The Evening Blues - 4-3-19



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The day's news roundup + tonight's musical feature: Earl Gaines

Hey! Good Evening!

This evening's music features blues and soul singer Earl Gaines. Enjoy!

Earl Gaines - The Best Of Luck To You & Turn On Your Lovelight

"Ahh, but the strawberries that's... that's where I had them. They laughed at me and made jokes but I proved beyond the shadow of a doubt and with... geometric logic... that a duplicate key to the wardroom icebox DID exist, and I'd have produced that key if they hadn't of pulled the Caine out of action. I, I, I know now they were only trying to protect some fellow officers..."

-- "Captain Queeg"


News and Opinion

Julian Assange has 'repeatedly violated' asylum terms, Ecuador's president says

Ecuador’s president, Lenín Moreno, has said the WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange had “repeatedly violated” the conditions of his asylum in the country’s London embassy, where he has lived for close to seven years. Speaking to the Ecuadorean radio broadcasters association on Tuesday, Moreno said under the terms of his asylum “Assange cannot lie or, much less, hack into private accounts or private phones” and he could not “intervene in the politics of countries, or worse friendly countries”.

Moreno fulminated that “photos of my bedroom, what I eat and how my wife and daughters and friends dance” had been circulated on social media but stopped short of directly accusing WikiLeaks of circulating hacked photos of his family and wiretapping his phone calls and private conversations. The Ecuadorean government, however, has said it believes the whistleblowing organization shared the photos, which date back several years to when Moreno and his family lived in Geneva. ...

WikiLeaks tweeted on Tuesday that Moreno had said he would take a decision about Assange’s fate “in the short term” after it had reported on an “offshore corruption scandal wracking his government”. Known in Ecuador as the Ina Papers, the scandal alleges Moreno corruptly benefitted from an offshore account in Panama. Moreno denies any wrongdoing. ...

Moreno has also accused his predecessor turned arch enemy Rafael Correa of spying on him. In September 2017, months after taking office, he accused the former Ecuadorean president of planting a hidden camera in the wall of his presidential office. Correa denies any wrongdoing.

Much better coverage than the above Guardian article is at the Consortium site. This piece is worth a full read:

Ecuador President Threatens to Decide Assange’s Fate Over Scandal

Ecuadorian President Lenin Moreno said Tuesday he would decide “in the short term” the fate of Julian Assange after claiming that WikiLeaks had “repeatedly violated” the terms of Assange’s asylum in Ecuador’s London embassy by commenting on a scandal linking a Panamanian investment company with Moreno and his family.


WikiLeaks had reported about the scandal allegedly involving Moreno and his family with INA Investments Corp, though WikiLeaks has not published any documents related to the case. Moreno’s spokesman, however, has implied that WikiLeaks published documents about the scandal. A search of Wikileaks’ website shows no such files. According to Telesur English the scandal came to light in February when Ecuadorian legislator Ronny Aleaga told reporters he had “received a dossier anonymously filled with documents that will implicate Lenin Moreno and his family in alleged crimes of corruption, perjury and money laundering.” The dossier has come to be known as the INA Papers.

The story was first reported by the Ecuadorian news outlet La Fuente in an article titled: “The Offshore Labyrinth of the Presidential Circle.” Ecuadorian media reported that the attorney general’s office has initiated a preliminary investigation and that Aleaga would be summoned on Thursday to “give his version and acknowledge his complaint.” The president of the National Assembly, Elizabeth Cabezas, has also come under investigation after allegedly trying to prevent an investigation into the scandal, El Universo newspaper reported. ...

Moreno appears to have attempted to deflect from the growing scandal by using it as a pretext to blame WikiLeaks and expel Assange.

Chelsea Manning Seeks Immediate Release From Virginia Jail

A federal judge sent Manning to jail March 6 for refusing to testify to a grand jury investigating Wikileaks. On Monday, Manning's lawyers filed a motion with the federal appeals court in Richmond seeking her release on bail while that judge's order is appealed.

Manning's lawyers cited her medical needs related to her transgender status. They also say she was illegally electronically surveilled by the government before her grand jury appearance, and that Manning can legally refuse to answer questions derived from such surveillance.

US Government's Refusal to Confirm or Deny It Put American Journalist on Drone Kill List Called 'Chilling'

Lawyers for an American journalist who believes he was placed on the government's infamous "kill list" warned Tuesday that the rights of all U.S. citizens are at stake if the country's drone assassination program is allowed to continue.

The organization's comments came as part of a response to the U.S. government's attempt to dismiss a lawsuit regarding its use of the list. Reprieve is representing Bilal Abdul Kareem, a journalist and U.S. citizen who claims he was repeatedly targeted —and nearly killed on five separate occasions—by drone and missile attacks in 2016 when he was reporting on the ongoing conflict in Syria. Kareem joined an Al Jazeera journalist in 2017 in a lawsuit against the government, demanding that the Trump administration remove their names from the "kill list" of potential targets for the U.S. drone program.

If the government manages to have the lawsuit dismissed, legal experts warn it would allow the Trump administration and future presidents to secretly place any American on a kill list without telling them why, therefore stripping them of their constitutional right to due process. "The right to due process has been a bedrock of the judicial system, and one of the pillars that support a free society going back eight centuries to the Magna Carta," wrote Tom Emswiler and Will Isenberg in the Boston Globe last summer. "It is the birthright of every American. Gaining a tactical advantage is not worth losing that heritage."

As Common Dreams reported at the time of the filing, Kareem believes the Obama administration placed him on the kill list and wants President Donald Trump to remove his name, asserting that his inclusion "is the result of arbitrary and capricious agency action, accomplished without due process, and in violation of the United States Constitution and U.S. and international law."

The government responded that if those included on the U.S. kill list were to be informed and given a trial, national security could be jeopardized during the court case. ... The government, in its motion to dismiss, said that Kareem's due process rights would be satisfied simply by allowing him to present evidence that he has been wrongly placed on the kill list, and that the government was under no obligation to respond. ...

"The government's assertion that it has the right to mark its own citizens for death, based on secret information, without affording them the legal protections offered by the Constitution, is chilling," said Jennifer Gibson, co-counsel for Kareem.

Rep. Ro Khanna on Ending Support for the Saudi War in Yemen, and Venezuela

Heh, standards were made to be broken.

