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Ye are of your father the devil, and the lusts of your father ye will do. He was a murderer from the beginning, and abode not in the truth, because there is no truth in him. When he speaketh a lie, he speaketh of his own: for he is a liar, and the father of it. – John 8.44

“I will make those who are of the synagogue of Satan, who claim to be Jews though they are not, but are liars—I will make them come and fall down at your feet and acknowledge that I have loved you.” Rev 3.9

“I know thy works, and tribulation, and poverty, (but thou art rich) and I know the blasphemy of them which say they are Jews, and are not, but are the synagogue of Satan.” Rev. 2.9

"But when he saw many of the Pharisees and Sadducees come to his baptism, he said unto them, O generation of vipers, who hath warned you to flee from the wrath to come." Matthew 3:7

“For he is not a Jew who is one outwardly, nor is circumcision that which is outward in the flesh. But he is a Jew who is one inwardly; and circumcision is that which is of the heart, by the Spirit, not by the letter; and his praise is not from men, but from God.” – Romans 2:28-29

"I and my Father are one,[31] Then the Jews took up stones again to stone him. JOHN 10:30-31

For you, brothers and sisters, became imitators of the churches of God in Christ Jesus that are in Judea, for you suffered the same things from your own compatriots as they did from the Jews, who killed both the Lord Jesus and the prophets, and drove us out; they displease God and oppose everyone by hindering us from speaking to the Gentiles so that they may be saved. Thus they have constantly been filling up the measure of their sins; but God’s wrath has overtaken them at last. - Thessalonians 2:14-16

For we wrestle not against flesh and blood, but against principalities, against powers, against the rulers of the darkness of this world, against spiritual wickedness in high places. - Ephesians 6:12

GOD cursed the Satanic Jews out of Jerusalem for life. Jesus arrived and focused on Jerusalem because it was the most unholy, evil, place on earth... still is today.

The Nomadic Turks (ashkeNAZIS) have been behind all the Evil in the world since Cain's children... using their News Networks to create the News, and set the stage, to blame their opponents, for everything evil they do, across the globe.



Jewish Communist Dictum:- "Accuse the enemy of those crimes you are guilty of"

1.PROBLEM 2.REACTION 3.SOLUTION.

The Elite Jews create the illness, then sell the Cure. They create Chaos & Terrorism, then sell the solution... for more control and power.

Islam and Christianity have become servants of the Jews. Acting as physical and spiritual cattle for the Jews to harvest in building their Global Satanic Kingdom.

If I converted to Buddhism, does that make me Chinese? If I converted to Hinduism, does that make me Indian? When Khazarians (Turks) converted to Judaism in 740 BC and stole the true Semite Israelite Greek Aegean identity, did that make the counterfeit Jews Hebrew? Well, the Jew World Order seems to think so. They crucified Jesus Christ for exposing them.

The invention of the Muslim Terrorist by our Jewish Governments... to keep us in fear, and to justify raping the World, and slaughtering billions of innocent families in every country for power and control...for their 2 horned Gods.

Every Religion Church and Mosque has been infiltrated by the Jews. How do you know? ... if your Church has not discussed the below phrases by Christ... then it has been compromised.

Yemeni army releases pictures of Saudi troops, Sudanese mercs captured during Jizan operation

By VT Editors -June 15, 2021

This picture released by the media bureau of Yemen’s Operations Command Center on June 14, 2021 shows some Saudi troops and Sudanese mercenaries captured during a recent operation in Saudi Arabia’s Jizan.

The media bureau of Yemen’s Operations Command Center has published the pictures and interviews of a number of Saudi troops and Sudanese mercenaries captured during a recent operation in Saudi Arabia’s Jizan region, with an eye to swapping them with Yemeni prisoners held by the Saudi-led coalition forces.

Press TV: In their confessions broadcast on Yemen’s al-Masirah television, the captives identified themselves, and talked about military units they were affiliated with.

They said they were being treated humanely at the hands of the Yemeni Armed Forces and fighters from Popular Committees, and assured their families that they were in good health.Spokesman: Yemeni forces’ drone carried out new attack on Saudi Arabia’s Abha Intl. Airport

The spokesman for Yemeni Armed Forces says army troops have carried out a retaliatory drone strike against Saudi Arabia’s Abha International Airport.

They also appealed to Saudi authorities to secure their freedom, describing the Saudi-led military campaign against Yemen as “unjust and unreasonable.”

They were captured after Yemeni troops and fighters from allied Popular Committees carried out a major military operation in Saudi Arabia’s strategic Jizan region over the past few days, establishing control over many military sites.

Dozens of Saudi army troops, Sudanese mercenaries and Saudi-sponsored militiamen loyal to Yemen’s former president Abd Rabbuh Mansur Hadi were either killed or captured in the process, and large quantities of munitions and military equipment were seized from them.

A military source said Yemeni army forces wrested control over MBC mountains, in addition to Tabab al-Fadhia, al-Tabba al-Bayda, al-Qambora, al-Amoud, Tawaleq and Eastern Qa’im Sayab areas during the multi-pronged operation.

The source said more than 80 Saudi army troops and Sudanese mercenaries were killed in the offensives, while 29 military vehicles were destroyed and set on fire.Saudis seek ‘face-saving way out’ of their ‘unwinnable war’ on Yemen: ICG

Richard Atwood, the interim head of the International Crisis Group, says Riyadh’s war against Yemen “generates fury” toward the Saudi rulers.

Saudi Arabia, backed by the US and regional allies, launched a devastating war on Yemen in March 2015, with the goal of bringing Hadi’s government back to power and crushing popular Ansarullah movement.

Yemeni armed forces and allied Popular Committees have, however, gone from strength to strength against the Saudi-led invaders, and left Riyadh and its allies bogged down in the country.

The Saudi war has left hundreds of thousands of Yemenis dead, and displaced millions more. The war has also destroyed Yemen’s infrastructure and spread famine and infectious diseases across the Arab country.

ABOUT VT EDITOR

SVT EditorsVeterans Today

VT Editors is a General Posting account managed by Jim W. Dean and Gordon Duff. All content herein is owned and copyrighted by Jim W. Dean and Gordon Duff

[email protected]

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Announcing Out Of Mind New Daily Newsletter on Follow It!

» Announcing Out Of Mind New Daily Newsletter on Follow It!
Announcing Out Of Mind New Daily Newsletter on Follow It! EmptyYesterday at 12:11 pm by PurpleSkyz

» Klamath Water Basin drought impacting farmers, concerning Native American Tribes
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» Contacting ET is ‘reckless’, say astronomers
Announcing Out Of Mind New Daily Newsletter on Follow It! EmptyYesterday at 9:10 am by PurpleSkyz

» Physicians For Informed Consent Release Safety & Efficacy Data of The Pfizer-BioNTech Vaccine
Announcing Out Of Mind New Daily Newsletter on Follow It! EmptyYesterday at 8:49 am by PurpleSkyz

» More Jab Fatalities
Announcing Out Of Mind New Daily Newsletter on Follow It! EmptyYesterday at 8:25 am by PurpleSkyz

» FBI hypes QAnon threat again, says some conspiracy theorists ‘likely’ to attack Democrats
Announcing Out Of Mind New Daily Newsletter on Follow It! EmptyYesterday at 8:16 am by PurpleSkyz

» CDC Caught Cooking the Books
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» What Happens if the Election Audits Go Trump’s Way?
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» Good People (And A Critter) Doing Good Things
Announcing Out Of Mind New Daily Newsletter on Follow It! EmptyYesterday at 7:56 am by PurpleSkyz

» The F-ing President Has F-ing Dementia
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» DEAD PEOPLE
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» “All Seeing Eye”
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» ROGER WATERS SAYS “FUCK YOU” TO MARK ZUCKERBERG
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» AstraZeneca’s COVID Jab Should Be Halted For People Over 60: EMA
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» How a Respected Pediatrician Lost His Medical License — Because He Supported Informed Consent
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» Snordster – Fear Factor
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» UFO NEWS ~ Glowing Object Over Seoul, South Korea plus MORE
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» Drone caught two UFO Fastwalkers over Moah, Utah
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» Sci-Fi Documentary: ‘Reptilians Are Waging War On Mankind from the Space Between Dimensions’
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» Inventor of mRNA Vaccine Technology Explains ‘How to Save the World, in Three Easy Steps’
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» G7 Pushes Mass Extermination
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» College to charge unvaccinated students $1,500 ‘Health & Safety’ fee
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It will end in 2025

It will end in 2025. As shown on p5 of this World Bank document.

http://documents1.worldbank.org/curated/en/882781602861047266/pdf/World-COVID-19-Strategic-Preparedness-and-Response-Program-SPRP-using-the-Multiphase-Programmatic-Approach-MPA-Project-Additional-Financing.pdf

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ACH (1538) Dr. Matthew Raphael Johnson – Whatever Happened To “I Disagree With What You Said, But I’ll Defend To The Death Your Right To Say It”?

EURO FOLK RADIO
EURO FOLK RADIO
ACH (1538) Dr. Matthew Raphael Johnson – Whatever Happened To “I Disagree With What You Said, But I’ll Defend To The Death Your Right To Say It”?

In today’s show originally broadcast on June 16 2021, Andy is joined by Dr. Matthew Raphael Johnson for a show entitled, “Whatever Happened To ‘I Disagree With What You Said, But I’ll Defend To The Death Your Right To Say It’?”

We discussed: the recent G7 Summit and what we can expect from today’s meeting between Vladimir Putin and Joe Biden; how cancel culture has been around for a very long time; why Boris Yeltsin was the Joe Biden of the 90’s; the immorality of the West; how the attacks on our God given rights to free speech are driven by the monopolistic private companies that control our governments, judiciaries, and mainstream media; and many other topics.

Click Here For Matt’s Website

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Report: Perspex Screens Installed to Stop COVID May Have Actually Increased Its Spread

A new poll which included over 2,000 participants finds that a clear majority of Brits – 54 per cent – think COVID-19 was leaked from the Wuhan lab, with just 25 per cent saying they don’t believe that to be the case.

The survey, which was was conducted by JL, found that an additional 21 per cent say they don’t know where the virus originated.

The results of the poll contradict statements made recently by Prime Minister Boris Johnson and Foreign Secretary Dominic Raab, who both said they doubted the lab leak theory.

As we previously highlighted, an even higher number of Americans – 58 per cent – also believe that the virus was leaked from the Wuhan Institute of Virology, with even 43% of Democrats sharing that view.

Almost a quarter of Americans also believe that the virus was deliberately created and leaked by the lab, not that it escaped accidentally.

For the best part of a year, the mainstream media, the Biden administration and social media networks dismissed the lab leak hypothesis as a “debunked conspiracy theory” and those who circulated it faced ostracization and deplatforming.

On Monday night, comedian John Stewart joked with Stephen Colbert that the lab leak theory was obviously true, which is somewhat of a shift given that the liberal elite framed the whole issue as a piece of Trumpian fake news for most of last year.

Despite the fact that investigations into the lab are ongoing, the former head of MI6 Sir Richard Dearlove warned that the Communist Chinese government has likely already destroyed the evidence.

“We don’t know that’s what’s happened, but a lot of data has probably been destroyed or made to disappear so it’s going to be difficult to prove definitely the case for a gain-of-function chimera being the cause of the pandemic,” Dearlove noted.

As we highlight in the video below, the doctor who was tasked with investigating the Wuhan lab by the WHO (he spent a mere 3 hours doing so) was also empowered by Facebook to censor information about the lab leak theory.

In an April 2020 email to Dr. Anthony Fauci, Dr. Peter Daszak thanked Fauci for dismissing the entire issue as unscientific.

“I just wanted to say a personal thank you on behalf of our staff and collaborators, for publicly standing up and stating that the scientific evidence supports a natural origin for COVID-19 from a bat-to-human spillover, not a lab release from the Wuhan Institute of Virology,” wrote Daszak.

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Senator Wyden’s no-state solution

At a recent town hall, an Oregon student asked Senator Ron Wyden where he stood on the Israel/Palestine conflict. He answered that a two-state solution was needed, the same answer he has given for over twenty years.

Despite Senator Wyden’s support, the prospects for a two-state solution have never been worse. Israel’s right-wing government and powerful settlers have always opposed it, and they rule Israel today. Israel’s settlements are expanding; Palestinians are forced from their homes as in the Jerusalem neighborhood of Sheikh Jarrah. The occupation has a firm grip on the Palestinian people, and the Palestinians of Gaza live in a permanent prison, suffering occasional grotesque spectacles of violence.

So what has Senator Wyden done in support of his two-state solution? Here are some examples:

He opposes Palestinian access to the International Criminal Court, a venue that would allow them to hold Israel accountable for war crimes. This means that Israel is not held accountable for human rights violations, and Palestinians are not protected by international law.

Israel’s expansion of settlements and Palestinian dispossession are arguably the most significant threats to a two-state solution. Instead of opposing the settlements, Wyden has supported legislation to prevent the United Nations from holding Israel accountable for its settlements. Senator Wyden has given a green light to Israel’s colonization of the West Bank. Organizations like Human Rights Watch and B’Tselem have reported on the pervasive, apartheid nature of Israel’s control over Palestinians.

Senator Wyden may champion the rights of U.S. citizens against government surveillance, but Wyden leaves his progressive values behind when U.S. citizens use their free speech rights to take action for Palestinian human rights. He supported the Israel Anti-Boycott Act (S.720) which criminalizes boycott and divestment activism by U.S. citizens against the State of Israel, claiming that a line should be drawn around our free speech rights when it comes to Israel. This legislation (opposed by the ACLU and Amnesty International) is part of a broad strategy of legal warfare against Palestinian activists. Similar state-level bills have been struck down because they were unconstitutional.

