charges Inmate $1 Per Minute For Time With Photo Of Family.*
If an Onion page appears blank, try disabling JavaScript entirely or telling LibreJS to blacklist all scripts on the page, then right-click and select the item “Reveal hidden HTML”. Or use a browser such as lynx that doesn’t implement JavaScript and CSS.
*Global heating has caused ‘shocking’ changes in forests across the Americas, studies find.*
Trees are advancing to the north, and dying or burning in the south.
*Melting of the world’s biggest ice sheet [the East Antarctic] would cause catastrophic sea level rise, but can be avoided with fast climate action.*
*Inside Somalia’s vicious cycle of deforestation for charcoal.*
Reportedly, al-Shabaab is trying to prohibit cutting trees with leaves, and having some success enforcing the prohibition by burning trucks caught carrying such wood. A democratic government might be able to enforce the rule with less brutality, but this may be better than nothing in the long term.
In a world of growing scarcity, the long-term non-brutal solution is (1) decarbonization and (2) much fewer births.
ISTR that Haiti has suffered for decades from a similar problem; nearly all the forests have been cut down.
Colombia’s new president Gustavo Petro declared that fighting the war on drugs has failed.
but he means, fighting that war on Colombia’s territory has failed. He’s right about that. But he seems not to realize that fighting that war on US territory is equally a failure. “Strong measures that prevent consumption in developed societies” is not a solution to the problems caused by use of addictive drugs.
We should put that war into a treatment program to get it off drugs.
The corrupter said, “Only guilty people and mobsters plead the Fifth.” This week, he did just that, while being questioned for a lawsuit.
It’s tempting to say, “He’s guilty, or he’s a mobster — he said so himself!” But it’s wrong to say that, because the “rule” he cited was bullshit all along. To treat it as valid is to undermine the Fifth Amendment itself, and we must not do that.
We have plenty of other reasons to believe that the corrupter is guilty of trying to overthrow the US government and seize power, as well as swindling in his fund-raising.
Not yet proof that can put him away, though.
To whip inflation in the US, we need to stop big businesses from raising prices from greed.
The way I prefer is to break up the many large companies that have too big a share of whatever market. Rather than launch a lawsuit against each excessively large company, I recommend a tax system that raises the tax rate sharply as a company gets bigger, or as it gets a bigger share of each market.
Death Valley suffered flooding from unusual heavy rainfall. At least no homes were flooded, since nobody lives there.
A right-wing t-shirt company, which supports the corrupter, has been fined for fraudulently labeling its shirts “Made in the USA”. In fact, they were made in China.
What else would you expect from people that support someone who boasts of lying.
Privatized water companies in Britain are profiteering while draining their customers. That’s what privatizing a government service tends to do, and the Tories that did it probably were aiming for that result.
US citizens: phone your congresscritter and say to vote for the “Inflation reduction bill” (which includes climate defense, a little more tax on the rich, and reducing some medicine prices), which the Senate already passed.
The Capitol Switchboard number is +1-202-224-3121.
If you call, please spread the word!
Amazon wants to purchase One Medical, a medical treatment company which holds lots of patients’ medical records. And if it can purchase iRobot, which makes robot vacuum cleaners, it can collect data about the lives of the people who use them.
The corrupter could be put in prison for years for taking secret documents home, or for destroying them.
I don’t understand why Risen proposes to involving the Espionage Act in this. That would be very dangerous, because it could legitimize the misuse of that law to prosecute whistleblowers.
Until the day we change that law to protect whistleblowers, whose “crime” is to tell the people about the state’s actions, we must not lump them together with people like the corrupter who take secret documents in order to deny the state access to them and block it from functioning.
Phoenix, Arizona, is so hot that people doing nothing more than walk around are collapsing and need urgent rescue.
The abortion charges against Celeste Burgess and Jessica Burgess are based on a subpoena for their Facebook messages.
The only communication systems you can safely use to discuss abortion plans in the US now are those which do not save any record — either in a central server or in your own device.
China’s communications about Taiwan are monomaniacal intimidation pretending to be friendship.
It’s similar to coercive control, but on an international scale.
(satire) *Relieved [corrupter] Thought Mar-A-Lago Raid Was About All The Bodies.
If an Onion page appears blank, try disabling JavaScript entirely or telling LibreJS to blacklist all scripts on the page, then right-click and select the item “Reveal hidden HTML”. Or use a browser such as lynx that doesn’t implement JavaScript and CSS.
* Pentagon contractors operating in Afghanistan over the past two decades raked in nearly $108 billion—funds that “were distributed and spent with a significant lack of transparency,” according to a report published Tuesday.*
*AIPAC’s New Political Strategy: Spend Millions on Elections Without Mentioning Israel.*
*With Antitrust Bills Stalled, Watchdogs Demand Schumer Disclose Big Tech Donations.* They suspect him of being paid to block those bills from getting a vote.
(satire) Reminding would-be mass shooters that it has become old hat, and people would hardly even remember their names.
If an Onion page appears blank, try disabling JavaScript entirely or telling LibreJS to blacklist all scripts on the page, then right-click and select the item “Reveal hidden HTML”. Or use a browser such as lynx that doesn’t implement JavaScript and CSS.
Proposing credit card companies warn when someone orders large supplies of guns and ammunition.
I think this is a good idea. The interference with privacy would be very narrow, and little by comparison with the things we are fighting against.
*Biden Administration Plans for Legal Psychedelic Therapies Within Two Years.*
We must expect Republicans to demonize this with lies and exaggerations.
FBI agents searched the corrupter’s home at Mar-a-Lago, looking for secret government papers he was not allowed to remove from the files. Naturally they had to look inside his safe, but if “breaking in” implies damaging the safe, that was gratuitous. Thugs often cause gratuitous damage to people when they search. and many of those people aren’t rich like the corrupter and can’t shrug off the cost of those damages
They should have given him — and anyone whose premises they search — the chance to open things for them and avoid damage.
However, there is no reason to suppose he was honest about this. (He’s not usually honest.) Maybe the safe was opened without damaging it.
*Emmett Till: woman whose accusation led to [his] lynching will not be charged.*
I think this verdict was inevitable. If her story is true, it implies she is not responsible for the murder of Emmet Till. If she is lying, she might be co-responsible in some way, but there is no evidence about what it may have been, let alone any proof.
The people who really should have been convicted of murder were the people who killed him. They were acquitted by a racist jury.
If that were to happen today, the murderers would face federal civil rights charges, as well as state charges. The conviction of Ahmaud Arbery’s killers suggests that the US has learned to be less racist in its justice than it was in 1955. Maybe some day it will learn to be even less racist.
*Brazilians fear return to dictatorship as “deranged” Bolsonaro trails in polls.*
Like the wrecker in the US, Bolsonaro has talked about refusing to hand over power peacefully.
People fear he will try to organize mobs on Brazil’s independence day to overthrow democracy, perhaps arranging a false flag attack on them as an excuse.
As Greenland’s ice melts and exposes some areas of land, people are prospecting for rare metals.
There are no established ecosystems on those areas, but mining can spread pollution in many ways. It could pollute the land so that plants can’t grow there; it can pollute the nearby seas.
Investigation finds probable racism in how British thugs applied the rules for fines for violating Covid rules.
They were supposed to apply their discretion to make fines a last resort; now ever, they were much quicker to fine black.
The article linked to just above displays symbolic bigotry by capitalizing “black” but not “white”. (To avoid endorsing bigotry, capitalize both words or neither one.) I object to bigotry, and normally I will not link to articles that promote it. But I make exceptions for some articles that I consider particularly important. That article is one of the exceptions.
Worshipers of the Invisible Hand have seriously proposed that people should become corporations and sell shares in themselves to raise funds to invest in their education.
That’s effectively a way of selling a fraction of yourself into slavery. A few may become successful, while many become controlled by their shareholders. The rich who own the shares will dominate the decisions about the laws to regulate this system.
The book, The Unincorporated Man by Kollin and Kollin, describes a future world in which this has happened. The people in that world are used to the system and defend it, but at the end we see that forces everyone to be partly owned by whoever buys stock in them.
Please do not get it from Amazon!
The US military uses a highly polluting method (burn pits) to dispose of most kinds of inconvenient waste in deployment bases.
It causes avoidable injury to US solders, and also to the local civilians. But it’s cheap for the Pentagon, supposing it doesn’t bear the cost of treating those injuries. Now it will have to pay to treat the US veterans, but not the local civilians.
Don’t forget about the diseases caused to both US soldiers and local civilians by Depleted Uranium.
*Nebraska teen and her mother charged for aborting and burying fetus.*
Some of the charges are about doing things with a “dead body”. It is absurd to consider a fetus a dead body, but antiabortionists push for anything that classifies a fetus as a human being for any specific purpose in any specific circumstance, regarding that as a step closer to classifying abortion as murder.
Roe v Wade did not legalize abortion after 6 months except with certain specific grounds. I wonder if any of those grounds applied here — and also why she did not have an abortion earlier.
China is going all out to intimidate US support for Taiwan, even “breaking off” discussions on curbing global heating.
