The Weekly Watch

Laboring to Understand

I've been struggling to understand human behavior and actions this week (maybe every week). As it's Labor Day weekend I was thinking about the current labor strikes in our prisons. Really it is a strike against inhumane conditions and out right slavery. So why is it humans are so cruel to one another, to our fellow lifeforms, to our ecosystem at large. I usually explain it as greed, but I fear it is something deeper ... a fatal flaw in the nature of our species. It seems we lack the ability to act now for our future tomorrow. The corporate media can be blamed in part, but some things have become pretty obvious. How about the wild weather we've been having world wide? But we still keep pouring carbon into the air and pushing for more fossil fuel...basing most of the worlds economy on its extraction and use...driving absurd wars in the middle east and blatant efforts at regime change in Venezuela. Is it willful ignorance, or are we truly blind?

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If you think you've got it bad, imagine what the striking prisoners are enduring around the US. Perhaps we should first consider who is in prison...it ain't the criminal banksters nor the obviously guilty Hillary. It is mainly poor folks of color. Ever noticed who the police pull over? The guy in the Lexus going 90 MPH? No it's the poor Hispanic person driving a beat up Ford with a cracked windshield or a busted tail light. The police learn that it doesn't help their career to challenge power. They feel entitled to shoot you in the back if you run away. Those targeted people often end up staying in jail cause they can't make bail...spending months there without even being convicted. You would think we would work to reform inmates...but no, it is a self perpetuating punitive for-profit system designed to capture and retain...not to reform and rehabilitate. We should all be striking against this system....but until it is us, it's just them...no worries. This is the aspect of our nature I'm trying to address this week.

It speaks volumes about our culture and nation that we imprison the most people in the world. We're 5% of the global population with 25% of the world's prisoners. Is it our puritanical past that leads us to be such a punitive society? Or does it just serve TPTB to enrich themselves by incarcerating the weak and vulnerable?

Amani Sawari, prison strike organizer working on behalf of Jailhouse Lawyers Speak, talks about the ongoing movement. (video or text)

Prisoners are striking against an innately violent climate. The way that prisons are operated do incite violence, due to understaffing, also the lack of rehabilitation programs. Prisoners are calling out against these sort of conditions that incite violence. There isn’t much to engage the mind. There is no emotional services, no mental services, no mental health services, things that could occupy the prisoners’ time and help them with their development while they’re in prison. They want to have access to jobs that are valuable, jobs that give them the skills that they need and prepare them for being on the outside. The lack of these types of funding and rehabilitation programs towards that types of funding keep violent conditions going. And staff are complicit in this, either because they’re too tired or too overworked to respond effectively to incidents of violence

https://www.democracynow.org/2018/8/30/update_on_prison_strike_demanding...

Thirteen prisoners died in Mississippi in August.

And in Mississippi, throughout—and similarly, throughout the country, the private facilities are generally the worst and most violent facilities, because they’re generally understaffed, purposefully, so that gangs control the facilities, in which case the officers cannot respond to incidents. In this instance, this 24-year-old young man lost his life due to a fight with another inmate. Oftentimes it’s very difficult to get any information about what happens in these prisons. They have no constituency. They have no champion. They have no legislative or city council support.

https://www.democracynow.org/2018/8/30/mississippi_is_failing_as_prisone...

Pastor Kenneth Glasgow is the Founder of the Ordinary People Society; Convener of the National Criminal Justice Coalition and Co-chairman of Formerly Incarcerated and Convicted People Movement. He speaks about this strike and the 2016 effort. (video or text)
https://therealnews.com/stories/prisoners-across-the-us-strike-to-end-mo...

...many participants have been hit by prison officials with swift and vicious reprisals, advocates, prisoners and their families said.
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2018/aug/31/us-inmates-prison-strike...

