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Showing posts with label JON GRUDEN. Show all posts
Showing posts with label JON GRUDEN. Show all posts

Friday, October 15, 2021

RSN: Jemele Hill | Jon Gruden Just Put It in Writing

 


 

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Jon Gruden. (photo: Ethan Miller/Getty Images)
Jemele Hill | Jon Gruden Just Put It in Writing
Jemele Hill, The Atlantic
Hill writes: "Jon Gruden's resignation as head coach of the Las Vegas Raiders is just the beginning of a long-overdue reckoning for the NFL, and it underscores the basic problem: The NFL is full of Jon Grudens."

The deposed Raiders coach expressed bigoted attitudes that are all too common in the NFL.

Jon Gruden’s resignation as head coach of the Las Vegas Raiders is just the beginning of a long-overdue reckoning for the NFL, and it underscores the basic problem: The NFL is full of Jon Grudens.

Gruden made racist, homophobic, and misogynistic comments in emails for nearly a decade, but he was forced out only when some of those reprehensible statements became public. Last week, The Wall Street Journal reported that in a 2011 email to the former Washington Football Team general manager Bruce Allen, Gruden referred to DeMaurice Smith, the executive director of the NFL Players Association, as “Dumboriss Smith” and said that Smith, who is Black, had lips the size of Michelin tires.

And then on Monday, The New York Times dropped more bombshells, reporting that, in other messages to Allen over the course of seven years, Gruden called NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell a homophobic slur; opposed the presence of gay players in the NFL; exchanged pictures of nearly naked women, including Washington cheerleaders; mocked the league for having women referees; and railed against players who protested during the national anthem. Gruden was an ESPN analyst during the period when he sent the messages, which ended in 2018—the year the Raiders hired him back as head coach. (He had previously coached the team from 1998 to 2001.)

After his true feelings about Smith surfaced, Gruden proclaimed, “I never had a blade of racism in me.” Turns out, Gruden had a football field’s worth of racism, sexism, and homophobia in him that had yet to be exposed.

Now fans are left to wonder how Gruden’s views influenced how he operated as a head coach, both with the Raiders and when he was with the Tampa Bay Buccaneers, from 2002 to 2009. Most NFL players are Black. Gruden has held positions that not only required him to interact intimately with players, but also gave him a big role in deciding their futures. He also coached the Raiders defensive lineman Carl Nassib, the first active NFL player to publicly come out as gay. People in marginalized groups commonly find themselves in this precarious and frightening scenario: Their fate is being determined by someone who disrespects and dehumanizes them.

The most disturbing aspect of this scandal is that, in the NFL, Gruden’s mentality isn’t an anomaly.

Gruden’s emails came to light as part of a larger investigation into the Washington Football Team’s culture. Last year, several women came forward in The Washington Post to detail how sexual harassment and other forms of misogyny were prevalent within the organization.

The NFL opened its own investigation to look into the allegations, and the results were far from transparent or satisfactory. The NFL fined Washington $10 million, but unlike in other league investigations, such as that into Deflategate, the league refused to publicly release any written materials related to its findings. Dan Snyder, the team’s owner, also handed over day-to-day operations of the team to his wife, Tanya, and agreed that they and other team executives would take part in workplace-conduct training.

Once Gruden’s emails to Allen surfaced, according to the Times, Goodell told league executives to examine more than 650,000 emails from the past few months, likely because even Goodell knows that Gruden’s narrow-minded views are held by many more coaches, owners, and team executives.

The NFL Players Association has urged the league to release the emails, but that request seems unlikely to be granted, because the NFL promised confidentiality when it began its investigation.

Besides, the image-conscious NFL has no interest in the public knowing the depth of prejudice that exists in the league, even though the NFL has proved quite clearly that it’s neither progressive nor inclusive. The NFL has had one Black team president in its 101-year existence. Currently, the league has three Black head coaches, and it has never had a majority owner who is Black.