Not that China was cooperating very much anyway: it continues to build new coal-fired generating plants, and its target for (the weak goal of) “net zero” is 2060.
China has recently experienced disastrous floods and faces the danger of fatal weather in the North China Plain.
China’s rulers are arrogant but not crazy. The only thing that can convince them to try hard to decarbonize is awareness of what will happen if they don’t.
The US is also doing far too little to decarbonize, though the just-passed climate, welfare and tax law is a step forward.
Texas governor Abbott is having state officials force border-crossers onto buses to New York City, even though they wanted to go elsewhere.
It would be a kindness to offer them rides to New York City, if they had the choice to decline the offer without being punished. Misrepresenting this mistreatment as such a kindness is a big lie, a typical Republican act.
China’s missile interdiction of seas near Taiwan was such a large exercise that it was probably planned for months.
Pelosi’s visit was a convenient excuse, an opportunity to put the blame on her.
The great danger is that it shows that China can cut off Taiwan’s maritime trade just by firing missiles. To prevent that requires some way of making it cost China more than it costs Taiwan.
A Republican candidate for attorney general of Michigan is accused of plotting to tamper with voting machines after the 2020 election.
The coach of a college football team has been forced to resign after he started reading aloud the text on a distracted student’s iBad, and in the process recited some taboo word.
The word is so taboo that CNN dares not say what it was — and indeed, it hardly matters which taboo word it was. I presume it was a slur of some sort.
The ethical issue here is whether to treat such slurs as insults, wrong to use as insults because that unjustifiably nasty, or treat them as taboos. Do people deserve punishment for inadvertently breaching taboos?
The coach believes that even though the words he spoke were not his words, his violation of the taboo was such a grave sin that he deserves to be shunned and lose his job for quoting them carelessly. By doing that, he lets down other future people condemned for violating taboos. If he had to resign, he should have done so without admitting guilt.
If you step on a flagstone that has a taboo word inscribed on it, should you be shunned? How about if you are photographed near a sign (in a non-English-speaking country perhaps) which has a taboo word on it? Should you be fired for that? Is “what people might think” more important than what really happened?
Using slurs to insult someone is nasty and wrong. But we ought to know better than to punish people for violating taboos. To do so indicates a lack of moral reflection.
61 Oklahoma legislators called on the state to re-investigate whether Richard Glossip is really guilty. They believe there is no evidence that he committed the murder he is scheduled to be executed for.
Some people can forgive great wrongs; others simply can’t. It’s not a matter of choice.
This suggests to me that society’s treatment of criminals should not be based on whether their specific victims can forgive the crimes. Society needs to pardon the criminals eventually, if that helps make society whole, even if the victims can’t.
*Climate research finds modeling used [by central banks] cannot predict localized extreme weather, leading to poor estimations of risk.*
US citizens: The climate, tax and welfare bill passed the Senate, but hasn’t passed the House of Representatives. Big Pharma is lobbying to kill the part that will reduce drug prices. Please phone your representative to support it.
The Capitol Switchboard number is +1-202-224-3121.
If you call, please spread the word!
Military challenges Ukraine faces in recapturing Kherson.
I believe it is possible. The Putin forces soldiers have no reason to fight to the death, if Ukraine shows they will be safe if they surrender.
*Photos suggest Trump blocked toilets with ripped-up White House documents.*
Destroying those documents may have been illegal.
The Putin forces are using the Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant as a shield for their artillery, firing cannons from near the plant’s facilities. Meanwhile, they are interfering with proper maintenance of the plant.
The dental part of the UK’s National Health Service has collapsed; many Britons can’t find a dentist to treat them.
*Climate impacts have worsened vast range of human diseases.* They include Zika, malaria, dengue, chikungunya and even Covid-19.
*Democrats lose effort to cap insulin at $35 for most Americans before passage of Senate reconciliation bill.*
*The Danger of Empathy.*
*Amazon [(the company)’s] carbon emissions up 40% but somehow still on track for “net zero” by 2040.*
The right-wing government of the UK does exactly as Adam Smith warned: it crushes the non-rich and panders to the rich. It goes as far as murder.
As Aneurin Bevan said, the Tories are lower than vermin.
Texas threatens to prosecute any Texas organization that funds travel out of Texas for an abortion, and to sue any individual who provides such funds.
This is terrorism. Fanatical right-with Christian Taliban terrorism.
Activists in 13 countries that propose to negotiate a new business-supremacy treaty warn that it may become another iteration of the Trance Pacific Partnership, also known as the Pacific Partnership Trance.
The new treaty has a name, IPEF, and a likely bad result because of which countries are involved.
Poor children wore body cameras in New Zealand to contribute to a picture of what life in poverty is like.
A study like this can have good results, but we need to take steps to prevent poor people from being lured, tricked or forced to contribute to massive surveillance.
*Assange family barred from taking book about WikiLeaks founder into Australia’s parliament.*
*It’s time to ban private jets — or at least tax them to the ground.*
I favor taxing them heavily, because sufficient tax should make them insignificant as a contribution to global heating, and we can use the money. Prohibiting private jets as tax deductions would also help greatly.
*Massive Quantities of PFAS Waste Go Unreported to EPA.*
A bubble barrier is removing most of the plastic particles from the Oud Rijn river, with a modicum of energy and little human labor.
Republicans have been increasing income taxes and cutting support for working people for 40 years, but they are not satisfied, so they are proposing extreme ideas for how to do even worse. Ron Johnson proposes to make Social Security and Medicare payments a year-by-year decision.
People like Ron Johnson and Rick Scott deserve to be sentenced to live on $100 a week, and forbidden to receive gifts except through begging from strangers.
Governor Dementis advocates a long list of right oppressive right-wing policies. One that is subtle and long term is the distortion of civics education in favor of government promotion (effectively, establishment) of religion.
The campaign to limit use of facial recognition has stalled, and some regulations are being reversed, or expiring.
What makes facial recognition so dangerous is its capacity to track everyone’s movements. The only legitimate cases for using it are in systems that cannot be used to track everyone’s movements. To use it for “lead generation” is exactly the danger.
*Democratic ads boosted extremists in Republican primaries. Was that wise?*
It was a very risky bet. For such a bet to be wise, you need to be very sure of the dynamics of the situation. I don’t think any political group can validly be that confident.
US citizens: call on the Senate to pass the DISCLOSE Act.
The Capitol Switchboard number is +1-202-224-3121.
If you call, please spread the word!
US citizens: call on the Senate to pass the assault weapons ban.
People have criticized this proposed law for drawing the line in not exactly the right place. Perhaps that is true — but it is a step in the right direction, even if it doesn’t end up in exactly the right place. It includes a ban on selling large magazines, and that will generally reduce the number killed in mass shootings. Although most people killed by guns are killed by handguns, that doesn’t make this measure ineffective — only less than perfect.
The Capitol Switchboard number is +1-202-224-3121.
If you call, please spread the word!
US citizens: call on the Senate to pass the Pregnant Workers Fairness Act.
The Capitol Switchboard number is +1-202-224-3121.
If you call, please spread the word!
US citizens: call on Biden to reject new oil/gas leases.
US citizens: call on the Senate to pass the Respect for Marriage Act.
US citizens: call on Biden and Blinken to prevent home demolitions in Masafer Yatta, Palestine.
US citizens: call on NOAA to designate the underwater Hudson Canyon as a national marine sanctuary.
US citizens: call on the Department of Justice to prosecute the wrecker for his conspiracy to steal the election.
US citizens: call on Congress and Biden to make the federal minimum wage $15.
*Trump’s worst toadies hold degrees from Harvard and Yale. Did they learn anything [there]?*
*By taunting the US ‘paper tiger’, China risks provoking a backlash over Taiwan.*
Neither the US nor China is engaging in uncalculated emotional reaction. Both countries are pursuing their conflicting goals, driven by the strategic logic.
China’s rulers’ goal is to conquer Taiwan; this is not speculation, it is what they say. As long as that does not change, the idea of “stabilizing” this confrontation for the long term is self-delusion because China won’t accept that as an outcome.
China’s “reactions” to whatever happens are not spontaneous emotion. They are planned actions by officials, aiming at the goal of conquering Taiwan. Sometimes they go softer, sometimes harder, but either way it is tactics.
One of China’s tactics — China uses it because it is effective — is to twist the US up in the contradiction between its “one China” policy and treating Taiwan as independent. In the long run, that contradiction will be debilitating; so if the US is to protect Taiwan’s independence, it must move away from the “one China” policy.
China will threaten to break off relations, etc.; the US must respond, “We can’t prevent you from doing that, but you’ll hurt yourself more than you hurt us.” Then it must stand firm until China comes to face facts.
Smoke from wildfires harms people even thousands of miles away. A small concentration harms a smaller number of people but isn’t harmless.
Since even wealthy people don’t know how to protect themselves, we should have programs that aim at protecting everyone. Or perhaps everyone with asthma, if only people with asthma are particularly in danger.
In the long run, we can expect wealthy people to pay for this protection themselves, once we make sure they know what is needed.
Opposing the merger of Amazon and Roomba, on grounds of competition and privacy.