Because of my refusal to work, and the efforts I’ve made to organise strikes and publicise the horrors that go on behind bars, I have faced regular reprisals. In recent years I’ve been bounced around from state to state in an attempt to silence me: they sent me from Virginia to Oregon, from there to Texas and Florida, then back again to Virginia.
Now I’m on death row, even though I’m not a death row prisoner, which is about as total a condition of isolation you can get. Yet I still found a way to get this article to the Guardian.

https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2018/aug/23/prisoner-speak-out...

California is about to end its cash bail system. However, the new law, which will take effect January 1, 2020, is coming under some criticism from those who think it may adversely affect vulnerable communities in the justice system.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=epxzaQbu8Qs (2.5 min)

Lee Camp discusses the prison strike.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mGyjbRUL4lg (6 min)

I'm laboring to understand how we treat fellow humans so badly. Once again the system seems too overwhelming to address. However, we can act as individuals (I hope I don't sound like a broken record). There are several organizations that line up pen pals from prison. Here are a few:
https://writeaprisoner.com/
http://prisonpenpals.com/
https://www.meet-an-inmate.com/

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How about some good news and a little humor after that focus on prisons?
You may remember the BC pipeline fought to s stand still till Trudeau nationalized it? Well the courts have stopped it. Trudeau is Canada's Obama, saying he'll fight climate chaos while promoting fossil fuels. (no text, 14 min video)
https://therealnews.com/stories/major-legal-victory-canadas-kinder-morga...

California appears to be poised to insure net neutrality in their state. Jimmy and Ron tell the story. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SB6-Gz4HZKc (7.5 min)

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This story from CNN is so absurd it's funny. Jimmy, Ron and Nick Branna do a great job spoofing this story that sounds like something from the Onion.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hoLmEb1MH-4 (17.5 min)

Glenn Greenwald also dissects the CNN story
https://theintercept.com/2018/08/28/cnn-credibly-accused-of-lying-to-its...

More from Jimmy and Ron on CNN's Russiagate hype
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZkJrDZCBTAk (16.5 min)

Despite the constant Russiagate narrative, people aren't buying it, Jimmy and Ron explain.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6asqzcS-fQk (13 min)

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The Economy

It’s not that “Capitalism isn’t working,” as Noah Smith recently argued in Bloomberg. It’s that it’s working all too well.
https://www.truthdig.com/articles/capitalism-is-beyond-saving-and-americ...

As tariffs and sanctions are increasing globally many nations are dealing with reeling financial issues and the near collapse of local currency. Investors are concerned Latin Americas third largest economy, Argentina, could collapse after the country unexpectedly asked for the early release of a $50 billion loan from the International Monetary Fund. At the same time nations like Canada and Venezuela are dealing with growing inflation. Former UK member of parliament, George Galloway discusses the situation.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=80bPnizT5CM (9 min)

Chris Hedges explores the question "What will the consequences of this inequality be economically and politically?" https://www.truthdig.com/articles/becoming-serfs/

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The Ecosystem...

Check out the Thursday open thread by magiamma "Hot Air" for all the climate news you can handle. Nothing makes my point better than our approach to our impending extinction...willful ignorance and acceptance.
https://caucus99percent.com/content/hot-air-3

I dropped this two minute clip in a comment on the hot air OT...from 1958.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=m-AXBbuDxRY

The models developed in the 70's and 80's have been pretty accurate. It is amazing anyone can be in denial. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qL92L0tSGGI (14 min)

Education is the best approach to solving our problems.

The public does not agree with many of the criticisms leveled at public education by think tanks and public officials. The public’s respect for teachers is well-nigh overwhelming, but parents see the profession as undervalued. And the closer individuals get to a real school, the more they like what they see.

http://pdkpoll.org/perspectives/school-critics-are-not-listening-to-the-...

In Louisville KY citizens are fighting against a state take over of their schools.
https://progressive.org/public-school-shakedown/is-louisville-ground-zer...

Meanwhile we place our young folks deep in debt for worthless degrees.
https://www.marketwatch.com/story/graduates-of-poor-performing-programs-...

Many schools are little more than a pipeline to prison.
https://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry/civil-rights-devos_us_5b7b2dd3e4b01...
http://www.justicepolicy.org/news/8775

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A Quick Look Around the World...