'Weak Journalism': NYT Fails to Disclose Op-Ed Writer's Close Family Ties to Venezuelan Opposition Leader

A recent video opinion piece published by The New York Times intended to drum up support for U.S. involvement in Venezuela failed to disclose the author's ties to the opposition government, leading to criticism from progressives of the paper's coverage. Joanna Hausmann, a comedian who posts highly viewed articles on Venezuela on YouTube, delivered a five minute, thirteen second opinion piece at the Times Monday in which she claims that the country's leader, President Nicolas Maduro, is a dictator and that the American left are his patsies.

"This movement is dangerously glorifying a brutal dictator and promoting inaction," Hausmann says in the video as quirky music plays behind her. "That is the worst combination for ordinary Venezuelans." Hausmann also claims that the country's economic problems are the fault of decades of socialist rule and that the path forward is a future without Maduro—it's implied, though never outright stated, that the answer is for opposition leader Juan Guaidó to take power.

What the video and the Times did not reveal is that Hausmann's father, Harvard University economics professor Ricardo Hausmann, currently serves as Guaidó's envoy to the Inter-American Development Bank (IADB). It's a position that, if Guaidó became president, would wield immense political and economic power. That omission was a focus of criticism from progressives. The elder Hausmann's place in the Venezuelan shadow government is a conflict that should have been made clear in his daughter's opinion video implicitly arguing for American intervention to remove Maduro.

Ricardo Hausmann's past in Venezuela should give Americans serious pause before taking him seriously, Anya Parampil argued in an early March article for Mint Press News.

Ricardo Hausmann is much more than a prominent pundit. He is one of the West’s leading neoliberal economists, who played an unsavory role during the 1980s and ’90s in devising policies that enabled the looting of Venezuela’s economy by international capital and provoked devastating social turmoil.

"She's not an independent voice but rather the failchild of Guaidó advisor Ricardo Hausmann, a man who neoliberalized and destroyed [Venezuela's] economy once before and wants to do it all over again," Parampil said.

In a response to critics, Times video producer Adam Ellick implied that because Joanna Hausmann has a sizable social media and YouTube following, disclosing her father's close ties to the Venezuelan opposition was unnecessary.

It's all about the Benjamins:

Pence: Low Oil Prices Allow US to Impose More Sanctions

Speaking to reporters on Tuesday, Vice President Mike Pence said that
the current price of oil remains low enough to allow the US not only to
continue with its sanctions against Iran and Venezuela, but to “bring even more pressure” on the nations
going forward. ...

Yet getting exports to zero would cause a substantial shortage on the market, and there is no easy replacement available. This is doubly true with the US also forbidding Venezuela to sell oil, or at least to get paid for it. While this may ultimately cap how high the sanctions can go, the growing US oil market may suggest that this is informing the administration in both directions, and that they would not want to ease sanctions if it means US oil becomes less valuable on the world markets.

Nuclear regulators were unaware of transfer of sensitive technical information to Saudi Arabia

When the Trump administration on seven occasions authorized companies to share sensitive nuclear energy information with Saudi Arabia, it was supposed to consult with several agencies, including the independent Nuclear Regulatory Commission.

But NRC Chairman Kristine L. Svinicki testified before the Senate Environment and Public Works Committee on Tuesday that she did not know whether the agency had been consulted, and if so whether it had raised any concerns. ...

Last week, the administration divulged that it had kept secret from Congress as well as the public seven authorizations for nuclear energy companies to use in wooing Saudi Arabia, a potential customer interested in building two nuclear reactors for civilian purposes. The information kept under wraps includes the identity of the companies and the type of information. ...

In the Senate hearing Van Hollen said, “You have a statutory and regulatory role to play here, and I’ve got to say it’s astounding that not a single one of you is aware of whether, when and what role the NRC played in that particular authorization.”

Egypt killed tourists with US weapons. An American survivor wants justice

A US woman who survived an attack by the Egyptian military on a group of tourists is now fighting to prevent the sale of the US-made weaponry that left her permanently scarred. April Corley from San Diego and her Mexican boyfriend Rafael Bejarano were traveling with a tour group in Egypt’s White Desert in September 2015 when they were attacked by Egyptian military, who later claimed they mistook the group for jihadist militants. ...

Corley described how the tourists scrambled for shelter as an Apache attack helicopter circled overhead, firing at them with rockets and 30mm machine guns for several hours – even while their guides desperately waved a white flag. “I played dead,” she said, describing how the helicopters returned to fire on the group for several hours, even though a member of the Egyptian tourist police was traveling with the tour vehicles which were marked with logos from the their travel company. ... “They just kept coming back around, again and again, and shooting. They wanted to wipe everything out.”

When the attack finally ended, Bejarano, his mother and six other Mexican tourists were lying dead, along with four of their Egyptian guides. Corley is now seeking to draw attention to the deadly consequences of American weaponry used on foreign soil.

The United States supplies Egypt with an average of $1.3bn in annual military aid, and Corley and her lawyers are pressuring Donald Trump to raise her case when the country’s president, Abdel Fatah al-Sisi, visits Washington next week. Corley has called on the US to deny Egypt the $1bn sale of a further 10 Apache AH-64E helicopters, arguing that the attack is a stark example of misuse of weapons made by the US manufacturer Boeing. ...

The 40-year-old former pilates instructor and professional rollerblader sustained injuries that doctors say she will never fully recover from. Ammunition broke her shoulder, collarbone, arm and ribs, tore off parts of her skin and ripped muscle from her bones; she still suffers from debilitating post-traumatic stress disorder. “I was not trained for war,” she said. The Egyptian government has offered her $150,000 in compensation, far short of the over $14m that Corley and her lawyers say would cover her ongoing medical bills and lifelong loss of earnings.

Widespread Censorship of Former Government Employees Violates the First Amendment, Lawsuit Says

For officials in the Trump administration, leaving the government and writing a book has become a reliable and lucrative exit strategy — so much so that it has created a small army of literary agents who specialize in snapping up the next tell-all memoir. For anyone with name recognition in D.C., it has perhaps never been easier to scoop up a sizable advance and make the best-seller list. But for rank-and-file members of the intelligence community, the process is not so easy. Employees who formerly had access to sensitive information must submit manuscripts for a government “pre-publication review,” intended to ensure that they don’t divulge official secrets.

The result has been a massive system that processes thousands of submissions, in which the rules are broad and vague, and vary from one agency to another. The process can drag on for months or, in some cases, years, and can force authors to choose between deleting text or publishing pages of type blacked out by U.S. government censors.

