Month: November 2019

Home / Month: November 2019

I’d been dumped by a man who was feeling ambivalent. We’d jumped into it all too fast. I adopted a coolly elegant tone and told him, “I set you free,” then hung up the phone and ugly cried for four weeks. Somewhere around week five, I got a fantastic breakup haircut, pretended I was fine, signed up for internet dating and assumed I’d never see him again.

At week six, like a guy sniffing around a beach with a metal detector, the man called. He wondered if he’d made a mistake. Also, the way I’d handled the breakup had impressed him.

I gave him an ambivalent “maybe.” I’d already convinced my friends I was the suffering heroine in a love tragedy, and that’s not an easy PR campaign to reel back in. Also, I was nervous. Fool me once, shame on you. Fool me twice, I can’t afford a second breakup haircut right now. Then again, I’d been scanning dating websites for a week and finding only what a friend calls “the leftovers.” And I really did like this man.

Over dinner, he showed me a dog he had found online. A red tricolor Australian shepherd at an Aussie rescue in Lake Elsinore. I won’t lie: The dog had seriously photogenic profile photos. He asked me to come along for the first meeting.

Do you love L.A. Affairs? Help us keep it going. Subscribe here.

So there I was, conflicted about this newly defibrillated relationship, riding in the passenger seat to the Inland Empire. We pulled up to a house, and a dog with red curls the same color as mine raced back and forth at the fence, barking furiously.

Karyl, who ran the rescue, had named him Chance. “You know, like the ABBA song?” He’d been at the rescue for a year. He’d been trapped as a stray at 6 months old and had been at the rescue on and off for about a year. (He’d been been given back by one home and had escaped from another.) His file warned, “Chance can and will jump a five-foot fence.” He was a dog with a rap sheet.

I sat on the ground, Chance immediately climbed into my lap (he was a 55-pound dog) and I thought, “Oh no.” It was the eyes that did it. He had human eyes. He was like a person trapped in a dog’s body. He’d look at you with a keen expression that said, “I wish I had the power of speech because, girl, we need to talk.” When we left with him, Karyl implored us, “If it doesn’t work out, please just bring him back.”

Submission guidelines for L.A. Affairs >>>

We never brought him back. And I fell in love with the man because of the dog. It was his kindness toward an “unadoptable” animal who had been written off by most people. That first night, the man slept on the hardwood floor with Chance to make sure the dog felt part of a new pack. It was a simple gesture, and I was stunned by the goodness of it.

And maybe I owe some credit to Los Angeles geography. It was 2008, a few months after the Writers Guild strike ended. Work was slow. Nobody was hiring yet. My apartment at Olympic and Robertson faced a busy alley and had no air conditioning. I had a group of single lady neighbors with whom I’d gather for wine in our Wooster Street complex (we’d nicknamed it Woosteria Lane), but my writerly “room of one’s own” suddenly felt small and hot and lonely. I knew that up in Topanga Canyon, where the man lived, there was a dog who would put his chin on your knee and gaze up at you as if he understood it all. I’d found a new pack. Maybe it was time to get over having been dumped in haste.

And maybe I even owe some credit to the canyon itself. To that feeling of turning off PCH onto Topanga Canyon Boulevard, winding your way up through hills and oaks and sandstone peaks where ocean murk creeps in at night, filling the place with Brigadoon mist. There’s a dental X-ray apron feeling of anxiety weighing on you as you navigate a writing career in Los Angeles, a city of haves and have-nots and pretend-to-haves and never-happy-with-what-they-haves. But on those afternoons, I’d turn right at the corner where beach meets mountain, and I was suddenly in the woods, hearing the sounds of hawks and mourning doves and coyote packs screaming like they’re watching someone open gifts at a baby shower. Most important, there was an Australian shepherd who wanted me to come hike at Red Rock Canyon Park with the man who adopted him. The man who would see his dog seemingly deep in thought and stop to ask, “What’s on your mind, Chance?” I didn’t want to lose this pack.

I realized the man deserved a second chance. The same one he’d given this dog. We went from ambivalent to back together to married. We were a trio.

Meanwhile, Chance’s rap sheet grew.

“This is a dog that needs to be managed,” said a trainer. A human had clearly done something terrible to Chance in his first 2 ½ years of life. If we were seated at a sidewalk cafe, Chance would wag his docked Aussie tail if a fellow canine walked by. But if a 1,000-year-old man with a cane shuffled past, those were the pants he’d lunge for. He once lifted a leg and peed on a friend’s Christmas tree. He was a serial humper. He stole off countertops. He destroyed a couch.

The morning after a dinner party, I found him on top of the table, surrounded by crystal wine glasses, eating the remains of a cheese plate. Seeing me, he went in for a last bite and then leaped over the stemware with a Baryshnikov-like grace. I once caught him finishing a loaf of bread and wondered if he might actually be my biological son. When a new neighbor remarked, “Oh, you guys have the fat red dog that barks on the balcony,” I explained he was a home security system you need to feed twice a day. Also, he was fluffy, not fat.

Earlier this fall, 11 years after meeting him, we said goodbye on our living room floor. They’d found an inoperable heart mass. He was in pain. We weren’t putting an almost 14-year-old dog through chemo. As the vet inserted the needle, he tried to nip her. He was Chance up to his final moment. Misunderstood by most. Loved by us.

We always called him “Poor little Chance” because of his rough start. My sister-in-law once gave us a dubious staredown and said, “There is nothing poor about that dog.”

Now that he’s gone and there’s a new rescue dog named Larry chewing our couch, I realize it’s true: There was nothing poor about him. He’s the old soul who helped me understand no human or dog is perfect. No beginning is perfect. You have to take a chance.

The author is a screenwriter who recently co-wrote the romantic comedy “Falling Inn Love” and the upcoming “Love, Guaranteed,” both for Netflix.
You can find her on Twitter @LizHackett.

Straight, gay, bisexual, transgender or nonbinary: L.A. Affairs chronicles the search for love in and around Los Angeles — and we want to hear your story. You must allow your name to be published, and the story you tell has to be true. We pay $300 for each essay we publish. Email us at [email protected]. You can find subscription guidelines here.

MORE L.A. AFFAIRS

He didn’t tell me he was married. But Facebook did.

I told all my dates: ‘I’m never getting married, I’m never having kids’

I was a divorced dad with an empty nest. Was I doomed to be single?


Click Here: geelong cats guernsey 2019

You’re traveling for Thanksgiving by car? Then listen up: The absolute worst time to leave Southern Californnia is 5 to 7 p.m. Nov. 27, the day before Thanksgiving, because of what is expected to be a record freeway crunch, AAA predicted.

About 3.7 million Southern Californians are expected to take a car trip of more than 50 miles during the long weekend, AAA said. They’ll be among the 55.3 million nationally who are traveling for the holiday, about 49.3 million by car. A strong economy is being credited for a 2.9% overall surge in Thanksgiving holiday travel.

Nov. 27 is expected to be the worst travel period nationally, and car trips are expected to take as much at four times longer than normal in major metropolitan areas, including Los Angeles and much of Southern California.

So leave now if you can. But you probably can’t. So ….

