October 9, 2020 |
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A series of heartbreaking photos showing a young boy—believed to be a refugee from Syria—washed up on the beach in Turkey after a failed attempt to cross the sea to Greece is being shared and discussed across the world on Wednesday after many media outlets decided to publish the images as a way to confront Europeans—and humanity at large—with a “stark reminder” that “more and more refugees are dying in their desperation to flee persecution and reach safety.”
“This tragic image of a little boy who’s lost his life fleeing Syria is shocking and is a reminder of the dangers children and families are taking in search of a better life. This child’s plight should concentrate minds and force the EU to come together and agree to a plan to tackle the refugee crisis.” —Justin Forsyth, Save the Children
Under the social media hashtag #KiyiyaVuranInsanlik (which translates from the Turkish as “humanity washes ashore”), the photos have spurred a global outcry surrounding the plight of those families and individuals who have become victims to the “callous indifference” of western nations and what international aid groups have decried as a broken system for the world’s ballooning refugee population.
As the Guardian reports:
The two images described can be see here and here. (: these images are graphic and may be distressing to view.)
Though only one young life out of the nearly three thousand people estimated to have died so far this year while attempting to reach Europe by crossing the Mediterranean Sea, the pictures of the young boy appear to have captured the collective sorrow of those sickened by a world in which children—with or without their families—are forced to face such dangers in order to escape the threats of war and impoverishment that have made their homelands unlivable.
( Despite agreeing with the sentiment that such images should be seen as a way for the general public to be confronted with the horrors wrought by endless war, a global assault on human rights, and the scourge of poverty and statelessness that results, Common Dreams has decided not to publish the images on our pages given their ubiquity elsewhere and in deference to the unidentified child’s family and anyone who may be needlessly traumatized by viewing such images.)
Responding to the impact the photo was having, Justin Forsyth, CEO of Save the Children, told the Guardian the “tragic image of a little boy who’s lost his life fleeing Syria is shocking and is a reminder of the dangers children and families are taking in search of a better life. This child’s plight should concentrate minds and force the EU to come together and agree to a plan to tackle the refugee crisis.”
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Explaining why it published the un-edited photos prominently on its homepage, the UK-based Independent said it made the decision “because, among the often glib words about the ‘ongoing migrant crisis,’ it is all too easy to forget the reality of the desperate situation facing many refugees.”
While dramatic images of desperate refugees “emerge almost every day,” the newspaper continued, “the attitude of Europe’s policymakers and much of the public have continued to harden.”
In an open letter to “anyone who ever talked down the refugee crisis,” the Independent‘s sister publication, i100, went further on the necessity of the general public seeing the photos. Addressed to a cross-section of individuals and groups of people who have framed the plight of refugees seeking asylum in Europe as a “migrant crisis”—specifically [British Prime Minister] David Cameron, Theresa May, Nigel Farage, the Daily Express, protesters in Germany, Katie Hopkins, Philip Hammond, anyone who has ever written a disparaging comment on a Mail Online article, police in Hungary, the governments of Bulgaria, the Czech Republic, Estonia, Hungary, the Netherlands, Poland and Slovakia, the people of Britain, Czech police, tourists in Kos, Tony Abbott, cartoonists, Ukip MEPs and people on Twitter—the letter chastises those who have disparaged and dehumanized those desperate enough to make the journey while “spreading anti-migrant and anti-refugee sentiment” across Europe and beyond. It states:
“Enough is enough,” the letter concluded. “Attitudes have to change. See the human and not the imagined danger that anything is under threat apart from these people’s lives. A refugee crisis unlike any other since the Second World War is unfurling on our doorstep and now is the time to help people who need it the most.”
Despite the distressing and repetitive imagery, the social media conversation surrounding the images continues on Twitter and other platforms.
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October 8, 2020 |
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Speaker Paul RyanPaul Davis RyanBush, Romney won’t support Trump reelection: NYT Twitter joins Democrats to boost mail-in voting — here’s why Lobbying world MORE (R-Wis.) is dispersing funds straight to House Republicans’ campaign committees on Tuesday as the GOP gears up for the 2018 midterm elections, according to a new report.
Ryan is sending $1.2 million from his own political accounts to Republican lawmakers facing primary challengers and who have general election competition, Politico Playbook reported. Checks will go out to roughly half of the House Republican Conference, the news outlet added.
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Ryan’s political director reportedly emailed the lawmakers’ staffs telling them they could pick up the checks at the Republican National Committee headquarters.
Ryan in March also sent a record $7 million to the National Republican Congressional Committee as lawmakers prepare for the 2018 cycle.