Jimmy, Abby Martin and her partner look at the push for a war with Iran
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4DTDZrJFP3I (19 min)

Just 48 hours after Defense Secretary James Mattis attempted to obscure America’s direct role in Saudi Arabia’s ongoing massacre of Yemeni civilians by proclaiming that the U.S. is merely “watching” the deadly conflict, journalist Ken Klippenstein reported for The Young Turks (TYT) on Thursday that the Pentagon is currently preparing to train Saudi military pilots on U.S. soil. https://www.truthdig.com/articles/u-s-planning-to-train-saudi-pilots-on-...

Pakistan's new PM faces crisis from the get go
https://therealnews.com/crunch-time-in-pakistan
Less than a week in office, Pakistani Prime Minister Imran Khan has made blasphemy one of his first issues, empowering militants and initiating international moves, long heralded by Saudi Arabia, that would restrict press freedom by pushing for a global ban after a Dutch competition for cartoons about the Prophet Mohammed was announced.
https://therealnews.com/playing-politics-with-religion-imran-khan-puts-h...

African colonization is continuing in a new way. Chris Hedges talks with Lee Wengraf about her new book Extracting Profit: Imperialism, Neoliberalism, and the New Scramble of Africa.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Q1_1s9PRYfA (25.5 min)

Recent months of deadly unrest in Nicaragua have fractured splits in the Sandinista movement, with critics accusing President Daniel Ortega of autocratic rule, and supporters accusing the opposition of attempting a US-backed soft coup. We host a debate between Dr. Mary Ellsberg of George Washington University and Max Blumenthal of the Grayzone Project
https://therealnews.com/stories/debate-who-is-behind-nicaraguas-turmoil-...

Lee Camp talks about Nicaragua and other US coups. Lee continues to get better.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=u5qt6W7nxuQ (12 min)

Brazil is in a weird place. Lula, the country’s former two-term president — is virtually certain to have his candidacy judicially barred due to the fact that he’s currently in prison after a criminal corruption conviction: the result of a judicial process that even many of his critics who believe him to be corrupt regard as a highly flawed and politically motivated trial and appeal. If Lula were to run, it is close to certain that he would win. Glenn Greenwald explains the situation.
https://theintercept.com/2018/08/31/watch-interview-with-one-of-brazils-...

Abby Martin and Papantonio discuss media and Venezuela
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yJ7jeoB845s (6 min)
Abby Martin and Mike Prysner lay out exactly what happened to teleSUR and Empire Files on Jimmy's show. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1glTX3c8ttY (23 min)
More from Mike Prysner on active duty war resistance with Lee Camp (1st 15 min)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mIIbrLoMgA4

So a final clip about the survival of democracy. Historian, David Van Reybrouck, in his new book “Against Elections," identifies modern day examples of Aristotle's "drawing lots" underway in Iceland, Ireland and Australia marking innovation in democracies. He thinks democracy only can survive if innovation occurs.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Gbluj0WlvHs (25 min)

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In closing I hope you are all having a great holiday weekend. Really the holiday itself is a distraction from the May 1 international Labor Day based on the Haymarket incident in Chicago... from wiki

The date of May 1 (an ancient European folk holiday known as May Day) emerged in 1886 as an alternative holiday for the celebration of labor, later becoming known as International Workers' Day. The date had its origins at the 1885 convention of the American Federation of Labor, which passed a resolution calling for adoption of the eight-hour day effective May 1, 1886. While negotiation was envisioned for achievement of the shortened work day, use of the strike to enforce this demand was recognized, with May 1 advocated as a date for coordinated strike action. The proximity of the date to the bloody Haymarket affair of May 4, 1886, further accentuated May First's radical reputation.