When not to go

When the time comes, here are some peak periods to avoid at choke points around Southern California on D-Day (departure day), Nov. 27:

  • Interstate 10 eastbound from Santa Monica to the Interstate 5 interchange: 6 p.m. (with a delay five times the norm).
  • Interstate 405 southbound from Roscoe Boulevard to the 110 Freeway: 5:30 p.m.
  • Interstate 405 northbound from the 110 to Roscoe Boulevard: 5:45 p.m.
  • Interstate 10 eastbound from State Street to West Covina: 5:15 p.m.
  • U.S. 101 Freeway westbound from California 170 to California 23: 6:30 p.m.

Blame population increases nationwide for some of the growing freeway crunch, said Trevor Reed, an analyst for INRIX, a transportation data company.

“Although travel times will peak on Wednesday afternoon nationally, travelers should expect much heavier than normal congestion throughout the week,” Reed said.

An unseasonably warm November is likely to increase congestion around theme parks in Anaheim and other parts of Southern California.

For most Americans, gasoline prices will be similar to last year’s. As of Nov. 13, the California retail state average was $4.02 a gallon for regular. The Los Angeles-Long Beach average is at $4.06. Among popular destinations for L.A. travelers, San Diego shows a $4.01 a gallon price and Las Vegas, $3.31.

California prices are higher than the national average ($2.57) partly because of the state’s blend of fuel to accommodate its strict environmental laws, which few refineries outside the state produce.

To the rescue

Here’s another breathtaking stat: AAA expects to rescue 368,000 California motorists on the roadside. Of those, 137,909 are expected to need a tow, 55,456 are expected to need tire assistance, and 103,871 will need battery help.

Mechanics urge motorists to take these pre-trip precautions:

  • Check tires for wear and make sure all tires, including the spare, are properly inflated.
  • Check all fluids, especially oil, transmission and brake levels.
  • Check windshield blades, which are often dried out and brittle by this time of year.
  • Inspect coolant level and condition.
  • Check engine belts for cracks or tears, as well as all hoses for cracks and blisters. Belts and hoses that are more than 10 years old may need replacement just because of age.
  • Test and replace old or weak batteries. The Auto Club has a mobile battery service in select areas to test your battery and replace it with a new one if necessary.

A basic emergency kit should include blankets or a sleeping bag, water, a first-aid kit, a flashlight, flares and nonperishable food. Although roads are mostly free of snow now, conditions will change rapidly once late November hits. Snow chains should always be carried anywhere near mountains in winter months.

Put this number in your phone: (800) 427-7623. That’s the CalTrans road conditions number.

Bottom line: Be safe, stay patient, be prepared.

Defense! Defense!

Finally, as you travel, drive defensively, especially when you consider that California motorists are fifth-worst in the nation in their understanding of road signs. Almost 13% of California participants failed a simple sign test, according to a study by a New York car dealership. Drivers older than 51 had the highest average grades, followed by teens, no doubt still benefiting from recent testing.

Another sobering note: Almost 8% of drivers nationwide couldn’t identify a simple “U-Turn Only” sign.

Pack that tidbit away in your brain. If nothing else, it’s fodder for the Thanksgiving table when Uncle Arnie insists on talking about tariffs or Aunt Edna starts describing her latest rash.

At that point, anything goes.


Sundae School, the 2-year-old unisex smokewear label that earlier this year expanded into branded cannabis, has opened a pop-up shop in a downtown Los Angeles art gallery that showcases both sides of its growing business and a slate of weed-friendly events and activities. through Sunday.

Called Sundae Cave, it includes several racks of the fall and winter 2019 collection, a range of exclusive pop-up pieces, a display shelf of cannabis products and a cave-like corner appointed in faux moss, artificial turf, green plastic curtains and grassy-green beanbag chairs. Just outside is a “smoking alley” for those inclined to spark up.

Label co-founders Mia Park and Dae Lim explained that the pop-up’s name and decor reference the allegory of Plato’s Cave (a highbrow stoner reference if ever there was one) and the notion of cannabis use in the pursuit of enlightenment. “This whole space was created to get people to think about why they’re smoking, what they’re smoking and, ultimately, how they integrate it into their lifestyle,” Park said.

Lim added that they also wanted to stress the community-building aspect of cannabis by holding a series of workshops over the course of the 10-day pop-up, which kicked off during the weekend with a screen-printing workshop (on Saturday) and an ashtray-making pottery class (Sunday) and continues this week with a tea ceremony, a tasting series, a DJ set and a chance to add limited-edition patches to your clothing. (Aside from a small materials fee for the pottery class, the programs are free, but tickets must be ordered online in advance through Eventbrite.)

Sundae School’s wearable wares can be purchased on site. Visitors interested in the label’s cannabis-containing products, including its bestselling .3-gram pre-rolled dogwalker joints (so-called because their smaller size means they last about as long as it takes to walk the dog), can order them for free delivery to the pop-up through a partnership with the MedMen dispensary chain.

Other partners and sponsors in the pop-up include Sackville, Old Pal and G Pen, the last of which is set to host a closing-night dab-bar demonstration.

Click Here: Real bape hoodie

It’s also, it turns out, a chance for the city’s fashion and cannabis communities to meet the new kids on the block, because Lim and Park, who launched the line in New York in 2017, relocated it — and themselves — to Los Angeles two months ago.

Sundae School pop-up shop, 110 Winston St., 11 a.m. to 6 p.m. through Sunday.


Turmoil in Bolivia: An explainer

November 18, 2019 | News | No Comments

MEXICO CITY — 

The Andean nation of Bolivia, home to 11 million, has been engulfed in political turmoil since disputed elections were held last month. Ex-President Evo Morales is now in exile in Mexico.

Some questions and answers about the Bolivian crisis.

Who is Evo Morales?

Morales, 60, was elected in 2005 on a socialist platform and served as the first president from Bolivia’s historically marginalized indigenous community. His rise was significant in a nation long run by a mostly white and mixed-race elite with close ties to the United States and multinational corporations. Morales has emerged as an icon of the international left.

What is Morales’ background?

Morales comes from humble origins — before seeking public office he had been a llama herder, bricklayer, sugar cane cutter, trumpet player in a traveling band and head of the federation representing growers of the coca leaf, from which cocaine is derived. The latter post propelled Morales into national prominence, and the country’s many cocaleros remain crucial allies.

What happened in Bolivia’s elections?

Morales says he won reelection cleanly in the Oct. 20 balloting. But thousands took to the streets alleging that the results had been rigged. Morales finally agreed to new balloting after a team from the Organization of American States found widespread irregularities.

When did Morales step down?

Morales resigned on Nov. 10, along with his vice president and other political allies, in the face of what he says was pressure from the military. He calls himself the victim of a “coup” and a “political and economic conspiracy” launched from Washington.

How does the U.S. government view Morales?

Not well. U.S. administrations have had rocky relations with Morales, the last one standing of the “pink tide” of leftist leaders who took office in South America more than a decade ago. Morales regularly denounces U.S. “imperialism” and has been a strong ally of leftist governments in Venezuela, Cuba and Nicaragua — all targeted by the Trump administration. Morales’ campaign pledges in 2005 to eliminate coca-leaf eradication efforts angered Washington. As president, Morales expelled the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration from Bolivia. The Trump administration greeted Morales’ departure as a step forward for democracy.

Was Morales’ administration a success?