But the American Civil Liberties Union and Knight First Amendment Institute at Columbia University are challenging this redaction regime. In a lawsuit filed on Tuesday, the groups allege that pre-publication review amounts to a “far-reaching system of prior restraint,” and that the government’s arbitrary and sometimes confounding censorship decisions are unconstitutional under the First Amendment. “This far-reaching censorship system simply can’t be squared with the Constitution,” Jameel Jaffer, executive director of the Knight First Amendment Institute, said in a statement. “The government has a legitimate interest in protecting bona fide national security secrets, but this system sweeps too broadly, fails to limit the discretion of government censors, and suppresses political speech that is vital to informing public debate.”

The lawsuit has five plaintiffs, all of whom are former members of the military or intelligence community. They allege that the delays and censorship involved in prepublication review have unfairly damaged their work as academics, authors, and outside experts, and are asking the court to stop the government from enforcing their review agreements.

The EU’s new “meme ban” could change the internet forever

Imagine the internet without all those crazy memes that make your day. That’s what Europeans are worried about after the EU Parliament voted last week in favor of a wonky-sounding law called the “copyright directive in the digital single market.”

Lawmakers claim the directive will protect the rights of online creators, but opponents say it will create an unintended consequence: restricting freedom of speech.

The most contentious section of the law, Article 13, says platforms can be sued if they don’t make “best efforts” to stop copyrighted content from being uploaded onto their sites. That’s a radical departure from the status quo, where the liability for infringing copyright currently rests with the individual user. ...

Opponents [...] believe the only feasible way to screen millions of uploads will be to use algorithm-led upload filters — which will inevitably be imperfect, error-prone and unable to tell the difference between a copyrighted image and a parody of one.

Tory Brexiters dismayed by May plan to talk to Corbyn

Theresa May’s cabinet descended into rows and recriminations before it settled on the uneasy decision to invite Jeremy Corbyn to help solve the UK’s Brexit crisis. During seven hours of meetings on Tuesday described as tense and gruelling, the prime minister struggled to keep order among colleagues who are vying to take her job. The outcome provoked disbelief and anger from members of the Conservative party’s largest Eurosceptic grouping, the European Research Group (ERG), some of whom doubted that they could support a subsequent deal. ...

Geoffrey Cox, the attorney general whose evidence that the UK risked being trapped in the Irish backstop indefinitely helped sink May’s deal at the second meaningful vote, urged the prime minister to make concessions to Corbyn to win a majority. Cox spoke after several ministers had argued against any further extension to article 50, and said government had to shift its position. “He said, give Labour whatever they want to get it over the line,” said a cabinet source. In what was described by two sources as one of the key moments, Michael Gove strongly agreed. ...

Former minister Conor Burns, who is from Northern Ireland, said that the deal was proof that May’s government had collapsed. The MP said: “The UK no longer has a functioning government of executive control. The prime minister has handed the future decisions over Brexit to the Labour party. It will now be for Corbyn, Diane Abbott and John McDonnell to decide if the Conservative party implements its manifesto. ...

As the meeting broke up, Jacob Rees-Mogg, the ERG’s chair, criticised the prime minister for planning to collaborate with “a known Marxist” and said the move would lose Tory votes.

Brexit deadlock: will May's talks with Corbyn work?

May’s bombshell means the Little English nationalist revolution is over

The carefully crafted illusions the May administration were founded on have crumbled into dust. After three years of civil service expertise wasted, billions of pounds of growth lost and two years’ worth of legislative time squandered, Theresa May stopped trying to get Brexit through with Tory votes and turned to Jeremy Corbyn. Corbyn will be asked to co-author a new version of the political declaration acceptable to Labour or, failing that, to help engineer a majority in the Commons, either for a Norway-style deal or a customs union.

In effect, May has bottled out of a fourth “meaningful vote”, ditched the threat of no deal completely and, in a desperate attempt to avoid an election, has thrown herself on the mercy of parliament. It should show no mercy.

Labour’s proposed Brexit deal would sign Britain up to the customs union and enter a state of “dynamic alignment” with the rules of the single market. This is not the equivalent of a Norway-style deal, because it allows Britain to participate fully in the single market – with the obligation to accept freedom of movement – but to diverge over time by paying a price in lost market access. If May can accept this to the letter, and is prepared to whip her MPs for it, splitting the Tory party for a generation, Corbyn should consider the offer. But I doubt she will do so. Indeed, I doubt she will retain a shred of authority once the Tory grassroots and backbenches understand the scale of the climbdown she has made.

But what’s crucial now is that any deal done must be put to a second referendum, with remain as the other option. For the past two years, it has been pro-remain progressives who advocated a second referendum. Now, all possible outcomes look so far away from the fantasies sold to leave voters that they need to be given the option to decide whether remain is better. ...

For certain, a second referendum will be difficult. But mass ideologies deflate suddenly. There cannot legitimately be a no-deal option on the ballot paper – in which case, I expect the minority of dedicated white nationalists and xenophobes to throw the towel in. We need to break it to them as gently as possible, and offer as many as possible a way back to consensus politics, but May’s bombshell means simply: the Little English nationalist revolution is over.

Video shows British troops firing at Jeremy Corbyn poster

The Ministry of Defence has launched an urgent investigation after a video emerged via social media that shows members of the parachute regiment firing at a poster of Jeremy Corbyn at a target range in Kabul. MoD insiders said they believed the video – which had the caption “happy with that” – was genuine, but inquiries were taking place to establish why an image of the Labour leader, studded with bullet marks, was used.

The video shows four soldiers, clearly identifiable as members of the 3rd Battalion, the Parachute Regiment, stationed in Afghanistan, using simulation weapons. Brig Nick Perry, the commander of 6th Air Assault Brigade, acknowledged the video showed a “serious error of judgment” that was “being fully investigated”. He added: “The army is, and always will be, a totally apolitical organisation.” ...

Labour sources highlighted that Corbyn and other Labour figures have been targeted in recent weeks and months, while the party pressure group Momentum said it reflected the “radicalising effect the rightwing press is having”. A Brexit supporter who hit Corbyn, assaulting him outside a mosque in north London, was jailed for 28 days last month.

Mega Banks Tell SEC: Derivatives Could Blow Up Wall Street Again

The most recent 10Ks (annual reports) filed by the largest Wall Street banks covering their financial condition as of December 31, 2018, provide the strongest argument thus far for Congress to enact legislation to separate the Federally insured, deposit-taking commercial banks from the trading casinos on Wall Street. In other words, Congress needs to restore the Glass-Steagall Act, which kept the U.S. financial system safe for 66 years until its repeal in 1999.