There was disagreement among labor unions at this time about when a holiday celebrating workers should be, with some advocating for continued emphasis of the September march-and-picnic date while others sought the designation of the more politically-charged date of May 1. Conservative Democratic President Grover Cleveland was one of those concerned that a labor holiday on May 1 would tend to become a commemoration of the Haymarket Affair and would strengthen socialist and anarchist movements that backed the May 1 commemoration around the globe. In 1887, he publicly supported the September Labor Day holiday as a less inflammatory alternative. The date was formally adopted as a United States federal holiday in 1894.

So this holiday weekend I continue to labor with my thoughts on human nature and our seeming inability to create a harmonious and sustainable existence. Sadly those goals are not part of the fabric of our nation and most of the world. Wishing you all best in all your labors...may to find just rewards in all your efforts!

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Raggedy Ann's picture

It's a beautiful morning, after 12 hours and 80/100" of rain yesterday. It is fresh outside!

Thanks for the info on the prison strike. Of course, trying to find anything about it is tough, in the msm environment. I'm grateful for alternative sites (and your) coverage.

I've been meaning to read the book "Sapiens: A Brief History of Humankind," by Harari, to try and get a better grip on our species and try to find an answer to or at least understand why we do the things we do. If that is possible.

Lots to learn today at the WW. Many thanks, as always, for the effort it takes to bring this to us.

Have a beautiful Sunday, everyone! Pleasantry

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"The “jumpers” reminded us that one day we will all face only one choice and that is how we will die, not how we will live." Chris Hedges on 9/11

Lookout's picture

...and could do with another rain.

There are protest encampments today around prison labor camps - bet you don't see them on the news today. https://incarceratedworkers.org/news/labor-day-call-action

and I neglected to drop a primary link -
https://incarceratedworkers.org/campaigns/prison-strike-2018

but at some point I start thinking I'm including too much info so the big stories get swallowed in the bulk of the essay.

Thanks for reading! All the best.

EDIT:
This was meant as a reply to RA but I didn't click reply...oh well.

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“Until justice rolls down like water and righteousness like a mighty stream.”

The Aspie Corner's picture

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Modern education is little more than toeing the line for the capitalist pigs.

Guerrilla Liberalism won't liberate the US or the world from the iron fist of capital.

Lookout's picture

@The Aspie Corner

Confined to a chair. I had a friend in a chair. He was a botanist, an excellent taxonomist. Although he was limited in getting into some field situations, people sent him specimens from all over the world. We all have limits to our abilities. I think the trick is to make the best use you can of the skills you possess.

Hope you're doing well in the land of flowers.

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The Aspie Corner's picture

@Lookout I've never been able to get a drivers' license because I can't react quickly enough. And because of that, most 'skilled' jobs are closed to me in the shit state of Flawer'Duh.

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Modern education is little more than toeing the line for the capitalist pigs.

Guerrilla Liberalism won't liberate the US or the world from the iron fist of capital.

Lookout's picture

@The Aspie Corner

Seems to me that as long as you show up for work it doesn't matter if you drove yourself or took a bus. What an insane system.

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“Until justice rolls down like water and righteousness like a mighty stream.”

Deja's picture

@The Aspie Corner
If it's a law, I couldn't find it, but that doesn't mean it's not there somewhere. I looked in the Driver's License area and Employment area. Of course, anything relating to a waiver had to do with criminal history and hardship licenses for underage kids, and child labor. Oh, and there's a whole section for fucking golf carts. Oy!

That said, I've also seen, with my own eyes, jobs near you, that you'd qualify for, requiring a DL for the non-driving jobs. It's assinign and insane!

There has to be an agency that can help, but I'm at a loss as to which one.

Maybe someone else will take a stab at it.

Driver's License section:
http://www.leg.state.fl.us/Statutes/index.cfm?App_mode=Display_Statute&U...

Employment section:
http://www.leg.state.fl.us/Statutes/index.cfm?App_mode=Display_Statute&U...

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smiley7's picture

Hey, between your work, joe's and other's, c99 is becoming a virtual paper of record; providing so much information often missed by the MSN.

Appreciate the work, brother.

Cheers for the pm, just responded.