Morales’ policies during almost 14 years in office helped reduce poverty and elevate living standards in what has long been one of South America’s poorest nations. A country with a long history of social unrest and military takeovers was mostly stable. Despite his fiery socialist pronouncements, Morales was known for pragmatic economic decisions. Revenue from natural gas — the country’s major export — was funneled to social programs. Bolivia remains extremely poor, but inequality has been reduced. Millions credit Morales and revere him.

What do his detractors say about Morales?

Critics say Morales has shown increasingly autocratic tendencies and an apparent desire to be president for life. He refused to abide by a 2016 national referendum in which Bolivians upheld term limits, saying “the people” urged him to run again. A ruling from a court that critics say was packed with Morales supporters paved the way for him to seek a fourth term this year.

What does Mexico have to do with the tumult in Bolivia?

Click Here: Aston Villa Shop

Morales was granted political asylum in Mexico and arrived to Mexico City on Tuesday. Mexican President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador, the country’s first avowedly leftist leader in a generation, is an admirer of Morales. Mexico’s foreign minister calls Morales’ ouster a coup. The Mexican news media have since reported sightings of Morales, with heavy security details, at an upscale restaurant and spa in the capital. Morales has continued his political activism from Mexico, calling for a “national dialogue” and hinting he would be willing to return to Bolivia if asked to do so. The interim Bolivian administration has accused Morales of “inciting” chaos from abroad and asked Mexico to muzzle the exiled leader, a step that Mexican authorities have refused to take.

Who is Jeanine Añez?

Morales’ departure, and the exit of his vice president and other constitutionally designated successors, left a power vacuum in Bolivia. A conservative opposition senator, Jeanine Añez, declared herself Senate leader and interim president at a legislative session lacking a legal quorum and absent lawmakers from Morales’ Movement Toward Socialism party, which has majorities in both congressional houses. The self-appointed interim leader toted an oversized Bible to the presidential palace, a rebuke of Morales’ preference for indigenous religious symbols in a nation where much of the population remains Roman Catholic. Añez is allied with right-wing activists based in the eastern city of Santa Cruz, long a bastion of anti-Morales sentiment.

What is Añez’s plan for Bolivia?

Añez said she is working to restore peace and arrange for new elections. She appears to have the crucial backing of the nation’s military and police forces, at least for now. From Mexico, Morales assailed Añez’s ascension as an illegitimate “assault on the power of the people” and called for United Nations-backed dialogue to quell the crisis and prevent further bloodshed. The United States has embraced Añez’s rise. The asserted interim president has said Morales would be barred as a candidate in future elections and should be prosecuted for electoral fraud if he returned to Bolivia.

Has Añez changed Bolivia’s foreign policy?

Añez has abruptly aligned her country with Washington’s Latin American agenda, working to undo Morales’ leftist international orientation. She moved to expel hundreds of Cubans, many of them physicians and medical staff, and vowed to break ties with Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro, whom Morales long supported, while allying Bolivia with another self-declared South American head of state: Juan Guaido, recognized by the United States and its allies as the legal leader of Venezuela.

What is the situation on the ground in Bolivia?

Very tenuous. Pro-Morales demonstrators have been blocking roads and calling for his reinstatement. Authorities worry about shortages of gasoline and food. Journalists have been attacked on the streets and, in the most violent incident to date in the crisis, nine people were killed and dozens injured Friday when security forces open fire on pro-Morales protesters, including many coca growers, outside the city of Cochabamba. That incident brought to at least 23 the death toll since last month’s elections, according to rights monitors. Michelle Bachelet, the U.N. human rights chief and former president of Chile, voiced concerns that the violence in Bolivia “could spin out of control.”

Cecilia Sanchez of The Times’ Mexico City bureau contributed to this report.


WELLINGTON, New Zealand — 

Samoa has closed all its schools, banned children from public gatherings and mandated that everybody get vaccinated after declaring an emergency due to a measles outbreak that has so far killed six people.

For the last three weeks, the Pacific island nation of 200,000 people has been in the grip of a measles epidemic that has been exacerbated by low immunization rates.

Schools were closed Monday after the government declared an emergency on Saturday. The National University of Samoa also told students to stay home and said exams scheduled for this week had been indefinitely postponed.

Health authorities said most of those who died were younger than 2. They counted 716 measles cases reported, with nearly 100 people still hospitalized including 15 in intensive care.

Samoa’s Director General of Health Leausa Take Naseri said in a news conference last week that he expects the epidemic will get worse. He said that only about two-thirds of Samoans had been vaccinated, leaving the others vulnerable to the virus.

But figures from the World Health Organization and UNICEF indicate that measles immunization rates among Samoan infants have fallen steeply, from over 70% in 2013 to under 30% last year.

Helen Petousis-Harris, a vaccine expert at New Zealand’s University of Auckland, said the Samoan government halted its immunization program for several months last year after two infants died from a medical mishap involving a vaccine.

New Zealand Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern said Monday it was sending 3,000 vaccine doses to Samoa as well as nurses and medical supplies.

Ardern said Samoan authorities believe the outbreak was started by a traveler from New Zealand.

Click Here: Crystal Palace Shop

“We, of course, have an open flow of people,” Ardern said. “But we see our responsibility as supporting Samoa as they deal with the outbreak, and we are doing that actively.”

Petousis-Harris said it was disappointing that people in New Zealand who were carrying the virus had traveled to Samoa. She said New Zealand has for years known it has immunity gaps.

“But we didn’t deal with the problem,” she said.

Tonga, Fiji and New Zealand have also reported outbreaks of measles but on a smaller scale than in Samoa.


Newsletter: How to address homelessness in L.A.?

November 18, 2019 | News | No Comments

Here are the stories you shouldn’t miss today:

TOP STORIES

How to Address Homelessness in L.A.?

As homelessness has exploded in Los Angeles, taxpayers have been willing to spend hundreds of millions of dollars on housing, shelters and services to help get people off the streets. But a new poll shows that a broad majority of voters think the city and county have been ineffective in spending that money and that new policies are needed — and they have several ideas.

For a deeper understanding of the crisis, columnist Steve Lopez spent months reporting on those who live on the streets of Hollywood (on top of his years of reporting on the subject more broadly).

In three columns, Lopez examines the story from different angles: through the eyes of residents dealing with a homeless encampment growing outside their windows, from the perspective of those who live in the camp and walking the beat with a cop trying to make a difference.

Gun Violence Claims More Victims

Fresno police say at least 10 people were shot and four were killed at a backyard party in a home where about 35 people, including children, had gathered to watch football on Sunday night. Fresno Police Deputy Chief Michael Reid said all of those shot were men who were 25 to 30 years old. The violence comes after last week’s shooting at Saugus High School, in which two students were killed by another teen who subsequently died of a self-inflicted wound, and a suspected murder-suicide that killed five family members in San Diego and left a 3-year-old boy in critical condition.

At a Critical Juncture in D.C.

Democrats this week will enter what some observers see as a do-or-die phase of the impeachment inquiry into President Trump, as they summon a flurry of witnesses they hope will convince the public that Trump should be impeached for pressing a foreign government to launch criminal investigations for his political benefit.

The hearings follow a rare weekend in which a key White House official was deposed and the transcripts were released from two additional closed-door depositions of administration officials. Earlier in the week, three veteran diplomats testified in public, soberly describing the ramifications of the president’s pressure campaign — undermining Ukraine, a stalwart U.S. ally at war with Russia, and eroding U.S. stature across the globe, they said.