With proper privacy laws, no privacy issue would arise from this merger. A product such as the Roomba would not be allowed to send any data to anyone about the owner or the use of the product.
Billionaire Polluters have spent a million dollars to influence the British public against a windfall profits tax.
Texas and the federal government are headed for a fight where federal guidelines call for an abortion as part of proper medical care for a pregnant female with certain kinds of dangerous medical conditions, but Texas says it is a crime.
Pearson plans to allow students to “resell” digital textbooks, but not freely: they will have to pay Pearson for the privilege, and let Pearson track them.
Pearson uses the term “NFT” to describe these plans, but that’s a red herring, as the article explains — a marketing buzzword that has been stretched to fit.
There is no sign that these ebooks will avoid any of the injustices of existing digital textbooks: DRM, surveillance, and “jerkmaking” contracts where you commit to be a jerk by refusing to share copies with others.
It is unethical to agree to such a contract; however, carrying it out (supposing you have agreed to it) is even more unethical. The less bad option, if you have agreed to such a thing, is to disregard it.
Veterans for Peace protested the US military’s failure to reduce its greenhouse gas emissions.
A judge ruled that refusing to give Andrea Anderson emergency contraception wasn’t discrimination based on sex.
That conclusion makes sense to me: it didn’t fall under the heading of “discrimination” because there is no reason to believe the pharmacist would have treated a male patient differently. In my view, it was an injustice for the pharmacist to refuse to fill her prescription, but it was a different kind of injustice.
There is something in the article I don’t clearly understand. Did the jury award Anderson $25k in damages (under some other rubric), or not? If it did, that could be a very good outcome: perhaps sufficient to convince those pharmacies not to let this happen again. But if so, I’d like to understand the reasons for it.
* Special [UK Foreign Office] unit spread fake news about leftist [Kenyan] politician, Oginga Odinga, seen as threat to British interests in 1960s.*
Anna Vorosheva was a prisoner in Putin’s Olenivka prison, and reports on the torture done to male prisoners there. As for female prisoners, they were not tortured but were treated degradingly in many ways.
The article excuses the Putin forces of setting off an explosion a week ago, inside the prison, which killed around 50 prisoners. If Putin keeps refusing investigators access, it will be his word against the satellite photos; but refusing access is a reason to disbelieve his word.
San Bernardino thugs got out of an unmarked car, and after a few seconds started shooting at Robert Adams who had done nothing but run away.
(satire) *Biden: U.S. Won’t Rest Until Brittney Griner Returned Home To Serve Marijuana Possession Sentence.*
The US should legalize marijuana and free everyone that’s in prison for nonviolent crimes relating to marijuana. Then it will speak with moral authority when it calls on other countries not to punish Americans for such offenses.
Republicans in some US towns are defunding their public libraries, or trying to, over objections to books about queer people.
I write “queer” rather than “LGBTQ” because the former is one syllable instead of five and covers the same range of variations.
The wrecker’s officials approved plans for coal mining which failed to uphold environmental requirements. Environmentalists sued, and Biden’s officials defended the wrecker’s plan.
Fortunately, a court ruled against the plans, but why defend those plans? Whether or not they were lawful, they were clearly bad.
*First-of-Its-Kind Greenwashing Lawsuit Targets Gas Giant for Methane Lies.*
Actually, it wasn’t what we normally called a “gas giant” — it was on the small rocky planet we inhabit.
*Election deniers are one step closer to taking control of voting in 4 key states.*
China is going all-out to remind us that it is a military threat to Taiwan.
which reinforces that the US must stand firm with Taiwan.
China’s “live fire exercises” close to Taiwan amounted in effect to a temporary blockade of Taiwan.
South Dakota has an optional Indian alternative justice system which aims for healing rather than punishment.
In the 1970s, US courts and prisons aimed for rehabilitation of criminals, but that was all discarded in the 1980s under the malign influence of the “war on drugs”.
Portugal requires residents to have a biometric ID card for many purposes, including medical care, employment and travel. This is an injustice to everyone that is compelled to have the card; it is also a practical disaster for the resident foreigners who can’t get one.
The government seems to be using those foreigners as hostages to an international dispute, but we should not let this distract us from the injustice those cards present to people who DO have them.
*Justice Department employees ask for expanded benefits to protect abortion access, asking for the administration to expand health care coverage to include abortion-related benefits like paid leave to travel out of state and reimbursement for travel expenses.*
Amnesty International criticized Ukraine for stationing military units and weapons systems in cities.
It would be absurd to compare this with the pervasive evil of the Putin forces, and it certainly doesn’t excuse them. But this is a valid point. Ukraine should heed this criticism and change those practices.
A woman is suing the only pharmacy within 50 miles of her home for refusing to fill a prescription for contraception (the morning-after pill).
Such situations are likely to arise in the depopulated rural parts of the US, where stores of any kind are few and far between, and anti-abortion fanatics are numerous.
I am suspicious of any pharmacy business that gives its individual staff the privilege to veto a prescription. No supermarket would tolerate a sales clerk who refused to sell certain products — if you won’t do the whole job, you would need to find some other job. I suspect that the owners or managers of those pharmacies are themselves anti-abortion fanatics, and that letting staff veto prescriptions is a intentional deniable way of attacking abortion and birth contraception while denying their responsibility in the matter.
It’s clear that any pharmacy, when open for business, must be legally required to fill any valid prescription presented by anyone.
The price Biden wants to pay Manchin for approving spending is a permanent change to environmental rules for damaging projects.
Sanders lambasted Manchin’s planet-roasting demands,
which were elsewhere described by “Exxon CEO Loves What Manchin Did for Big Oil in $370 Billion Deal.”
The UK will test a system that uses photos of drivers of passing cars to detect those who are not wearing seat belts, or are holding phones in their hands.
Detecting the use of a snoop-phone while driving is a good thing, in itself, because that practice is dangerous. But I wonder what else these photos could (and will) be used for. Will the state use them to identify every driver by facial recognition? And ever passenger, too?
There should be technical safeguards in the system to ensure it can’t be used for this
Australia’s coral is not out of the woods yet.
Global heating will eventually kill the Great Barrier Reef, and the acidification caused by too much CO2 in the water will eventually wipe out most sea animals with shells — including coral.
President Wickremesinghe has sent Sri Lanka’s thugs to use cruelty to crush the protest movement that drove out President Rajapaksa.
*How the Tory party has systematically run down the NHS.* It *does not believe in the NHS but dares not say so.*
US citizens: call on Biden to stop the Uinta Basin Railway.
To sign without running nonfree JavaScript code from the web site, use the Salsalabs workaround.
Everyone: call on Columbia Sportswear to commit to ending use of PFAs in its products.
*Boston police chasing white suspect wrongly arrested black man, lawsuit says.*
This is an extreme case of thugs‘ frequent practice of assuming a black man is guilty of something, simply because he’s black. They knew the suspect was white,
The article linked to just above displays symbolic bigotry by capitalizing “black” but not “white”. (To avoid endorsing bigotry, capitalize both words or neither one.) I object to bigotry, and normally I will not link to articles that promote it. But I make exceptions for some articles that I consider particularly important. That article is one of the exceptions.
*US border patrol accused of taking turbans from Sikh asylum-seekers.*
Thugs are fond of contriving excuses to claim that they are required to do something that will cause suffering to someone weak.
*Four corporate US landlords deceived and evicted thousands during Covid.*
I contend that we should forbid ownership of buildings containing housing for rent by corporations. Or else limit how many units, or how many buildings, any one owner can own.
The article linked to above displays symbolic bigotry by capitalizing “black” but not “white”. (To avoid endorsing bigotry, capitalize both words or neither one.) I object to bigotry, and normally I will not link to articles that promote it. But I make exceptions for some articles that I consider particularly important. That article is one of these exceptions.
*Floods, storms and heatwaves are a direct product of the climate crisis — that’s a fact, so where is the action?*
The thugs involved in killing Breonna Taylor now face federal charges of violating her civil rights.
Governor Dementis “suspended” the elected state prosecutor of Tampa, who said he would refuse to prosecute anyone for abortions, and put in his place a nonelected prosecutor.
I suppose Dementis has chosen a replacement who will eagerly prosecute abortions. I wonder when the citizens of Tampa will have another chance to elect a prosecutor.
Warning, Australia! Warning, Europe! Potential business-supremacy treaty sighted near both continents!
Promotion of these treaties focuses on increased profits for some businesses, and those businesses push for treaty approval. What the mainstream media tend not to mention is that they transfer power from government (which can be democratic) to businesses (which are by definition not democratic).
The sex of a baby sea turtle is determined by temperature. This must have been an effectively random choice in the past, but now that it is so hot, all the loggerhead sea turtles hatching in Florida are female.
In a few decades, that will cause extinction of the species — the females will have no mates.
Extremist Republican senator Johnson wants social security and medicare to require congressional approval each year.
Most US schools monitor everything students say and do on their school-supplied laptops, and students are in a substantial danger of being charged or harassed as a result.
If this massive surveillance continues, parts of the US may jail students for seeking abortion resources (or birth control, or whatever the Christian Taliban may prohibit) using those school-supplied facilities.