Posted the news of the Village Voice closing on el's OT and am posting it here as well so as not to be missed. Its passing carries, potentially, a bad omen for our culture's future.
https://www.theguardian.com/media/2018/aug/31/the-village-voice-ceases-p... https://www.newyorker.com/culture/culture-desk/the-closing-of-the-villag...

The Village Voice ceases publication after 63 years

The Pulitzer prize-winning New York alternative weekly is going out of business because of intractable financial problems
The Voice was the country’s first alternative news weekly and once had a weekly circulation of 250,000. Along the way, it received three Pulitzers and became known as home for some of New York’s best investigative journalists.
“For a time in 1950s, the 1960s and the 1970s, the Voice was the only voice of the counter-culture. It was a window into an alternative universe that became our universe. In its time it was almost the sole arbiter of culture and taste for the arts, progressive politics and the lifestyle that came attached with them.”
...

My first time at the Voice, in 1966, was a fluke typical of the overnight mobilities of life and work in New York then. As a chaotic college-dropout poet and freelancer, subsisting on Avenue B, I had no credentials apart from hanging out with a lot of artists and having done some short (chiefly one-sentence) reviews for Art News. Someone at the Voice—eleven years past its founding, by Dan Wolf, Ed Fancher, and Norman Mailer—liked how I wrote. I wasn’t ready. In a contest between meeting deadlines and doing drugs, guess what won. But the brief elevation launched what I hadn’t yet imagined would become a career.

A sad day, thank you Mailer and all the writers for leading us, enlightening us, feeding us. You will be missed.

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Lookout's picture

We are losing our voice in the main stream. Thankfully we still have our voices here. Enjoyed your poetry and OT from yesterday ...just got to it this am.

I appreciate you dropping in.

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“Until justice rolls down like water and righteousness like a mighty stream.”

Lookout's picture

I forgot to mention Julian and his ordeal this morning. Here's an excellent piece about his situation.

https://consortiumnews.com/2018/09/01/an-online-vigil-in-defense-of-juli...

and another excellent story about prison...
While serious prison reform in the United States has long failed there is a new force to be reckoned with from an unlikely source that should be taken seriously, says John Kiriakou.
https://consortiumnews.com/2018/08/31/the-unlikely-force-behind-us-priso...

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ggersh's picture

@Lookout the prison complex is as bad as it gets
for amerikans, but then on has to consider them
selves lucky to make it to prison instead of
getting shot before even having that lucky chance
to serve time

This ALEC article makes me leary of any chance
reform is coming

https://www.thenation.com/article/hidden-history-alec-and-prison-labor/

Somewhat more familiar is ALEC’s instrumental role in the explosion of the US prison population in the past few decades. ALEC helped pioneer some of the toughest sentencing laws on the books today, like mandatory minimums for non-violent drug offenders, “three strikes” laws, and “truth in sentencing” laws. In 1995 alone, ALEC’s Truth in Sentencing Act was signed into law in twenty-five states. (Then State Rep. Scott Walker was an ALEC member when he sponsored Wisconsin’s truth-in-sentencing laws and, according to PR Watch, used its statistics to make the case for the law.) More recently, ALEC has proposed innovative “solutions” to the overcrowding it helped create, such as privatizing the parole process through “the proven success of the private bail bond industry,” as it recommended in 2007. (The American Bail Coalition is an executive member of ALEC’s Public Safety and Elections Task Force.) ALEC has also worked to pass state laws to create private for-profit prisons, a boon to two of its major corporate sponsors: Corrections Corporation of America and Geo Group (formerly Wackenhut Corrections), the largest private prison firms in the country. An In These Times investigation last summer revealed that ALEC arranged secret meetings between Arizona’s state legislators and CCA to draft what became SB 1070, Arizona’s notorious immigration law, to keep CCA prisons flush with immigrant detainees. ALEC has proven expertly capable of devising endless ways to help private corporations benefit from the country’s massive prison population.

And I tried finding out which of our brave
clowngresspricks are heavily invested, couldnt
find any info.