The NFL has sent the message repeatedly that it is more comfortable with Black people as laborers, rather than leaders. Gruden could find an NFL team to hand him $100 million; the players Colin Kaepernick and Eric Reid, in contrast, both suffered professionally because they knelt during the national anthem in order to make people more aware of racial injustice and oppression. Urban Meyer, another coach in the hot seat in the past week, hired Chris Doyle as the Jacksonville Jaguars’ strength coach—even after numerous players for the University of Iowa, Doyle’s former employer, described a pattern of racially offensive comments. (Meyer changed his mind after an outcry.) Meanwhile, teams refuse to give head-coaching jobs to Byron Leftwich and Eric Bieniemy, Black offensive coordinators who have won Super Bowls for their respective teams, Tampa Bay and Kansas City.

Kaepernick and Reid sued the NFL, accusing teams of colluding to keep them from playing. One reason the NFL settled that case was that doing so would keep NFL owners’ depositions and other evidence from becoming public. If Gruden was so comfortable making vile comments in writing to an NFL team executive, imagine what NFL owners, coaches, and other officials were saying behind closed doors about Kaepernick, Reid, and other Black players who chose to be just as outspoken.

The NFL does a fantastic job of covering for its lack of progressiveness. In 2014, the league reportedly cut a deal with the Rams that in exchange for drafting Michael Sam—the first openly gay player drafted in pro football—the team would not have to appear on the NFL’s HBO show, Hard Knocks, which follows a different team every year in training camp. Many teams view the show as a distraction; for the league, a chance to avoid taking part in it was a carrot to dangle when officials didn’t want to explain why not one single team would take a chance on drafting an openly gay player. (The Rams’ then-coach, Jeff Fisher, strongly denies any deal with the NFL.)

Notwithstanding the occasional polite, performative gesture, the culture of football won’t improve as long as people like Gruden are elevated, protected, and prioritized in the NFL’s hierarchy. Now that his emails have become public, Gruden makes a convenient sacrificial lamb, but his departure doesn’t change the bigger picture.

No matter how many social-justice slogans the NFL stencils in its end zones or allows players to put on their helmets, no matter how many prominent Black artists the league hires to perform during its Super Bowl halftime show, no matter how much money the NFL gives to anti-prejudice organizations, it will never fix its own corrosive, institutionalized racism without more fundamental change. Unless the league chooses to confront prejudice in substantive ways, bigots will continue to protect bigots, and power will continue to protect power.


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Drug Industry Hires Its Former Critics as Lobbyists Against Medicare Price NegotiationsPrescription pill bottles. (photo: Getty Images)

Drug Industry Hires Its Former Critics as Lobbyists Against Medicare Price Negotiations
Lee Fang, The Intercept
Fang writes: "In 2004, then-Sen. Blanche Lincoln, D-Ark., cast herself as a conservative, commonsense Democrat focused on finding savings, such as moving to allow Medicare to use its size and scale to collectively negotiate lower drug prices."

Former Democratic lawmakers now earn a living as drug company lobbyists.

In 2004, then-Sen. Blanche Lincoln, D-Ark., cast herself as a conservative, commonsense Democrat focused on finding savings, such as moving to allow Medicare to use its size and scale to collectively negotiate lower drug prices.

“We tried desperately to allow the secretary of [the Department of Health and Human Services] to negotiate, using all 42 million seniors as a negotiating tool, to bring down the cost of pharmaceuticals,” said Lincoln, staring down her Republican opponent during a televised debate. “And we weren’t allowed to do that. At least two times I voted on that amendment.”

Days later, she won her reelection campaign. But six years after that race, Lincoln was swept out of office during the 2010 congressional midterm elections, due in part to an infusion of drug company dark money that flowed into the race.

Lincoln now serves Pfizer as a lobbyist focused on blocking the very cost-saving proposal she once championed. The Lincoln Policy Group, a firm she founded, brings in about $20,000 per month working to maintain the ban on Medicare negotiating lower drug prices that is now being weighed in Congress’s budget reconciliation package.