A school-supplied laptop that allows connection to anything but the school’s own servers is bait — tempting students to browse the web under direct monitoring by the school and the local thug department. Paradoxical as it may seem, perhaps schools should be legally required to limit these computers strictly to class assignments, so students won’t make the mistake of using them for their other activities.
US citizens: call on your Senators to pass the Saving America’s Pollinators Act.
To sign without running nonfree JavaScript code from the web site, use the Salsalabs workaround.
US citizens: call on Congress to pass the Ending Corporate Greed Act (windfall profits tax).
(satire) *Woman [is] At That Age Where All Her Friends Getting Prosecuted For Losing Pregnancies.*
I suspect that right-wing white women will get preferential treatment: they won’t get prosecuted for miscarriages.
If an Onion page appears blank, try disabling JavaScript entirely or telling LibreJS to blacklist all scripts on the page, then right-click and select the item “Reveal hidden HTML”. Or use a browser such as lynx that doesn’t implement JavaScript and CSS.
The heatwave in Europe is damaging olive oil production in Spain and Italy.
*Justice department urged to investigate deletion of January 6 texts by Pentagon.*
Republicans changed their mind about veterans poisoned by military incineration of toxic substances, and passed a bill to help them.
They tried following their philosophy, which is that if you’re not rich you don’t deserve help, but the public disgust made them change their tune.
*UN to investigate prison attack that killed [53] Ukrainian prisoners of war.*
The Putin forces claim this was a false flag attack by Ukraine, but the claim is not plausible. It is absurd to think that Ukraine would kill Ukrainians just to have an excuse to accuse the Putin forces of yet another atrocity. Ukraine has hundreds, or is it thousands, of atrocities to charge them with.
It is the Putin forces that would desire to kill those Ukrainians; indeed, it had already threatened to execute them.
* For a long time now, the mechanisms of our democratic system of government meant to ensure accountability have been at the edge of collapse, if not obliteration.*
The use of Real Estate Investment Trusts for business property cause complications for businesses that impede them from providing good service. They also increase the power of the financial industry, which harms society overall.
The 6 uniformed thugs of Kenly, North Carolina, who are white, all handed in resignations after the town appointed a black woman as city manager.
In the absence of any specific facts, I speculate that they were used to getting away with abusing some citizens, and saw that the new city manager was not going to permit that.
California has decided to produce insulin and offer it at a much lower price to diabetics in the state.
I wonder if California will sell to diabetics in other states, too?
Mark Finchem, who won the Arizona Republican primary for attorney general, is a Qanonsense believer that advocates the wrecker’s Big Lie (that the 2020 election was stolen).
*Big oil is wringing humanity dry. We need a fossil fuel non-proliferation treaty.*
Rewilding marginal areas in a large farm was a big help to wildlife, and the increased wildlife increased the productivity of the rest of the farm.
A new HIV-prevention drug could wipe out that disease, over time, except that it is too expensive for the people that need it.
*Spiraling inflation, crops left in the field and travel chaos: 10 reasons [leaving the EU] has been disastrous for Britain.*
I dislike the word “Brexit” so I don’t use it.
An extremely strange snail species, found only at a few deep-sea thermal vents in one region, is endangered, and could be wiped out by deep-sea mining in that region.
Robert Reich: *Joe Manchin and Kyrsten Sinema act out of ego, not principle.*
In a broad sense, this must be true. But is it “ego” in the ssnse of simple emotion, or is it “ego” in the sense of future advantage?
Umberto Eco explains why the Italian term “facsism” could generalize to fit many different repressive tyrannies.
The heat in Europe is reducing the power output of some nuclear power plants. They are cooled by water from rivers, and it is too hot to cool them enough.
Right-wing Democrat Cuellar joined Republicans in proposing a law that would allow companies to eliminate important workers’ rights, by extending the piecework sweatshop economy to more kinds of work.
This would also stop states from requiring better wages and working conditions for existing gig-work companies such as Uber
and Lyft.
*Zuckerberg-backed Summit Learning platform suggests schools ‘listen’ to parents’ ‘online conversations’.*
The citizens of Kansas voted to keep abortion rights into the state constitution, by a landslide.
*Organizers said treating reproductive rights as a non-partisan issue was key to success in a Republican-leaning state.*
The vote was on a right-wing initiative to ban abortion in Kansas, but initiatives to legalize abortion are also possible, in the states that allow them.
Yet more gratuitous cruelty by the US border thugs.
This article mentions a policy of making asylum seekers throw away all their personal possessions, as well as specific cruelty towards Sikh men — forcing them to violate religious commandments for no rational reason.
Religion is not an excuse for someone to violate safety requirements or mistreat anyone else. But these particular Sikh religious practices don’t hurt or endanger anyone.
When “security forces” display a persistent habit of gratuitous cruelty, we cannot take their word about what they do. Their punishment should be a requirement to document how they treat each asylum seeker.
*AIPAC Defeats Andy Levin, the Most Progressive Jewish Representative.*
AIPAC is a big danger to the US fight against plutocracy. Americans who care about injustice to persecuted minorities tend to be concerned with Israel’s occupation policies, so AIPAC essentially campaigns for disdain towards persecuted minorities.
(satire) *Democrats Worried Biden Will Be Healthy Enough To Run Again In 2024.*
The military budget passed by the House of Representatives is a big give-away to the military-industrial complex, including systems that are useless.
What should we say about the people who started out supporting the wrecker when he was a hate-spewing right-wing extremist, and stopped only when they saw he was an enemy of our system of government?
I don’t think that either the good or the bad erases the other. I can’t deny that Pence is actively campaigning against sedition. I can’t refuse to recognize that he is a religious extremist that seeks to impose his religious extremism on everyone in the US. He is a hero and he is atrocious, both at once.
Several new business-supremacy treaties are being negotiated. In addition to the usual kinds of oppression, these may also restrict governments’ in blocking massive surveillance by networks of businesses.
A large music festival in Atlanta has been cancelled because Georgia does not permit music festivals in parks to exclude guns.
The direct cause of cancellation seems to be that Atlanta refused to authorized it, but I expect the city invited the festival to change its rules to permit guns in order to get approval. I expect that the organizers were wise to stand by their policy.
According to Russian law, it is illegal to jail volunteer soldiers (as distinct from conscripts) for refusing to fight in Ukraine. However, Putin is using the puppet governments of Donetsk and Luhansk, and the Wagner mercenaries, to jail hundreds of refusal soldiers and pretend that Russia isn’t doing it.
Is it possible to establish in international law that Russia is responsible for crimes supposedly committed by those puppets?
China responded to Pelosi’s visit to Taiwan with the typical bluster with which it tries to pressure other countries not to support Taiwan, and the usual displays of military strength.
These are the way China tries to intimidate and threaten. If we don’t want to let China conquer Taiwan, we must not be influenced by China’s pressure.
China is a real military threat, but that’s not due to Pelosi’s visit, and Pelosi could not have made China less of a real threat by staying away from Taiwan. We cannot defend Taiwan from China’s military power by tiptoeing.
Republicans seek to purge the employees of federal agencies and replace them with inexperienced Republicans who will do whatever they are told.
Due to their lack of experience, they won’t respect traditional rules that were adopted to restrain abuse of power.
In the FBI, the extremist agents will investigate whoever the president tells them to investigate. In the DoJ, the extremist staff will prosecute whoever the president tells them to prosecute.
* No single crisis, no matter how existential, will be enough to shut this [planet roasting] machine down naturally. We must break it or it will break us.*
* The fossil fuel industry as a whole is not just another business, providing a service to meet a demand; it is a predatory drug dealer that works every day to keep the world addicted to its poisonous product, knowing full well that it will eventually prove fatal.*
(satire) *15-Year-Old Finds Summer Job As BetterHelp Therapist.*
Trumppets in Arizona organized a bogus “audit” of the presidential election in Arizona, evidently aiming to blow smoke so they could claim there was a fire. They later reported 282 supposed cases of dead people who had cast votes.
A subsequent investigation by Arizona’s attorney general found that 281 of them were in fact alive.
The FBI continues luring vulnerable people (generally Muslims) into fantasy terrorism schemes and sentencing them to 20 years in prison.
If the FBI goes after right-wing extremists it could start protecting us from real terrorism.
Australia’s inflation is like America’s inflation: caused by big businesses that have the power to impose price increases because they want to.
Antisocialism (so-called “Libertarianism”) attracts mainly white males, and a large part of its attraction for them is their wish to be allowed to put bigotry into practice.
Looking at some of the ways global heating‘s effects could possibly cause extinction of humanity.
I think that result is unlikely. Humans are quite flexible, and have survived in drastically different situations. So I think various small groups of humans will remain, without high technology. But I can’t claim that extinction is impossible.
US citizens: call on Congress to act to let the FCC restore the past network neutrality requirements on ISPs.
As explained before, the Obama-era network neutrality requirements that the corrupter abolished were weak and inadequate. Nonetheless, they would do some good.
UN Secretary General Guterres warns that the risk of nuclear war is slowly increasing. The world’s nuclear disarmament efforts are weakening.