Senator Wyden says that the two sides must negotiate a solution. One key negotiating point is the status of East Jerusalem which Palestinians want for their capital. When Trump unilaterally decided to move the U.S. Embassy to Jerusalem, a severe insult to the Palestinian negotiating position, Senator Wyden weighed in to support Trump’s actions. So much for negotiations.

Senator Wyden justifies his support for Israel and domination of Palestinians because his parents fled the holocaust. But contrast Senator Wyden with Stéphane Hessel, a genuinely heroic and dashing figure. Born to a German Jewish family, Hessel joined the French resistance fighters against the Nazis and escaped two concentration camps and execution after his arrest. He co-authored the Universal Declaration of Human Rights. Unlike Senator Wyden, Hessel truly believed in the word “universal” and was a staunch supporter of Palestinian rights. Hessel said that “The absence of meaningful action from governments to hold Israel accountable to international law leaves upon one path for citizens of conscience: to take this responsibility upon themselves, as done against apartheid South Africa.”

The pattern is clear: Senator Wyden is standing by for Israel whether it is support for settlements, military domination, escaping accountability for human rights violations, or protecting Israel from the activism of U.S. citizens.

Senator Wyden talks about two-state solutions, but his actions have led to apartheid.

So where are the Palestinian voices in mainstream media?

Mondoweiss covers the full picture of the struggle for justice in Palestine. Read by tens of thousands of people each month, our truth-telling journalism is an essential counterweight to the propaganda that passes for news in mainstream and legacy media.

Our news and analysis is available to everyone – which is why we need your support. Please contribute so that we can continue to raise the voices of those who advocate for the rights of Palestinians to live in dignity and peace.

Palestinians today are struggling for their lives as mainstream media turns away. Please support journalism that amplifies the urgent voices calling for freedom and justice in Palestine.

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Humans and Neanderthals Met and Mated 50,000 Years Ago in Negev Desert

A recent re-examination of artifacts collected from Israel’s central Negev desert has revealed important details about the development of human culture in the region, according to a new study published in the journal PNAS. Precise archaeological dating techniques of artifacts from the Boker Tachtit site have shifted the known timeline of the arrival of modern humans to about 50,000 years ago. This would make Boker Tachtit the oldest modern human settlement in the Levant, and means that early Homo sapiens occupied the region at the same time as the Neanderthals.

A recent re-examination of artifacts from Israel’s central Negev desert has revealed important details about modern Human-Neanderthal coexistence in the area. Star shows the location of Boker Tachtit. (Weizmann Institute of Science)

A recent re-examination of artifacts from Israel’s central Negev desert has revealed important details about modern Human-Neanderthal coexistence in the area. Star shows the location of Boker Tachtit. ( Weizmann Institute of Science )

Timeline of Neanderthal-Modern Human Transition in the Negev Desert

Throughout Asia, Europe, and the Middle East, modern human culture displaced Neanderthal culture during the transition from the Middle Paleolithic to the Upper Paleolithic. This transition was marked by important technological innovations, including the invention and production of sharp blades for cutting and the use of standardized tools made from antlers and animal bones. The transition occurred between 50,000 and 40,000 years ago, with changes taking place later in Europe and Asia since it took longer for modern humans to arrive there once they’d left their African homeland.

A team of archaeologists from the Weizmann Institute of Science, the Max Planck Society, and the Israel Antiquities Authority were interested in learning more about this transition, as it occurred in the Levant, an area which includes modern-day Israel, Palestine, Syria, Lebanon, Jordan, and large parts of Turkey. The team was led by Elisabetta Boaretto, an archaeological dating expert from the Weizmann Institute, and Dr. Omry Barzilai of the Israel Antiquities Authority, who has supervised the excavations at Boker Tachtit for many years.

Studies in the 1980s had suggested a later and slower-than-expected transition. Radiocarbon dating tests seemed to show that humans had first arrived at Boker Tachtit about 47,000 years ago, and that it took another 10,000 or so after that for Upper Paleolithic technology and culture to fully develop at the site.

The new study analyzed tools from the Boker Tachtit site using highly accurate dating technology. Left: A flint point from Boker Tachtit. (Clara Amit / Israel Antiquities Authority) Right: Layer of Early Upper Paleolithic flint tools from Boker Tachtit site. (Prof. Elisabetta Boaretto / Weizmann Institute of Science)

The new study analyzed tools from the Boker Tachtit site using highly accurate dating technology. Left: A flint point from Boker Tachtit. (Clara Amit / Israel Antiquities Authority ) Right: Layer of Early Upper Paleolithic flint tools from Boker Tachtit site. (Prof. Elisabetta Boaretto / Weizmann Institute of Science )

Skeptical Archaeologists and their Dating Techniques

Skeptical of this finding, Boaretto and associates applied the very latest in radiocarbon dating techniques to samples of charcoal taken from Boker Tachtit between 2013 and 2015. They also used a sophisticated and highly accurate dating technology known as optically stimulated luminescence (OSL), which helped them calculate when fine grains of quartz sand had been deposited at the site.

Using these reliable dating techniques, they found that modern humans had actually begun living at Boker Tachtit 50,000 years ago, or three thousand years earlier than previously believed. This was only 10,000 years after the Homo sapiens migration out of Africa began. They also confirmed that the transition from Middle Paleolithic to Upper Paleolithic culture took about 6,000 years to complete.

They also found that the transition at Boker Tachtit could be broken down into two distinct phases: an early Upper Paleolithic phase (50,000 to 47,000 years ago) and a later Upper Paleolithic phase (47,000 to 44,000 years ago). By 44,000 years ago, the toolmaking innovations developed by Upper Paleolithic modern humans had been universally adopted at Boker Tachtit.

Interestingly, the later Upper Paleolithic phase coincided with the early Upper Paleolithic phase in the Mediterranean woodland region of the Levant (Lebanon and Turkey). This discovery showed how modern humans were gradually taking over from the Neanderthals as they continued their march northward and eastward into the depths of Europe and Asia.

One of the most notable consequences of the study was its verification that modern humans and Neanderthals were present in the central Negev desert at the same time. “This goes to show that Neanderthals and Homo sapiens in the Negev coexisted and most likely interacted with one another, resulting in not only genetic interbreeding, as is postulated by the ‘recent African origin’ theory, but also in cultural exchange,” Boaretto and Barzilai theorized in a Weizmann Institute press release announcing their discoveries.

Image of excavations of the Boker Tachtit site in the Negev Desert. (Prof. Elisabetta Boaretto / Weizmann Institute of Science)

Image of excavations of the Boker Tachtit site in the Negev Desert. (Prof. Elisabetta Boaretto / Weizmann Institute of Science )

The Mystery of Neanderthals and Modern Humans in the Negev Desert

A transition from Neanderthal culture to modern human culture occurred between 50,000 and 44,000 years ago in the desert region of the Levant, and later on elsewhere. But the final fate of the now-extinct Neanderthals contains an element of mystery or uncertainty. To what extent were the Neanderthals willing participants in the transition, and to what extent were they its tragic victims?

Some Neanderthal groups may have had friendly relations with the new arrivals. They may have traded with them, or otherwise cooperated for their mutual benefit. Interbreeding practices may have added a voluntary element to the Neanderthals’ eventual extinction. European and Asian genomes contain about two percent Neanderthal DNA , showing that some merging did occur between the two cultures.

But other Neanderthal groups may have come into conflict with the new arrivals, as each side struggled to secure access to scarce resources. Many Neanderthals may have been killed during these conflicts, or driven away to less hospitable lands where they eventually died out.

In still other instances, Neanderthals and modern humans may have simply avoided each other, content to remain separate as long as nature was productive enough to provide for all. This practice couldn’t continue forever. Nevertheless, peaceful co-existence would have been a reasonable alternative to constant conflict, until the point that population pressure made this unsustainable.

As of now, no sign of conflict or warfare between Neanderthals and modern humans has been found in the vicinity of the Boker Tachtit site in Israel. This suggests that the initial interactions between them were either friendly or indifferent. Of course, future discoveries may contradict this conclusion.

The real story what happened between Neanderthals and modern humans, in the ancient Levant and beyond, is undoubtedly quite complex. Archaeologists and anthropologists will continue to seek the truth, with every new find adding at least a few small pieces to the immense puzzle of prehistory.

Top image: Neanderthals cohabited with modern humans in the Negev desert. Source: Kovalenko I / Adobe Stock

By Nathan Falde

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Protesters Prevent Israeli Container Ship From Docking

Above Photo: Matt Allen/CBC.

Block the Boat aims to prevent Israel from shipping goods to North America.

An Israeli container ship was prevented from docking Monday at the Prince Rupert, B.C., port after a group of about 10 protesters — whose aim is to block Israel from shipping goods to North America — formed a picket line at an entrance to the Fairview container terminal.

The container ship, the Volans — owned by Israeli shipping company ZIM — was anchored in Prince Rupert’s harbour for most of the day Sunday.

The protesters said they were acting in solidarity with a movement called Block the Boat, which aims to block Israel from shipping goods to this continent as a reaction to the recent conflict between Israel and Palestinian militants.

The ship was unable to dock as protestors set up a picket line at the terminal’s entrance, which unionized longshore workers would not cross. International Longshore Workers Union (ILWU) local 505 members are required to tie down and unload ships that enter the terminal.

“We can’t deny that the world is an interconnected place, so the ship that unloads here has an impact on the lives of people on the other side of the world,” said Frances Riley, who was one of several people holding signs.

“And I think that it’s a difficult point to make but I think it’s an important point to make,” Riley said.

After confirming with the Prince Rupert Port Authority that the Volans would not be unloading in Prince Rupert, protestors left the entrance, allowing the port to continue with other business. However, they said they would return if the ship attempted to dock again.

CBC has reached out to the Prince Rupert Port Authority, the shipping company ZIM and DP World — The Fairview Terminal Operator — for comment, but has not yet heard back.

The latest round of fighting between Israel and Hamas began last month, when the militant group fired rockets toward Jerusalem after days of clashes between Palestinian protesters and Israeli police.

Israel in turn launched hundreds of airstrikes that it said targeted Hamas’ infrastructure, including a vast tunnel network. The airstrikes also destroyed health and civic infrastructure, a refugee camp and a highrise that housed the Associated Press and other media.

The 11-day conflict has since come to a fragile halt, with a ceasefire, and a new coalition government in Israel has indicated it is likely to pursue a modest agenda that seeks to reduce tensions with the Palestinians.

Ship blocked from the U.S. last month

In May, the Volans tried to dock in Oakland, Calif., but ILWU local 10 members there also refused to cross a similar picket line in support of protestors affiliated with Block the Boat. The Volans then departed for southern California before returning to Oakland to attempt to dock again at the beginning of June, then left for Prince Rupert on June 4.

“Given the victory in Oakland, we are hopeful that the ongoing inconvenience that we’ve caused to ZIM shipping lines and the costliness, how effective we’ve been in terms of political and economic impacts will continue through Prince Rupert as well,” said Lara Kiswani, the executive director of the Arab Resource and Organizing Centre, the leader of the Block the Boat campaign, in a statement.

In a statement emailed to ILWU local 505 obtained by CBC, the International Dockworkers council said, “We would like to express our solidarity with the comrades who choose not to cross the picket line to defend such a noble cause.”

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Nicaragua: CIA Attempting A Coup Through US Agencies And Foundations

By Nan McCurdy, Popular Resistance.

| Educate!

Above photo: Getty images.

USAID Does not provide aid – it Carries out Coups.

Since the Sandinistas won the 2006 election their anti-poverty policies have had enormous success.

The country is 90% self-sufficient in food. 99% of the population have electricity in their homes that is now generated with 70+% green energy; International financial Institutions including the World Bank, the International Development Bank and The Central American Bank for Economic Integration praise Nicaragua for its excellent, efficient project execution. it has one of the best health systems in Latin America praised by the International Monetary Fund, with 20 new state of the art hospitals since 2007 achieving one of the lowest Covid mortality rates in the world. Poverty, extreme poverty, maternal, child and infant mortality have all been cut at least in half. Nicaragua is number one in the world in both women in politics and women in ministerial positions and it is fifth in gender equity behind the Nordic nations.

Many more advances for the majority of the population in education, housing and infrastructure have resulted in huge wins for the FSLN in the last two elections (2011 and 2016) and polls indicate that in the Nov. 7 presidential elections they will garner at least 60% of the vote with at least 70% voter turn-out. Some 95% of the adult population have identity cards needed for voting. If the US public knew what this nation, impoverished by nearly 200 years of US war and aggression, has been able to achieve in fourteen years it would surely encourage them to demand better education, infrastructure and universal health care in the United States.

To prevent similar acts of sovereignty by small nations still considered colonies by the United States, the CIA prepared the way for the 2018 coup attempt and has never stopped trying to overthrow the Sandinista government since. The CIA uses US agents, many who pass themselves off as journalists or activists, as well as those eternally stationed at the US embassy; it has provided millions of dollars to hundreds of Nicaraguans acting as foreign agents as well as their nonprofit organizations that conspire against the Sandinista government like those recently arrested for money laundering, fraud and requesting foreign intervention.

The US helped grow the pro-US anti-Sandinista media in Nicaragua

Much of the US-directed propaganda apparatus was designed and funded by the US after the FSLN won the 2006 elections ending 17 years of three US-directed governments. A subversive front of newspapers, magazines, television stations, radio stations, websites, news agencies, and social media pages was formed. Journalists and media outlets were paid by the US (millions through the USAID, NED, IRI and US foundations) and much of it was administered by the Chamorro family media cartel, specializing in fake media campaigns to try to promote anti-Sandinista hatred and mistrust of the government.