In strategy calls with other drug company officials, Lincoln has worked to fight the drug pricing proposal. And in recent weeks, the former senator has continued to socialize with Democratic leadership, including making an appearance at a recent rooftop party in Washington, D.C., where House Majority Whip Rep. James Clyburn, D-S.C., and Sen. Chris Coons, D-Del., were in attendance.

The popular, once bipartisan idea to hold down Medicare costs is now at the center of President Joe Biden’s domestic agenda. Legislation backed by the administration calls for Medicare to mirror other government agencies, such as the Department of Veterans Affairs, in being able to negotiate for cheaper medicine through the Part D program.

The idea could potentially save the government nearly $500 billion over a decade, freeing up funds to pay for the expansion of other Medicare programs, including a new proposed benefit to cover dental, vision, and hearing care that is part of the president’s so-called Build Back Better plan. The drug pricing proposal could also translate to lower prescription costs across the board, as private health insurers would also have access to the reduced prices.

The drug industry, according to its top lobbyist, Stephen Ubl, has made defeating the provision its top priority, calling the legislative effort “an existential threat to the sector.” The industry has marshaled major resources, including calls from patient advocacy groups and sponsored advertising in key districts.

But inside the Beltway, the opposition is coming from familiar faces. Many leading Democratic lawmakers and staff have been hired by the drug industry to convince their former colleagues to abandon the drug pricing proposal.

The Democratic National Committee held its very first indoor, in-person fundraiser this year on the rooftop of Brownstein Hyatt Farber Schreck, a prominent law firm that helps drug companies such as Eli Lilly and Co., Johnson & Johnson, and Roche influence the drug pricing debate. Lobbyists from the firm mingled with DNC Chair Jaime Harrison and other prominent Democratic officials, according to a report about the event.

Lincoln’s onetime colleague, former Sen. Mark Pryor, D-Ark., also works at Brownstein as a lobbyist for Eli Lilly and Co. Pryor, like Lincoln, voted to allow Medicare to negotiate for lower drug prices when he served in office, before making the jump to the private sector. In 2007, Pryor appeared with other Senate Democrats and activists to demand action on lowering prescription drug prices by lifting the prohibition on Medicare’s negotiating power.

Pfizer alone has assembled a lobbying team that includes Dean Aguillen, a former adviser to House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif.; Remy Brim, a former health policy adviser to Sen. Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass.; and over half a dozen aides to senior Senate Democrats.

Ann Jablon, former chief of staff to Rep. Richard Neal, D-Mass., the current chair of the Ways and Means Committee, with jurisdiction over tax-writing policy, currently represents several drug companies as a lobbyist, including Amgen Inc., Astellas Pharma, and Bayer.

Pharmaceutical Research and Manufacturers of America, the trade group that represents the largest drug companies in the world, has also gone on a hiring spree of Democratic lobbyists, adding Vin Roberti, a prominent fundraiser close to Pelosi, to its roster of 185 registered lobbyists earlier this year. In recent months, PhRMA has hired other firms with close ties to congressional Democrats, including Thorn Run Partners, Foley & Lardner LLP, and Tiger Hill Partners. In July, PhRMA hired Christopher Putala and his firm, Putala Strategies, as a contract lobbying firm. Putala is a former aide to Biden.

The drug industry has even retained some influence among its most outspoken critics. Michaeleen Crowell, former chief of staff to Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., is working as a lobbyist on behalf of drug company Horizon Therapeutics PLC against the Medicare pricing proposal.

Of course, it’s not only Democratic staff and lawmakers retained by drugmakers. Former Sen. Jon Kyl, R-Ariz., is retained by both Merck and PhRMA, while former Rep. Tom Davis, R-Va., works for Pfizer. Dozens of former GOP aides make a living as drug industry lobbyists.

The tidal wave of influence spending appears to be paying off. Not only are GOP lawmakers standing firm against any measure to allow Medicare to use its bulk buying power to bring down prices, but a few conservative Democrats have also broken ranks to threaten the proposal.