Putin is trying to threaten nuclear war and pretending that he isn’t — much as US Republicans (also known as the Christian Taliban) are threatening civil war and pretending they aren’t.
Shell is using its windfall profits for stock buybacks — not investing them in renewable electric generation.
US government “security” agencies track people’s movements through their phones, without getting search warrants, by buying location data from companies that accumulate them.
We must forbid companies from collecting, or accumulating, people’s location data.
*Corporate Media [Fail] to Connect Gas Price Surge and Climate Crisis.*
(satire) *Police Experimenting With Nonlethal Methods To Give Speeding Ticket.*
If an Onion page appears blank, try disabling JavaScript entirely or telling LibreJS to blacklist all scripts on the page, then right-click and select the item “Reveal hidden HTML”. Or use a browser such as lynx that doesn’t implement JavaScript and CSS.
Sanders: *I say to Senator Toomey, if you don’t believe we can afford to take care of our veterans suffering from toxic burn pit exposure, then you should not have approved funding to go to war.*
(satire) *New Windex Formula Removes Menacing Apparitions From Mirror.*
If an Onion page appears blank, try disabling JavaScript entirely or telling LibreJS to blacklist all scripts on the page, then right-click and select the item “Reveal hidden HTML”. Or use a browser such as lynx that doesn’t implement JavaScript and CSS.
The UAE has convicted democracy campaigner Asim Ghafoor, who is a US citizen, of money laundering after a suspect trial.
He was arrested in a flight connection in Abu Dhabi. I recommend people avoid setting foot in Abu Dhabi’s airport.
Another bizarre thing in this report is that it the accusation appears to have come initially from the US; but the US did not arrested him, instead it let him fly to Abu Dhabi airport and he was arrested there.
I suspect this represents dirty work.
The US has a pattern, since 2001, of persecuting Muslims that raise money in the US for charity in other countries. Try as they might, they get accused of terrorism, or violating financial regulations. Is that what happened here?
Filipinos, including expats, are buying lots of copies of the book Marcos Martial Law: Never Again, fearing that the new president, son of the late dictator Marcos, will suppress the memory of his crimes.
The US has adopted policies that encourage the public to ignore Covid-19 and abandon the effective, low-tech methods of reducing transmission. This has allowed transmission to increase enormously, which puts vulnerable people at great danger. Politicians say, implicitly, that it doesn’t matter if those people die, that they are not important enough to wear a mask for.
There are two side points in the article that I take issue with. First, eugenics means an active effort to control who can reproduce. Letting people get sick and perhaps die is not eugenics. It is wrong, but it is a different wrong. This is an example of a pattern of stretching terminology for condemning a wrong that has excited special ire, to apply it to other things and carry some of that ire to them.
Second, the article describes the US practices as “American exceptionalism”, but I’ve seen similar practices in several European countries, and I think most of them have adopted the policy of “Imagine there’s no Covid.”
I asked the mayor of Boston to start a PR campaign to convince people to wear masks in enclosed places. Even if it’s not a legal requirement, there are ways of convincing people to do it — and in this case, it doesn’t require any deception. Obviously, this has not been done.
Rally for Julian Assange on Monday, August 1, from 11 to 12:30, at Park Street Station on the Boston Common. People will remain near the Park St station entrance for an hour, then march through the Common, giving out literature and talking to people on the way.
You can also support the campaign by phone or email.
Human-caused global heating will cause more tornadoes and more flooding in Kentucky. The governor is horrified seeing this at work, but will he understand what needs to be done?
The US must put an end to irrigation of lawns in areas where water is going to be scarce.
88% of Britons who stopped working since 2020 did so because of long-term illness.
I would expect the same to be true in the US, but does anyone actually know?
Already some places on Earth occasionally experience fatal weather, for short periods. But we know only theoretically at which point the combined heat and humidity (measured as the “wet bulb temperature”) will kill a large fraction of humans.
I fear we will get clear empirical evidence about this question in the next 20 years.
*Yes, Republicans really did try to make abortion punishable by death.*
*‘Soon it will be unrecognisable’: total climate meltdown cannot be stopped, says expert.*
Hothouse Earth, by Professor Bill McGuire, says we must stop trying to give people hope by underplaying the extent of the disaster that we have already made unavoidable.
Are economic sanctions against Russia worth while, if they don’t help make Putin drop the attempt to conquer Ukraine?
I support showing solidarity with Ukraine, but I contend that the best ways to do that are the ways that re effective help. Giving Ukraine arms to defeat and repel the Putin forces is effective, while economic warfare through sanctions seems to be backfiring. Thus, I suggest we do more of the former and less of the latter.
The US is suing to block the merger of two of the five giant US publishing companies.
This demonstrates the weakness of our antitrust laws. For two such large companies to merge should be a crime, so that blocking the merger requires no lawsuit. We should not have let them get down to less than 20.
*A group of whistleblowers has provided evidence that the Environmental Protection Agency has not adequately assessed the health risks posed by several new chemicals on the grounds that they are corrosive. Managers in the New Chemicals Division have repeatedly and incorrectly used the idea that a chemical may cause irritation to the eyes, skin, and respiratory tract as an excuse to avoid assessing the risk of other harms it may cause.*
By 2100, Austin, Texas, will be as hot as Dubai is now.
Dubai then will be even hotter.
The heat wave in the UK has ruined the harvest for many kinds of fruits and vegetables.
This is surely true also in parts of the US, but I don’t have an article to reference.
Moon’s “Unification church” has offered electoral support to Japanese and American right-wing politicians, since the 1970s.
Now that some TV weather forecasters are warning people about the likely significance of heat waves, global heating denialists are now trying to bully them into shutting up.
A ship carrying Ukrainian grain has left Odessa, bound for Lebanon.
If Putin allows grain shipments to continue, that will be a great help to many countries where people are suffering from hunger.
I previously suggested the idea that Ukraine could choke off Russia’s oil exports from Novorossiysk. Back then, it would have been retaliation in kind for what Putin was doing — but maybe he is no longer doing that.
If Putin henceforth refrains from cutting off Ukraine’s exports, Ukraine should and must refrain from cutting off Russia’s exports.
US citizens: phone your senators and urge them to pass the “trans bill of rights” now.
The Capitol Switchboard number is +1-202-224-3121.
If you call, please spread the word!
US citizens: call on Biden not to run again in 2024.
Here are reasons.
* “Approving lots of new fossil fuel projects in exchange for some clean energy funding is completely bonkers and will make the climate crisis worse.”*
All but 6 Republicans in the House of Representatives voted against legalizing abortion of pregnancies caused by rape.
Could it be that big US businesses are jacking up prices to help the Republican Party win this year’s election?
(satire) *Regretful Officer Believes More Could Have Been Done To Kill Unarmed Black Man.*
*Humanity faces ‘collective suicide’ over climate crisis, warns UN chief.*
*US drafts new speed limits on shipping to help save endangered whales.*
The US government must fund “managed” retreat from housing that is doomed to be flooded or burnt.
The people who live in those homes can’t afford to move or build elsewhere — the government must help them. But subsidizing rebuilding in place is an enormously inefficient way to do that.
I disagree with the statement that “managed retreat is not defeat.” Of course it is! Global heating disaster will be one defeat after another. However, there are different kinds of defeats. When you can’t win the battle, an orderly retreat is much less bad than a disorderly rout, and that’s what will happen if we don’t plan this.
Cory Doctorow explains how the rootkit that attacks treacherous computing is a disaster for “security” in the usual sense.
It means that machines with the WHAT? can now have additional back doors other than the one that Microsoft designed into Windows.
However, since WHAT is what ensures we can’t free our machines from Microsoft’s control, the same vulnerability that this rootkit uses might give us a way to turn off treacherous computing and/or install our own free boot software.
The inspector general of the Department of Hostility and Sadism knew for months that some important Jan 6 messages had been deleted, and did not tell Congress. The missing (deleted) messages extend beyond the Secret Service; some involved the highest officials of the DHS.
*Big Pharma Flooding Airwaves With Disinformation to Kill Drug Price Reform.*
(satire) *Toyota Unveils Multifamily Tenement Sedan For People Living Out Of Their Cars.*
Doctors in US states that have banned abortions are now afraid to treat miscarriages and nonviable pregnancies, because that overlaps with abortion.
The Indian state of Telengana is pushing for total surveillance. The excuse is terrorism, but India’s repression combined with total surveillance will do more damage than terrorism that lacks the backing of the Indian government.
Four myths about inflation (in the US).
Republicans have, for years, pushed to start a constitutional convention that would rewrite the US Constitution. It turns out that Republicans would have pre-imposed control of that convention, and could do whatever they wish, disregarding the public.
*Fears that Egypt may use Cop27 to whitewash human rights abuses.*
Australia may soon change its constitution to establish something to be known as “an indigenous voice to parliament”, though no one has stated clearly what that would concretely mean.
In general, it is wrong to establish rights or privileges for citizens based on their racial background. Would this “voice” do a thing? Without a concrete plan, we can’t tell.
Prime Minister Albanese has promised to state simply and clearly the text for the referendum to decide on the plan. Supposing that the simple and clear text also states concretely what would be done, then depending on those details, it might perhaps be a good thing.