If the average American knew that the very same banks that blew up the U.S. economy, devastated the housing market, crashed the stock market, threw millions of Americans out of work just a decade ago were warning in their own 10K legal filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission that the same thing could happen again at any moment, there would be mobs with pitchforks in the street. But because corporate media does not put this critical information on the front pages of newspapers, the public remains in the dark and Congress dawdles.

According to JPMorgan’s 10K, it has sold credit derivative protection on $177 billion of “subinvestment grade” i.e., junk credits. When you sell credit protection, you are on the hook to pay the buyer if that entity goes belly up. When you are selling credit protection on subinvestment grade entities, it is far more likely that they could go belly up. JPMorgan Chase will likely argue that they have also purchased boatloads of credit derivatives, which might be on the same entities, but there is no way for anyone to accurately predict if this mega bank has aligned these risks correctly. ... We know very well that JPMorgan Chase “may not be successful” in managing its derivative risks because as recently as 2012 it lost at least $6.2 billion of its bank depositors’ money gambling in derivatives in London.

[See article for considerably more information about the derivative risks of pretty much all of the big Wall Street Banks. -js]

Major Nurses Union Calls Medicare X Plan 'Sub-Par and Wholly Inadequate to Address the Healthcare Crisis'

Democratic Senators Tim Kaine and Michael Bennet reintroduced their "Medicare X" public option plan Tuesday in an effort expand health insurance coverage, but National Nurses United said the bill is "sub-par and wholly inadequate to address the healthcare crisis confronting our country."

"Now is not the time for half-measures, while lives are at stake," NNU President Zenei Cortez, RN, said in a statement. Instead of embracing incremental measures, Cortez argued, Senate Democrats should line up behind Medicare for All, which would provide comprehensive health insurance to everyone at a lower overall cost to the nation.

"The solution to fix our healthcare is clear: the Medicare for All Act of 2019 (H.R. 1384), which offers real patient choice, without devastating out of pocket costs," said Cortez. "The Medicare for All Act is backed by over 100 members of Congress and will guarantee quality healthcare for everyone."

Kaine readily admitted that his legislation would not fundamentally alter the current for-profit healthcare system, which has left 30 million Americans uninsured and over 80 million more underinsured. "We preserve everything about the existing system," the Democrat from Virginia told The Hill. "And we just put one additional element into it." ...

Medicare X would allow Americans of all ages to buy a public insurance plan, which distinguishes it from other incrementalist plans Democrats have introduced in recent weeks—such as Sen. Debbie Stabenow's (D-Mich.) proposal to let Americans buy-in to Medicare at age 50. But, Cortez argued, Kaine and Bennet's plan would not do nearly enough to remedy the systemic problems and immense costs of the U.S. healthcare system.

As Common Dreams reported Tuesday, a Gallup survey found that Americans were forced to borrow $88 billion to cover their healthcare expenses in 2018.

How the Laquan McDonald shooting affected Chicago's mayoral election

Legal Experts Aghast as 'Bloodythirsty' Right-Wing Supreme Court Sanctions Torturous Executions

Critics on Tuesday said the U.S. Supreme Court's ruling in a case brought by a Missouri death row inmate fundamentally erodes protections against torture enshrined in the U.S. Constitution.

Justice Neil Gorsuch wrote the opinion for the court's right-wing majority in the 5-4 decision, ruling that Russell Bucklew can be executed by lethal injection despite his medical condition, cavernous hemangioma. The disease, warn his legal team and medical experts, will cause Bucklew to choke for several minutes on his own blood before dying as the tumors growing in his throat and elsewhere in his body rupture.

"The Eighth Amendment does not guarantee a prisoner a painless death," wrote Gorsuch.

The decision was denounced as "atrocious," "blood-thirsty" and "barbaric" by death penalty abolitionists and other critics, with some saying the high court's approval of Bucklew's execution is tantamount to nullifying the Constitution's Eighth Amendment—the law banning cruel and unusual punishment. ...

At the legal analysis blog Above the Law, Elie Mystal wrote that Gorsuch's opinion will not only condemn Bucklew to a painful death instead of forcing the state to find a less painful method, as the inmate requested, but will weaken the Eighth Amendment's protections for other death row inmates for generations to come.

"Unknown numbers of innocent people have been executed in this country since the death penalty was reinstated," wrote Mystal. "Untold numbers of guilty people have known the spiteful vengeance some people mistake for justice. Through it all, the Eighth Amendment sits on the sidelines, a grand idea neutered by our society’s rage and cowardice, waiting for better men and women to live up to its noble promise."

"But Neil Gorsuch is not a better man," he continued. "Instead of just killing the murderer and being done with it, Gorsuch could not resist seeing the Bucklew case as an opportunity to experiment with justifications of the state’s right to inflict suffering that have long been discarded by decent people."

AMLO: How Mexico’s New Leftist President Has Navigated Corruption, Inequality, and Trump

Wow, it just makes you proud to be an American:

Border Patrol moved migrants from a pen under a bridge to overcrowded tents in a parking lot

After several days of media attention, Border Patrol started moving migrants out of an open-air, fenced enclosure beneath a bridge here over the weekend. By the time a delegation of Congressional Democrats arrived to tour the holding pen on Sunday, it was almost empty. The agency said they decided to relocate the migrants to a large Border Patrol facility on the outskirts of El Paso with “more space and more shelter capability.” It turns out, they meant a parking lot.

On Monday, we spoke to more than a dozen people who were among those relocated, and had since been released. We showed them footage of the facility and tents. They confirmed that this was where they'd been taken, and insisted that it was even worse than sleeping under the bridge. “When they took me out of the bridge, I thanked God because I thought I’d be going to a better place,” said a man who asked to be known only by his first name, Gustavo. ...

“I get to this other jail, and they throw us in those tents. And then more and more and more people kept arriving, until it turned into chaos,” he said after being released to a makeshift shelter provided by an El Paso church. Gustavo described the scene at the new location as overcrowded to a point of absurdity. He estimates there were about 1,500 people crammed into the three tents, an estimate in line with those of the others we spoke with. “The kids slept on top of our feet — we were standing up, because we didn’t fit. You couldn’t see even one part of the floor. Just shoes and more shoes.”

Even though temperatures dipped into the low 40s with strong wind gusts on Sunday night, the migrants we spoke with said everyone, including children, was forced to take off any additional layers of clothing and hand them over to the officers. “I had to hand them my daughter’s sweater,” Syrly, who also asked that we only share her first name, told us. “I watched them throw it away.”