Republican House members are likely to continue pounding a point that some GOP senators have raised: that even if true, the allegations don’t rise to the level of impeachable conduct.

More Politics

— Trump spent more than two hours at Walter Reed National Military Medical Center on Saturday for what the White House said were medical tests as part of his annual physical, but a lack of details or public appearances has fueled speculation.

— U.S. Defense Secretary Mark Esper said the United States and South Korea have indefinitely postponed a joint military exercise in an “act of goodwill” toward North Korea.

— The shifting Democratic presidential primary was on display in California on Saturday, with the newest candidate, Deval Patrick, making his first appearance in front of a large group of voters and Sen. Kamala Harris arguing that her campaign remains vibrant despite her plummet in the polls.

Should They Stay or Should They Go?

In Hong Kong, the weekend brought another round of clashes between police and protesters, including an all-night siege at one university campus. Months of conflict over the city’s political future have driven a growing number of Hong Kongers to consider moving abroad and rekindled memories of the 1990s, when hundreds of thousands fled out of fear of communist rule. But, as this portrait of one family shows, the decision isn’t easy.

Your support helps us deliver the news that matters most. Subscribe to the Los Angeles Times.

Newsletter

Get our Today's Headlines newsletter

OUR MUST-READS FROM THE WEEKEND

— Do active-shooter drills at schools go too far? Some experts fear that increasingly aggressive drills risk becoming trauma-inducing events of their own.

— One year after the deadly Woolsey fire, homeowners share the lessons they learned.

— Former California Gov. Pete Wilson is still defending Prop. 187 and fighting for a better place in history.

Click Here: pandora Bangle cheap

— How to hail a ride at ever-changing Los Angeles International Airport during the holidays (or any other time).

FROM THE ARCHIVES

On this date in 1978, more than 900 people died in a ritual of mass suicide and murder dubbed the Jonestown Massacre at a cult compound in Guyana. The mass killing was orchestrated by the Rev. Jim Jones, who ordered members of his People’s Temple cult to consume a cyanide-laced drink.

At an airstrip in the jungle, Jones’ followers shot and killed five people, including California Rep. Leo Ryan, who had traveled to Guyana to investigate alleged human rights abuses being perpetrated by the cult.

“On a grassy slope in Oakland, more than 400 take their final rest, mostly children who were unclaimed or unidentified,” wrote reporter Tim Reiterman in 2003. He covered Jonestown for the San Francisco Examiner and was wounded in the jungle airstrip attack.

CALIFORNIA

— Thousands of Santa Clarita residents gathered for a candlelight vigil Sunday night to honor the two students killed in the shooting at Saugus High School.

— Developers and transit officials are set to apply today for city permission to build a $1-billion mixed-use complex in North Hollywood that would surround the subway entrance and adjacent hub for connecting bus routes.

— After warm, dry weather today, the first winter storm of the season is expected to arrive in Southern California on Tuesday night through Thursday, the National Weather Service said. In Northern California, weather and utilities officials are warning of possible red flag conditions midweek.

— California remains the top U.S. destination for foreign students, yet enrollment has dipped slightly for the first time in at least a decade.

HOLLYWOOD AND THE ARTS

— The new Matt Damon-Christian Bale film “Ford v Ferrari” about rebel Southern California automaker/industry giant Carroll Shelby and self-picked driver Ken Miles versus the egos and establishment at Ford in the 1960s — was No. 1 at the box office over the weekend. Perhaps not surprisingly, it takes some liberties with history.

— Two years after admitting to sexual misconduct with female comedians and associates, Louis C.K. is back on tour, landing for the time being in some pretty far-flung locales.

“The Inheritance” on Broadway will have you sobbing. But, theater critic Charles McNulty writes, the play aims for more.

Nickelodeon once ruled kids TV. Can it make a comeback?

NATION-WORLD

— Louisiana Gov. John Bel Edwards stunned Republicans again, narrowly winning a second term Saturday as the Deep South’s only Democratic governor and handing Trump another gubernatorial loss this month.

— Trump has said freeing American prisoners abroad is a top priority. What about U.S. prisoners in Iran?

— The United Nations’ human rights chief has warned that postelection violence causing turmoil in Bolivia could “spin out of control” if officials resort to the use of disproportionate force.

Prince Andrew has offered a detailed rebuttal to claims he had sex with a woman who says she was trafficked by Jeffrey Epstein, providing an alibi for one of the alleged encounters and questioning the authenticity of a well-known photograph that shows him posing with the woman.

BUSINESS

— It’s not just farmers: U.S. exports to China may never recover from the trade war.

Ford Motor Co. has unveiled its first new-from-the-ground-up fully electric vehicle, the Mustang Mach-E.

SPORTS

— The Rams took a different approach to beat the Chicago Bears and boost their playoff hopes, while the Chargers are seeking a victory over the Kansas City Chiefs tonight and still clinging to a chance at the playoffs.

— After getting walloped by Utah, UCLA football is looking to rebound with a victory over USC in their big rivalry game.

OPINION

— The Ukraine scandal is a microcosm of what we already know: Trump’s presidency is a failure.

Chelsea Becker‘s baby was born dead because she used drugs. That doesn’t make her a murderer.

WHAT OUR EDITORS ARE READING

— More than 400 pages of internal Chinese documents provide an unprecedented inside look at the crackdown on Muslim ethnic minorities in the Xinjiang region. (New York Times)

— A three-year investigation has found widespread separate and unequal treatment by real estate agents of minority potential homebuyers and minority communities on Long Island. (Newsday)

ONLY IN L.A.

The heart works in mysterious ways. After getting dumped by a man who was feeling ambivalent, a Hollywood screenwriter got a call six weeks later from the same guy. Before long, he had invited her to check out an “unadoptable” rescue dog named Chance. And as this week’s L.A. Affairs column explains, “I fell in love with the man because of the dog.”

If you like this newsletter, please share it with friends. Comments or ideas? Email us at [email protected].


Haas unwraps striking new VF-19 charger!

November 18, 2019 | News | No Comments

The Haas F1 Team’s cars will be draped in black and gold this season, thanks to the US outfit’s new commercial partner Rich Energy.

Haas revealed its 2019 VF-19 charger – and its cosmetics – which give the machine a smart, sleek look.

The team has been renamed Rich Energy Haas F1 Team to reflect its new sponsor’s participation.

    Launch Gallery: Haas 2019 VF-19

Details of the digital images showcase the car’s 2019-spec simplified front wing, complete with its five elements, and a deeper rear wing.

“This is the time of the season when you hope you’ve got designs right and you can be competitive straight away,” said Haas.

“The new car looks distinctive, not only in terms of its color scheme, but also with the new regulations in play.

“Hopefully those design changes brought in for 2019 will improve the racing on-track, and more importantly give us a shot at making more of an impact at each grand prix.”

©Haas

Rich Energy’s tribulations in F1 started last year, when the company popped out of nowhere claiming to be working up an angle in F1.

Rumors of a buy-out of Force India were ridiculed by the Silverstone-based outfit itself, which evidently had more pressing matters to tend to.

Later in the year, the company appeared to be courted by Williams, but ultimately it was Haas with which it would engage.