The indigenous Australians suffered a grave wrong when the British colonists took their land, and suffer from direct and systemic racism today. They deserve various sorts of help and compensation — but that is a different question.
Some former Republicans are campaigning against trump-pets and for preserving democracy.
The ancient Middle East understood the need to cancel debts periodically, so that the rich did not drive the rest into bondage.
Nowadays, by contrast, the creditors rule and government believes it exists to make sure that debts are not forgiven.
*IVF may be in jeopardy in states where embryos are granted person hood.*
I think that artificial assistance to getting pregnant is ok in theory, but terribly self-destructive to a society in our present situation.
The EPA has an indirect plan to get coal-fired generators to close.
Accusation: *Boris Johnson is planning to fill the Lords with his cronies and legitimize bribery*
A Bank of America executive expressed hope that workers will lose their power to pressure for raises, and that unemployment will rise.
*Maritime heatwaves have destroyed up to 90% of coral populations in parts of the Mediterranean.*
These heat waves are intense — almost 6C hotter than normal.
*Could Long Covid lead to the rise of a four-day work-week?*
A four-day work week might be a change for the better, but in order for long Covid to make society adopt that, it would have to wreak such enormous suffering that a mere change in work schedules could not come near to compensating. We need to prevent so many people from getting long Covid.
Brazil has approved a paved highway through Amazonia, which risks encouraging illegal logging.
This is Bolsonaro at work.
The US achieves foreign policy goals by sending arms or troops. Cuba achieves foreign policy goals by sending doctors or teachers. Can the US do with sending more doctors or teachers, and less arms or troops?
Indiana’s attorney general is a religious fanatic. He is looking for any possible excuse to harass Dr Caitlin Bernard, including “complaints” about her from people who never met her or had anything to do with her.
Sri Lanka’s new president, Wickremesinghe, formerly prime minister, is imposing harsh repression of protests.
I have a suspicion that Wickremesinghe allowed protests to chase out Rajapaksa, for reasons of his own.
Australia’s prime minister is not an extreme planet roaster, but he is repeating myths used by the coal industry to keep coal cheap.
Only 11 states require sex education classes that are medically accurate. Good education for adolescents about sexual relationships is rare.
Good education about how to be confident of delighting your lover is almost nonexistent in our society, and that absence causes millions of people years of misery.
Republican performative cruelty includes US workers whose medical insurance is currently required to cover screening for various dangerous diseases.
The Department of Justice is investigating the phony electors plot.
Sanders warns that Bolsonaro is plotting to overthrow democracy in Brazil, and called on Biden to help Brazil resist this.
Sad to say, there are reasons to distrust the computerized voting machines used in Brazil. Or at least, that was the case 10 years ago. They are digital and the system does nothing to try to detect systemic digital fraud. Brazil should replace them with paper ballots.
But there is no reason to think that cheating in Lula’s favor is more likely than cheating in Bolsonaro’s favor. Quite the contrary: Bolsonaro’s supporters are more likely to have the business connections necessary to cheat, more likely to think they need to cheat, and more likely to be unscrupulous enough to cheat.
*Inflation Is Not an Excuse to Withhold Support for Needed Tax Reforms and Investments.*
US citizens: phone your senators and urge them to vote to allow the Equal Rights Amendment to take effect. The Equal Rights Amendment says,
Equality of rights under the law shall not be denied or abridged by the United States or by any state on account of sex.
The Capitol Switchboard number is +1-202-224-3121.
If you call, please spread the word!
US citizens: call on Congress to extend and expand Social Security.
The Capitol Switchboard number is +1-202-224-3121.
If you call, please spread the word!
US citizens: call on elected officials to speed decarbonization and make the greenhouse gas emitters pay.
*BBC criticised over climate question in Tory leadership debate.* The sole question about climate disaster supported the fossil fuel companies’ distraction campaign, reducing one’s own “carbon footprint”, rather than on the systematic state actions that they seek to prevent.
However, when it comes to reducing your own personal efforts to avoid global heating disaster, it’s clear that the best thing you can do is avoid having children. Fewer humans in the future means humanity’s collective ecological footprint will be smaller in every dimension.
Reproducing at full speed, and letting the human population be reduced by famine and war is the other alternative, and it’s much worse.
The US assisted in a Nigerian air raid on a displaced persons’ camp, which killed aid workers and civilians; then it secretly investigated what had happened.
The raid was intended to target terrorists, but something went very wrong in the planning.
The Democrats’ great “deal” with Manchin includes increased drilling for fossil fuels.
It is one step forward in exchange for Manchin’s demanded half a step back.
The deal also includes some positive changes regarding taxes: a 15% corporate profits minimum tax, more higher tax on private equity funds, and funding the IRS to investigate tax cheaters that aren’t poor.
Also, it makes an effort to reduce the cost of medicines for people on Medicare. Sanders called it “better than nothing.”
Overall, it is a change for the better, but the additional wells will pump death for decades.
But we must never talk about this deal without condemning the price to civilization that Manchin has charged for it.
*Climate targets at risk as countries lag in updating emission goals, say campaigners.*
Christian anticharity is the main opposition to Australia’s plan to eliminate the national law prohibiting assistance for suicide.
The US clinical trial data for some recently approved anti-cancer drugs is still secret some years later.
The US government should stop negotiating with those exploitative companies and legislate that the US government can and will publish those studies as soon as the drug is approved. Or perhaps as soon as the application for approval is filed.
The biggest companies tend to want to increase their trade secrecy to gain more advantage over competitors. But what is good for the public is to give the biggest companies less advantage over competitors. Therefore, whenever there is a public-interest reason to demand that companies come clean about their operations, we should make that a legal requirement.
Trader Joe’s workers at one store have voted to unionize.
Noam Chomsky: *Even without fundamental changes in prevailing state capitalism, the kind of New Deal-style regulation that was dismantled by the neoliberal assault can be reinstated, and strengthened.*
Republicans made a deal to improve medical care for military veterans who were poisoned by toxic substances while deployed. Then they demanded to change the deal, and ultimately killed it.
Military veterans used to be politically untouchable in the US, but in 2016 the wrecker started started showing public contempt for veterans and their families. Maybe that made them less sacrosanct.
A right-wing party that advocates climate defense will oppose Tories in the next UK elections.
*What has happened to the Labour party that it can’t stand up for labour?*
The answer is, it has followed the Democratic Party in the US in becoming “centrist”, and forgotten the goal of making working people better off.
*One in three people killed by US police were fleeing, data reveals.*
It is usually unjustified for thugs to shoot someone who is running away or even looking away from them.
*Labor announces national security law review after inquiry criticises secrecy of Witness J case.*
*Humanity can’t equivocate any longer. This is a climate emergency.*
Accusing Senator Schumer of protecting big tech near-monopolies in exchange for campaign funds.
*Climate breakdown made UK heatwave 10 times more likely, study finds.*
The article does not discuss the heatwaves in western Europe and various parts of the US, but I expect global heating is largely responsible for them too.
*Self-awareness in short supply as Trump calls for law and order in DC.*
Hackers have developed a way to embed misoprostol in business cards so that it can be used for abortion straight off the card.
General Milley reports that China’s military has become more aggressive in dealing with US military forces since 5 years ago.
China states repeatedly that it intends to capture Taiwan; we know from what we saw in Hong Kong that this would mean subjection and repression.
When China posed no real threat of conquering Taiwan, it was safe to smile at China’s pretensions of doing so, and avoid ostentatious support for Taiwan. But now that the threat is real, the US needs to face up to it with a calm, explicit visible commitment to Taiwan’s defense. That means that China can’t order the US to limit its ties with Taiwan.
The present aggressive confrontations are harassment, intended to pressure Taiwan and the US to step on the path of yielding. That, above all, they must not do. To argue that “Pelosi should not visit Taiwan now because China might respond by increasing the harassment” is the first step of abandoning Taiwan.
However, it would be a mistake to treat these harassments as if they were real attacks — for instance, to respond aggressively. The only response to these acts of harassment should be the necessary defensive precautions in case one turns into a real bombing raid.
*Congressional Staffers Arrested for Climate Sit-In at Schumer’s Office.*
One thing we can expect in last stages before total disaster is that people will desperately pollute and destroy unusual ecosystems, to delay the local disaster a few more years. Now the DR Congo is about to open up a large rainforest for oil drilling.
Hulu is censoring Democrat’s political ads that talk about abortion rights and gun control.
Incoming medical students at the University of Michigan walked out on a ceremony which presented a speaker who claims that fetuses are people, and rebuked the university for inviting a speaker who advocates forbidding abortions.
The US Constitution forbids people who have participated in insurrection against the United States from running for elected office, but judges have thwarted the attempt to make this apply to Marjorie Taylor Greene.
A study estimates that exposure of today’s living Americans to PFAs could cost 5 to 63 billion dollars in medical costs.
That is assuming that the US continues functioning with a modern medical system that actually tries to treat most Americans who have these medical problems.