Part of this has been known for some time. For example, in May, 2018 during the coup, Tom Ricker of the Quixote Institute described 55 NED grants awarded between 2014 and 2017 for US$4.2 million “as part of a U.S. government-funded campaign to provide a coordinated strategy and media voice for opposition groups in Nicaragua. NED grants fund media (radio, social media and other web-based news outlets) and opposition research. In addition, strategies targeting youth get substantial funding, along with programs seeking to mobilize women’s and indigenous organizations. Though the language is of support for “civil society” and “pro-democracy” groups, the focus on funding is specifically to build coordinated opposition to the government.”

US propaganda funds for 2018 coup channeled through Chamorro family media dynasty

On June 2, Journalist William Grigsby on his news analysis program, Sin Fronteras, revealed (see below) US documents which show that the CIA openly channeled US$16.7 million for the coup attempt, between February 2017 and July 2018, through the Violeta Barrios de Chamorro Foundation whose director Cristiana Chamorro is part of a famous family of oligarchs that count eight members as previous presidents; she is also the daughter of former president Violeta Barrios de Chamorro. She and her uncle are owners of the only daily, La Prensa, funded by the US for pro-Contra lies since the 1980s. Her brother Carlos Fernando has his own media dynasty. US funds to the VBCHF support these family businesses. Her now-deceased husband, Antonio Lacayo is widely considered to have exercised great power during her mother’s presidency from 1990 to 1997 overseeing some 7 billion dollars in privatization of state property, as well as privatization of education and health care. During the early 90s you couldn’t get so much as an aspirin at a government hospital without paying for it.

Chamorro Family, 1990s, Cristiana is second from the right, Antonio Lacayo on far right, laprensa.com.ni.

The US$16.7 million was given by US agencies and foundations specifically to finance media terrorism [lies, fake news and distortion to foment assassinations and hate, destabilize and create chaos] to incite and maintain the coup attempt. The Chamorro Foundation also received €679,530 from European government-financed organizations during this period. The attempted coup left more than 200 families in mourning, thousands of people traumatized as well as much destruction and severe damage to the economy resulting in the loss of at least 130,000 jobs.

The Foundation’s Director, Cristiana Chamorro, was accused by the Public Prosecutor’s Office of money laundering, and given house arrest on June 2, 2021. She closed the Foundation in February of this year saying she didn’t want to comply with the “Foreign Agents” law passed in October 2020, similar to but not as strict as the 1938 US Foreign Agents Act. Under the Nicaraguan law, organizations receiving foreign funding must report that funding and how it is used – thousands of nonprofits are doing this with no problem.

According to Grigsby and Liberal Party news analyst, Enrique Quiñones, there was still at least US$7 million in the Foundation account when she closed it and this money appeared soon afterward in three of her personal banks accounts.

The US$16.7 million given by the CIA during that short time-span was just the money given for fake news – to fund every kind of news media, programs, social media and to directly fund individuals. Many millions more were provided to other nonprofits and “Human Rights” organizations. It is telling that in a country of 6.3 million people there are four human rights organizations – all funded by the US government and one was even founded by the US government in the 80s to cover up for the Contra.

Within that US$16.7 million, US$9,409,853 was provided by USAID for individuals, projects and media. The National Endowment for Democracy gave the Foundation US$564,134 for a project “promoting independent journalism and freedom of expression” in November 2017.

US Financing of Propaganda for Coup Attempt

The Soros Foundations – owned by New York-based tycoon George Soros – also financed fake news in Nicaragua through several of his organizations that are known to fund destabilization efforts around the world: US$6,722,325 was given by two of the Soros Foundations: US$6,148,325 by the Soros Foundation for the project, “independent and transparent journalism” given in March 2018 a month before the coup began, and $574,000 in July 2018, the month the coup was defeated, by the Open Society Foundation for the “independent journalism and citizenship” project.

The 2017-2018 funding of opposition media and journalists through the Chamorro Foundation by USAID, NED and Soros Foundations – US$16,696,312 million provided just before and during the attempted coup is a small part of funding provided by agencies like USAID, NED, IRI, Freedom House and foundations, like those of Soros with close ties to the Council on Foreign Relations.

USAID spent US$160 million on agents and agent organizations to try to topple the Sandinistas

The US began major destabilization attempts after the Sandinistas won the 2006 elections.

The bigger picture on USAID financing for destabilization in recent years is that it gave US$160 million to opposition organizations and individuals between 2015 and early 2021, information still available by year on the internet; however much information about recipient organizations has been removed. Most information about NED money and the recipients has also been removed.

Official US documents presented by Grigsby in July 2020 provide more detailed evidence of which nonprofits and individuals benefitted from US$30 million right before the 2018 coup.

Breaking the Yankee Propaganda Apparatus

The USAID says this about their role in Nicaragua, “USAID/OTI partnered with independent media to operate and produce more targeted digital content during the political crisis. The program enabled independent media to preserve and promote democratic discourse, absent further economic destabilization or dramatic state intervention.”

In a recent article Rita Jill Clark-Gollub writes:

“Anyone who has been watching Nicaragua knows that these supposedly “independent” media in Nicaragua have been the main source of Nicaragua news reported here in the United States. In other words, in my country most people get information about Nicaragua from the CIA!”

New laws passed in 2020 (a Foreign Agents Law and a law against terrorism, coups and inciting foreign intervention, which the US is screaming about even though they are less punitive than those of the US and Europe), and the recent arrests of US Foreign Agents are actions to try to limit US intervention and prevent coup attempts. The US will still get money to their agents, but it won’t be nearly as easy as before and this will limit their ability to carry out the kind of terrorist actions they did in 2018.

William Grigsby on June 2 described what is happening right now in Nicaragua: “[We are] breaking the heart of the Yankee propaganda apparatus in Nicaragua, which was their main way of intervening, now, for the elections – influencing public opinion with lies, instilling fear, instilling hatred in order to try to defeat the Sandinistas. This whole operation that is being carried out from the prosecutor’s office as a spearhead is just that, to destroy the propaganda apparatus of US imperialism.” He asked what all the journalist agents in Nicaragua will do without the salaries they were getting. “Are they committed enough to actually do independent journalist?”

RAIN: the CIA destabilization plan in progress now

Nevertheless, Uncle Sam will still continue efforts to destabilize the country. US ambassador Sullivan is constantly seen meeting with the agents, even denounced by President Daniel Ortega:

“This goes for the Yankee ambassador (U.S.) and other ambassadors; they like to meddle everywhere and want to make decisions for us; the Yankee ambassador (Sullivan) parades his candidates, promoting them as if he were Nicaraguan.”

In August 2020 William Grigsby received a USAID document leaked from the embassy. It details in couched terms US destabilization plans for “transition” in Nicaragua and even the contracting of a US company to head it all up. They call it RAIN – Responsive Action in Nicaragua. The document has since been deleted, but not before it was archived. RAIN is a blatant plan for destabilization and overthrow of the democratically elected government of Nicaragua. It is likely that much of what the US has financed in the last year is part of the RAIN plan.

The USAID document establishes three scenarios that they call “democratic transition in Nicaragua:”

“RAIN will pursue these activities against a variety of scenarios generally falling under three categories: 1. Free, fair and transparent elections lead to an orderly transition [the US candidate wins] 2. A sudden political transition occurs following a crisis [a coup leads to a US backed government] 3. Transition does not happen in an orderly and timely manner. The regime remains resilient in the face of domestic and international pressure. It is also possible that the regime may remain in power following electoral reforms and a fair election, but without changes to the rule of law or democratic governance [i.e. without changes that benefit US corporations].”

It is clear from the RAIN document that the U.S. government realizes that the Sandinistas will win the 2021 election by a large margin: that is another reason they have provided millions to agents, organizations and fake news media, hoping that they can put a dent in the 60% Sandinista win predicted in the polls, or to dis or undermine the elections altogether.

The long-time US agents under investigation for very serious crimes are not leaders: there has not been even one small protest since the arrests began June 2 because those arrested have no “pueblo.” People know that the US funded the very violent coup attempt through them – and hold them accountable. The foreign media tout them as presidential candidates, which they are not. When some of them saw that they might be arrested they ran to try to inscribe with the CXL (Citizens for Freedom) party as pre-candidates thinking this might protect them from detention. They all had the opportunity to form new political parties, but they didn’t even try because they don’t have enough members to fulfill minimal requirements. And more importantly, 19 legitimate parties are participating in the November 7 elections that don’t receive foreign funding.

And while the United States wastes millions of tax-payer dollars destabilizing the country, Nicaragua effectively and efficiently makes social and economic advances lauded by international organizations and banks, like universal health care, education, affordable housing, social infrastructure, gender equity, conversion to green energy, natural disaster and climate change mitigation, free recreation, and job creation with the creative and popular economy. The majority of the safest population in Central America with the lowest Covid mortality rate, who are healthier, better educated and housed, with electricity and potable water, whose food is locally grown and available at a decent price, with parks, fairs, pools and sports stadiums to enjoy their free time, are unlikely to let Uncle Sam influence their vote in November.

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Sanctions On Syria – A Silent Death And Killing Hope

Above Photo: Vanessa Beeley.

Sanctions are designed to kill Syrians and to kill hope, post war.

Sanctions are very often described, by those enforcing them, as “non-lethal” measures. I would argue that sanctions, when used as a brutal and vindictive component of a neo-colonialist hybrid war strategy, are arguably more devastating than a military war. When they are imposed by global super-force nations against target nations like Syria, in conjunction with a proxy war that has been fomented and sustained by the same nations, it becomes as much a weapon of mass destruction as the terrorist/mercenary armies these US aligned nations have unleashed upon the Syrian people. Thus it is almost impossible to speak about the economic sanctions against Syria in isolation and without referring to the parallel measures that ensure they hit the poorest people in Syria the hardest.

I would argue that the effects of the US/UK/EU Turkish and Arab League sanctions are equivalent to the campaign of infrastructure destruction carried out by the illegal armed groups funded and armed by the US regime change coalition and promoted by their aligned media outlets. Terrorism can be defined by the “unlawful use of force or violence against persons or property in order to coerce or intimidate a government or the civilian population into furtherance of political or ideological objectives”.

The act of withholding means of sustaining life to innocent civilians in order to coerce an entire nation into submission to foreign agendas in the region must surely qualify as economic terrorism. The destruction of essential civilian infrastructure is a war crime, the withholding of essential resources or occupation of those resources is also a war crime. One could argue that the US Coalition is responsible for genocide in Syria under Genocide Convention article II (e) – deliberately inflicting on the group, conditions of life calculated to bring about its physical destruction in whole or in part”.

The correlation between economic and military coercion was made clear by previous Secretary of State, Mike Pompeo’s point-man on Syria, Ambassador James Jeffrey, who not only described Al Qaeda as a “US asset” in Syria but also bragged openly about the misery that sanctions had brought to the Syrian people:

And of course, we’ve ratcheted up the isolation and sanctions pressure on Assad, we’ve held the line on no reconstruction assistance, and the country’s desperate for it. You see what’s happened to the Syrian pound, you see what’s happened to the entire economy. So, it’s been a very effective strategy….

There are a number of sectors of Syrian society that are being targeted by sanctions and simultaneously by US occupation and proxy terrorism which ensure that quality of life for Syrian civilians is severely reduced and their human rights are being gravely violated:

The fuel/oil sector

Production had been affected by the sanctions applied in 2011/12. The effect of curtailing of import and export of petrol between 2011 and 2014 is estimated to be a 21 billion dollars loss for Syria. When ISIS occupied the Syrian oil-rich region of north-east Syria they were banking around $ 3million per day in stolen revenue. The Kurdish separatist US contras are now benefiting from the sale of Syrian resources on the back of the US occupation of the north-east oil fields. The US, itself is stealing Syrian oil via Delta Crescent Energy oil company, established under the Trump administration. Other beneficiaries include Al Qaeda who also set up an oil refinery monopoly, going by the name of WATAD, that receives stolen oil and then trades it in Turkey. Effectively, the US or their proxies seized Syrian oil fields early on in the conflict, this has provided revenue for the various contra forces under their control (including ISIS) enabling them to further steal resources, ethnically cleanse areas of Syria and destroy infrastructure while increasing sanctions and imposing a brutal blockade on the Syrian people, the majority of whom live in areas under the protection of the Syrian government.

Industrial sector

A huge number of factories have been forced out of existence by incremental sanctions and production has been reduced in those that survived. The cause is lack of fuel, electricity, parts for machinery (the majority came from the EU). A report from the Aleppo Chamber of Commerce in 2015 detailed total closure of 26,000 factories, partial closure of 17,000 and suspended production in 50,000 factories. At the same time, armed groups, including Nusra Front and ISIS invaded the industrial areas of Aleppo and dismantled thousands of factories, destroyed power grids, railways etc and to provide trade revenue in Turkey – many factories were re-established inside Turkey. In October 2015, the US Coalition bombed the Aleppo thermal power station, then under control of ISIS – ensuring total black-out in Aleppo and the surrounding countryside.

Agriculture sector

The agriculture sector has been affected by the rising costs of fuel, lack of machinery parts thanks to the sanctions. Some of the most abundant olive and cotton growing areas have been occupied by the armed groups who, again, benefit from the illegal trade of Syrian food crops via Turkey and Iraq. Vast swathes of Syrian forestry and wheat crops were deliberately burned in 2020. The US Coalition dropped thermal balloons into wheat crops in the north-east, Kurdish contras took control of wheat storage facilities and restricted supply to Damascus, to the Syrian people. Bread queues became a familiar scene throughout Syria and prices of food went through the roof. Syria is being driven into dangerous food insecurity by a combination of military and economic force, both backed by the same criminal US/UK-led alliance.