Rich Energy’s CEO is one William Storey, a man as little-known as the product he claims to sell, and whose hirsute, bearded countenance would blend in more appropriately at the Burning Man event in Nevada than in an F1 paddock.

Click Here: France Football Shop

The company’s drink is as rare as a rain-drop in the Sahara desert, but its corporate efforts are apparently backed by wealthy investors, including West Ham co-owner David Sullivan.

“I’m naturally delighted to finally see the Rich Energy colours and stag logo in Formula 1 with Haas F1 Team,” said Storey.

“Partnering with the team has already significantly raised the profile of our brand, this livery unveil will again elevate us to another level.”

Gallery: The beautiful wives and girlfriends of F1 drivers

Keep up to date with all the F1 news via Facebook and Twitter

 

Women On The Frontlines, An Untold Climate Story

November 18, 2019 | News | No Comments

Women’s experiences, struggles, and solutions make up perhaps the most vital, yet largely untold story of the climate crisis.
 
Twenty million of the twenty-six million people estimated to have been displaced by climate change as of 2010 are women. The bottom line is that the poor are most heavily impacted by climate change, and the vast majority of people living on less than a dollar a day are women.
 
Studies show that women are more susceptible then men to the harmful effects of toxic pollution from fossil fuels and industrial processes. As mothers and life-givers, climate change effects women in deeply personal ways, such as the dangerous health effects of carbon emissions on pregnant women and developing babies.

“We know, and must push governments to see, that the window of opportunity for acting on climate change is not going to be open for much longer. Our children are watching. The lives of current and future generations are at stake.”

The stresses that many Indigenous women and women in developing countries experience as a result of environmental degradation and climate change are even more severe due to their direct reliance on nature and primary resources for their survival. Drought, flooding, and unpredictable temperatures increase burdens on millions of women worldwide who, due to gender roles and norms, hold primary responsibility for providing food, water and firewood for their families.

Looking at a deeper analysis, it is clear that that women face these disproportionately severe climate harms because at a global scale, their economic, political, and social rights continue to be denied. Women, for example, are much more likely to die in extreme weather events for reasons ranging from a lack of financial independence from male family members, to things as simple as never being permitted to learn how to swim.
 
Thus, when we reflect on the dire climate impacts felt by women, it is essential that we reflect on roots causes – namely the culture of patriarchy based on domination over nature and women that has been institutionalized worldwide to varying degrees. It is essential that we embrace this systemic perspective so that we can take bold steps to shift our cultural narratives and challenge the worldviews that produce and enforce the twin problems of environmental destruction and gender inequality.

However, I highlight women’s stories as the most vital untold climate story not only because of their increased vulnerability, but because of their profound power and agency. Women hold the keys to just, holistic solutions for a livable planet.
 
Countries with higher female parliamentary representation are more likely to ratify international environmental treaties, and in North America, women decide roughly 80 percent of all consumer purchases. This means that women are in the drivers seat when it comes to moving towards sustainability policies, renewable energy and decreased consumption.
 
On a global scale, women produce half of all the food we eat and are responsible for 60 to 80 percent of household food production in developing countries.  Women are keepers of seeds and biodiversity, and in many communities are largely responsible for the water, food, and medicinal needs of their families, making them natural guardians of these most precious gifts. When we speak about achieving food sovereignty and security, we are talking about women.
 
Women’s work is often not ‘seen’ because it is happening at the local, small scale, however this is exactly what we need to meet the growing challenges presented by climate change. It is precisely the centralized, top-down, and large-scale processes of our current economic, energy, and food systems that have led to this crisis. The reclamation of power at the local level and the redesign of our economies towards circular, holistic frameworks is just what we need, and women are vital to this process. They are among the most powerful actors that hold localized knowledge and social capital necessary to implement adaptive and innovative measures.

Unfortunately women’s points of strength are not often recognized, leveraged, supported, or mobilized into action. We face a situation that is the opposite of what we need – women’s voices remain silenced and underrepresented, be it in national and international climate policymaking or within our own communities and homes. The Women’s Earth & Climate Action Network (WECAN International) and other women’s groups worldwide are working to change this.
 
As we approach the COP21 climate negotiations in Paris this December 2015, women’s experiences and solutions are more vital than ever. With this in mind, WECAN International has released a call for a Global Women’s Climate Justice Day of Action on .
 
Over the next month, and on September 29th itself, women and allies around the world will hold decentralized local actions to show resistance to environmental and social degradation, share stories surrounding the climate impacts their communities are facing, and demonstrate a variety of real solutions that are equitable and in line with the severity of our global situation.
 
The goal is to show the women’s movement for climate justice in all of its power, passion, and diversity, and to present our collective voice in such a way that world governments gathered at the UN General Assembly in September, and COP21 climate negotiations in December, are pushed to listen to our calls for justice, gender-responsive policy-making, and bold climate action.

As part of the Day of Action, women have the opportunity to sign and collect signatures on the Women’s Climate Declaration (available in 5 languages), which will be delivered to world leaders gathered at COP21 as a way of presenting women’s demands and visions for an alternative to destructive market-based solutions.
 
We know, and must push governments to see, that the window of opportunity for acting on climate change is not going to be open for much longer. Our children are watching. The lives of current and future generations are at stake. These are all reasons to get involved, but another one that we so often fail to mention is LOVE. We love this Earth, and it’s about time we stand up, change radical course, and return to our role as Earth-respecting citizens.
 
We cannot underestimate the power of people taking direct action to resist the institutions that are interfering with our democracy, freedom, health, happiness, and the very web of life itself.
 
You can add your voice to the Global Women’s Climate Justice Day of Action by organizing an action, or simply uploading a photo, video, or statement to the global submission portal on (or before!) . 

For an in depth analysis and action plan for our way forward though Paris and beyond, please see theWomen’s Climate Action Agenda.

Osprey Orielle Lake is the Founder and Executive Director of the Women’s Earth and Climate Action Network (WECAN) International and serves as Co-Chair of International Advocacy for the Global Alliance for the Rights of Nature. Follow on Twitter: @WECAN_INTL 

Click Here: kanken kids cheap

Read More

On the Verge of the Great Unraveling

November 18, 2019 | News | No Comments

Let me start with a confession. I’m old-fashioned and I have an old-fashioned profession. I’m a geo-paleontologist. That means I dig around in archives to exhume the extinct: all the empires and federations and territorial unions that have passed into history. I practically created the profession of geo-paleontology as a young scholar in 2020. (We used to joke that we were the only historians with true 2020 hindsight).  Now, my profession is becoming as extinct as its subject matter.

Today, in 2050, fewer and fewer people can recall what it was like to live among those leviathans. Back in my youth, we imagined that lumbering dinosaurs like Russia and China and the European Union would endure regardless of the global convulsions taking place around them. Of course, at that time, our United States still functioned as its name suggests rather than as a motley collection of regional fragments that today fight over a shrinking resource base.

Empires, like adolescents, think they’ll live forever. In geopolitics, as in biology, expiration dates are never visible. When death comes, it’s always a shock.

Consider the clash of the titans in World War I. Four enormous empires — the Ottoman, Austro-Hungarian, Russian, and German — went into that conflict imagining that victory would give them not just a new lease on life, but possibly even more territory to call their own. And all four came crashing down. The war was horrific enough, but the aftershocks just kept piling up the bodies. The flu epidemic of 1918-1919 alone — which soldiers unwittingly transported from the trenches to their homelands — wiped out at least 50 million people worldwide.