*The Global Ruling Class Is Frog-Marching Us Towards Extinction.*
*Extreme Heat Could Wipe Out Decades of Gain in Fight Against Child Malnutrition.*
That’s just the beginning. In a couple of decades, malnutrition could affect most of the human population.
Humans are very adaptable. I expect that small groups of humans will survive for a long time at low levels of technology — but that will be little comfort for the rest.
The central principle of the Republican Party is performative cruelty.
Unless you are a millionaire (as well as white and straight), don’t suppose that you are not the target.
The Tyre Extinguishers campaign against gas-guzzling SUVs by deflating their tires, and leaving leaflets on the cars thus targeted.
Students at the University of Cambridge persuaded the university not to name a research lab in honor of Billionaire Polluters.
*Adopting a policy to reject “all fossil fuel industry funding and research partnerships” is what’s needed.*
A female couple wants to join with a male couple to have and raise one baby as four parents.
*[US] Banks’ financing of coal, oil, and gas was higher in 2021 than it was in 2016, the year after the Paris agreement was adopted.*
This activity amounts to mass murder, to accelerate over the next few decades.
*Leaked: US power companies secretly spending millions to protect profits and fight clean energy.*
What they spend it on includes election dirty tricks to defeat legislators that support bills to decarbonize.
This activity amounts to mass murder, to accelerate over the next few decades.
US citizens: tell Congress that AIPAC doesn’t speak for you.
The Capitol Switchboard number is +1-202-224-3121.
If you call, please spread the word!
Zelensky explains why a temporary cease-fire would help the Putin forces in the long term.
We must not allow Putin to succeed in capturing and holding Ukrainian territory, but as long as we prevent that, it makes sense to help him save face.
A militia leader testified in the Jan 6 committee that the wrecker was preparing for an armed revolt.
The EU is making big cuts in burning natural gas. The immediate motive is to resist Putin’s pressure, but this is a good thing for more general reasons.
In practice, “Sustainable investment” funds try to avoid investing in businesses that would lose value from decarbonization — but they don’t invest in accelerating decarbonization. So they are no help to what we need.
*Biden says Trump “lacked the courage to act” during January 6 attack.*
What a bizarre understatement! The wrecker had already acted, by preparing and launching the attack on the Capitol, and he continued to act by keeping it going and protecting it.
What he lacked was not guts, but loyalty to his country.
Doubts over obtaining insurance for the ships puts a cloud on the supposed deal to export grain from Ukraine through the Black Sea.
Walgreens in Texas refused to prescribe methotrexate for the purpose of facilitating insertion of an IUD, claiming the pharmacy couldn’t know that it wasn’t for an abortion.
Millions of people take methotrexate to treat various medical problems other than pregnancy, and the Texas law has put them all in danger.
*The Enduring Tyranny of Oil: War, Inflation, Geopolitical Rivalry, and Soaring World Temperatures.*
Students: *We’re planning school strikes across the world to protest climate inaction.*
This is entirely reasonable, for those who realize that global heating disaster will not leave them much of a chance to use their studies.
Sad to say, their web site depends so totally on JavaScript code that it shows no information with JavaScript disabled. It’s as much as to require, arbitrarily, that you can’t support your own freedom and their campaign too. Why create a gratuitous conflict between these two causes, when fundamentally they are entirely compatible?
If you are in contact with them, please offer to make their site work at least minimally for users that reject JavaScript code.
If you attend a school where an occupation is planned, I expect you will be hear about it in other ways, so that you can support it.
Tories plan to require carers who need to stay overnight in a hospital to take care of a patient to pay to stay.
Little by little they are making the NHS impossible for poor people to use. Tory policy is, sick poor people should die.
US citizens: call on the Senate to protect same-sex marriage.
US citizens: call on Biden to declare a climate emergency, and use his emergency powers to decarbonize.
*The World Burns and the Richest Profit. It Doesn’t Have to Be This Way.*
Biden’s gestures, making nice to Netanyahu and Crown Prince Bone Saw were ugly but merely symbolic. Sad to say, they symbolize support for actions that are horrible.
Orbán publicly endorses unabashed racism.
Cellular network operators in Europe are associating each network access from a snoop-phone with its phone number, so web sites (advertisers) can track each user.
Thousands of US women are getting themselves sterilized, for fear that they would no longer have the option of abortion. But it can be difficult to find a surgeon willing to do the operation.
*Let’s Acknowledge Why the Midterms Look So Bleak for Democrats: Joe Biden.*
I can’t say I am entirely sure that this is true. The reason why I am not sure is because voters’ thinking seems to be irrational. Why let your opinion of Biden affect whether to vote for your local progressive candidate?
Biden or no Biden, it’s clear that the only way to get progressive laws through Congress is to elect more progressives to Congress. The 2022 elections are an opportunity to do this — so what are we waiting for?
Since I can’t make sense of what those voters are thinking, I can’t model what would influence them. But the article could be right.
(satire) *Snobby Ex-Con Always Mentioning How He Went To Private Prison.*
If an Onion page appears blank, try disabling JavaScript entirely or telling LibreJS to blacklist all scripts on the page, then right-click and select the item “Reveal hidden HTML”. Or use a browser such as lynx that doesn’t implement JavaScript and CSS.
Reality Winner speaks about her duty to inform the public when the government was lying to the public.
This reinforces the need to change the Espionage Act to include a public interest defense.
US citizens: call on Merrick Garland to prosecute the wrecker and his co-conspirators for their coup attempt.
US citizens: call on the U.S. Forest Service to protect the Boundary Waters.
US citizens: call on Congress to end US military support for Salafi Arabia’s war in Yemen.
200 Starbucks stores in the US have voted to unionize.
*Biden’s Presidency Isn’t Sinking Because of the Left — It’s Because of Right-Wing Democrats.*
* By declaring a public health emergency under the Public Readiness and Emergency Preparedness Act, the Biden administration could “enable out-of-state prescribing and dispensing of medications for abortion for those in states with abortion bans.”*
The Burmese military government has executed democracy activists, accusing them of “terrorism”.
Two large chains of Australia stores have ceased using facial recognition to identify all customers.
*Tyre dust: the “stealth pollutant” that’s becoming a huge threat to ocean life.*
Governments’ mission requires compelling tire manufacturers to disclose what the tires contain. No one is entitled to keep secrets about chemicals that may be endangering ecosystems. The idea that businesses should have such powers is sheer plutocracy.
The American Data Privacy and Protection Act takes a step toward limiting how companies can snoop on computer users. But the bad part is that it preempts state laws.
I suspect that the ADPPA is fundamentally based on limiting the use of data once collected, an approach that it is inadequate, because the only method that will really work is to limit the collection of the data.
If states can’t pass laws that go beyond this, all progress will stop.
So I think this law should not be passed.
A recent decision by the Supreme Court may have blocked Biden from cancelling federal student loans.
It is not clear.
A movement for white Christian nationalism is spreading through the US. It is based on falsifying the history and founding principles of the US.
Republicans ruling Arkansas and Nebraska, for ideological reasons, rejected federal rental assistance for poor people in those states. They prefer to see poor people evicted.
The wrecker is continuing to try to overthrow the US government.
Israel is using Google’s AI services to track Palestinians by facial recognition and analyze everything they say, write, read or express with their faces to generate suspicions about them
Starmer is taking the Labour Party a step closer to plutocratism.
“Growth” as a political goal tends to be an excuse to reject other more important goals, such as “tax the rich and help the rest.”
*If Biden isn’t willing to really fight the climate crisis, he shouldn’t run in 2024.*
I disagree with the article on one subpoint: it is not only the results that count. When something really important is at stake, we can forgive you for being defeated, if we see you fought really hard. But if you fail to do that, you have failed us.
US citizens: support the National Popular Vote Compact.
US citizens: call on investment fund companies to create sustainable options now. This refers to companies such as Vanguard, Fidelity, and BlackRock.
US citizens: call on the Senate to replace Senator Manchin as Energy Committee Chairman.
The Capitol Switchboard number is +1-202-224-3121.
If you call, please spread the word!
US citizens: call on Biden to end the Remain in Mexico policy.
US citizens: call on Congress to pass the Fourth Amendment Is Not for Sale Act.
The Department of Hostility and Suffering currently buys lots of surveillance data. This law would prohibit that, but it wouldn’t eliminate the resulting injustice. It is a small step forward, but not a true solution.
Governments could buy other kinds of data which would enable them to find out what sort of places you have been, and then use parallel construction to attack you.
The Capitol Switchboard number is +1-202-224-3121.
If you call, please spread the word!
*DRC to auction oil and gas permits in endangered gorilla habitat.*
Global disaster will push many people to the brink, and before actually dying, they will try desperate schemes to survive. Many of those schemes will involve destruction. This is a foretaste.
If there had been stronger winds, fire might have engulfed much of London last week.
*These soaring temperatures have given Britain a taste of the dystopia to come.* Other parts of the world, too.
The planet-roasters, and the officials they have bought influence with, are responsible. Let’s rub their noses in their mess.
*Barely 12 hours after Moscow signed a deal with Ukraine to allow monitored grain exports from Ukraine’s southern ports, [Putin] targeted Ukraine’s main port of [Odessa] — through which grain shipments would take place — with cruise missile strikes.*
*Airstrikes on ports could derail grain export plan, warns Ukraine.*
I had a feeling that this deal was too good to be true. Cheating is Putin’s way; you can’t expect him to keep a deal sincerely.