“There were 1-year-olds,” said Gustavo. “They took away their blankets and they threw them in the garbage. They took away their hats. The kids trembled.”



the horse race



Nancy Pelosi urges Joe Biden to keep his hands to himself

Nancy Pelosi – widely seen as the most powerful woman in Washington – has some advice for Joe Biden: keep your hands to yourself. As Biden, the former vice-president, scrambles to contain any political damage over his past behavior with women, the House speaker said at an event in Washington that her fellow Democrat and other male politicians should keep their distance during encounters with women and restrain from being touchy-feely.

“Join the straight-arm club with me,” Pelosi, who is the first female speaker, said of Biden during a live interview with Politico on Tuesday. “He’s an affectionate person, to children, to senior citizens, to everyone, but that’s just not the way.” ...

Pelosi said the two allegations of unwelcome contact should not keep Biden from running for the presidency in 2020. “I don’t think it’s disqualifying,” she told the event on Tuesday. But she added that Biden “has to understand that in the world we are in now, people’s space is important to them and what’s important is how they receive it, not necessarily how you intended it”. ...

On Tuesday, Bernie Sanders’ 2020 campaign manager, Faiz Shakir, strongly denied any suggestion that anyone from the senator’s team or his allies encouraged Lucy Flores to publish her account of an unwelcome interaction with Biden. “Neither the Bernie Sanders campaign nor anyone involved in it, planted, planned, persuaded, cajoled or otherwise urged Lucy Flores or anyone else to tell their story. Full stop, period, end of sentence. I don’t want to hear it. We didn’t play a role,” he said.

Flores, the former Nevada lawmaker, supported Sanders during the 2016 election and was on the board of his group Our Revolution.

Biden made Ukraine fire top prosecutor investigating son’s firm

Joe Biden's 2020 Ukrainian nightmare: A closed probe is revived

Two years after leaving office, Joe Biden couldn’t resist the temptation last year to brag to an audience of foreign policy specialists about the time as vice president that he strong-armed Ukraine into firing its top prosecutor.

In his own words, with video cameras rolling, Biden described how he threatened Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko in March 2016 that the Obama administration would pull $1 billion in U.S. loan guarantees, sending the former Soviet republic toward insolvency, if it didn’t immediately fire Prosecutor General Viktor Shokin. ...

Interviews with a half-dozen senior Ukrainian officials confirm Biden’s account, though they claim the pressure was applied over several months in late 2015 and early 2016, not just six hours of one dramatic day. ... But Ukrainian officials tell me there was one crucial piece of information that Biden must have known but didn’t mention to his audience: The prosecutor he got fired was leading a wide-ranging corruption probe into the natural gas firm Burisma Holdings that employed Biden’s younger son, Hunter, as a board member.

U.S. banking records show Hunter Biden’s American-based firm, Rosemont Seneca Partners LLC, received regular transfers into one of its accounts — usually more than $166,000 a month — from Burisma from spring 2014 through fall 2015, during a period when Vice President Biden was the main U.S. official dealing with Ukraine and its tense relations with Russia. The general prosecutor’s official file for the Burisma probe — shared with me by senior Ukrainian officials — shows prosecutors identified Hunter Biden, business partner Devon Archer and their firm, Rosemont Seneca, as potential recipients of money.

Shokin told me in written answers to questions that, before he was fired as general prosecutor, he had made “specific plans” for the investigation that “included interrogations and other crime-investigation procedures into all members of the executive board, including Hunter Biden.”



the evening greens


Canada warming at twice the global rate, climate report finds

Canada is warming twice as fast as the rest of the world, a landmark government report has found, warning that drastic action is the only way to avoid catastrophic outcomes. “The science is clear – Canada’s climate is warming more rapidly than the global average, and this level of warming effectively cannot be changed,” Nancy Hamzawi, assistant deputy minister for science and technology at Environment and Climate Change Canada, told reporters on Monday.

The report, released late on Monday by Environment and Climate Change Canada, paints a grim picture of Canada’s future, in which deadly heatwaves and heavy rainstorms become a common occurrence. Forty-three government scientists and academics authored the peer-reviewed report. While global temperatures have increased 0.8C since 1948, Canada has seen an increase of 1.7C – more than double the global average. And in the Arctic, the warming is happening at a much faster rate of 2.3C, the report says.

While the increased warming in the Arctic is not yet fully understood, snow and ice play a critical role in reflecting the sun’s radiation and heat. But scientists say the retreat of glaciers and disappearing sea ice both contribute to a feedback loop of warming, which is one of the factors contributing to Canada’s disproportionate temperature increase.

The report suggests the majority of warming felt in Canada and around the globe is the result of burning fossil fuels.

Despite the urgency of the report, Canada remains mired in a political battle over climate policy.

US regulator lets Exxon block shareholder vote on climate proposal

Securities regulators will allow oil giant Exxon Mobil to block shareholders from voting on a proposal that the company disclose goals for reducing greenhouse gas emissions.

Activist investors led by the New York state comptroller pushed the proposal, which urges Exxon to set annual targets in line with goals decided by the 2015 Paris climate agreement.

Exxon asked the Securities and Exchange Commission in January for permission to bar the resolution.

As Industrial Farming Exploded Over the Past Century, the Netherlands' Butterfly Population Plummeted 84%

Bolstering global concerns about declining biodiversity, a new study shows that as industrial farming has expanded in the Netherlands over the past century, the nation's butterfly population has plummeted by at least 84 percent, and 15 native species are now extinct.

The analysis of 71 butterfly species native to the northwestern European country was conducted by Statistics Netherlands and the Dutch Butterfly Conservation, and published Friday in the journal Biological Conservation.


The results of the study are "more evidence of the catastrophic declines insects [and] other invertebrates are suffering globally," Chris Cathrine, director of U.K.-based ecological consulting firm Caledonian Conservation Ltd, said on Twitter.

"These largely ignored animals are the foundations of the ecosystems we all depend on to live," Cathrine added.

Noting that early collectors of butterflies didn't seek out common species, study coauthor Chris van Swaay of the Dutch Butterfly Conservation told the Guardian that "we are quite sure that the real decline must be much larger."

As Van Swaay explained to the newspaper, experts believe a key driver of the regional decline has been industrial farming across the lowlands of western Europe:

Before 1950 or so, grasslands in the Netherlands very much resembled what we now only have left in some nature reserves—they were wet, they had lots of flowers, were lightly grazed, and mown only once or twice a year. This was very low-intensity farming.