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Republicans are also working to ensure that several seats vacated by Trump Cabinet members remain in GOP hands.
Scott Wong contributed to this report.
October 8, 2020 |
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The Pew Research Center is out with the findings of a new global survey which shows that—in contrast to nearly half the nations surveyed—those in the U.S do not see climate change as a top threat.
Forty-two percent of respondents in the U.S. said they were very concerned about global climate change. Ranking higher were perceived threats from ISIS (68 percent), Iran’s nuclear program (62 percent), cyber-attacks (59 percent), global economic instability (51 percent), and tensions with Russia (43 percent).
Only territorial disputes with China ranked lower than climate change at 30 percent.
Partisan divide was clear, however, with 62 percent of Democrats seeing climate change as a top threat, compared to 20 percent of Republicans.
In the U.S., Europe and the Middle East, ISIS was seen as a top threat. In the UK, for example, 66 percent say they are very concerned about ISIS, a level of fear shared by 84 percent of respondents in Lebanon and 70 percent in Germany.
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But global climate change is seen as a top threat 19 of the 40 countries surveyed, including those on the frontlines of the crisis, like the Philippines, Burkina Faso, Brazil, and Peru. Looking at regions as a whole, respondents in Latin America expressed the most concern over climate change with 61 percent seeing it as a very serious threat. And in half of the Asian countries surveyed, climate change was seen as a bigger threat than the other issues.
This widespread view of climate change as a top threat may call for a shift-change in dealing with greenhouse gas emitters, Dr. Michael Dorsey, a member of the Club of Rome and an expert on global governance and sustainability, told IPS News.
“If publics fear climate change more than terrorism, we might have to re-think collective and regulatory approaches for entities responsible for carbon pollution.
“If we accept the fact that carbon pollution drives both human mortality and morbidity, compromises ecosystems, and threatens society, then institutions and firms that produce carbon pollution, as well as those who opt to finance carbon polluters are akin to those who work with entities engaged in and financing terrorism,” Dorsey said.
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October 8, 2020 |
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As Planned Parenthood grapples with a series of attacks against it by anti-choice forces, the political stakes are intensifying as the Republican-controlled U.S. Senate readies to vote on a measure that would strip all federal funding from the non-profit women’s health organization.
Three covertly-filmed videos showing Planned Parenthood officials discussing fetal tissue donations have prompted some in Congress to renew the debate over the government’s financial support of the organization. Senate Republicans are gearing up to vote on a bill that would cut off federal funding to Planned Parenthood, which already receives limited subsidies from the government and is prohibited from spending taxpayer money on abortions.
The bill, sponsored by Sen. Rand Paul (R-Ky.) and introduced on Tuesday, states: “Notwithstanding any other provision of law, no federal funds may be made available to Planned Parenthood Federation of America, or any of its affiliates.”
One GOP senator who was familiar with the bill said that under the new legislation, funds would be redirected to “other groups that deal with women’s health,” CNN reports.
It is unclear whether the bill would pick up enough Democratic support to surpass the necessary 60 votes. Sens. Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.) and Harry Reid (D-Nev.) both criticized the bill, according to CNN.
“Look, the bottom line is, Planned Parenthood does a great job protecting women’s health,” Schumer said. “And I think, if you look at the polling data, the American people are overwhelmingly in favor of allowing Planned Parenthood to continue funding women’s health.”
The House of Representatives appears unlikely to vote on defunding Planned Parenthood before the August recess despite mounting pressure on Speaker John Boehner (R-Ohio). And President Barack Obama would almost certainly veto any such bill, although more details on the legislation are expected to emerge this week.
Planned Parenthood also confirmed this week that it was hit by anti-choice hackers who gained access to the healthcare nonprofit’s employee database. The organization called on the Justice Department and the FBI to investigate the attack.
“Extremists have broken laws, harassed our doctors and patients, produced hack videos and now are claiming to have committed a gross invasion of privacy—one that, if true, could potentially put our staff members at risk,” Planned Parenthood executive vice president Dawn Laguens said on Tuesday.
As for the battle it now faces in Congress, Planned Parenthood is rallying supporters to call on lawmakers not to be “fooled by [the] latest smear job” against the organization.
“Once again, a group of anti-abortion activists has attacked Planned Parenthood doctors, nurses, and patients with false accusations. And once again, its political allies are seizing on these accusations as an excuse to push the same dangerous agenda—ban abortion, shut down health centers and cut women off from care,” Planned Parenthood stated in a petition to Congress circulating this week.
The petition continues:
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October 8, 2020 |
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Pope Francis’s bold call to tackle climate change and save the planet appears to be in conflict with U.S. Catholic churches’ millions of dollars of investments in fossil fuels industries, including fracking, a new Reuters report shows.