Health sector

While the claim is made that the “humanitarian sector” is exempt from sanctions, this is misleading. Almost 50% of Syrian hospitals have been destroyed during the war against this country, many were occupied by terrorist groups and converted into military centers, Sharia courts, detention and torture centers – for example the Eye and Childrens Hospital in east Aleppo which was finally liberated by the Syrian Arab Army and allies in December 2016. An estimated 20 Pharmaceutical factories were also destroyed or occupied during the terrorist invasions. Syria had a fleet of 703 ambulances in 2011, 350 have been destroyed or stolen by the armed groups or their western-backed auxiliary, the White Helmets. The remaining hospitals and equipment are suffering from lack of updated technology, parts and maintenance because the majority of the hardware was supplied originally by the EU.

This has led to the scarcity of drugs for chronic illnesses like Cancer, heart disease, kidney disease. The health sector, offering free healthcare for everyone inside Syria, has always been a source of pride for the Syrian state – now 41 public hospitals and 621 medical centers are out of commission. There are restrictions on the import of chlorine gas used as a water purifier which has resulted in the spread of infectious diseases  due to the pollution of drinking water. At the same time, NATO-member-state Turkey, is deliberately depriving Syrian people of water in the Hasaka region, north-east Syria. The sanctions are again only one element of a war of hydro hegemony waged by the US Coalition against the Syrian people – a war that impacts upon the health sector with devastating consequences.

The most recent and savage Caesar Act sanctions introduced under Trump are preventing the rebuilding of hospitals and repair of essential machinery. The closure of many of the rural hospitals is leading to inevitable overcrowding of city hospitals resulting in delays in treatment and the spread of disease. Sanctions on the health sector are a deliberate and criminal targeting of the Syrian people by the US Coalition. This violates all human rights conventions and must be condemned.

Electricity and transport sectors

The electricity sectors in Syria have been devastated by a combination of war and sanctions. There has been a drastic lowering of output which is affected by the lack of fuel thanks to the occupation of oil-resources and inability to source spare parts. Damages in 2015, due to electricity outages, were estimated at 16 billion dollars, now in 2021 that figure will be hugely increased.

Armed groups, dominated by Nusra Front, have systematically destroyed electrical power stations, fuel warehouses, gas and oil pipelines and stolen entire power grids to trade inside Turkey. Entire railway lines have been torn up and melted down inside Turkey or sold as scrap. The Syrian transport system is affected by lack of fuel, spare parts and destruction of essential infrastructure. All of these have a debilitating knock-on effect on Syrian society and how it functions.

Education sectors and tourism sectors in Syria are also being undermined by sanctions and an inability to rebuild and restart after the effects of war.

Overall effects of economic terrorism on the Syrian people

There have been huge price hikes in food across Syria, around 300% increases in some instances. Fuel prices have gone through the roof, inflation is only just under control. This is engendering food insecurity, malnutrition and poverty among 80% of the population. Wages have remained static so an average government employee is earning SYP 50,000 per month ( $ 16 dollars at today’s rate) while, for example, 2kg of chicken is now SYP 20,000. In the winter many areas of Damascus were receiving electricity for only 3 hours per day, in rural areas even less. The cost of heating fuel and gas for cooking is now extortionate – for one gas bottle on the black market, between 30-40,000 while there are long waits for subsidised government supplied gas.

There is a shortage of fuel which has led to queues of up to 2 days to receive 20 litres of fuel. Lebanon is also now out of fuel, having been one of the main suppliers of black market fuel to Syria. Unemployment is rising exponentially. Apartment rental costs have soared, while the building of new projects are on hold due to lack of materials, equipment and investment. Families are being torn apart because young people are risking the dangers of illegal travel routes to the EU and beyond to try to earn money to send back to their impoverished relatives in Syria. The sanctions are suffocating Syria and they are being used to deliberately increase the suffering of the Syrian people who have resisted ten years of war waged against them by the US/UK Coalition that is ensuring their inability to rise out of the quagmire of war.

The US Coalition is effectively following a policy of collective extermination of the Syrian people by military and economic means. This is a crime against Humanity, a war crime and a flagrant violation of the right to life and a life of dignity. Syria is a member of the United Nations, these coercive unilateral measures targeting the people of Syria are a violation of the UN Charter.

Under the most recent and barbaric Caesar sanctions, considered by many experts to be illegal, greater  pressure is being brought to bear against nations who would try to help Syria rebuild. At the same time, the US, UK, EU, Turkey and Israel continue to support and promote terrorism in Syria and enable their proxies to pillage and plunder Syrian resources, further punishing the Syrian people. The sanctions against Syria are a malevolent attempt to bring the country to its knees after one of the most protracted and expensive UK/US led regime change wars has failed militarily. The sanctions are not affecting the alleged targets, they are killing the Syrian people and they are killing hope – we must campaign against them to restore peace and stability to Syria and to the region.

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Solemn Vigil At Shannon Remembers Child Victims Of War

Sunday June 13th saw us returning to Shannon Airport to recommence our monthly peace vigils. We had around 20 peace activists there, watched by around 20 Gardai.

Inside the airport, security personnel, including an Irish army patrol, protecting three US Marine Corps Hercules KC-130J warplanes that had landed the previous night. They stayed overnight at Shannon, meaning that their crews and military passengers were almost certainly in local hotels for the night.

Our vigil was poignant and emotional as we commemorated the more than 70 Palestinian children killed recently. Two members of Red Rebels Clare, which is a theatre group that accompanies Extinction Rebellion and other action in Clare, joined us in silent, solemn protest, while others read out the list of the children killed in Palestine. The protest then moved from the usual roundabout up the Garda barriers where the officers present were asked to search and investigate the three US warplanes parked at the airport. The names of the Palestinian children killed were also read out to the Gardai, and their photos displayed. The Gardai were then asked to end their complicity in such deaths by undertaking to search and investigate all US military aircraft transiting through Shannon. They were reminded of how many people have died as a result of wars in the Middle East since 1991, and how Shannon Airport has played a substantial role in this slaughter.

Meanwhile an Omni Air troop carrier N846AX using US military callsign CMB401 passed through Shannon early in the morning on its way to Al Udeid Air Base in Qatar with its cargo of armed US soldiers.

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Over 16,000 Artists Sign Letter In Solidarity With Palestine

‘This is not a conflict: this is apartheid.’

Over 16,000 artists, including hundreds of Palestinian artists, six Academy Award winners, and eight Pulitzer Prize winning writers, have signed a letter denouncing Israel’s apartheid system and calling on countries “to cut trade, economic and cultural relations.”

Over 16,000 artists have signed their names in support of a letter that condemns Israel’s recent attack on Gaza and denounces the country’s apartheid system. The letter also calls on other countries “to cut trade, economic and cultural relations” with Israel.

Titled, “A Letter Against Apartheid,” the statement was written by six Palestinian artists, who have asked to remain anonymous. It was initially signed by hundreds of Palestinian artists including filmmakers Annemarie Jacir, Elia Suleiman, and Farah Nabulsi; visual artists Emily Jacir and Larissa Sansour; actress Hiam Abbass; musicians Kamilya Jubran and Sama’ Abdulhadi; and writers Elias Sanbar, Mohammed El-Kurd, Naomi Shihab Nye, Raja Shehadeh, Randa Jarrar, Suad Amiry, and Susan Abulhawa.

Following that artists across the world signed on as supporters of the document. Supporters include six Academy Award-winning directors and actors – Alejandro Iñárritu, Asif Kapadia, Holly Hunter, Mike Leigh, Jeremy Irons, Julie Christie, Thandiwe Newton, Viggo Mortensen, Brian Cox, Michael Moore, Alia Shawkat, and Susan Sarandon; eight Pulitzer Prize-winning writers, poets and playwrights –  Benjamin Moser, Hisham Matar, Richard Ford, Viet Thanh Nguyen, Tyehimba Jess, Annie Baker, Lynn Nottage and Tony Kushner; and many others including Brian Eno, Angela Davis, Roger Waters, Cypress Hill, Ta-Nehisi Coates, and Robert Wyatt.

The authors also told Mondoweiss that the decision to remain anonymous stemmed from the desire to speak in a collective voice and not have the letter associated with specific people or organizations.

“An unprecedented display of unity, inspired by the most significant elements of what we’ve seen unfold in Palestine. The Palestinians of Gaza, Lydd, Jerusalem, Ramallah, and throughout the world have shown that seven decades of Israeli policies have not broken their idea of themselves as Palestinians. This letter is a reflection of that,” one of the organizers said in a press release put out announcing the statement.

“To frame this as a war between two equal sides is false and misleading,” reads the letter. “Israel is the colonizing power. Palestine is colonized. This is not a conflict: this is apartheid.”

“There was this question after the most recent escalation of violence by the Israelis that came about,” one of the authors told Mondoweiss, “We all had this discussion about what we could do and how we could use our networks. How can we use our own positions to organize around this?”

“Another goal was to bring this vocabulary that Palestinians have been working on for decades to a larger audience,” they explained. “We wrote this letter with a true sense of urgency and it took on a life of its own. We’re trying to balance the urgency with a long term response that’s not tied only to the specific events that have been happening in the past weeks. The letter was triggered by them, but these events are just a continuation of everything that’s been happening for decades, the letter is a long term call.”

The authors said the amount of people willing to sign the letter points to the fact that the public opinion on Palestine is shifting.

“Obviously people are still anxious and there is still censorship,” said one of the authors, “But the conflation of antisemitism with support for Palestinian liberation is something we wanted to directly address in the letter and dismantle. And you’ll see we have a huge number of Jewish signatories and as well as anti-Zionist Israeli signatories. I think there has been a change , even in the last five years, between the level of fear in speaking out.”

You can read the whole letter below:

Palestinians are being attacked and killed with impunity by Israeli soldiers and armed Israeli civilians who have been roaming the streets of Jerusalem, Lydda, Haifa, Jaffa and other cities chanting, “Death to Arabs.” Several lynchings of unarmed and unprotected Palestinians have already taken place in the last two weeks. Families in the Jerusalem neighborhood of Sheikh Jarrah continue to face ethnic cleansing and displacement from their homes. These acts of murder, intimidation, and violent dispossession are protected, if not actively encouraged, by the Israeli government and police.

This May, the Israeli government committed yet another massacre in Gaza by indiscriminately and relentlessly bombing Palestinians in their homes, offices, hospitals and on the street. The bombing of Gaza is part of an intentional and recursive pattern where entire families are killed and local infrastructure is destroyed. This serves to exacerbate conditions that are already unliveable in one of the most densely populated places on earth, which, despite the temporary ceasefire, remains under military siege. Gaza is not a separate country: we are one people, forcibly separated by the architecture of the Israeli state.

To frame this as a war between two equal sides is false and misleading. Israel is the colonizing power. Palestine is colonized. This is not a conflict: this is apartheid.

In the face of the increased mortal danger of the past two weeks, Palestinians are uniting once again. In Palestine and across the world, vast numbers are taking to the streets, organizing on social media, defending their homes, protecting each other, and demanding an end to ethnic cleansing, apartheid, discrimination and dispossession. Our communities have been systematically denied their right of return and forcibly fragmented and erased since An-Nakba, the dawn of Israeli settler colonial rule in 1948, and this recent coming together has given us some much-needed confidence amid the rage and grief of the past two weeks. We are starting to feel, in spite of all that is happening, in spite of years of dehumanization, some hope.

Finally, the world has started calling the Israeli system by its name. Earlier this year the Israeli human rights organisation B’Tselem followed the example set by decades of Palestinian intellectual and legal advocacy work in demonstrating that there is no separation between the Israeli state and its military occupation: the two form a single apartheid system. Human Rights Watch, in turn, published a thorough report accusing Israel of “crimes against humanity of apartheid and persecution.”

We, the undersigned Palestinian artists, writers and our listed allies in the arts ask you to join us. Please don’t let this moment pass. If Palestinian voices are silenced again, it may take generations for another chance for freedom and justice to arise. We ask you to join us now, at this critical juncture, and show your support for Palestinian liberation.

We call for an immediate and unconditional cessation of Israeli violence against Palestinians. We call for an end to the support provided by global powers to Israel and its military; especially the United States, which now provides Israel $3.8 billion annually without condition. We ask all people of conscience to exercise their agency to help dismantle the apartheid regime of our time. We ask governments that are enabling this crime against humanity to apply sanctions, to mobilize levers of international accountability, and to cut trade, economic and cultural relations.  We call on activists, and especially our peers in the arts, to exercise their agency within their institutions and localities to support the Palestinian struggle for decolonization to the best of their ability. Israeli apartheid is sustained by international complicity, it is our collective responsibility to redress this harm.

We have seen how governments in Europe and beyond recently have instated policies of open censorship, and fostered a culture of self-censorship, towards Palestinian solidarity. Conflating legitimate criticism of the State of Israel and its policies towards Palestinians with antisemitism is cynical. Racism, including antisemitism, and all forms of hate, are heinous and not welcome in the Palestinian struggle. It is time to stand up to these tactics of silencing and overcome them. Millions of people around the world see in Palestinians a microcosm of their own oppression and hopes, and allies such as Black Lives Matter and Jewish Voice for Peace, along with indigenous rights, feminist and queer activists, among many others, are increasingly vocal in their support.