In two decades after the 1950s, the countryside was rebuilt—land was drained and planted with one species of grass, large amounts of fertilizer was put on the land, and it was mown six times a year. There is no room for butterflies except on road verges and nature reserves. The countryside is more or less empty.

... The new findings on the country's butterfly numbers, Van Swaay said, shows that "industrial agriculture is simply leaving hardly any room for nature."


Also of Interest

Here are some articles of interest, some which defied fair-use abstraction.

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Yasha Levine: Silicon Valley and “Communication Weapons of War”

Turkey's Problems Will Change The Dynamics On The Idlib Front

Industry Front Group Called Out for Spreading 'Bald-Faced Lies' About Medicare for All Costs

Bedouin women capture their village's final moments before it's demolished by Israel

How Democrats and Republicans fell over themselves to appeal to AIPAC crowd

Dozens show up to support woman challenging anti-Israel boycott law

House Dems offer $733B for defense in 2020 in two-year budget caps deal

Dire streets: muddied roads and broken promises on the Navajo nation

To Be Truly Righteous: Commemorating the Prince of Soul


A Little Night Music

Earl Gaines - Baby, Baby, What's Wrong

Earl Gaines - Please Love Me

Earl Gaines - Can't Keep From Cryin'

Earl Gaines - Have Faith (In Me)

Earl Gains - It's Worth Anything

Earl Gaines - It's Drivin' Me Mad

Earl Gaines - It's Love Baby (24 Hours A Day)

Earl Gaines - 24 Hours a Day

Earl Gaines - You Belong To Me

Earl Gaines - Soul Children

Earl Gaines & Roscoe Shelton - Be Good or Be Gone


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have complained about hair inhaled and kissed for too long, an arm around a woman's shoulder that slid down her back while a photo was being taken, a hand on a thigh. Youtube videos abound of Joe exercising his entitlement to be handsy and kissy with women and also with little girls and positioning a little girl so that her shoulder met his crotch. Just the usual.

Speaking of youtube videos, Unca Joe, with whom we'd all feel comfortable having a beer, has just released a video of his own. In it, he claims that he has always shown affection to both men and women by grabbing people around their shoulders. However, he gets that standards of personal space have changed. He gets it. He gets it. (Did he mention he gets it?)

Wow. Talk about copping a plea to grabbing people by the shoulders while ignoring the hair, thigh and claims and all the videos. Talk about creating a shoulders straw man to knock down while leaving the real issues untouched. I haven't heard anyone complain about him grabbing any adult by the shoulders.

You?

This isn't pizzagate. He's been caught by photos and videos and named by humans we actually know. If the Democrats anoint this guy, it will be proof positive that, despite all the blather and bloviating, they are quite happy to have Trump in the Oval Office.

If so, I won't be surprised. After all, he's doing a bunch of stuff from which they will benefit, yet they don't have to take any heat for it. To the contrary, they can make political hay from it while, in their hearts, they are grateful.

Kamala is fizzling, even though she is a law and order (in name, anyway) Democrat and a woman of color. They're touting Beta (sic) as the new Obama. Meanwhile, isn't the original Obama the one who presided over historic losses by Democrats to Republicans and became known as not ready for prime time? And, AFAIK, the original Obama was not arrested twice and did not admit to insider trading. Warren doesn't seem to be doing very well, either, which is somewhat surprising to me. I don't think she is a leftist at all, but I thought others assumed she is.

Democratic voters will, I believe, may consider a gay candidate too risky in the general and they desperately want Trump out. It's interesting, tho not surprising, that they obviously did not consider a black man too risky in 2008, but many did consider a Democratic Socialist too risky in 2016. It's really the difference between being the anointed one and not, but most people don't realize how much they get manipulated.

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OLinda's picture

@HenryAWallace
2 cents, barely:

IMHO, Let Joe run. He won't make it far, will he? He never has in past runnings, and he has even more baggage this time. I would expect him to be one of the first to drop out after poor showings in the early primary votes.

I am just not that into the election this time. However, wowee, did I feel the bern in 2016!! I feel so strongly that Bernie was screwed out of the nom, and the presidency, that it is hard not to root for him as he tries again. He may have missed (got screwed out of) his time though. It was definitely his time in 2016.

It's early, but I wouldn't mind seeing Buttigieg get the nomination, just for the chance of having a gay prez and a First Gentleman. I'm told the "Lady" is Lady like in Lords and Ladies. So, he would be our First Lord. Smile Ha! The husband, Chasten is sure fun and likable. Would I risk 4 more years of Trump to watch Pete and Chasten try for the White House? Yeah, maybe. What a grand time it would be.

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joe shikspack's picture

@HenryAWallace

well, i guess biden's not a pussy grabber, so maybe he's "trump lite." i'm not surprised that harris is fizzling, she's kind of a dud and she her law and order past pisses off one key democrat constituency and is not likely to endear her with younger voters, either.

i'm kind of not surprised that warren is not getting much traction. the powers that be (especially wall street) are deathly afraid of her and her antitrust proposal is certainly not endearing her to key democrat donors, big tech. i think that in a smaller field, she might have had a better chance of breaking through the media silence.

yep, i'm not sure if america is ready for another highly articulate neoliberal like buttigieg. i think his being gay is the best thing about his candidacy, but it certainly doesn't get me past his neoliberalism.

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detroitmechworks's picture

So, it's official, he is now acknowledging he's creepy, and will be savaged by the press.

Dumbest move he could have made. He just freaking ADMITTED it and instead of putting safeguards into place, which would have been the SMART thing to do, just "Promised to do better".

Fucking Dumbass. You just admitted that you've lied for years, and then ask us to just TRUST you? Should put direct action and safeguards into place. Said something like "I acknowledge my behavior is inappropriate AND will take THESE steps to change it."

Instead, weak ass nonpology... moron.