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I never knew that the term "Never Again" only pertained to
those born Jewish

"Antisemite used to be someone who didn't like Jews
now it's someone who Jews don't like"

Heard from Margaret Kimberley

Lookout's picture

@ggersh

Caitlin thinks we can still have a voice. I hope so.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dFprL7aC0Vk (18 min)

Thanks for the link. Our prison system is truly a reflection of our culture. Ever heard this one Mark Graham's "I can see your aura and its ugly"?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=piFIID-iE-w (2.5 min)

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ggersh's picture

@Lookout and ya, the hatred, racism, lives on
as was said upthread Jim Crow if not what came
before is still alive.

What really gets me though is how the black
leadership was so easily bought. It's so sad.

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I never knew that the term "Never Again" only pertained to
those born Jewish

"Antisemite used to be someone who didn't like Jews
now it's someone who Jews don't like"

Heard from Margaret Kimberley

Lookout's picture

@ggersh

along with the rest of the black leadership, I knew they sold out.

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snoopydawg's picture

I second what Smiley said. Your WW, Joe's EBs and the other members here are doing a great job distilling the crap out of the news.

The prison idea needs to be reworked because it shouldn't be a reason for companies to make a profit and it doesn't work. Making prisoners do work without properly being compensated is the definition of slavery which was said to have been eradicated here in the 1860's. It hasn't

From a comment on the Common Dreams article on the prison strikes:

The whole institution of imprisonment needs to be re-thought. Locking up men and women away from human society and nature only serves to exacerbate the problem because it is not normal, not natural.

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Lookout's picture

@snoopydawg

I find your voice and research to be some of the best on our site. Thanks for your work and insights. Much appreciated and very beneficial!

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magiamma's picture

this one: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qL92L0tSGGI

A couple of points... Hansen was incredibly brave to speak out and did so against great resistance.

In the clip Andrew Dressler mentions that the 1990 IPPC report said that the global system was warming, but that the warming was also consistent with natural variability.

Flannery says about Jim Hansen (2007):

Moderator: The NASA scientist, Jim Hansen, is speaking in Houston at the Houston Progressive Forum, where you spoke a few months ago.

Hansen: Yes. Yes, I did.

Moderator: He (Jim Hansen) is a man, a scientist, who has been silenced, as you point out. He’s one of the winners, really, of the Nobel Peace Prize, because he’s part of the IPCC.

Hansen: Yeah, exactly. And what a great hero! That man has done more from a more difficult position than almost any other climate scientist. And he heads an institute, NASA, run by the federal government, and yet he’s had the bravery to speak out and try to be heard. And, you know, it was extraordinary what happened to him. They put a sort of a media manager in place who had lied about his credentials. Just an amazing incompetence.

Moderator: Lied about graduating from college.

Hansen: Indeed.

Moderator: I think it was in 2003.

Hansen: That’s right.

Moderator: So already he was, to say the least, rather young, less than half the age of Jim Hansen.

Hansen: Can you imagine what it would be like for one of the world’s leading scientists, who is revered by everyone, to have this pipsqueak who lied about his credentials controlling what he tells the public? Just appalling. And, you know, the countries around the world would -- I don’t know what they’d pay to have the advice of a Jim Hansen. It’s the sort of stuff we all desperately need. And here, in a country that actually pays him a salary and allows him to do his work, he is silenced. I mean, I honestly cannot see the sense of that. I can’t see who benefits.

And about that IPPC report... it just happens it was done by consensus...

Moderator: Tim Flannery, let's talk more about the IPCC and what it has done over the years. How significant is it?

Flannery: Well, significant enough, clearly, to win a Nobel Peace Prize, which is exactly what they should have got. That group of scientists have been working together now for over twenty years, and every five years they produce a report that really is a report on the state of our planet’s atmosphere and the warming that is damaging it. And the early reports started off rather mild in tone, you know, saying there might be a problem, and we think it might be caused by people. The last report, the fourth assessment report, which is still being reduced in -- I’m sorry, released in bits this year, is much more alarming. You know, the basic news is that this is a human-caused problem, it’s getting very severe, we need to do something about it.