We ask you to be brave. We ask you to come forward, speak up and take a clear public stand against this ongoing injustice in Palestine.

Apartheid must be dismantled. No one is free until we are all free.

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Make Normalizing Relations With Cuba A Priority

With the stroke of a pen, Biden could lift trade and travel restrictions and allow unrestricted remittances to Cuba, alleviating needless pandemic suffering.

Silvia from Miami, Eduardo from Hialeah, Abel from Lakeland. The names pour in on the donations page for “Syringes to Cuba” as Carlos Lazo promotes the campaign on his popular Facebook livestream.

An energetic Cuban-American high school teacher in Seattle, Lazo created a group called Puentes de Amor, Bridges of Love, to unite Cuban Americans who want to lift the searing U.S. blockade that is immiserating their loved ones on the island.

Puentes de Amor is the latest addition to the Syringes to Cuba initiative, which was started by the Saving Lives Campaign and the humanitarian organization Global Health Partners to help Cuba vaccinate its people against COVID-19. With the help of two other groups, [The People’s Forum](https://peoplesforum.org/event/syringes-for-cuba-campaign/#:~:text=The US-Canada Saving Lives,You can help.) and CODEPINK, the campaign has raised over $350,000 and has already placed an order for four million syringes. Two million will arrive in June and the balance in July.

This initiative is in response to the dire economic situation in Cuba, where the economy shrank by 11 percent last year — Cuba’s worst economic downturn since the early 1990s, when the country was left reeling from the collapse of the Soviet Union and the Eastern bloc. The present economic meltdown is largely a result of the COVID-induced shutdown of the tourist industry and a tightening of the embargo under Trump.

Reversing the gains made by the Obama-Biden administration in normalizing relations with Cuba, Trump added over 200 restrictive measures, including limiting remittances Cuban Americans can send to their families, stopping U.S. flights to every city but Havana, and prohibiting cruise ships from docking in Cuban ports. As a final stab in his parting days, Trump took the completely bogus step of adding Cuba to a U.S.-created list of state sponsors of terrorism, a designation that discourages investments and substantially limits the entry of foreign currency.

As a presidential candidate, Joe Biden pledged to “promptly reverse the failed Trump policies that have inflicted harm on the Cuban people and done nothing to advance democracy and human rights.” Early in the Biden administration, the White House announced that it was undertaking a review of Cuba policy.

But to the surprise and disappointment of many Cuba watchers, and despite the fact that most of Trump’s policy changes could be reversed with a single executive order, Biden has not moved an inch. Questioned about this at an April 16 press conference, Press Secretary Jen Psaki callously claimed that changing U.S. policy towards Cuba was “currently not among the president’s top foreign policy priorities.”

On May 25, the State Department even announced that it would continue Trump’s determination that Cuba does not cooperate with U.S. anti-terrorism efforts. The Cuban Ministry of Foreign Affairs fired back, calling this action “irresponsible and shameful” and reminding U.S. officials that Cuba itself has been “the victim of 713 terrorist attacks, in their majority organized, financed, and executed by the U.S. government or individuals and organizations that are protected and act with impunity in U.S. territory.”

On June 23, the U.N. General Assembly will hold its yearly vote calling for the U.S. to lift its embargo on Cuba. Every year since 1992, the world’s nations overwhelmingly reject the embargo, leaving the U.S. and one or two of its allies, like Israel and Brazil, clinging to this unpopular and anachronistic policy.

In 2016, the Obama administration broke with 25 years of U.S. opposition to the UN resolution by abstaining. A new lobby group ACERE (Alliance for Cuba Engagement and Respect), with the support of over 100 organizations, is calling on Biden to follow President Obama’s lead by not opposing this year’s resolution, and instead using the occasion to announce the measures that his administration will take to provide relief for the Cuban people and a return to the path of normalization.

A push for action has also come from the grassroots, through creative and growing anti-blockade car and bicycle caravans held on the last Sunday of every month. The largest of the nation’s caravans winds through the heart of the pro-blockade world: Miami. In the most recent May 30 Miami caravan, over 200 people participated, most of them Cuban-Americans. “We’ve had 10 of these caravans so far,” said organizer Jorge Medina (a.k.a. El Proteston Cubano on YouTube). “Each one is bigger than the last and the energy is fantastic.” But so far, the media — and the Biden administration — have ignored them.

Congress has been pushing Biden as well. In March 2021, 80 representatives, led by Congressman Bobby Rush, sent a letter to Biden urging him to take swift executive action to reverse the Trump administration’s draconian policies and return to the diplomatic path charted by the Obama-Biden administration, and Congressman Rush later introduced a bill to that effect. On May 21, U.S. Senators Jerry Moran (R-Kan.), Amy Klobuchar (D-Minn.) and Patrick Leahy (D-Vt.) introduced the bipartisan Freedom to Export to Cuba Act that would eliminate the legal barriers to Americans doing business in Cuba, a move that would be particularly popular with farm and business groups interested in trade and export opportunities.

Unfortunately, Biden seems more concerned about catering to right-wing Cuban Americans in southern Florida, where Democrats, failing to stand up to Trump’s red-baiting, lost the state and two congressional seats in the last election. Despite the talk that his administration is guided by human rights concerns, Biden ignores what the humanitarian group Oxfam, in its detailed report on the devastating effects of U.S. policy, called “The Right to Live Without a Blockade.”

But Biden ignores the crisis in Cuba at his own peril. The dire food and medicine shortages may well spark a migration crisis that will exacerbate the rush of Central American asylum seekers at the Mexican border that the Biden administration is already unable to cope with. Cuba expert Bill LeoGrande predicts “a mass exodus of desperate people” if Biden doesn’t act soon.

Biden would do well to heed the warning and with the stroke of a pen, lift trade and travel restrictions and allow unrestricted remittances. These measures would quickly infuse more money into Cuba’s economy and alleviate the needless suffering Cubans are experiencing at the hands of an administration that does not consider the well-being of 11 million Cubans “a priority.”

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Nonprofit Arts, Culture Organizations Have Lost $17.3 Billion In Pandemic

Above Photo: The Ernest Hemingway Foundation of Oak park.

While hundreds of people in the US and 10,000 globally continue to die each day, American media outlets lose no opportunity to assure their viewers and readers that the pandemic is “over.”

In fact, the suffering of the population continues, long- and short-term physical and economic suffering. For example, Feeding America reports that more than 50 million people in the US experienced food insecurity in 2020, up from 35 million in 2019, while more than 42 million face the same condition this year. A new study also indicates that one-third of Americans planning to retire now say the pandemic has delayed their retirement.

Artists are faring badly, along with other vulnerable and unprotected portions of the population. This alone should encourage the radicalization of more thinking elements among the artists.

A June 14 update from Americans for the Arts estimates that nonprofit arts and culture organizations in the US have lost some $17.3 billion to date since the outbreak of the pandemic. Ninety-nine percent of producing and presenting organizations have canceled events, a loss of an estimated 541 million canceled ticket admissions. Local area businesses have experienced enormous declines in revenue, as have local governments. The survey calculates that “1.01 million jobs have been negatively affected as a result of canceled events.”

The statistics are mind-numbing, but revealing: some 46 percent of arts and culture organizations have laid off or furloughed workers. More than a third of this group had more than 50 percent of their staff affected. Less than half expect to return to pre-pandemic employment levels, and not until 2022 or beyond at that. Arts employment as a whole is still down 25 percent from its level before the pandemic. Many positions are never coming back.

The June 14 report indicates that more than half of arts organizations “with in-person programming remain closed to the public. 36% have targeted a 2021 re-open date. 38% have no target date. 42% lack the financial resources needed to restart in-person programming. 68% of those report it will take 3+ months to assemble those funds, and 14% are not confident they can do so at all.”

The US Census Bureau’s Small Business Pulse Survey suggests that “arts, entertainment, and recreation” businesses are among the most likely to take longer than six months to recover from the pandemic.

The Americans for the Arts report asserts that artists and creative workers “remain among the most severely affected segment of the nation’s workforce, having lost an average of $34,000 each in creativity-based income since the pandemic’s onset. At the height of the pandemic in 2020, 63% experienced unemployment. … 37% have been unable to access or afford food at some point during the pandemic and 58% have not visited a medical professional due to an inability to pay. 95% have lost creative income. 74% had events canceled.”

Arts and entertainment in New York City and state have sustained particularly sharp blows. According to Creatives Rebuild New York, 50 percent of performing arts jobs statewide have been lost, with that figure rising to 72 percent in New York City. The city’s arts and recreation sector suffered a 60 percent drop in employment between February and April 2020.

Many museums in the US, where government subsidization of arts and culture is pitiful, also face a bleak future. A “National Snapshot of COVID-19 Impact on United States Museums,” prepared for the American Alliance of Museums in April, revealed that three-quarters of the museums surveyed report their operating income “fell an average of 40 percent in 2020 while their doors were closed to the public an average of 28 weeks due to the pandemic.”

Fifteen percent (over 5,000 US museums) confirmed there was a “significant risk of permanent closure” or they “didn’t know” if they would survive the next six months absent additional financial relief.

The institutions responding to the American Alliance of Museums survey reported having, on average, “16 months of operating reserve on hand, but one quarter of respondents had 4 months or less remaining. Fifty-nine percent of responding museums had to cut back on education, programming, and other public services due to budget shortfalls and/or staff reductions.”

At the time of the April survey, nearly 30 percent of responding museums were still closed. Those that were open were experiencing an average of only 41 percent of pre-pandemic attendance. Of those that were closed, “64 percent had identified an opening date, with 79 percent identifying a reopening date by July 2021 or earlier.”

“Museums,” the “Snapshot” continues, “have largely been unable to offset losses by cutting expenditures. Nearly two-thirds of institutions (61 percent) report that their net operating performance decreased, by an average of 38 percent.” The average pandemic-related loss per museum was nearly $700,000, an intolerable loss for smaller organizations.

Behind these dull figures lies a social and cultural crisis, organizations and museums closed or damaged, thousands of individual lives harmed or even ruined. And all of this unnecessary, all of it because of the homicidal policies of US governments at every level, under Republicans and Democrats alike, designed only to protect and extend the assets of the very wealthy.

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Organizing Poultry Workers Starts With Learning Together

Above Photo: Magaly Licolli, left, at an action in favor of a just food system. Courtesy of Licolli.

She’s been denounced by Tyson Foods as a “radical union organizer,” but Magaly Licolli doesn’t organize unions — she organizes workers.

Licolli is a leader in the workers’ center movement that since the 1970s has been organizing labor difficult to formally unionize. An immigrant who developed a passion for popular education through her theater education in Mexico, Licolli served as the executive director of the now-defunct Northwest Arkansas Workers’ Justice Center, a nonprofit founded in 2007 to serve the region’s poultry workers, where she worked with local community organizer Fernando Garcia. In 2019 Licolli co-founded Venceremos (Spanish for “we will win”), a nonprofit community center with a similar mission. Venceremos, like the NWAWJC, belongs to the Food Chain Workers Alliance, a coalition of over 30 similar worker-based organizations representing some 375,000 food workers in the U.S. and Canada.

Workers’ centers have sprung up in recent decades in the anti-union, right-to-work states of the U.S. South. The earliest included organizations in Black communities in the Carolinas and among immigrants in El Paso, Texas in the 1970s and 1980s; the most recent waves have been in immigrant and refugee communities, serving farmworkers, food processors, and others in the agriculture industry. Workers’ centers often focus on direct service and the specific needs of the communities they serve. Because they are not unions, they fall outside of the National Labor Relations Act’s purview, which allows them to engage in tactics that are prohibited for traditional unions, like boycotts against businesses connected to the primary target of a campaign.

In this oral history interview, Licolli tells Facing South about the experiences that led her to start Venceremos, which she co-founded with a group of 16 women poultry workers in 2019. After meeting with groups like Florida’s Coalition of Immokalee Workers, which successfully organized tomato pickers to push companies at the top of the fast-food and grocery store supply chains to implement a code of conduct to protect the farmworkers at the bottom, they formed Venceremos to pursue a similar worker-driven social responsibility model at poultry processing companies like Tyson and George’s.

Licolli also discusses her upbringing in Mexico, how she uses her theater training in her organizing strategy, sexism in the labor movement, and how the pandemic affected workers and organizing in northwest Arkansas.

This interview is published alongside a new essay on the poultry industry and three archival stories — an interview with organizer Donna Bazemore, an investigation into slaughterhouse conditions, and a detailed report on the chicken industry’s concentration — from the summer 1989 issue of Southern Exposure, Facing South’s print forerunner, which won a 1990 National Magazine Award for its investigation of the industry. The conversation took place over the course of two phone calls in May 2021 and has been edited for length and clarity.

I am from Mexico. I grew up in a very humble but a very hardworking family. My dad is a printer. I am the middle one of five children, and I have always been very different than the rest of my siblings. I grew up in a Catholic school, and I was very rebellious and very curious. I lived also in a very violent environment in my house. León, it’s a very conservative town, very conservative city, and Guanajuato is very conservative. My family didn’t really believe that women had to get higher education, but had to do women’s roles.

When I was 9 years old I wanted to escape my house. I felt asphyxiated. When I was 13 I began joining theater at school. In Mexico all the art back then was very political, very aligned with social justice. All my friends who were on the art side were socially not acceptable. I felt at home because I felt like we were all struggling to express ourselves through art. Theater was giving me the healing I needed, because theater is a very complex art. I believe that that really helped me right now with my work.