[video:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZtdZs2zy5T8]

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I do not pretend I know what I do not know.

joe shikspack's picture

@detroitmechworks

i think that it is worse than admitting that he's been lying for years. his statement sounded more to my ear like, "i'm just a clueless old man, out of touch with social conventions that have been consistent for the last 50 years. gosh, you mean women no longer like it when you invade their space? oh, bumbling me. well, garsh, i'm all ears now!"

heh:

if you don't care for that fiddle and banjo stuff, here's the lyrics:

Old and in the way, that's what I heard them say
They used to heed the words he said, but that was yesterday
Gold will turn to gray and youth will fade away
They'll never care about you, call you old and in the way

Once I hear tell, he was happy
He had his share of friends and good times
Now, those friends have all passed on
He don't have a place called home
Looking back to a better day, feeling old and in the way

When just a boy, he left his home
Thought he'd have the world on a string
Now the years have come and gone
Through the streets he walks alone
Like the old dog gone astray, he's just old and in the way

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First off, thanks for the EB as usual. Lots to unpack in the articles you have tonight. Not much nice in the Evening Greens. The quote by Van Swaay of the Dutch Butterfly Conservation sums it up "industrial agriculture is simply leaving hardly any room for nature." about nature on this planet.

Did spend the afternoon yesterday wandering in the Llano River shores checking out the wonderful rock stacks, arches, sand paintings etc. left over from the Llano Earth Art Fest. Some real talent and art there. If I had the knowledge, would love to share some of the photos.

On another note, I have been cleaning out closets,cabinets,etc and have found still in unopened packages 100 BD ultra fine insulin syringes1\2cc, 1/2",30 gauge needles and a nebulizer which allows someone to administer breathing treatments at home. Do not have need for these and know some in our community have lots of pressing medical needs. I am offering these to anyone in this community that has a need for them to message me.

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Life is what you make it, so make it something worthwhile.

This ain't no dress rehearsal!

joe shikspack's picture

@jakkalbessie

yep, a lot of days on the green beat there just isn't much good news to share. there has been a run recently of court decisions reining in the despicable trump administration efforts to loot the planet of any natural resources that can be extracted willy-nilly, which is somewhat encouraging.

are you able to upload your photos to the web? if so, point me to the location and i'll help you put them up here. if not, message me and i'll try to help you find an easy process that will allow you to upload and post.

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janis b's picture

@joe shikspack

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wisconsin election results.

the evil, amoral, unethical, theocratic, seditious, usurping fuckface appears to have won the open seat for the WI state supreme court.

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The earth is a multibillion-year-old sphere.
The Nazis killed millions of Jews.
On 9/11/01 a Boeing 757 (AA77) flew into the Pentagon.
AGCC is happening.
If you cannot accept these facts, I cannot fake an interest in any of your opinions.

joe shikspack's picture

@UntimelyRippd

i did a quick search and it looks like turnout was pretty low (26.6%) and the supreme court race was a pretty close. sorry to hear that the forces of evil triumphed.

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GreatLakeSailor's picture

@UntimelyRippd @UntimelyRippd

Her pitch was more/less "I'm gonna get TOUGH on criminals!!" instead of championing Wisconsin's citizens & environment defending against exploitation and erosion of rights by powerful, moneyed interests.

Who, I say whodda thunk pitchin' Superpredator 2.0 wouldn'ta got the masses (who would vote for the non-fascist) motivated and to the polls!?!?

Edit: protecting -> defending

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Compensated Spokes Model for Big Poor.

joe shikspack's picture

@GreatLakeSailor

sounds more like fascist vs. fascist-lite. i guess voters gravitate towards authenticity.

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In 2002, the villagers began receiving evacuation and demolition orders for the third time, because the government had decided to resettle them – this time in order to build an exclusively Jewish community called Hiran on their lands. Overnight, Umm al-Hiran became a symbol of the struggle against the evacuation of Israel's Bedouin and Arab communities in favor of the country's Jews, and a lengthy public and legal battle ensued, accompanied by demonstrations, police raids and demolitions.

How can anybody defend government construction of exclusively anything-ish communities, anywhere?
I despair.

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The earth is a multibillion-year-old sphere.
The Nazis killed millions of Jews.
On 9/11/01 a Boeing 757 (AA77) flew into the Pentagon.
AGCC is happening.
If you cannot accept these facts, I cannot fake an interest in any of your opinions.

joe shikspack's picture

@UntimelyRippd

yeah, i guess ethnic cleansing is popular pretty much everywhere and despite the clear and obvious contradiction, nobody seems willing to challenge the israeli claim that it is a true democracy.

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lotlizard's picture

@joe shikspack  
and keep expanding, people you might have thought were reasonable go all “Blut und Boden,” right-of-conquest on you.

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@lotlizard @lotlizard

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The earth is a multibillion-year-old sphere.
The Nazis killed millions of Jews.
On 9/11/01 a Boeing 757 (AA77) flew into the Pentagon.
AGCC is happening.
If you cannot accept these facts, I cannot fake an interest in any of your opinions.

Azazello's picture

Here's Chris Hedges on Russiagate:
[video:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VkoH3l7c5cI width:500 height:300]

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We wanted decent healthcare, a living wage and free college.
The Democrats gave us Biden and war instead.

@Azazello A really brilliant assessment by Hedges.

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"We'll know our disinformation program is complete when everything the American public believes is false." ---- William Casey, CIA Director, 1981

joe shikspack's picture

@Azazello

thanks! hedges nails it as usual.

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snoopydawg's picture

from killing habeous corpus, extending the patriot act, making spying on us legal, bailing out the banks and finishing with the TPP his presidency wasn't a presidency, it was a crime spree. Even the ACA was just a gift to the insurance companies.

Trump wants to throw 750,000 people off food stamps by putting work requirements on them even though most people who are on them are already working. The way the reporting is setup is what will get people kicked off. The republicans refused to do it when they did the farm bill so Trump is going around them to do it. Plus he wants to end the ACA before he has his "better" health care plan in place. This kinda makes you think that he does just want people to die.

IMG_3150.JPG

Kids who have been reunited with their parents have severe PTSD. Of course. And for gawd's sake what kind of person takes coats and blankets from children and babies? I seriously cannot wrap my brain around this. Will this get congress off its ass and do something? Hey Nancy, is this worth going after Trump? Or are you going to just sit back and watch as another executive office takes more power from congress? Yeah that's what I thought.

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Which AIPAC/MIC/pharma/bank bought politician are you going to vote for? Don’t be surprised when nothing changes.

joe shikspack's picture

@snoopydawg

yep, obama was the author of rather a lot of trump's worst ideas. what a great guy!

This kinda makes you think that he does just want people to die.

it's frankly pretty hard to come up with another compelling option, but he certainly has a lot of company in the sociopath department.

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lotlizard's picture

@joe shikspack  
on “the other side,” without regard for their humanity, often end up being heralded as great leaders of their country.