Journalist Richard Valdmanis combed through church disclosures and portfolios and found: “Dioceses covering Boston, Rockville Center on Long Island, Baltimore, Toledo, and much of Minnesota have all reported millions of dollars in holdings in oil and gas stocks in recent years.”
“The holdings tend to make up between 5 and 10 percent of the dioceses’ overall equities investments,” Valdmanis noted, “similar to the 7.1 percent weighting of energy companies on the S&P 500 index, according to the documents.”
Furthermore, the investigation finds that, while the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops provides ethical guidelines discouraging investments in firms related to contraception, abortion, pornography, and war, it does not issue similar warnings about fossil fuels stocks.
This is despite Pope Francis’s 180-page Papal Encyclical, a formal letter to Catholic bishops released in June, underscoring the moral imperative to take aggressive steps to address climate change. “This home of ours is being ruined and that damages everyone, especially the poor,” he wrote, adding: “The problem is aggravated by a model of development based on the intensive use of fossil fuels, which is at the heart of the worldwide energy system.”
The Archdiocese of Chicago acknowledged to Reuters the contradiction between the pope’s message and its over $100 million worth of fossil fuel investments. “We are beginning to evaluate the implications of the encyclical across multiple areas, including investments and also including areas such as energy usage and building materials,” Betsy Bohlen, chief operating officer for the Archdiocese, told Reuters.
In response to growing grassroots campaigns across the globe, over 300 institutions worldwide have committed to divest from fossil fuels, roughly a quarter of them faith-based organizations. The United Church of Canada announced Tuesday it will be the latest religious institution to divest, and the Catholic institution Georgetown University voted in early June, two weeks before the encyclical, to halt its direct investment of its endowment funds in coal mining companies.
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October 8, 2020 |
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Russia must compensate the Netherlands for its seizure of a Greenpeace ship two years ago, which led to the arrest of 30 international environmental activists, a court in the Hague ruled on Monday.
The Permanent Court of Arbitration (PCA) ruled that Russia’s September 2013 seizure of the Arctic Sunrise and the jailing of those on board was unlawful, and said the Netherlands “is entitled to compensation with interest for material damage” to the ship and the crew, who became known as the Arctic 30.
Activists had scaled an offshore oil rig owned by Russian energy company Gazprom in a protest against Arctic drilling. In response, Russian authorities intercepted Greenpeace’s vessel in international waters and took the crew into custody at gunpoint, sparking international outcry over what many saw as excessive and hostile treatment of the peaceful demonstrators and journalists.
Russia returned the ship to the Netherlands last year, but not before detaining the activists for months.
Monday’s ruling found that Russia had violated some of the requirements of the International Tribunal for the Law of the Sea (ITLOS), which had ordered authorities to promptly release the Arctic Sunrise and the protesters. Russia must also pay back the bail money raised by the Dutch people to free the detained protesters.
“Russia had failed to satisfy the ‘promptness’ of the requirements of the ITLOS,” the PCA said, adding that this “amounted to a breach of Russia’s obligations under the convention.”
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Greenpeace International counsel Daniel Simons said the ruling “sets an important precedent.”
“Governments exist to uphold the rule of law, not to act as armed security agents for the oil industry,” Simons said. “This kind of behavior is not limited to the Russian authorities; across the world environmental activists are facing serious intimidation from those who wish to silence them.”
One of the protesters, Australian Colin Russell, was detained for three months. On Monday, he told ABC Australia that he had no regrets over his participation in the action. However, he added, the ruling “puts a closure to what happened on that day, but it really doesn’t take away from the fact that the Russians have treated us in that way.”
“We were basically given an amnesty for some crime that we never committed, and we were never tried for,” he said.
Russell’s wife Christine added, “I think it’s a great step for freedom of speech. This is just vindication you know that it’s not wrong to want to stand up and fight for the future of our planet.”
Dutch Foreign Minister Bert Koenders told Agence France-Presse, “Freedom of expression and the right to demonstrate are issues of great importance to the Netherlands which we’ll defend.”
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October 8, 2020 |
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Responding to a growing call to get money out of politics—and strong policy stances by her more progressive rivals—Democratic candidate Hillary Clinton announced Tuesday that should she be elected president, she would work to stem the influence of big-monied donors and overturn Citizen’s United.
“We have to end the flood of secret, unaccountable money that is distorting our elections, corrupting our political system, and drowning out the voices of too many everyday Americans,” Clinton said in a statement released by her campaign. “Our democracy should be about expanding the franchise, not charging an entrance fee. It starts with overturning the Supreme Court’s Citizens United decision, and continues with structural reform to our campaign finance system so there’s real sunshine and increased participation.”