I’m so glad that I studied theater in Mexico. The approach, the techniques were learning who you are, your feelings, and asking why are you feeling this way. And reflecting about your humanity. I was a victim of sexual abuse when I was 15 years old, so for me theater was a way of letting that pain go. Eventually I told my parents, “I’m going to move to Guanajuato,” which is 40 minutes away. It was a relief being far from my family and that environment. I was not able to express to my family that I was a victim of rape, that all this anger I had was because I was angry with society, I was angry with the roles of women, I felt very oppressed. After a year I told my parents that I was leaving to Mexico City.

It was a very beautiful education, because there they believed that in order to transform yourself into a different character, you need to learn who you are, where you come from, where you are, and where you’re going to go. The first stage was about learning from our past, our pains, our traumas. I had to confront myself, and confronting myself means that I am responsible of who I am, I am responsible of who I want to be. I am not responsible for what happened to me but I am responsible of how I see that and how I take that to transform that into something good. That has helped me. I also try to push that to others — that way of healing, that way of saying this happened to me and I’m not going to carry this for the rest of my life and be miserable.

When I have the spaces with the poultry workers, I always give them this example. We believe that women have a specific role and that women also perpetuate the machismo in our culture. My mom played a huge role about perpetuating machismo in my family, but also she’s a victim of violence herself. I learned that whenever you don’t see that, you are going to keep repeating that story and repeating that with your family, your kids, with your partners. I found myself finding this type of men that were oppressing me, that were machistas. I was fighting against that but at the same time I was attracting that. I was feeling like in order to feel love I needed someone to be jealous with me.

I had been in a relationship like that for years. I got married to this white person and that’s why I moved to the U.S., to Arkansas. But I was in a very violent situation. I thought that white people were not machistas, that they were beyond that because they always blamed Mexicans to be the machistas. But no. The worst relationship that I had in my life was with this white person.

My first years in Arkansas were hell. I was alone, I didn’t know English, I was in another culture, in another country. It was very bad. My plan was to continue studying to free myself from that situation. I began learning English as my second language and then I began studying at the University of Arkansas. But that was a way of getting out of this relationship, of empowering myself to say I don’t need you, I no longer need you to translate for me, I no longer need you to hit me, I can do this myself.

When I began at the university I left him. I had to say I need to be happy, and I am not happy in this situation. That’s why I studied theater in the U.S., because theater had always given me that freedom.

But in the U.S., theater was not that. It was about oppression. I am a Mexican, I have this strong accent, I have a brown skin color, and they didn’t know what to do with me in Arkansas, in the theater department. A lot of my partner students did not have the experience that I have. They were very inexperienced in theater. I had more experience because I was learning these techniques since I was 13. But somehow that didn’t matter. The only thing that mattered was my accent, my skin color, and that’s it.

When I was in Mexico, the approach was that the theater we do needs to transform the lives of our audience. Here in the U.S. it was about entertainment. It was not really about analyzing where we are. In Arkansas there is a lot of poverty, a lot of inequality, a lot of racism. Why don’t we use those things to do theater? But it was not the approach.

I really suffered a lot. I was miserable. I was depressed. I hated the U.S., I hated white people, I hated the white culture because they didn’t let me exist, they didn’t let me be. I couldn’t even say that they were racist because how are you going to say that? You couldn’t even say that back 10, 15 years ago. It was very difficult to call out people about their racism. I decided that if I wanted to continue to do theater I had to leave Arkansas, or just stop doing theater. When I graduated, I didn’t have money and I ended up staying in Arkansas but I didn’t want to do theater anymore. I didn’t want to be involved in that. I was not interested in the type of theater that was done in Arkansas.

I began working in this nonprofit, the Community Clinic in Springdale, where I learned the struggles of poultry workers. My job at the Community Clinic was helping patients get enrolled in health care or other programs, because most of the people that go to this clinic are low-income families that don’t have enough resources to get health care. Most of them were poultry workers. When they came, they used the space sometimes to just let things go.

I needed to ask them about their jobs, about their income. Whenever we talked, I was surprised that, for example, George’s poultry workers didn’t know how much they were making. I was like, what do you mean you don’t know? Can you ask your employer? No, because they can fire us. No, they will retaliate against us. I was like, what?

On the pay stubs it didn’t say anything about how much they were making per hour or how many hours. It just said the names and the total. To me that was shocking.

A lot of the workers who didn’t have jobs were former poultry workers that have some type of disability from working in the poultry processing for many years. I remember this woman, a single mom around 40 years old, and she was unable to find a job because she was exposed to this chemical accident at a Tyson plant in 2011. She got holes in her lungs, and she was having difficulty to get a specialist because she didn’t have any health care. And what did Tyson give you? “Well, nothing, I had to quit because I could no longer be there because of the high temperatures or the chemicals.” I was like, but Tyson didn’t do anything, didn’t give you compensation?

All of them were saying no, nobody will win at Tyson because Tyson has all of this power here.

I found that the leaders in the community didn’t really want to talk about those issues. Then I began understanding the complexity of the nonprofits that were receiving funding from Tyson and therefore they couldn’t talk against Tyson. They were praising Tyson for all the charity that they were giving to the community, but in my head I was like, this is just — this is outrageous. They are creating these crises with our communities and then instead of helping these people, these workers, they are giving money to these organizations to help these workers. By doing that, these organizations cannot stand against the roots of the problem.

They’re pretty much controlling the community by giving charity. Charity is not the same as justice. To me that was very clear. The charity is not fixing the problems, it’s just creating the problems, and creating this cycle of poverty, this cycle of injustice. This is not solving anything whatsoever.

The Community Clinic does an amazing job with these workers, and I’m not saying that we don’t need that. But we need more than that. At the end of the day the Community Clinic, or these immigrant organizations — they cannot solve the whole thing. They are just putting a Band-aid to this huge injury. That’s why in 2014 I began to learn how to organize workers. I began with the Industrial Workers of the World, which is a union that’s very different than the rest.

Fernando [Garcia] was working with me and organizing workers. He told me about the IWW, and why the IWW was a different type of union. When I began learning about this strategy, I was like, it makes sense that we organize committees within the jobs to organize workers. The only ones that had the power to change things were the workers, and we needed to empower the workers.

But it was a struggle, because IWW is very white-led. I understood that even if I was a Marxist, or a leftist, or an anarchist, it was not going to land in the immigrant community. I used the ideas, but it was very hard to connect workers to join or to create IWW committees within the poultry plants.

IWW, they have their preamble that’s very specific. A lot of the workers didn’t feel like this was their language. It was hard to even get workers to our meetings. It was just not landing. And IWW was very white. Eventually they created a Spanish group to translate materials and organize with the Latinx community, but it was not what I expected.

The techniques of organizing workers, I still use them. I don’t have to tell them this comes from the IWW. The power of bringing workers collectively to fight for their demands, that still stays there. But we don’t have to say you need to join the IWW to fight.

I learned that I didn’t really want to say that we are forming an IWW committee. No, we are forming a committee with poultry workers from the Berry Street Tyson plant. It’s a way of strategizing and using the laws that allow workers to collectively organize. Also, there is a lot of obstacles in Arkansas that will fight against an independent union. The UFCW [United Food and Commercial Workers], in the South they’re not as strong, because in the South the companies fight against the unions.

Eventually, I took the job of being the director of the Northwest Arkansas Workers’ Justice Center. When I took the organization, I took it to change it, to make it more functional for poultry workers. I changed everything in that organization. I changed the way of training, I changed the theory of change.

The focus of the workers’ justice center was on single cases, compensation, wage theft, OSHA complaints, things like that. That is important, but really in Arkansas it’s very difficult. If the wage theft cases go more than $2,000 the cases don’t proceed. The worker’s comp cases are very difficult because very few lawyers will go against Tyson or other poultry plants. OSHA will just come to inspect the place if there’s a huge accident because OSHA doesn’t have enough resources.

I would talk with them and say, look, these are the options — but also the other option is to fight collectively with others, because this case is not only your case. These cases happen every day, and it’s happening a lot. So what about if we fight together to form campaigns to fight against these things?

They were using only PowerPoints to educate workers, but not to engage with the workers or to empower them or to make them part of the organizing efforts. I didn’t want to be the one to uphold the power — it was not about me, it was about building power within the community. It was like, I need to use everything I learned in theater about myself, about how we can believe that another reality can be different. We have groups of 30 people coming to our meetings. I think we need to do more than just give them a presentation or give them updates. What about if we engage them to analyze this deeply?

Ultimately it’s about people believing themselves to be powerless. I said to myself, well, if theater did this to me, I think I can use this also to change the realities of others. So I changed the way of training to popular education. I was using some theater exercises to bring out the realities of power.

I was in meetings with workers and they were saying things like, the company is good but the supervisor is not, or the CEO is good, but the supervisor is not. No. We need to understand the complexity of why the CEO is the most responsible. I used theater to do that, to put workers in roles, to create their own social drama, to create their own stories improvising the dialogues of what they heard, of what the supervisor said. And it was beautiful to see how workers were more engaged.

But I had a lot of problems with that organization because it was also very led by men, very led by machismo. It was a lot about stopping me and telling me that my approach was not working whenever I saw that, yes, it was working. They didn’t appreciate, I guess, that it was me who brought that change. It was a woman who brought that change.

A lot of sexism is in our movement. Sometimes I need to navigate that. Nobody questions a man’s idea. But when we say it, it’s questionable. My whole life has been about fighting for my own ideas and the ideas I believe are going to benefit workers. At the end of my years at the Workers’ Justice Center, I decided that we needed to create another organization so that nobody could stop us. It’s already hard to organize workers. And when an organization is not supporting your vision, it’s even harder. That’s why I created Venceremos with poultry workers, women who saw and believed in my approach, in the way that I organize.

Since I began organizing poultry workers, the more active workers were women. Women have been at the frontline of the poultry movement since the beginning. When I began building Venceremos, it was the women who saw that we needed to implement the worker-driven social responsibility model to poultry. Most of the workers on the processing lines are women. It was not like we were not allowing men — but women have been more actively involved, more actively pursuing solutions.

Venceremos has a very specific goal of adopting the worker-driven social responsibility model. When I was at the Workers’ Justice Center, Oxfam was using us to create their report, to create their campaigns, to create their winnings — was just tokenizing us and using us for their own purposes. I had to get rid of our relationship with Oxfam because they went and met with Tyson. They had this agreement of Tyson was going to change these different things. But it was just a symbolic agreement. That agreement didn’t have any mechanisms of enforcement, any accountability, nothing. It was just a paper saying they were going to change these things.

I fought with Oxfam and asked them, why are the workers not part of those conversations? Again it was this idea of the workers are ignorant and they don’t know how to talk with the company, and we are handling this. I was very angry and I was like, no, this is not what we believe in. I had to protect my trust with workers because workers are not dumb.

When that happened, we were in a point of what’s next? It was for me a moment of growing. This approach of organizing workers in the workplace — we’re not building a union. I am not organizing workers to belong to a union because workers don’t trust the union. Luckily, other organizations have created models that are very effective.

I didn’t know much about the Coalition of Immokalee Workers. In 2018 I traveled with Fernando to Immokalee first to learn about what was happening. When I learned about the program they had created, I said I need to bring workers to see it themselves. I brought workers the same year, and these workers are co-founders of Venceremos now. When they saw how the program works, they said, Magaly, why don’t we do this? They told the coalition, we believe that this model in the poultry industry can work.

From that model, you push the buyers to adopt this code of conduct. But it’s not just the code of conduct — it’s the implementation of the code of conduct that makes you powerful. They created these monitor organizations that monitor the rights of workers under this code of conduct. The complaints can be resolved within two weeks, whereas an EEOC [Equal Employment Opportunity Commission] complaint can take years. This is more effective, more rapid, and more impactful in the long-term because it also prevents the issues from keeping going.

Venceremos was built with this idea. These workers who traveled with me to Immokalee believed that the only ways to change, systemically, the poultry industry is by adopting a model that has its own mechanisms of enforcement and compliance. That’s why we are using this model in Venceremos.

It’s basically knowing who is on top in the power chain. We know that poultry companies have gained so much political power within the communities where we are. Who is on top of these big companies that have a lot of power? Other companies that have the power of purchase. At the end of the chain is the public, who has the power of purchase. We’ve seen the power of consumers with animal welfare. Lately, customers are more concerned by how the product is made than who is making the product. This model brings in the labor part of it — not only concerns about the animal, and how the product is grown, but who is making the product. The beauty of this model is it brings consumers into having direct responsibility. It brings market consequences, because at the end the buyers can say, I’m not going to buy this product because you are violating the code of conduct. The companies don’t want to lose those contracts, those profits. It’s a way to force them to do what’s right.

We launched Venceremos Oct. 1, 2019. We were going to work on renting a space, bringing more workers, and just building this frame and educating others about the worker-driven social responsibility model.

That didn’t happen because of the pandemic in early 2020. When that happened, we changed drastically. We could no longer meet in person, we had to change the meetings to phone calls. I had to split the George’s group and the Tyson group because the companies were acting differently.

It was an emergency. Companies were not providing adequate PPE [personal protective equipment]. I remember very clearly that one worker said, “Magaly, we don’t have paid sick leave, what is going to happen to us? With the pandemic and COVID, how are we going to miss work? We are not going to be paid for that, we are going to be punished.”

All of the pre-existing working conditions were not favoring the workers whatsoever with the pandemic. OSHA was not doing anything. Workers were pretty much left alone. The only thing that was left to me and to the workers was to organize themselves, to fight. I think that Tyson and the companies were reacting to that. For the first time they saw that these 300 workers signed this petition, and now it’s on the news. And we are protesting outside Tyson, and how is Tyson responding to workers? Nothing. They were exposing themselves — that they didn’t care for workers.