And it’s 400-odd scientists, along with some government representatives, and so forth. One of the problems the IPCC faces is they have to do everything by consensus. It’s a bit like the old Quakers, you know, how they used to have to get everyone to agree. And you can imagine what it’s like trying to get, for example, the representative of Saudi Arabia to agree to particular wordings of things. So it’s a long and painful process, and in my view some of the leading scientists deserve the Order of Lenin, as well as the Nobel Peace Prize, because it’s a very torturous business.

So the IPCC wins the Nobel Peace Prize. In the United States, there is this ongoing controversy over whether climate change is really an issue at all. You have corporations, the wealthiest in the world, like ExxonMobil, that has poured millions of dollars into Washington think tanks to simply raise questions about global warming. They also have poured, well, over $100 million into Stanford University, part of a consortium of corporations that are funding their global climate change program there. What is this doing to the science, when these corporations -- BP also, now “Beyond Petroleum,” before called British Petroleum, giving half a billion dollars to the University of California, Berkeley -- some are calling it “BPerkeley” now.

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Stop Climate Change Silence - Start the Conversation

Hot Air Website, Twitter, Facebook

Lookout's picture

@magiamma

on scientists that do real research that explain our dilemma.

You might enjoy this interview too. Text of video
https://therealnews.com/stories/new-climate-study-warns-of-dangerous-hot...

All the best!

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“Until justice rolls down like water and righteousness like a mighty stream.”

magiamma's picture

@Lookout
The real take away is at the end. He actually gives us a to do list for survival. Maybe unrealistic but there it is. Smile

Dr. Will Steffen, co-author of Trajectories of the Earth System in the Anthropocene. The following steps need to be taken to avoid crossing the Paris Agreement threshold of 1.5 -2 degrees centigrade:
• We must meet the Paris targets. (He says 1.5 C not 2C)
• We must absolutely not open up any more fossil fuel resources around the planet-- no coal, oil, gas--convention or unconventional.
• We need a definite phase out plan for fossil fuels for planet in a two to three decade period.
• These must be replaced with renewables. Other types of transport systems, run-off electricity, run-off biofuels (not sure what he means by run-off).
• All this need to be underpinned by new value systems that values stabilizing the earths systems as the highest priority that any economy must strive for. So, any economic efficiency or GDP growth must take second place to stabilizing the system.

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Stop Climate Change Silence - Start the Conversation

Hot Air Website, Twitter, Facebook

Lookout's picture

@magiamma

I just don't see it happening. We still have our individual actions. I'm planting more trees this winter. All we can do is what we can do.

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“Until justice rolls down like water and righteousness like a mighty stream.”

magiamma's picture

@Lookout
not likely, but gonna keep on keepin' on. Got some willow starts to put in the ground down by the stream in the wildlife preserve.

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Stop Climate Change Silence - Start the Conversation

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Lookout's picture

@magiamma

We ain't gonna save the world but we can limit our personal destruction. I'm going for chestnut trees this year. They ain't cheap but they were the dominant tree in our forest 100 years ago.
http://www.chestnuthilltreefarm.com/store/c/31-Dunstan-Chestnut-Trees.aspx

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“Until justice rolls down like water and righteousness like a mighty stream.”

Pluto's Republic's picture

The focus on prisons was much appreciated. More than any other social edifice, prisons are a direct reflection of who and what a nation is really about. It is their soul on display.

On another note, sentience comes with a forebrain. The forebrain offers the capacity to anticipate the future. The brain continues to evolve in vitro, and understanding the future consequences of actions — especially within a complex system — is one of those refinements that come with the evolution of consciousness or epigenetic changes in the brain. Some societies nurture this, some don't. It's haphazard on this planet, at best. Since epigenetic changes to the DNA cannot always be passed on through reproduction, longer lifespans help tremendously in harnessing and growing this meta-knowledge or wisdom. Language and recorded histories are no substitute. Much, much longer lifespans are needed. We should work on that very intensely if we hope to sustain the planet for any meaningful length of time going forward. It's the flaw in our species.