The full plan, which the candidate will reportedly roll out sometime later this week, calls for “the overturning of 2010’s Citizens United v FEC decision that paved the way for the creation of super PACs; the implementation of a more rigorous political spending disclosure regime; and a new public matching system for small donations to presidential and congressional campaigns,” Politico reports.
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Progressive advocates of campaign finance reform, who have pushed the candidates to take such positions, welcomed Clinton’s announcement. However, more skeptical observers also noted that her history of big-money ties runs the risk of undermining the substance of her rhetoric.
“Clinton is in an awkward position on campaign finance,” writes Los Angeles Times reporter Evan Halper. “She is calling for a reversal of the court’s decision, vowing to nominate justices who would uphold limits on campaign spending. She has also said she would push for a constitutional amendment if the court will not bend.”
“But,” Halper adds, “the candidate herself is taking advantage of the openings the court created as well as the laxity of the Federal Election Commission to raise eye-popping amounts of cash.”
As Jon Schwarz wrote at the Intercept last month:
Indeed, in the second quarter of 2015, Clinton’s campaign raised nearly $50 million—more than any other Democrat or Republican contender. And Priorities USA Action, the primary Super PAC backing her bid, raised $15.6 million in the first half of 2015.
In comparison, Senator Bernie Sanders, Clinton’s top competitor for the Democratic nomination, has from the outset of his campaign refused to accept support from Super PACs. Vox’s Jonathan Allen argues that the surprising success of Sanders’ campaign has pushed Clinton to take such a strong stance on campaign finance reform.
Clinton’s announcement also comes about a week after another Democratic rival, former Maryland governor Martin O’Malley signed a pledge by campaign finance advocacy group Democracy Matters to support publicly financed elections—a promise which Sanders has also signed, but the frontrunner has yet to make. Further, O’Malley has made it one of the 15 goals of his campaign to institute publicly financed congressional campaigns within five years.
In a statement following the announcement, Kurt Walters, campaign manager of the money in politics reform organization Rootstrikers, commended the proposal. However, he noted that the former Sectary of State, known for her strong ties to Wall Street, must follow through by surrounding herself with people who also want to advance an agenda of getting money out of politics.
“While it’s encouraging to see Sec. Clinton start to lay out concrete proposals for money in politics reform, it’s important to keep in mind what she wrote last week: personnel is policy,” Walters said. “Sec. Clinton can show she is truly serious about this vital issue—during the campaign and beyond—by putting personnel in place with a track record of advancing reform and standing up to big corporations trying to keep their chokehold over the system.”
And David Donnelly, president and CEO of open democracy group Every Voice, said that her plan makes it clear that Clinton “recognizes that in order to create government of, by, and for the people—not just the wealthy campaign funders—it’s crucial to amplify the voices of regular voters.”
Donnelly added, “That’s why Clinton should actively campaign on this platform and push these solutions to the center of the debate in the days, weeks, and months to come.”
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October 8, 2020 |
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Striking down a state effort to “politically interfere” with a woman’s right to choose, a federal appeals court on Monday declared a Wisconsin law unconstitutional in a ruling reproductive rights advocates say is both a “victory” and an important precedent for an upcoming Supreme Court decision.
In his searing rebuke, Judge Richard Posner with the 7th Circuit Court of Appeals, said the law was a “clear flouting of Roe v. Wade.”
The ruling applied to a measure signed by Republican Gov. Scott Walker in 2013, known as a TRAP law—short for “targeted regulation of abortion providers.” It stipulated that an abortion provider must have admitting privileges at a local hospital, mirroring policies passed in 10 other states.
In the opinion, Judge Posner echoed the concern of medical experts, who argued that the political maneuver both threatened a woman’s constitutional right and endangered her health.
“What makes no sense is to abridge the constitutional right to an abortion on the basis of spurious contentions regarding women’s health,” Posner stated.
Indeed, during the federal trial, an independent, court-appointed medical expert said of the Wisconsin law: “I think it is an unacceptable experiment to see if you decrease access (to abortion) and see if more women die. It is not acceptable. It is not ethical.”
Following Monday’s ruling, Jennifer Dalven, director of the ACLU’s Reproductive Freedom Project, said, “The federal appeals court in Wisconsin recognized what the medical experts have been saying all along: These laws aren’t about protecting women’s health, they are about shutting down clinics and preventing a woman who has decided to have an abortion from actually getting one.”
Monday’s 2-1 ruling blocks a state effort to revive the law after it was struck down by a lower court in March.