When dinosaurs collapse, they crush all manner of smaller creatures beneath them. No one today remembers the death throes of the last of the colonial empires in the mid-twentieth century with their staggering population transfers, fierce insurgencies, and endless proxy wars — even if the infant states that emerged from those bloody afterbirths gained at least a measure of independence.

My own specialty as a geo-paleontologist has been the post-1989 period. The break-up of the Soviet Union heralded the last phase of decolonization. So, too, did the redrawing of boundaries that took place in parts of Asia and Africa from the 1990s into the twenty-first century, producing new states like East Timor, Eritrea, South Sudan. The break-up of the Middle East, in the aftermath of the U.S. invasion of Iraq and the “Arab Spring,” followed a similar, if far more chaotic and bloody pattern, though religious extremism more than nationalist sentiment tore apart the multiethnic countries of the region.

Even in this inhospitable environment, the future still seemed to belong to the dinosaurs. Despite setbacks, the U.S. continued to loom over the rest of the planet as the “sole superpower,” with its military in constant intervention mode.  China was on the rise.  Russia seemed bent on reconstituting the old Soviet Union. The need to compete on an increasingly interconnected planet contributed to what seemed like a trend: pushing countries together to create economies of scale. The European Union (EU) deepened its integration and expanded its membership. Nations of very different backgrounds formed economic pacts like the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) and the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA). Even countries without any shared borders contemplated such joint enterprises, like the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) and, later, Brazil, Russia, India, China, and South Africa (the “BRICS” nations).

As everyone now knows, however, this spirit of integration would, in the end, go down to defeat as the bloodlands of the twentieth century gave way to the splinterlands of the twenty-first. The sense of disintegration and disunity that settled over our world came at precisely the wrong moment. To combat a host of collective problems, we needed more unity, not less. As we are all learning the hard way, a planet divided against itself will not long stand.

The Wrath of Nations

Water boils most fiercely just before it disappears. And so it is, evidently, with human affairs.

Just before all hell broke lose in 1914, the world witnessed an unprecedented explosion of global trade at levels that would not be seen again until the 1980s. Just before the Nazis took over in 1932, Germans in the Weimar Republic were enjoying an extraordinary blossoming of cultural and political liberalism. Just before the Soviet Union imploded in 1991, Soviet scholars were pointing proudly to rising rates of intermarriage among the many nationalities of the federation as a sign of ever-greater social cohesion.

And in 2015, just before the great unraveling, the world still seemed to be in the grip of what was then labeled “globalization.” The volume of world trade was at an all-time high. Facebook had created a network of 1.5 billion active users. People on every continent were dancing to Drake, watching the World Cup final, and eating sushi. At the other end of the socio-economic spectrum, more people were on the move as migrants and refugees than at any time since the end of World War II.

Borders seemed to be crumbling everywhere.

Before 2015, almost everyone believed that time’s arrow pointed in the direction of greater integration. Some hoped (and others feared) that the world was converging on ever-larger conglomerations of nations. The internationalists campaigned for a United Nations that had some actual political power. The free traders imagined a frictionless global market where identical superstores would sell the same products at all their global locations. The technotopians imagined a world united by Twitter and Instagram.

In 2015, people were so busy crossing borders — real and conceptual — that they barely registered the backlash against globalization. Officially, more and more countries had committed themselves to diversity, multiculturalism, and the cosmopolitan ideals of liberty, solidarity, and equality. But everything began to change in 2015, a phenomenon I first chronicled in my landmark study Splinterlands (Dispatch Books, 2025). The movements that came to the fore in 2015 championed a historic turn inward: the erection of walls, the enforcement of homogeneity, and the trumpeting of exclusively national virtues.

The leaders of these movements — Donald Trump in the United States, Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban, Russian President Vladimir Putin, French National Front Party leader Marine Le Pen, Indian Prime Minister Nahendra Modi, Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, and Egyptian President Abdel Fattah el-Sisi, to name just a few — were not members of a single party. They did not consider themselves part of a single movement. Indeed, they were quite skeptical of anything that smacked of transnational cooperation. Personally, they were cosmopolitans, comfortable in a variety of cultural environments, but their politics were parochial. As a group, they heralded a change in world politics still working itself out 35 years later.

Ironically enough, at the time these figures were the ones labeled “dinosaurs” because of their focus on imaginary golden ages of the past. But when history presses the rewind button, as it has for the last 35 years, it can turn reactionaries into visionaries.

Few serious thinkers during the waning days of the Cold War imagined that, in the long run, nationalism would survive as anything more significant than flag and anthem. As the historian Eric Hobsbawm concluded in 1990, that force was almost spent, or as he put it, “no longer a major vector of historical development.” Commerce and the voracious desire for wealth were expected to rub away at national differences until all that remained would be a single global marketplace of supposedly rational actors. New technologies of travel and communication would unite strangers and dissolve the passions of particularism. The enormous bloodlettings that nations visited on one another in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries would surely convince all but the lunatic that appeals to motherland and fatherland had no place in a modern society.

As it turned out, however, commerce and its relentless push for comparative advantage merely rebranded nationalism as another marketable commodity. Although travel and communication did indeed bring people together, they also increased the opportunities for misunderstanding and conflict. As a result, nationalism did not go gently into the night. Quite the opposite: it literally remapped the world we now live in.

The Fracture Lines

The fracturing of the so-called international community did not happen with one momentous crack. Rather, it proceeded much like the calving of Arctic ice masses under the pressure of global warming, leaving behind only a herd of modest ice floes. Rising geopolitical temperatures had a similar effect on the world’s map.

At first, it was difficult to understand how the war in Syria, the conflict in Ukraine, the simmering discontent in Xinjiang, the uprisings in Mali, the crisis of the Europe Union, and the upsurge in anti-immigrant sentiment in both Europe and the United States were connected. But connected they were.

The initial cracks in that now-dead global system appeared in the Middle East. As a geo-paleontologist, I must admit that I wasn’t particularly interested in those changes themselves, only in their impact on larger entities. Iraq and Syria, multiethnic countries forged in the post-colonial fires of Arab nationalism, split along ethnic and confessional lines. Under the pressure of a NATO air intervention led by the U.S., Libya similarly fell apart when its autocratic leader was killed and its arsenals were pillaged and sent to terror groups across a broad crescent of crisis. The fracturing then continued to spread — to Yemen, Egypt, Saudi Arabia, Lebanon, and Jordan. People poured out of these disintegrating countries like creatures fleeing a forest fire.

This vast flood of refugees by land and sea proved to be the tipping point for the European Union. Having expanded dramatically in the 2000s, the 28-member association hit a wall of Euroskepticism, fiscal austerity, and xenophobia. As they reacted to the rising tide of refugees, the anti-immigrant forces managed to end the Schengen system of open borders. Next to unravel was the European currency system as the highly indebted countries on the periphery of the Eurozone reasserted their fiscal sovereignty.

