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Showing posts with label COMMON DREAMS. Show all posts
Showing posts with label COMMON DREAMS. Show all posts

Sunday, March 31, 2024

COMMON DREAMS: Weekend Edition: Palestinians Mark Land Day Amid Genocide


TO THE FEW RIGHT WINGERS WHO ENLIGHTEN THEMSELVES, YOU MIGHT 
CONSIDER READING BILL MCKIBBEN'S COMMENTS ABOUT THE NATIONS 
THAT ARE LEADING....WERE AMERICANS NOT SO POORLY INFORMED,
THE US SHOULD BE LEADING THE WORLD!



Sunday, March 31, 2024

■ Today's Top News 


Conservative Texas District Court Won't Implement Anti-Judge Shopping Policy

The chief judge of the Northern District of Texas indicated the court will not follow new guidance, while a lower court judge called out a pro-business group's use of "judge shopping."

By Julia Conley



Right-Wing Court's PFAS Ruling Will Impede Regulation of Harmful Chemicals, Advocates Say

Public health groups are "fully committed to taking all steps available to assure that the Inhance fluorination no longer produces dangerous PFAS which put workers, consumers, and communities at risk."

By Julia Conley



'Every Year It Is More Relevant': Palestinians Mark Land Day Amid Genocide

"We honor those who rose up in 1976 and all who have risen up to fight for justice in Palestine," said one advocacy group.

By Julia Conley


WHY WOULD ANY REASONABLE AMERICAN SUPPORT THIS?

In GOP's Latest 'Clear Call to Genocide,' Lawmaker Calls for Nuclear Bombing of Gaza

"To so casually call for what would result in the killing of every human being in Gaza sends the chilling message that Palestinian lives have no value," said one Palestinian rights advocate.

By Julia Conley

U.S. Rep. Tim Walberg became the latest Republican lawmaker to openly call for the genocide of Palestinian people in Gaza, saying at a town hall that instead of sending humanitarian aid to starving civilians there, the U.S. should "get it over quick" by dropping a nuclear bomb on the besieged enclave.

The Michigan Republican was asked by a voter why taxpayer money was being spent to build a port off the coast of Gaza at an event in the town of Dundee, in a video that was apparently recorded on March 25 and posted to social media on Saturday.

"We shouldn't be spending a dime on humanitarian aid. It should be like Nagasaki and Hiroshima," said Walberg, referring to the two Japanese cities where the U.S. detonated two atomic bombs in 1945, killing an estimated 214,000 people and leaving survivors with the effects of radiation, including chronic and deadly diseases.

Walberg's comments were made public a day after it was reported that the Biden administration had approved the transfer of new weapons to the Israel Defense Forces, including 2,000-pound bombs like those that have already made Israel's bombardment one of the deadliest and most destructive in modern history.

The White House has called on Israel to allow more humanitarian aid into Gaza, where at least 31 people—including 27 children—have already died of starvation as a result of Israel's near-total blockade on aid since October. Parts of northern Gaza are now experiencing famine, according to the Integrated Food Security Phase Classification global initiative (IPC), after months of warnings from experts that a man-made famine would eventually take hold unless humanitarian aid increased significantly.

The Israel Defense Forces' U.S.-backed bombardment of the enclave has killed at least 32,705 Palestinians so far.

Dawud Walid, executive director of the Michigan chapter of the Council on American-Islamic Relations, said Walberg's "clear call to genocide... should be condemned by all Americans who value human life and international law."

"To so casually call for what would result in the killing of every human being in Gaza sends the chilling message that Palestinian lives have no value," said Walid. "It is this dehumanization of the Palestinian people that has resulted in the ongoing slaughter and suffering we see every day in Gaza and the West Bank."

Mitchell Rivard, chief of staff to Rep. Dan Kildee (D-Mich.)said Walberg's comments illustrate "the Republican position on Gaza."

Earlier this month, Rep. Chuck Fleischmann (R-Tenn.) told a group of Palestinian rights advocates, "Goodbye to Palestine"—leading Rep. Becca Balint (D-Vt.) to say he had called "for the genocide of the Palestinian people."

Rep. Andy Ogles (R-Tenn.) in February told an activist, "I think we should kill 'em all," when asked about Palestinian children who have been killed by Israel with U.S. military support, while Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.) called for Israel to "level the place" soon after the war started.




WHO Chief Demands Swift Medical Evacuations for 9,000 Injured, Sick Patients in Gaza

Israel is currently attempting to send several patients back to the besieged enclave from East Jerusalem, where they have been receiving cancer treatment.

By Julia Conley



'Obscene': Biden Quietly OKs More 2,000-Pound Bombs, Warplanes for Israel

"Arming a war criminal makes you a war criminal," one critic admonished the U.S. president.

By Brett Wilkins


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■ Opinion


Hey Biden, Give Peace a Chance

Public dissatisfaction with the dictatorial decision-making by the White House and the absence of congressional action is growing rapidly.