Texas is facing a U.S. Supreme Court battle over its “draconian” version of the TRAP law, in a similar case said to have wide implications for national abortion rights. The Texas law has forced the closure of over half of the state’s women’s health clinics and, according to researchers, driven up to 240,000 women in the state to dangerously attempt to end pregnancies on their own.
Had the Wisconsin law taken effect, at least one of the state’s four remaining abortion providers would have been forced to close immediately. Advocates say the resulting backlog would have “delay[ed] procedures by up to 10 weeks, forcing abortions later in pregnancy, if a woman is able to have one at all.” Earlier this year, Walker signed a bill banning abortion after 20 weeks of pregnancy with an extremely narrow exception for medical emergencies.
In a statement Monday, Cecile Richards, president of the Planned Parenthood Federation of America, said the Wisconsin ruling was “an important victory for women’s health and rights.”
“Laws restricting abortion hurt women—as we’ve seen in states like Texas, where restrictions are already forcing women to end pregnancies on their own, without medical assistance,” Richards said. “This is what we all feared would happen, and we’re deeply concerned that we’ll see this more and more if the Supreme Court does not intervene.”
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October 8, 2020 |
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Honda could transfer the development of its F1 engine to Red Bull from 2022 and therefore establish a continuation program between the latter’s teams and the Japanese manufacturer.
Honda announced last week its exit from F1 at the end of the 2021 season, a decision that leaves Red Bull Racing and Scuderia AlphaTauri in need of new engine supply deals.
But Honda F1 boss Masashi Yamamoto has suggested that an alternative form of collaboration between Red Bull and the engine supplier could replace the pair’s current partnership.
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“Honda is happy to talk to them if they need us in any way, not only about the power unit but about other things as well,” Yamamoto told website The Race.
“To support AlphaTauri and Red Bull for their programme after 2021 in any way, we’re happy to cooperate.
“As Honda we had so many things from the teams, so we want to give it back somehow in a nice way for the future.”
Bringing an engine development program in-house at Red Bull would require significant financial and human resources investment, and perhaps add a lot of weight to the energy drink company’s F1 program, not to mention concerns on the part of Honda about safeguarding the manufacturer’s intellectual property.
But Yamamoto said that any inquiries by Red Bull about a potential continuation program managed directly by the latter will be conveyed to Honda’s top brass.
“If that kind of request is made from the team, I am ready to speak to Japan,” he said. “I personally want to support [what Red Bull and AlphaTauri do] as much as possible.”
Read also: Marko and Mateschitz knew about Honda exit ‘for a long time’
Honda’s immediate focus is on the remainder of the 2020 season and on 2021, when a new power unit will be introduced with the aim of helping Red Bull fight for the championship.
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“We still have seven more races to go this year first and we have various things we like to try for next year as well,” ensured Yamamoto.
“Next year we will try to fight for the championship and have a good ending to our story.
“For next year, we will not reduce any people from our project. We are going to develop more. And we will make the biggest effort in order to win as much as possible.
“We will just keep pushing till the end.”
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October 7, 2020 |
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Hillary ClintonHillary Diane Rodham ClintonWhite House accuses Biden of pushing ‘conspiracy theories’ with Trump election claim Biden courts younger voters — who have been a weakness Trayvon Martin’s mother Sybrina Fulton qualifies to run for county commissioner in Florida MORE gathered top campaign staffers’ emails after her 2008 loss to Barack ObamaBarack Hussein ObamaHarris grapples with defund the police movement amid veep talk Five ways America would take a hard left under Joe Biden Valerie Jarrett: ‘Democracy depends upon having law enforcement’ MORE, according to a new book.
Clinton had one of her aides download the emails of her top campaign staff so she could assess what went wrong during the 2008 campaign, The Hill’s Amie Parnes and Sidewire’s Jonathan Allen report in “Shattered: Inside Hillary Clinton’s Doomed Campaign.”
By reviewing the emails, Clinton wanted “to see who was talking to who, who was leaking to who,” a source
told the authors.
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Two staffers from the 2008 campaign, Guy Cecil and Mark Penn, were not brought into the fold for the 2016 campaign. According to the book, Cecil corresponded with media members using his campaign email.
“I was struck by how good of a sense she had before I walked in there of the problems that were going on,” a Clinton aide told the authors.
“She had a mosaic pieced together that if you read a transcript of it, you would have thought it was someone who had sat at headquarters every day, and it was remarkably accurate. She just had it pegged.”
Following the loss to President Obama, Clinton conducted an autopsy in the summer of 2008 to analyze “deficiencies” in her campaign.