It was an emergency, and the workers were so worried about their lives, the lives of their families, that workers were joining. It was so impressive to see this many workers signing the petition, giving their names, willing to fight and to take any consequences. Since 2014 I’ve been organizing workers, and I never saw this courage of workers coming together to fight. But it was because of the extreme danger that they saw coming. Other organizations keep saying, oh they’re so afraid. Well, yes, they are afraid because these are the only jobs. But they also understand that jobs are not about losing their lives. And they didn’t want to lose their lives. That’s why they were organizing.

Workers at the George’s plant were organically organizing themselves some weeks before I began to organize with them. They already took action, they went to HR to express their concerns with the company ending the staggered shifts [which allowed greater social distancing]. HR didn’t want to listen. That’s why some of the workers who were leading those efforts contacted me. They told me about their demands, and they said they were going to do a similar action the following week. I said, OK, let’s all have a conversation. That was a Saturday, and we had 20 workers joining the call. We discussed the working conditions and their demands and their concerns. I encouraged them to walk out — I told them we needed to escalate the action, because obviously they were not listening to workers.

I was able to share with them some of the laws that would protect collective action. They were kind of hesitant, because they were afraid of losing their jobs. They had heard managers and supervisors telling them that they were going to fire them if they did something like that. I told them I will follow your leadership — if what you want is to not walk out, that’s fine. But this is very limited, what we can do to help you all. If we want to expose the situation, we want to make sure that people know what’s happening. The media, they’re not going to be able to know what’s happening if everything happens indoors.

I didn’t really call the media before because we didn’t know what was happening on that day. I called some in the early morning on the same day and said workers are going to be walking out. But we didn’t really know how many of them. So at the end workers got encouraged by others and myself. They walked out that morning. It was 33 workers, but a lot of workers were detained by the supervisors and managers inside the plant, so it could have been more.

Eventually, they told the employees that they were not going to end staggered shifts, which was one of the major demands. The biggest victory of this walkout was that workers found themselves to have power. At the end of the day, the company didn’t fire any worker. They were kind of retaliating against some of the workers who were leading the strike, but we were following the cases with lawyers. The retaliation ceased.

It’s very difficult to encourage workers to keep going on the actions because some of the workers were not paid. We came together and fundraised money to cover the lost wages of workers from that day, but still some workers became not so much interested in continuing. One of the bigger barriers for us is we were not able to meet in person to have a space to continue organizing. However, we continue organizing with the George’s workers — there are a lot of issues that we still want to address.

Workers from other towns in Arkansas, from Van Buren, from Siloam, workers from Dardanelle, the only unionized plant — these workers were calling me to thank me for our work and to tell me that the union had not appeared at the plant, that they didn’t know what to do because the union was absent. They were very alone, and they were very grateful that we were doing these actions.

I was able to connect with other workers from other towns — with Pine Bluff, with Green Forest, Huntsville, and some others in Missouri. They were calling us all the time. Eventually I hope that when we have a place and this happens, we will try to engage other people.

Now, we are planning to rent this space to keep growing the worker base, and our focus will be again with popular education but more the solutions. The solutions that we have found are the worker-driven social responsibility models. We are going to keep building on that to educate other workers about the power of this program, to educate the allies, to build this model to create a code of conduct, and to start targeting the supply chain of these companies.

We are still working on building the resources of Venceremos to bring more staff. Eventually we want to bring poultry workers to become the organizers, because they need to be at the front.

I got into this fight with the socialists. I also come from that background, the intellectual background, I have read books, I have read Marx, I understand what they’re saying. But I cannot come to workers and say, “We need to be Marxists because Marx says…” Sometimes the intellectuals don’t understand that in order to organize people you need to put yourself into the realities and just learn with them. You are not coming with this idea, “I’m going to teach you because you are ignorant, you’re dumb.”

No. When you organize poultry workers, it’s about getting rid of all of these ideas and coming with them, and just sit with them. A lot of them are very religious. I’m not going to come with them and say, no that is a way of oppression. No. I need to accept that this is their reality. I need to respect that, and I need to come talk with them about yes, let’s build this work together. It’s learning with them — it’s not about me imposing my idea on them.

A lot of people in Arkansas ask me, “Why do you organize with older immigrants?” The majority focus on the younger immigrants because they’re easier. They already know English, they already go to school, they probably know how to read these books or have read these books. You find this comfort — I am with my people, they understand what I’m saying. But you cannot be like that with the older immigrants. You need to go down with them and just embrace that. It’s beautiful, really.

They have learned to respect me, and I respect them because I know that I am with them. I have never come to impose on them anything. It’s not about that. It’s about gaining their trust to believe that we all together can change things. That’s why popular education is so beautiful, because we learn that we learn from each other. We share our experiences — this experience can relate to this other experience, and so on.

Venceremos is led by women, and for us it’s so important to end sexism at the poultry plants, to educate workers about sexual harassment, gender issues, and equality, and to bring the women’s voice. We acknowledge that workers come from trauma — historic trauma, collective trauma, personal trauma. We want to not judge them, but instead embrace that and say, we need to find solutions to end this type of thinking.

We recognize that we are working with very vulnerable communities that need more access to that type of education. So we build a safe place to talk about these issues, to end discrimination against the LGBTQ community, against women. But we also recognize that our communities are fighting to survive, and that the immediate concern for them is to have food on the table. As long as workers keep struggling with that basic need, it’s going to be very difficult that they are able to transform the whole society. It’s about building consciousness among workers, among allies. It’s a process of growing and learning, and not crucifying anyone for not knowing how to approach those conversations with other people.

When I was an activist, I believed that I knew more than others, and that I knew how to change the world and others didn’t. No. I am not an activist — I am an organizer, and I organize with workers, understanding their faults, understanding that we are not perfect human beings, that we cannot make the workers fight for everything. Understand that we are also learning, that we are also healing collective traumas, personal traumas, historic trauma, and that is not an easy job. You’re not going to heal that by reading a book, or two or three.

We need to work around how to create power within these communities and stop being the people that believe because we went to school we know more than them. That is not creating power, and we don’t know more than them. They know more, because they are directly affected. They are the ones that have expertise in that job, and we need to learn how to connect with them. That is work for the organizers to do.

People really need to connect with the community to get rid of these ideas that the workers are afraid and we are the voice of workers. That needs to really change. I am not the voice of workers and fighting for the workers who cannot fight. No. These workers have a beautiful voice, a powerful voice. The only problem is that nobody wants to hear them.

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Klamath Water Basin drought impacting farmers, concerning Native American Tribes

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Contacting ET is ‘reckless’, say astronomers

Contacting ET is ‘reckless’, say astronomers

Posted on Tuesday, 15 June, 2021


Contacting ET is 'reckless', say astronomers News-murchison-mwa

Is it wise to try to contact aliens ? Image Credit: CC BY-SA 3.0 CSIRO
A group of astronomers have warned of the potential dangers of trying to contact intelligent extraterrestrials.
Most people involved in the search for signs of intelligent alien civilizations tend to assume that these advanced spacefarers are benign; that they are interested only in peaceful co-existence.

There are some, however, who hold the opposite view.

Writing in a recent op-ed for the Washington Post, physicist Mark Buchanan has warned that making contact with aliens could be comparable to the first Europeans making contact with the indigenous Americans.

“Chances are, we should all be grateful that we don’t yet have any evidence of contact with alien civilizations,” he wrote. “Attempting to communicate with extraterrestrials, if they do exist, could be extremely dangerous for us.”

SETI astronomer Joe Gertz also agreed, noting that attempts to communicate with aliens could cause “the reckless endangerment of all mankind, and be absolutely proscribed with criminal consequences, presumably as exercised at the national level, or administered through the International Court of Justice in The Hague.”

On the other side of the argument, meanwhile, is American astrobiologist Douglas Vakoch who believes that if we don’t attempt to contact extraterrestrials, we risk “missing guidance that could enhance our own civilization’s sustainability.”

Ultimately, it all comes down to whether or not the aliens we do contact happen to be peaceful.

Is it worth the risk ? You decide.

Source: Mail Online

https://www.unexplained-mysteries.com/news/347818/contacting-et-is-reckless-say-astronomers
Thanks to: https://www.unexplained-mysteries.com

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Houston Methodist Hospital Set To Terminate Unvaccinated Employees

  • The Facts:

    Journalist Laurie Clarke has published a piece in the British Medical Journal about the censorship of science, and who these Big Tech “fact-checkers” really are.

  • Reflect On:

    Why has there been such an effort to hide information that threatens the accepted narrative we get from the mainstream? What is going on here? How is this legal, moral and ethical?

Take a moment and breathe. Place your hand over your chest area, near your heart. Breathe slowly into the area for about a minute, focusing on a sense of ease entering your mind and body. Click here to learn why we suggest this.

The censorship of information is at an all time high, but do people really recognize the extent to which it has been and is being carried out? A recent article published in the British Medical Journal by journalist Laurie Clarke has highlighted the fact that Facebook has already removed at least 16 million pieces of content from its platform and added warnings to approximately 167 million others. YouTube has removed nearly 1 million videos related to, according to them, “dangerous or misleading covid-19 medical information.”

Being an independent media outlet, Collective Evolution has experienced this censorship first hand. We’ve also been in touch with and witnessed many doctors and world renowned scientists be subjected to the same type of treatment from these social media organizations. Not long ago I wrote an article about Dr. Martin Kulldorff, a Harvard professor of medicine who has been having trouble with twitter. I did the same with Dr. Carl Heneghan, a professor of evidence based medicine from Oxford and an emergency GP who wrote an article regarding the efficacy of facemasks in stopping the spread of COVID. His article was not removed, but a label was added to it by Facebook saying it was ‘fake information.’ There are many more examples.

Clarke’s article says, with regards to posts that have been removed and labelled, that,

“while a portion of that content is likely to be wilfully wrongheaded or vindictively misleading, the pandemic is littered with examples of scientific opinion that have been caught in the dragnet.”

This is true, take for example the ‘lab origins of COVID debate.’ Early on in the pandemic you were not even allowed to mention that COVID may have originated in a lab, and if you did, you were punished for doing so. Independent media platforms were demonetized and subjected to changes in algorithms. Now, all of a sudden, the mainstream media is discussing it as a legitimate possibility. It makes no sense.

Laurie Clarke outlines in her piece,

This underscores the difficulty of defining scientific truth, prompting the bigger question of whether social media platforms such as Facebook, Twitter, Instagram and YouTube should be tasked with this at all…

“I think it’s quite dangerous for scientific content to be labelled as misinformation, just because of the way people might perceive that,” says Sander van der Linden, professor of social psychology in society at Cambridge University, UK. “Even though it might fit under a definition (of misinformation) in a very technical sense, I’m not sure if that’s the right way to describe it more generally because it could lead to greater politicisation of science, which is undesirable.”

This type of “politicization of science” is exactly what’s happened during this pandemic.

Science is being suppressed for political and financial gain. Covid-19 has unleashed state corruption on a grand scale, and it is harmful to public health. Politicians and industry are responsible for this opportunistic embezzlement. So too are scientists and health experts. The pandemic has revealed how the medical-political complex can be manipulated in an emergency—a time when it is even more important to safeguard science. – Kamran Abbas is a doctor, executive editor of the British Medical Journal, and the editor of the Bulletin of the World Health Organization. (source)

An important point to get across is also the fact that these independent “fact checkers” are working with Facebook, who in turn is working with the government. NSA whistleblower Edward Snowden offered his thoughts on the censorship we’ve been seeing during this pandemic in November of last year stating the following,

In secret, these companies had all agreed to work with the U.S. Government far beyond what the law required of them, and that’s what we’re seeing with this new censorship push is really a new direction in the same dynamic. These companies are not obligated by the law to do almost any of what they’re actually doing but they’re going above and beyond, to, in many cases, to increase the depth of their relationship (with the government) and the government’s willingness to avoid trying to regulate them in the context of their desired activities, which is ultimately to dominate the conversation and information space of global society in different ways…They’re trying to make you change your behaviour.

If you’re not comfortable letting the government determine the boundaries of appropriate political speech, why are you begging Mark Zuckerberg to do it?

I think the reality here is…it’s not really about freedom of speech, and it’s not really about protecting people from harm…I think what you see is the internet has become the de facto means of mass communication. That represents influence which represents power, and what we see is we see a whole number of different tribes basically squabbling to try to gain control over this instrument of power.

What we see is an increasing tendency to silence journalists who say things that are in the minority.

It makes you wonder, is this “fact-checking” actually about fact checking? Or is something else going on here?

Below is a breakdown from Clarke’s article illustrating how fact checking works and what the problem is with following the science. Since we have reported this many times over the last 5 years, we decided to let our readers hear it from someone else for a change as it’s truly quite vindicating to see more investigators coming to these conclusions.

How fact checking works

The past decade has seen an arms race between users who peddle disinformation (intentionally designed to mislead) or unwittingly share misinformation (which users don’t realise is false) and the social media platforms that find themselves charged with policing it, whether they want to or not.1

When The BMJ questioned Facebook, Twitter, and YouTube (which is owned by Google) they all highlighted their efforts to remove potentially harmful content and to direct users towards authoritative sources of information on covid-19 and vaccines, including the World Health Organization and the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Although their moderation policies differ slightly, the platforms generally remove or reduce the circulation of content that disputes information given by health authorities such as WHO and the CDC or spreads false health claims that are considered harmful, including incorrect information about the dangers of vaccines.