By Ralph Nader


The Next Few Years Will Decide What Kind of Future We Leave for My Grandchild

Everyone’s job this decade is to arrest the sudden and sickening lurch upward in temperature, so that there’s somewhere at least a little stable for young people to stand as they build that new world that must come.

By Bill Mckibben

Asa Caleb Crane was born over the weekend; he came into the world with a full head of hair, and on first impression an undeniable charisma, a full array of important moral virtues, and a calm but determined approach to the new world in which he found himself.

And I found myself both entirely agog at his general niftiness, and bowled over by the fact that I now know, very intimately, someone who God willing is going to exist in the 22nd century.

I can compass the passage of time; my grandmother, who I knew well, was born in the latter part of the 19th century, and I can imagine most of the changes of her life—feel in some visceral way the increase in mobility, in communication, in opportunity, in ease. My parents were born in the Depression and came of age in the great postwar boom; my daughter was born just as the internet was getting off the ground. It all makes more or less sense to me; but of course the future is harder, and the future now is harder than ever. In fact, there have been a spate of stories this week pointing out that even our greatest climate scientists are having a hard time explaining the rapid rise in global temperature over the last 12 months—and others explaining just how hot it has become. Here’s a compelling Guardian account of the record heat across much of Africa in recent weeks.

Tarly in Ivory Coast explained: “All I can do is open the windows and the door to let the air flow, but even the air doesn’t move.”

He lives with a one-year-old child, who cries at night because he is hot, and his two teenage daughters, who wake up in the middle of the night to shower before returning to bed where they lie in front of the fan. Still, the heat clings; it does not go away.

“At four in the morning, it’s when it’s least hot and you can sleep better, but I have to wake up to go to work,” Tarly said. “When it’s this hot, mixed with humidity, time stands still.”

Of course time in the larger sense, rushes on—and right now the very real-time acceleration of warming scares me more than I want to admit. It also makes me think—as you might guess from the title of this newsletter—that the next few years may be the crucial ones between now and 2100, maybe even between now and 5100. Because if we don’t break the momentum of the warming then it will build unstoppably on itself—and that will foreclose all kinds of options.

It’s keeping those options open that matters to me. I don’t think we can reasonably plan all that far into the future—new technologies, new politics, new attitudes will inevitably shape how things happen 20 or 60 years from now. But I do think we can see the outline of our politics through the end of the decade, and I think it basically involves a single choice: Do we go all-in on the energy transition as the world pledged in December at the last global climate talks, or do we back off, following the advice of, say, the (wildly applauded) Saudi Aramco CEO who said last week at a Houston energy conference that “we should abandon the fantasy of phasing out oil and gas and instead invest in them.”

The first option—going all-in on the energy transition—doesn’t get us where we need to go, and certainly not by 2030. I don’t see any chance that the temperature won’t still be rising then. But done with vigor it keeps possibilities open: Politico this week reported, for instance, on the growing competition among blue-state governors to come up with more renewables and more efficiency, and the remarkable Kingsmill Bond at the Rocky Mountain Institute reported on the growing competition between the superpower blocs for green energy supremacy.

China, Europe, and the United States make up 80%–90% of deployment of key clean technologies.

China dominates the supply chain, but change is happening. China has outspent the United States and Europe 10-fold in the past five years to achieve market share in manufacturing of over 90% in solar and 70% in batteries. But United States and European capital expenditure is set to increase 16-fold by 2025, and opportunities for leadership abound; only 20% of final energy demand has been electrified; and technologies to enhance flexibility are still in the early stages.

Europe leads in solar and wind share of generation. Europe has the largest share of electricity from solar and wind, and all three regions are moving rapidly up the S-curve towards solar and wind dominance.

What I’m trying to say is, we have the chance to move over the next five years to establish a counter-momentum to the rising temperature. If we do, by 2030 we’ll be in a place to weigh the options going forward; if we don’t then nature will be making decisions for us, and we’ll be reacting.

For those like me of a certain age we have no real business telling young people what kind of world to build—that will be their opportunity and their responsibility, and my sense is that they have the savvy to do a good job of it. But our job—everyone’s job these next five years—is to arrest the sudden and sickening lurch upward in temperature, so that there’s somewhere at least a little stable for those young people to stand as they build that new world that must come. The best proxy for that stability is the number of solar panels and wind turbines and batteries we install between now and the end of the decade.

I’ve always thought this to be true; it’s why this newsletter is called what it is, and it’s why I do the work I do at places like Third Act. It’s just that all of a sudden I take it even more personally. Hi Asa! 

Environmental activists rally during the UK Student Climate Network's Global Climate Strike protest action in central London, on September 20, 2019. - Millions of people are taking to the streets across the world in what could be the largest climate protest in history. (Photo: Ben STANSALL/AFP/Getty Images)

Environmental activists rally during the U.K. Student Climate Network’s Global Climate Strike protest action in central London, on September 20, 2019. 