The Euroskeptics took heart from these developments. In 2015, the anti-immigrant Democratic Party in Sweden leaped to the top of the opinion polls for the first time. Once the epitome of tolerance and social democracy, Sweden led the great turn in Scandinavia away from the European mainland. On the heels of local elections and those for the European Parliament, the far-right National Front of Marine Le Pen became the most popular French party and, with its newfound power, began to pry apart the informal pact with Germany that had once been the engine for European integration. Euroskeptical parties consolidated power in Poland, Portugal, Hungary, and Slovakia. Desperate to curry favor with its hardcore constituents, the British Conservative Party sponsored a referendum that guided Great Britain out of the EU. What had once been only scattered voices of dissatisfaction suddenly became a rush to the exits. The EU survived for some years more — until the Acts of Dis-Integration of 2028 — but only as a shell.

The unrest in the Middle East and the unraveling of the EU had a profound impact on Russia. The last of that country’s Soviet-era politicians had been attempting to reconstruct the old federation through new Eurasian arrangements. At the same time, they were trying to expand jurisdiction over Russian-speaking populations through border wars with Ukraine, Georgia, and Moldova. But in their grab for more, they were left with less. Mother Russia could no longer corral its children, neither the Buryats of the trans-Baikal region nor the Sakha of Siberia, neither the inhabitants of westernmost Kaliningrad nor those of the maritime regions of Primorye in the far east. Moscow’s entrance into the Syrian conflict on the side of Damascus contributed to an upsurge in separatist sentiment in the trans-Caucasus republics of Chechnya and Dagestan. In the Second Great Perestroika of 2031, Russia divided along the lines we know so well today, separating its European and Asian halves and its industrial wastelands in the north from its creeping deserts in the south.

China found itself on a similar trajectory. A global economic slowdown frayed the unstated social contract — incremental improvements in prosperity in exchange for political quiescence — that the Communist Party had developed in the wake of the Tiananmen Square protests of 1989. Beijing’s crackdown on anything that smacked of “terrorism” only pushed the Uighurs of Xinjiang into open revolt. The Tibetans, too, continued to advance their claims for greater autonomy. Inner Mongolia, with almost twice as many ethnic Mongolians as Mongolia itself, also pulled at the strings that held China together. Taiwan stopped talking about cross-Straits reunification; Hong Kong reasserted its earlier status as an entrepôt city. But these rebellions along the frontiers paled in comparison to the Middle Uprising of the 2030s. In retrospect, it was obvious that the underemployed workers and farmers in China’s heartland, who had only marginally benefited from the country’s great capitalist leap forward of the late twentieth century, would attack the political order. But who would have thought that the middle could drop so quickly out of the Middle Kingdom?

The United States, as we all know, has not fallen apart. But the American empire (which U.S. leaders took such pains to deny ever existed) has effectively collapsed. Once the U.S. government went into receivership over its mountainous debt and its infrastructure began to truly collapse, its vast overseas military footprint became unsupportable. As it withdrew, Washington deputized its allies — Germany, Japan, South Korea, Saudi Arabia, and Israel — to do the same work, but they regularly worked at cross-purposes and in any case held their own national interests above those of Washington.

Meanwhile, U.S. domestic politics remained so polarized and congealed that Congress and the executive branch could not establish a consensus on how to re-energize the economy or reconceive the “national interest.” Up went higher walls to keep out foreigners and foreign products. With the exception of military affairs and immigration control, the government dwindled to the status of caretaker. Then there was the epidemic of assault rifles, armed personal drones, and WBA (weaponized biological agents), all easily downloaded at home on 3-D printers. The state lost its traditionally inviolable monopoly on violence and our society, though many refuse to acknowledge the trend, drifted into a condition closely approximating psychosis. An increasingly embittered and armed white minority seemed determined to adopt a scorched-earth policy rather than leave anything of value to its mixed-race heirs. Today, of course, the country exists in name alone, for the only policies that matter are enacted on a regional basis.

The centrifugal forces first set in motion in 2015 tore apart the great multiethnic nations in a terrifying version of Yugoslavization that spread across the planet. Farseeing pundits had predicted a wave of separatism in the 1990s. They were wrong only in terms of pace. The fissures were slower to appear, but appear they did. In South Asia, separatist movements ate away at both India and Pakistan. In Southeast Asia, Indonesia, Malaysia, and Myanmar fractured along ethnic lines. In Africa, the center could not hold, and things inevitably fell apart — in the Congo, the Central African Republic, Nigeria, and Chad, among other places.

There was much talk in the early twenty-first century of failed states like Afghanistan, Iraq, Somalia, Yemen, and Haiti. Looking back, it’s now far clearer that, in a certain sense, all states were failing. They had little chance against the governance-eroding winds of globalization from above and the ever-greater upheavals of non-state actors from below.

Perhaps under the best of environmental conditions, these forces would have pushed empires, federations, and trade pacts to the edge but no further. As it happened, however, despite conferences and manifestos and sort-of-binding agreements, the global thermometer continued to rise. The effects of climate change turned out to be the proverbial tipping point. Water shortages intensified conflict throughout China, as did food shortages in Russia. The tropics, the islands, the coastlines: all were vulnerable to the rising waters. And virtually every country entered into a pitched battle over drinking water, clean air, indispensible minerals, and arable land.

All of us have our own personal climate-change disaster stories. For instance, I lost my home in Hurricane Donald, which destroyed so much of Washington, D.C. and its suburbs in 2029. I started all over in Nebraska only to be forced to move again when the Oglala aquifer gave out in 2034, precipitating what we now call the Midwest Megadrought. And like so many others, I lost a loved one only three years ago in that terrible month of superstorms — 7/47 — which devastated such a large swath of the planet.

What no one anticipated was the impact climate change would have on nationalism. But how else would people divvy up increasingly precious natural resources? National sentiment proved to be the go-to principle for determining what “our” people deserved and those “others” didn’t. As a result, instead of becoming an atavistic remnant of another age, nationalism has proved to be this century’s most potent ideology. On an increasingly desperate planet, we face not the benevolence or tyranny of one world, but the multiple confusions of many worlds.

All That Was Solid

It was not only the multiethnic nation-state that proved untenable in our century. Everything seemed to be fracturing.

The middle class shattered. The promise of a stable job and income — the iron rice bowl in the East and the ironclad pension in the West — disappeared into a maelstrom of inequality in which the super-rich 1% effectively seceded from society while the poorest of the poor had nowhere to turn. Back in 2015, pundits loved to promote new trends like the “sharing economy” of millions of employees turned entrepreneurs or the “long tail” of a splintering consumer market. But the bottom line was grimly straightforward: the forces that could have acted to countervail the fissiparous competition of the market gradually disappeared. Gone was the guiding hand of the government. Gone were the restraining pressures of morality.

Technology certainly played a role in this transformation, first when computers and cell phones untethered individuals from fixed workplaces and then when biochips turned each individual into his or her own “work station.” The application of market principles to every facet of existence whittled away the public sphere in favor of the private one. Such dynamics at the social level also contributed to the great fracturing that took place in the international sphere.

Yes, I can anticipate your criticism. Perhaps it’s true that, in 2050, we are at a nadir of cooperation and some new form of centralization and globalization lies ahead. Clearly, the jihadis, who operate their mini-caliphates around the world, dream of uniting the faithful under a single banner. There are diplomats even today who hope to get all 300-plus members of the United Nations to agree to the sort of institutional reforms that could provide the world with some semblance of global governance. And maybe a brilliant programmer is even now creating a new “killer app” that will put every single person on the same page, literally.