But the pandemic has seen a shifting patchwork of criteria employed by these companies to define the boundaries of misinformation. This has led to some striking U turns: at the beginning of the pandemic, posts saying that masks helped to prevent the spread of covid-19 were labelled “false”; now it’s the opposite, reflecting the changing nature of the academic debate and official recommendations.

Twitter manages its fact checking internally. But Facebook and YouTube rely on partnerships with third party fact checkers, convened under the umbrella of the International Fact-Checking Network—a non-partisan body that certifies other fact checkers, run by the Poynter Institute for Media Studies, a non-profit journalism school in St Petersburg, Florida. Poynter’s top donors include the Charles Koch Institute (a public policy research organisation), the National Endowment for Democracy (a US government agency), and the Omidyar Network (a “philanthropic investment firm”), as well as Google and Facebook. Poynter also owns the Tampa Bay Times newspaper and the high profile fact checker PolitiFact. The Poynter Institute declined The BMJ’s invitation to comment for this article.

For scientific and medical content the International Fact-Checking Network involves little known outfits such as SciCheck, Metafact, and Science Feedback. Health Feedback, a subsidiary of Science Feedback, handpicks scientists to deliver its verdict. Using this method, it labelled as “misleading” a Wall Street Journal opinion article2 predicting that the US would have herd immunity by April 2021, written by Marty Makary, professor of health policy and management at John Hopkins University in Baltimore, Maryland. This prompted the newspaper to issue a rebuttal headlined “Fact checking Facebook’s fact checkers,” arguing that the rating was “counter-opinion masquerading as fact checking.”3 Makary hadn’t presented his argument as a factual claim, the article said, but had made a projection based on his analysis of the evidence.

A spokesperson for Science Feedback tells The BMJ that, to verify claims, it selects scientists on the basis of “their expertise in the field of the claim/article.” They explain, “Science Feedback editors usually start by searching the relevant academic literature and identifying scientists who have authored articles on related topics or have the necessary expertise to assess the content.”

The organisation then either asks the selected scientists to weigh in directly or collects claims that they’ve made in the media or on social media to reach a verdict. In the case of Makary’s article it identified 20 relevant scientists and received feedback from three.

“Follow the science”

The contentious nature of these decisions is partly down to how social media platforms define the slippery concepts of misinformation versus disinformation. This decision relies on the idea of a scientific consensus. But some scientists say that this smothers heterogeneous opinions, problematically reinforcing a misconception that science is a monolith.

This is encapsulated by what’s become a pandemic slogan: “Follow the science.” David Spiegelhalter, chair of the Winton Centre for Risk and Evidence Communication at Cambridge University, calls this “absolutely awful,” saying that behind closed doors scientists spend the whole time arguing and deeply disagreeing on some fairly fundamental things.

He says: “Science is not out in front telling you what to do; it shouldn’t be. I view it much more as walking along beside you muttering to itself, making comments about what it’s seeing and making some tentative suggestions about what might happen if you take a particular path, but it’s not in charge.”

The term “misinformation” could itself contribute to a flattening of the scientific debate. Martin Kulldorff, professor of medicine at Harvard Medical School in Boston, Massachusetts, has been criticised for his views on lockdown, which tack closely to his native Sweden’s more relaxed strategy.4 He says that scientists who voice unorthodox opinions during the pandemic are worried about facing “various forms of slander or censoring . . . they say certain things but not other things, because they feel that will be censored by Twitter or YouTube or Facebook.” This worry is compounded by the fear that it may affect grant funding and the ability to publish scientific papers, he tells The BMJ.

The binary idea that scientific assertions are either correct or incorrect has fed into the divisiveness that has characterised the pandemic. Samantha Vanderslott, a health sociologist at the University of Oxford, UK, told Nature, “Calling out fake stories can raise your profile.” In the same article Giovanni Zagni, director of the Italian fact checking website Facta, noted that “you can build a career” on the basis of becoming “a well respected voice that fights against bad information.”5

But this has fed a perverse incentive for scientists to label each other’s positions misinformation or disinformation.6 Van der Linden likens this to how the term “fake news” was weaponised by Donald Trump to silence his critics. He says, “I think you see a bit of the same with the term ‘misinformation,’ when there’s science that you don’t agree with and you label it as misinformation.”

Health Feedback’s website says that it won’t select scientists to verify claims if they’ve undermined their credibility by “propagating misinformation, whether intentionally or not.” In practice, this could create a Kafkaesque situation where scientists are precluded from offering their opinion as part of the fact checking process if they expressed an opinion that Facebook labelled misinformation. Strengthening the echo chamber effect is the fact that Health Feedback sometimes verifies claims by looking at what scientists have said on Twitter or in the media.

Scientific “truth”

Van der Linden says that it’s important for people to understand that in the scientific domain “there’s uncertainty, there’s debate, and it’s about the accumulation of insights over time and revising our opinions as we go along.” Healthy debate helps to separate the wheat from the chaff. Jevin West, associate professor in the Information School at the University of Washington in Seattle, says that social media platforms should therefore be “extra careful when it comes to debates involving science.” He explains: “The institution of science has developed these norms and behaviour to be self-corrective. So, for [social media platforms] to step into that conversation, I think it’s problematic.”

Experts who spoke to The BMJ emphasised the near impossibility of distinguishing between a minority scientific opinion and an opinion that’s objectively incorrect (misinformation). Spiegelhalter says that this would constitute a difficult “legalistic judgment about what a reasonable scientific opinion would be . . . I’ve got my own criteria that I use to decide whether I think something is misleading, but I find it very difficult to codify.”

Other scientists worry that, if this approach to scientific misinformation outlives the pandemic, the scientific debate could become worryingly subject to commercial imperatives. Vinay Prasad, associate professor at the University of California San Francisco, argued on the MedPage Today website: “The risk is that the myriad players in biomedicine, from large to small biopharmaceutical and [medical] device firms, will take their concerns to social media and journal companies. On a topic like cancer drugs, a tiny handful of folks critical of a new drug approval may be outnumbered 10:1 by key opinion leaders who work with the company.”7 Thus the majority who speak loudest, most visibly, and with the largest number online, may be judged “correct” by the public—and, as the saying goes, history is written by the victors.

Social media companies are still experimenting with the new raft of measures introduced since last year and may adapt their approach. Van der Linden says that the talks he’s had with Facebook have focused on how the platform could help foster an appreciation of how science works, “to actually direct people to content that educates them about the scientific process, rather than labelling something as true or false.”

This debate is playing out against a wider ideological struggle, where the ideal of “truth” is increasingly placed above “healthy debate.” Kulldorff says: “To remove things in general, I think is a bad idea. Because even if something is wrong, if you remove it there’s no opportunity to discuss it.” For instance, although he favours vaccination in general, people with fears or doubts about the vaccines used should not be silenced in online spaces, he says. “If we don’t have an open debate within science, then that will have enormous consequences for science and society.”

There are concerns that this approach could ultimately undermine trust in public health. In the US, says West, trust in the government and media is falling. He explains, “Science is still one of the more trusted institutions, but if you start tagging and shutting down conversation within science, to me that’s even worse than the actual posting of these individual articles.”

Dive Deeper

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Eric Clapton Details How The COVID Vaccine Paralyzed Him: Full Interview

The full Eric Clapton interview form Oracle Films can be found here.

Eric Clapton details how he was duped into getting the Astra Zeneca vaccine, what it did to his body, how the UK government installed a tracking app on his phone and the online hatred and bullying he received for speaking out against COVID lockdowns.

Source: FreeWorldNews.tv

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Israel’s historic new government cannot end growing delegitimization in U.S.

The new Israeli government has provided great hope to Israel’s friends in America that its image is about to improve in American politics. The Bennett-Lapid government is historic in that it includes three votes from a Palestinian party– “the most inclusive government ever, with Arabs, women, and Jews of color holding vital cabinet ministries,” as Democratic Majority for Israel, a conservative lobby group, puts it. And liberal Zionists are happy because their allies in Israel, the Meretz and Labor parties, are back in government after more than a dozen years in exile, and the orthodox parties are on the outs, a real shift in Israel’s political culture.

Rep. Debbie Wasserman Schultz says the “diverse, inclusive coalition” gives her new energy to battle Israel’s enemies.

“We will never waver in our commitment to Israel’s security and defending Israel from those who aim to weaken or destroy to those who would spirited Jewish democratic and critical ally.”

Neoconservatives are also proud. Bret Stephens in the New York Times:

Israel’s new government must be a puzzle for anyone who thinks of the Jewish state as a racist, fascistic, apartheid enterprise.

Daniel Sokatch of New Israel Fund calls the new government “revolutionary” in the historic inclusion of the Palestinian Ra’am party.

This is a precedent that cannot be undone… Their inclusion in this coalition is a major victory for the legitimization of Arab citizens as full participants in Israel’s political process, and a win for democracy. it also contains the seeds of real change…

While Natan Sachs expressed pleasure in a Carnegie talk that Naftali Bennett said the word “bipartisan” in English in his first speech as Prime Minister, meaning that he won’t continue Netanyahu’s “terrible” decision to politicize Israel support in the U.S. J Street also hopes the “partisan wedge” goes away.

I’m a glass-half-full person but I think these hopes are misplaced. Israel’s p.r. problems, aren’t going away with the new rightwing PM, and are sure to continue once the honeymoon is over. “No, we’re not celebrating the Bennett-Lapid government either. Still apartheid and we still must organize,” the young Jewish group IfNotNow says. Last night Israel bombed Gaza again. “New government — same apartheid.”

Ken Roth of Human Rights Watch made the same point, apartheid.

If the new Israeli coalition government wants really “to repair Israeli ties with the US Democratic Party and the Jewish diaspora,” it could start dismantling apartheid in Occupied Palestinian Territory that the Netanyahu government did so much to build.

So, prominent figures in the U.S. establishment and the Jewish community and the left are committed to the discourse of “apartheid.” And despite the best efforts of the Israel lobby, this talk will not go away.

In her report on the new government for NBC Nightly News Sunday, Kelly Cobiella went to Sheikh Jarrah to highlight the protests against the evictions of Palestinians to make way for Jewish settlers. “Palestinians, under occupation for decades, are fighting for their homes and demanding freedom,” she said.

Cobiella gave the mic to protester Munjed Keloti who called Israel an anachronism:

What the hell is going on. Really we are in 2021– and this injustice is still happening? And supported by so many official entities… the U.S.A. for an example.

Rashid Khalidi made the same point about anachronism in a call last week with Jim Zogby of the Arab American Institute, in which he said Israel faces a “decolonized future of equality.”

It’s out of time. They missed the boat. They could have gotten away with it in the 1800s. But not in the 21st century. Especially when they are so dependent on democratic countries.

Khalidi’s remarks are reminiscent of Tony Judt’s piece urging one democratic state back in 2003 that unleashed a firestorm of criticism from Zionists. Judt said then that Israel was an “anachronism: “the very idea of a ‘Jewish state’—a state in which Jews and the Jewish religion have exclusive privileges from which non-Jewish citizens are forever excluded—is rooted in another time and place.”

Benjamin Netanyahu’s “biggest achievement” was that he was able to defuse the delegitimization discourse for 12 years, Anshel Pfeffer said on a Carnegie call Tuesday. The diplomatic “paradigm” was that “Israel will not have prosperity, will not have a western style of living, will not enjoy normal or good relations with the rest of the world if it does not solve the Palestinian issue.” But Netanyahu “reversed” that thinking. Israel did everything it could to destroy the possibility of a Palestinian state and limit Palestinian freedom, and it paid no price.

Now Joe Biden and Naftali Bennett share the desire to see the Palestinian issue go to sleep for another four years, Natan Sachs said on that Carnegie call yesterday. But that won’t happen.

Too many voices in Palestine and the U.S. are now pushing for Biden to do more. Human Rights Watch issued its “apartheid” finding because Israel had destroyed the two-state solution.

And it is now OK to use the word “apartheid” in criticizing Israel, just not if you are in mainstream politics. Segue to the outrage over Rep. Ilhan Omar’s statement that Israel and the United States are no more accountable for war crimes than Hamas and the Taliban. The “Jewish community” and the Democratic leadership and the pro-Israel media are all up in arms, and there is a push to remove Omar from the House Foreign Affairs Committee.

But Omar has gotten a surprising amount of support for her comments a few steps away from the leadership. Mainstream folks are daring to support Omar in ways they would not have in the past. “A lot of my colleagues overreacted to her remarks,” Rep. John Yarmuth of KY said yesterday. Yarmuth said Omar is singled out for censure because she is Black, female, and Muslim. Elizabeth Bruenig has an excellent piece in the Atlantic describing the Omar outrage as a “ridiculous controversy” in which party leaders try to cement the donor base of the party by bashing Omar for comments they know to be true.

Omar has been a passionate ally of Palestinians embattled by Israeli assaults on Gaza, a position that has won her as few friends in the donor class as her steadfast advocacy for the poor, if not fewer. For the Democrats, who seem to believe that their midterm fortunes rest as far from the left as they can possibly tack, knocking out Omar is just a convenient electoral move, and this ridiculous controversy merely a pretext. Maybe all they wanted was to bully her a little, remind the viewing public who’s behind the party’s wheel, in case anyone had worried that it would ever, in any universe, be somebody like Ilhan Omar.

Jeffrey Goldberg is the editor of the Atlantic… And David Harris of the American Jewish Committee is complaining that leading voices in the Jewish community are no longer defending Israel. It’s a Humpty Dumpty situation…. one that Naftali Bennett and Yair Lapid will be able to do nothing about.

h/t Donald Johnson, Michael Arria, Adam Horowitz, Allison Deger, Scott Roth, James North.

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