(Photo: Ben Stansall/AFP/Getty Images)


Protecting Forests Can Help Us Combat the Climate Crisis–If Done Right

If we are to restore old growth, combat climate change, and preserve wildlife habitats and have forests for future generations to experience, we must change the way that we manage our public forest lands.

By Ellen Montgomery


VIEW ALL OPINION











COMMON DREAMS: Week in Review: The 'Dangerous' Dark-Money Plot to Boost Trump



DON'T FORGET TO READ THE OPINIONS LINKED BELOW!


Saturday, March 9, 2024

■ The Week in Review


Canada, Sweden Restore UNRWA Funds as Report Accuses Israel of Torturing Agency Staff

"The work that UNWRA does cannot be overstated," said Canadian lawmaker Salma Zahid. "It will save lives as we have seen the visuals of children dying of hunger in Gaza. The need for immediate aid is non-negotiable."

By Jon Queally • Mar 9, 2024


No Labels Denounced for 'Dangerous' Dark-Money Ploy to Boost Trump in 2024

"Their decision to move forward with a dark-money, Trump donor-funded third-party fantasy bid is shameful and puts millions of Americans at risk," said one opponent.

By Jessica Corbett • Mar 8, 2024


Florida GOP Passes 'Vicious' Bill Banning Mandatory Water Breaks for Workers

"We will see fatalities, because of what Florida Republicans chose to do this week," said one workers' rights advocate.

By Julia Conley • Mar 8, 2024


'Handmaid's Tale Coming to Life': Katie Britt's SOTU Response Sparks Alarm

"As someone who covers the far-right and the Christian nationalist movement, Sen. Katie Britt's speech was the closest thing to porn they'll consume," wrote one journalist.

By Jake Johnson • Mar 8, 2024


House GOP Advances 'Death Panel' for Social Security in Election Year

"MAGA House Republicans are demonstrating their hostility to working Americans and retirees," said one critic.

By Jessica Corbett • Mar 7, 2024


Sanders Rips 'Fiction' That There's Nothing US Can Do to End Gaza Carnage

"Of course we have the leverage," said Sen. Bernie Sanders. "We are funding the war."

By Jake Johnson • Mar 7, 2024


'Unconscionable': Biden Has Approved 100+ Arms Sales to Israel in Just Five Months

"When people ask, 'What do you want Joe Biden to do?' the answer is: Stop making these weapons deals," said one campaigner.

By Jake Johnson • Mar 6, 2024


Bullets Found at Gaza Flour Massacre Site Belie Israel's 'Stampede' Claim

A preliminary investigation by Euro-Mediterranean Human Rights Monitor affirmed that bullets that killed and wounded hundreds of Palestinians waiting for food aid are the same type fired by Israeli troops' guns.

By Brett Wilkins • Mar 6, 2024


'Finish the Problem': Presumptive GOP Nominee Trump Endorses Gaza Genocide

One commentator argued that while President Joe Biden has "bent over backward to support Israel," Donald Trump would "be even worse."

By Jake Johnson • Mar 6, 2024


Progressives Cheer Senate Exit for 'Corrupt Egomaniac' Kyrsten Sinema

Sinema's exit sets up an election between Rep. Ruben Gallego and former television anchor Kari Lake.

By Thor Benson • Mar 5, 2024

VIEW ALL NEWS

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■ Opinion


Why I Don’t Rely on Hope

I have gravitated toward projects for social justice and ecological sustainability because they have provided some meaning in my life, not because I imagined success.

By Robert Jensen • Mar 9, 2024


With Genocide in Gaza, the Word 'Never' Has Been Stripped From 'Never Again'

The Palestinians, facing down the most powerful countries in the world, left virtually alone even by their allies, have suffered immeasurably. But they have won this war.

By Arundhati Roy • Mar 8, 2024


Supreme Court's Trump Ruling Reveals a Deep Weakness in Our Constitutional Democracy

The 9-0 ruling by the Court has empowered MAGA Republicans to continue the lie that their assaults on democracy are done in the name of “election integrity” when we know full well the opposite is true.

By Jeffrey C. Isaac • Mar 8, 2024


Warning: The Great GOP Voter Purge of 2024 Is Underway

Using arcane laws and loopholes, Republican-affiliated groups are challenging the right to vote of thousands of mostly Democratic voters across the states most likely to determine the outcome of the 2024 election.

By Thom Hartmann • Mar 7, 2024


Paul Krugman Remains Blind to Wall Street's War on Workers

What the Nobel Prize-winning economist and prominent columnist fails to see again and again is that many, if not most, rural mass layoffs in the last four decades, are the result of out-and-out greed by corporate interests and the investor class.

By Les Leopold • Mar 6, 2024


When the Big Oil CEO Blames You for the Climate Crisis His Industry Created

We simply “waited too long,” said ExxonMobil's top executive last week. But never mind, the important thing is that we made “above-average returns.”

By Bill Mckibben • Mar 5, 2024


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