Putin has been using food effectively as a weapon, and he would hardly let go of a weapon.
I support Ukraine in this war, but “Odessa” has been the English name of that city for much more than a century, and I don’t see a reason to change the way we write it in English.
In Shasta county, ideological opponents of masks bullied many county officials into resigning, and removed some officials from office, demonstrating how they wish to harass anyone who doesn’t bow down to them.
*Dip in UK woodland’s ability to capture CO2 [because] felled trees not replaced.*
I would guess that other countries have the same problem, if they don’t take care to grow new trees as fast as they cut trees down.
Ralph Nader: * Waging peace and conflict resolution should be the State Department’s main mission.*
Extreme heat in the US is driving many species towards extinction, including birds, fish and mollusks.
The wrecker made a plan, called “Schedule F”, to enable him to arbitrarily purge the employees in 50,000 federal civil service jobs and replace them with people personally loyal to him. This could corrupt the whole federal bureaucracy.
Any Republican elected in 2024 might put this into practice. Reportedly Republicans in the Senate support that plan, and will block the efforts to legislate against it.
Why Bannon’s defiance of a subpoena to testify in Congress goes hand in hand with insurrection.
Bannon claimed that the wrecker still has the “executive privilege” to forbid Bannon from testifying, even though the wrecker no longer holds an executive office. This could be the basis of an appeal.
It seems pretty obvious to me that ex-officials must not have any power to block testimony about what they did while in office.
*Do you trust the people in suits downplaying this [climate] emergency, or the activists lying in roads in an attempt to ward off catastrophe?*
Unions and the labor movement have great capacity to support democracy and human rights, and have done so throughout history.
The Jan 6 committee has presented powerful evidence that the wrecker intentionally built up and directed the attack on the capitol, and chose intentionally to keep it going until he concluded it had failed.
*How the January 6 panel set the stage for a criminal case against Trump.*
California has passed a law that parodies the Texas law authorizing almost anyone to sue whoever helps someone get an abortion. California’s law does that same thing to people who do anything with illegal guns. Is this a good idea?
I think that the “anyone can sue you” approach to enforcing a law is cruel and repressive, regardless of what actions are being prohibited. Using this to enforce anti-gun laws is bad for the same reason that using this to enforce anti-abortion laws is bad.
Kenyan thugs have been convicted of murdering a human rights lawyer and others.
Although Graham Mansfield was not convicted of murdering his dying wife, he was convicted of manslaughter. His sentence was suspended so he probably will not go to prison for this.
I don’t know whether he cares about that question. He did not want to outlive Dyanne, but having survived his suicide attempt, he is stuck with it. Can he find meaning in life now?
I believe that the right to die should not be limited to people who are going to die soon anyway. People who are incapacitated, whose prospect is many years of helpless boredom and futility, should have the right to help in dying, too, if that’s what they want.
Extreme hot weather is causing local damage to roofs, bridges, railroads, pipes…
In ten years, the heat waves will be hotter, and cause a lot more damage.
Same-sex couples organize to stop right-wing fanatics from ruling same-sex marriage invalid in the US.
*US Regulators Urged to Block Amazon’s “Terrifying” Purchase of [the medical clinic company] One Medical.*
Large companies like Amazon should not be allowed to acquire any other companies.
The inspector general is investigating the deletion of possibly disloyal text messages posted by Secret Service agents.
(satire) *More Young Americans Achieving Homeownership By Changing Locks On Airbnb.*
If an Onion page appears blank, try disabling JavaScript entirely or telling LibreJS to blacklist all scripts on the page, then right-click and select the item “Reveal hidden HTML”. Or use a browser such as lynx that doesn’t implement JavaScript and CSS.
*Progressive Lawmakers Push Biden to Stop Transferring Military Weapons to Cops.*
The IMF could provide funds for food for starving countries, if the US gives the ok.
*Nearly Every House Republican Votes Against Codifying Right to Contraception.
“If they had the chance they would ban it,” said Rep. Ilhan Omar (D-Minn.).*
(satire) *Local Mom Wants Just One Nice Vacation Photo Where Family Isn’t Running From Gunfire.*
If an Onion page appears blank, try disabling JavaScript entirely or telling LibreJS to blacklist all scripts on the page, then right-click and select the item “Reveal hidden HTML”. Or use a browser such as lynx that doesn’t implement JavaScript and CSS.
Global heating has made fighting wildfires much harder in the UK. The government does nothing about this.
Political divisions are appearing among evangelical Christians.
Abortion rights activism pressured Biden to take small steps to defend access to abortion. If he had been truly eager, he would not have waited to be pushed.
(satire) *New Ford F-450 Comes With Shotgun In Case Truck Doesn’t Kill Pedestrian On Impact.*
*The Only Effective Pandemic Response Is a Global One.*
Biden is confronting Iran in a belligerent tone.
The article asks why he does that. I have two ideas: (1) to pressure Iran to resume the non-nuclear deal, and (2) to such up to Crown Prince Bone Saw so he will sell more oil. Neither one is a good reason.
The monarch butterfly is now listed as endangered.
Not enough restaurants and cafes allow the public (not limited to customers) to use their toilets. The solution is to pass laws which require them to do so.
Racial bias in length of prison sentences is increasing in the US.
A Chicago thug shot a teenager who ran away, as he was putting his hands up while holding a camera phone. The boy is now paralyzed.
California thugs killed a man who ran away with a phone in his hand.
*House panel says Trump “chose not to act” during attack on US Capitol.*
That is a shocking understatement. The corrupter did much worse than remain inactive during the Jan 6 attack on the Capitol. He continued to egg his followers on, as they rioted, for more than an hour.
At this point, I think the crucial question is, is there any law which criminalizes these actions? There ought to be, but is there any?
The new “interim” president of Sri Lanka, chosen by parliament, arrested hundreds of encamped protesters shortly before they were going to leave.
Ukraine wants to put Putin and his high officials on trial for war crimes.
Threatening to prosecute Putin would be a mistake, if there is any chance of actually bringing him to justice, because he would continue the war simply to prevent that, even if he has no chance of actually winning.
However, if there is no chance of bringing him to justice, the trial is just a futile display of anger.
The UK spy organization supports the plan to make all UK snoop-phones check everything people send through them.
They would like this, wouldn’t they?
“Gullible cynicism”: the practice of bending over backwards to disbelieve the generally accepted explanation for anything whatsoever, while eagerly accepting absurdly implausible conspiracy theories instead.
Gullible cynicism appeared long before there were modern disinformation campaigns. Nowadays it has spread beyond the US — but gullible cynicism sure helps disinformation campaigns succeed.
Food banks in the UK don’t have enough food for all the hungry people.
*We’re living in an age of permanent crisis — let’s stop planning for a “return to normal“.* Governments continue trying to do that.
It is fundamentally harder to plan for a different world 10 years from now, and a world 20 years from now that would be different again.
*Unless we act soon, this heatwave is just a taste of things to come.*
Complaints from black immigrants in US deportation prison *reveal a disturbing pattern of physical abuse and ignoring medical needs.*
An indigenous prisoner in Australian jail died of a disease that proper medical procedures would have identified. But they don’t follow proper medical procedures with indigenous prisoners.
Ukraine is preparing a counterattack to recapture Kherson.
The climate protesters of Ultima Generazione (Last Generation) glued themselves to the glass screen of a famous painting, Primavera by Botticelli.
*Ukraine and Russia sign UN-backed deal to restart grain exports.*
There are many ways this plan could fail. Putin could “implement” it with bad faith, or make new demands. But it could also fail despite sincere efforts by all parties. I hope it does succeed.
The UN’s International Court of Justice will proceed with a case against the Burmese government for genocide of the Rohingya.
Global heating effects are damaging roses in England.
16 members of Congress were among those arrested for protesting for abortion rights in the street before the Supreme Court.
Graham Mansfield was tried for murder after killing his wife, Dyanne, who in great pain from terminal cancer and made him promise to end her suffering. Then he tried to kill himself, but he couldn’t go through with it.
I read that he was acquitted of murder. I hope they do not punish him. Staying alive without his dearest is a terrible punishment.
The Republican nominee for governor of Maryland is an election liar.
Marylanders must expect him to lie about elections in the future, too, including the elections he runs in.
Amazon is harassing warehouse employees with pressure not to vote to unionize.
Workers at a Chipotle outlet filed for union recognition, so the company shut that branch permanently.
The article sates that since mid-June the branch has been open “only for staff trainings”. I have a hunch that these “trainings” are actually union-busting harassment meetings. This is a standard tactic used by many companies to fight union organizing. They order workers to listen for hours to the propaganda of union-busting consultants, and perhaps to answer their questions too.
It could be useful training … in how to stand firm against the man.
Do you feel like eating Chipotle’s food after reading this?
US cities are raising the priority of efforts to adapt to extreme heat, since heat we now call “extreme” will become normal
GIPHY App Key not set. Please check settings