As a geo-paleontologist, I am reluctant to speculate. I focus on the past, on what has actually happened. Anyone can make predictions. But none of these scenarios of future integration seems at all plausible to me. “That’s the way the cookie crumbles,” we used to say when I was a kid. And a cookie can only crumble in one direction.

Still, I would be remiss if I didn’t point out something that many have noted over the years. We have been fragmenting at precisely the time when we should be coming together, for the problems that face the planet cannot be solved by millions of individuals or masses of statelets acting alone. And yet how can we expect, with desperate millions on the move, the rise of pandemics, and the deepening of economic inequality globally, that people can unite against common existential threats? Only today can we all see clearly, as I wrote so many years ago, that the rise of the splinterlands has been humanity’s true tragedy. The inability of cultures to compromise within single states, it seems, anticipated our current moment when multiplying nation-states can’t compromise on a single planet to address our global scourges. The glue that once held us together — namely, solidarity across religion, ethnicity, and class — has lost its binding force.

At the beginning of the great unraveling, in 2015, I was still a young man. Like everyone else, I didn’t see this coming. We all lived in a common home, I thought. Some rooms were in terrible disrepair. Those living in the attic were often exposed to the elements. The house as a whole needed better insulation, more efficient appliances, solar panels on the roof, and we had indeed fallen behind on the mortgage payments. But like so many of my peers, I seldom doubted that we could scrape together the funds and the will to make the necessary repairs by asking the richer residents of the house to pay their fair share.

Thirty-five years and endless catastrophes later on a poorer, bleaker, less hospitable planet, it’s clear that we just weren’t paying sufficient attention. Had we been listening, we would have heard the termites. There, in the basement of our common home, they were eating the very foundations out from under us. Suddenly, before we knew quite what was happening, all that was solid had melted into air.

John Feffer is the author of the dystopian novel Splinterlands and the director of Foreign Policy In Focus at the Institute for Policy Studies. His new novel, Frostlands, a Dispatch Books original and book two of his Splinterlands series, has just been published. His podcast is available here.

Click Here: kenzo online españa

Read More

Strong Words, But Little Action at Arctic Summit

November 18, 2019 | News | No Comments

ANCHORAGE, Alaska – After a one-day summit in the U.S. Arctic’s biggest city, leaders from the world’s northern countries acknowledged that climate change is seriously disrupting the Arctic ecosystem, yet left without committing themselves to serious action to fight the negative impacts of global warming.

The Aug. 31 summit on ‘Global Leadership in the Arctic – Cooperation, Innovation, Engagement, and Resilience (GLACIER)’, was organised by the U.S. State Department and attended by dignitaries from 20 countries, including the eight Arctic nations – Canada, Denmark, Finland, Iceland, Norway, Russia, Sweden and United States.

Political leaders like U.S. President Barack Obama, who urged Arctic nations to take bolder action as the summit ended, came out with strong words, but stakeholders from civil society and scientific groups said the outcome came short of the tangible action needed.

“This statement (from the one-day GLACIER Arctic summit] unfortunately fails to fully acknowledge one of the grave threats to the Arctic and to the planet – the extraction and burning of fossil fuels” – Ellie Johnston, World Climate Project Manager at Climate Interactive The summit attracted the attention of environmental and indigenous groups, which criticised Obama’s reputation as a climate leader in the face of allowing offshore oil drilling in the Arctic.

Numerous protests and acts of non-violent civil disobedience in recent months have attempted to block oil company Shell from drilling; the company is currently active off the Alaskan coast.

“The recent approval of Shell’s Arctic oil drilling plans is a prime example of the disparity between President Obama’s strong rhetoric and increasing action on climate change and his administration’s fossil fuel extraction policies,” said David Turnbull, Campaigns Director for Oil Change International.

All participating countries signed a joint statement on climate change and its impact on the Arctic, after the initial reluctance of Canada and Russia, which eventually added their names.

“We take seriously warnings by scientists: temperatures in the Arctic are increasing at more than twice the average global rate,” the statement read, before going on to describe the wide range of impacts felt by Arctic communities’ landscapes, culture and well-being.

“As change continues at an unprecedented rate in the Arctic – increasing the stresses on communities and ecosystems in already harsh environments – we are committed more than ever to protecting both terrestrial and marine areas in this unique region, and our shared planet, for generations to come.”

However, the statement lacked concrete commitments, even on crucial topics like fossil fuel exploration in the Arctic, leaving climate experts with the feeling that it could have been more ambitious or have offered more specific, tangible commitments on the part of countries.

“I appreciate the rhetoric and depth of acknowledgement of the climate crisis,” the World Climate Project Manager at Climate Interactive, Ellie Johnston, told IPS. “Yet this statement unfortunately fails to fully acknowledge one of the grave threats to the Arctic and to the planet – the extraction and burning of fossil fuels.”

“This is particularly relevant as nations and companies jockey for access to drilling in our historically icy Arctic seas which have now become more accessible because of warming,” she said. “Drilling for fossil fuels leads to more warming, which leads to more drilling. This is one feedback loop we can stop.”

Oil and gas companies were encouraged – but not required –to voluntarily take on more stringent policies and join the Climate and Clean Air Coalition’s Oil and Gas Methane Partnership, an initiative to help companies reduce their emissions of methane and other short-lived climate pollutants.

U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry addressed participants – members from indigenous communities, government representatives, scientists, and non-governmental organizations – at the opening of the summit. “The Arctic is in many ways a thermostat,” he said. “We already see [it] having a profound impact on the rest of the planet.”

Kerry also attempted to drum up action ahead of the COP21 United Nations climate change negotiations in Paris this December, urging governments to “try to come up with a truly ambitious and truly global climate agreement.”

He added that the Paris conference “is not the end of the road […] Our hope is that everyone can leave this conference today with a heightened sense of urgency and a better understanding of our collective responsibility to do everything we can to deal with the harmful impacts of climate change.”

In a closing address to summit participants, President Obama repeatedly said “we are not doing enough.” He outlined the stark impacts of a future with business-as-usual climate change: thawing permafrost, forest fires and dangerous feedback loops. “We will condemn our children to a planet beyond their capacity to repair … any leader willing to take a gamble on a future like that is not fit to lead,” he stated.

However, neither Kerry nor Obama acknowledged, as many environmental groups have pointed out, that the United States’ current greenhouse gas emissions reduction commitment falls nearly halfway short of what the country must do in order to stay within the Paris conference goal of a 2oC warming limit.

While participants emphasised engagement from affected communities, the summit itself did not manifest engagement with those communities: less than one-third of the panellists and presenters were either indigenous or female, and only one woman of colour was present.

“It would have been nice to hear more from indigenous women or women of colour,” Princess Daazrhaii, member of the Gwich’in Nation and strong advocate for the protection of the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge, told IPS. “The Arctic is more diverse than what I felt like was represented at the conference.”

“As life-givers and as mothers, many of us nurse our children. We know for a fact that women in the Arctic are more susceptible to the persistent organic pollutants (POPs) that are bound to the air we breathe. Violence against women is another issue that I feel gets exacerbated when there are threats to our ecosystem.”

All individuals talked to appreciated the conference’s emphasis on climate change as a significant problem, yet all of them also expressed a desire for the United States – and governments around the world – to do more.

“[Climate change] is what brings human beings together,” Daazrhaii said. “We’re all in this together. And we have to work on this together.”