It’s how presidents prove they are “tough” and not “wimps.”

Hiroshima, Nagasaki . . . Dresden.

Burying Iraqi soldiers alive in their trenches or massacreing defenseless Iraqis in retreat on the Highway of Death.

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dystopian's picture

Earl Gaines was a great singer. Nice tunes there JS! Bunch of good guitar work too.

Bad situation with Assange and Moreno, this one looks like the bad guys are going to win.

I'm sure Trump, Jared and Ivanka are smart enough to know all about the proper transfer of
nuclear technology to proven violent regimes that also think they are above the law.

Re: "they would not want to ease sanctions if it means US oil becomes less valuable on the world markets." Nothing like rigging supply and demand with a war, sanctions, or dead bodies, whatever it takes to wring every dollar out of the little people.

Canada must have some serious cognitive dissonance with all the climate data supporting the
50 year old claims the poles would warm first and fastest (so Canada would be affected more
sooner), whilst they do everything they can to pipeline tarsands. Quick before they can't
recover their losses I suppose.

Major insect problems all over out there... as the butterflies in the Netherlands.
Industrial ag comes with more glyphosate, neonicitinoids, and chlorpyrifos than the planet can stand.

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We cannot solve our problems with the same thinking we used when we created them.
Look deep into nature, and then you will understand everything better.
both - Albert Einstein

joe shikspack's picture

@dystopian

Bad situation with Assange and Moreno, this one looks like the bad guys are going to win.

yeah, it's kind of like watching evil in slow motion.

I'm sure Trump, Jared and Ivanka are smart enough to know all about the proper transfer of nuclear technology to proven violent regimes that also think they are above the law.

regulations are just there to stop good people from doing what god intended, donchaknow?

Canada must have some serious cognitive dissonance

capitalists don't have cognitive dissonance, they have profits and losses.

Major insect problems all over out there...

heh. i would never have thought when i was a kid swatting mosquitos in the summer in maine (where the mosquitos have tail numbers and running lights) that i would someday be worried about there being too few insects. but here we are.

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janis b's picture

and thanks joe for the news and blues, always illuminating.

Here is Ginger Gorman two days ago on national radio about online radicalisation. You can start at 16:30 min. or listen to the entire interview which is interesting and informative.

She makes a great case for how to approach free speech and social media. In reference to Mark Zuckerberg and his recent public comment she says, “You built a public space where people are unsafe and now you’re saying you can’t fix it unless governments step in? Is that reasonable, would we accept that from big tobacco and big sugar?”

She covers many aspects of this issue in a way that acknowledges both societal and internet problems that contribute to this sad state of events and direction. Gorman says she approached Facebook six months ago to say Facebook Live was a dangerous product.

In her conclusion she says, “I would love to see law enforcement better resourced and trained, at the moment it is like domestic violence was like 30 years ago, if you go there (to the police) and say I’m being trolled they say, “stay off the internet love”, which is not only victim blaming but ludicrous. I would love to see legislative duty of care around the world for social media companies so they have to take care of us, otherwise they’re not allowed to operate. There’s a kind of hysteria about censoring the internet, I mean you can’t say whatever you want in normal life, you can’t tell me in the supermarket you’re going to cut my uterus out and kill my kids, but people tell me that online. So basically it’s quite simple, the norms that exist offline should exist online and I think we should enforce that”.

I hope we can all benefit from careful and open consideration of this issue, and legislate in ways that are fair and sensible, rather than ways that are heavy-handed and benefit the corporatocracy.

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joe shikspack's picture

@janis b

thanks for the link! it's an interesting discussion.

In reference to Mark Zuckerberg and his recent public comment she says, “You built a public space where people are unsafe and now you’re saying you can’t fix it unless governments step in?

i think that is a fair point. it appears to me that facebook is too large an entity. it is so large that it is not possible as it is configured to make it safe and at the same time, profitable.

There’s a kind of hysteria about censoring the internet, I mean you can’t say whatever you want in normal life, you can’t tell me in the supermarket you’re going to cut my uterus out and kill my kids, but people tell me that online.

i certainly don't have the answers, but i think that fear of censorship is reasonable, for reasons that should be quite obvious to any left-leaning person especially. virtually all ideologies and religions can/have lead to violence and/or harm to real people in our human history. we probably shouldn't ban all ideological or religious discussion.

there is clearly a difference between people discussing white supremacist ideas, for example and organizing acts of violence based upon those ideas. the problem, both on the internet and in real life is to find the people who are organizing harm.

i am also somewhat concerned about the idea that the police should be patrolling the internet. i'm just not sure that they are the right tool for the job.

like i said, i don't have the answers. it's an immensely difficult issue.

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janis b's picture

@joe shikspack

I agree with you. I don’t think police should be patrolling the internet, certainly not without valid and appropriate training, along with a sincere dedication to considering the bigger perspective. I think BLM discusses this issue with intelligence.

I also agree that fear of censorship is valid because of those who have the power to regulate it.

I am also a firm believer that whether it’s religion or any other personal belief, consideration should be open to an enduring discussion that makes no immediate decisions in terms of regulation.

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joe shikspack's picture

@janis b

i do think that something needs to be done, but i guess i lean towards more holistic sorts of solutions. for example, anything that we can do to diminish the dog-eat-dog, social darwinist nature of our cultures would be a big step towards reducing the impetus to social violence.

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janis b's picture

@joe shikspack

Thank you for your ongoing support of what really matters.

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lotlizard's picture

[E.U.] lawmakers claim the directive will protect the rights of online creators, but opponents say it will create an unintended consequence: restricting freedom of speech.

The E.U.’s Atlanticist elite seem to have concluded that “freedom of speech” only helps those nasty right-wing populists and Yellow Vesters and Putin. So overboard it goes.

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joe shikspack's picture

@lotlizard

freedom for me, but not for thee. sounds about like any elitist organization.

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lotlizard's picture

https://www.nzherald.co.nz/nz/news/article.cfm?c_id=1&objectid=12215196

Well! Talk about bad taste memetic mutation!

https://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/Main/MemeticMutation

Also covered on the Green-left German daily Taz’s humor and satire page “Die Wahrheit” (= “the truth” = “pravda”):
https://www.taz.de/Die-Wahrheit/!5583399/

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janis b's picture

@lotlizard

The Mongrel Mob here has always been a bit of an enigma to me. In many respects they can be the most staunch and effective supporters of those in need in their community. Alternatively, they can be unforgiving and rigid. This step they are taking is a positive one.

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