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Lookout's picture

@Pluto's Republic

a longer lifetime might be problematic. Better education is my thought...of course as a retired teacher it would be.

We teach kids to recite rather than to analyze and think for themselves. Planning ahead has always been problematic. The future is too far away. However we are trainable.

Thanks for the visit and for reading. Prisons are depressing things to consider. They are where we display our inhumanity to one another at home and abroad - like Abu Ghraib. Many are black sites we don't even know about, and others are nothing more than profit centers. It is such a sad reflection on us all.

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“Until justice rolls down like water and righteousness like a mighty stream.”

mimi's picture

@Pluto's Republic
what is needed is the humility and acceptance of a natural occurring death and the willingness to 'live' with that. A society which sends their young into wars and with it their deaths, and at the same token cares for the elderlies into their hundreds can't sustain itself. Why not accept a natural death? Are you above God's and nature's will? If you are, you are a danger, imo.

Well, my mileage seems to vary with yours. It's just an opinion and afaik I can voice it here, right?

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mimi's picture

Chris Hedges had "on Contact" about her new book "Extracting Profit: Imperialism, Neoliberalism, and the New Scramble of Africa".
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Q1_1s9PRYfA (25.5 min)

It brought up a lot of memories. My former husband, teenager during the independence years of his home country, Cameroon, later in life became an economist with the IMF and he had contracts with the world bank. What I sometimes miss is that people in general can't imgagine that you can work inside that system and still fight from within the policies and auterity measures imposed by both institutions ... with great personal impact on their own sanity. I can say that having to do that has destroyed quite some African's souls. Mine won some battles and lost his mind doing so. So, this discussion rang a lot of bells with me.

I can't really describe it here. I have seen several Africans within both institutions not supporting those institutions policies and trying their best to argue, write and fight against them from within. But that's too complex for the 'black and white simpletons'.

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Lookout's picture

@mimi

What I sometimes miss is that people in general can't imagine that you can work inside that system and still fight from within the policies and austerity measures imposed by both institutions ... with great personal impact on their own sanity

The education system constantly works against the need of students and for the convenience of administrators. Want to teach? You have to work within the system which is evolving toward a corporate (serve profit rather than children) system...much like today's discussion about prisons.

Been visiting memories lately too. The next couple of weekly's will share some of those.

All the best!

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You heard it here first? I don't know, tried to find a link to back up the gossip but maybe they are all on facebook and twitter... the open web has sound of crickets.

My neighbor drives for UPS, he has been a Teamster his whole working life and makes good wages with good bennies. Why would he vote to strike? The answer is, he would not. The deal is done, or so I heard. Every worker scratches and claws for every crumb they can get, there is no solidarity between tiers. That's the system.
https://teamster.org/upsupsf-contract-updates/ups-agreements-2013-2018
Northern California Supplement PDF
Now they will have three tiers for the next five years, I guess. Trail of tiers.

---nostalgiac

The Golden Gate ferry leaves Larkspur and floats past San Quentin before it goes across the bay to San Francisco. I was on the way to an Iraq War protest in Union Square one day, and the prisoners were out in the yard. I will never forget as long as I live the roar of cheers they sent us, and we replied in kind. STOP THESE FUCKING WARS! argh

same boat
thanks

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Lookout's picture

@eyo

to create a third party.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=u68PIhZe2sQ (16 min)

I wish him the best, but I ain't holdin' my breath. I've basically given up on a political solution. We need a new economy and I don't see how it happens through a political system. Meanwhile the climate is running wild at a pace we never imagined. You see it plainly in CA.

Here in AL new hire teacher don't get a pension...just an IRA...I hate the way we as a nation treat young folks...hell all folks.

Thanks for dropping by, always good to "see" you.

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“Until justice rolls down like water and righteousness like a mighty stream.”