Last month, a group of centrist House Democrats, including Reps. Kurt Schrader, D-Ore.; Scott Peters, D-Calif.; and Kathleen Rice, D-N.Y., joined with Republicans to vote against adding the Medicare drug pricing language to the $3.5 trillion social spending bill in the House Energy and Commerce Committee. Instead, they support a counterproposal that would limit the drugs Medicare could negotiate. Schrader and Peters have both received significant campaign cash from the pharmaceutical industry.


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Social Security Recipients Get Biggest Cost of Living Boost in Decades. What to Know.Millions of retirees on Social Security will get a 5.9% boost in benefits for 2022. (photo: Jenny Kane/AP)

Social Security Recipients Get Biggest Cost of Living Boost in Decades. What to Know.
Bailey Aldridge, McClatchy DC
Aldridge writes: "Millions of Social Security recipients will get the biggest cost-of-living boost to their benefits in decades."

Millions of Social Security recipients will get the biggest cost-of-living boost to their benefits in decades.

The Social Security Administration announced Wednesday that Social Security and Supplemental Security Income, or SSI, benefits will get a 5.9% cost-of-living adjustment, or COLA, in 2022 — the largest increase since 1982. The announcement comes amid soaring inflation as the economy struggles to recover from the pandemic.

Here’s what to know about the increase.

Who will get the increase?

Roughly 70 million Americans will see their Social Security or SSI benefits increase by 5.9%, according to the SSA.

The boost will translate to an average monthly increase of $93 for retired workers, $47 for the spouse of a retired worker, $87 for an “aged” widow or widower, $46 for a widow or widower who is disabled, and $75 for a worker who is disabled, according to estimates from the SSA.

The “monthly maximum federal” SSI amounts in 2022 will be “$841 for an eligible individual, $1,261 for an eligible individual with an eligible spouse, and $421 for an essential person,” the SSA said.

“Social Security and SSI beneficiaries are normally notified by mail starting in early December about their new benefit amount,” the SSA said Wednesday. “Most people who receive Social Security payments will be able to view their COLA notice online through their personal my Social Security account. People may create or access their my Social Security account online at www.socialsecurity.gov/myaccount.”

When will the increase start?

The boosted payments will begin on Dec. 30 for roughly 8 million SSI beneficiaries, and the adjustment to benefits payable to more than 64 million Social Security recipients will start in January 2022, the SSA said.

How was the increase decided?

People who receive retirement or disability benefits get a cost-of-living boost each year to keep up with inflation.

Since 1975, the SSA has increased Social Security’s “general benefit” based on increases in cost of living as measured by the Consumer Price Index, which is “a measure of the average change over time in the prices paid by urban consumers for a market basket of consumer goods and services.”

The SSA “starts with” the Consumer Price Index for Urban Wage Earners and Clerical workers, or CPI-W, which measures the monthly change in the price of a basket of goods and services like food, health care and energy, according to the AARP.

“SSA then calculates the COLA by comparing the average of the CPI-W for July, August and September of the previous year with the average for the same three-month period in the current year,” the AARP said. “The percentage change is the COLA for the following year.”

Why the increase matters

The increase comes during a surge in inflation. The Consumer Price Index for All Urban Consumers, or CPI-U, increased 0.4% in September after increasing 0.3% in August, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics.

Over the last year, inflation rose 5.4% before the seasonal adjustment.

Charles Blahous, a retirement policy expert and former public trustee who helped oversee Social Security and Medicare finances, told the AP that “regardless of the size of the COLA, you never want to minimize the importance of the COLA.”

“What people are able to purchase is very profoundly affected by the number that comes out,” Blahous said. “We are talking the necessities of living in many cases.”

Some experts had predicted the 2022 COLA could be the highest in decades, including the Senior Citizens League, which in August predicted a 6.2% increase. David Certner, legislative counsel and director of legislative policy for government affairs at AARP, said in a blog post that the COLA will “no doubt be higher than it has been for the last decade” because of rising prices.

Previous COLAs

The 2022 COLA is the highest since 1982, when it was 7.4%.

Since then it has only surpassed 5% twice — in 1991 when it was 5.4% and in 2009 when it was 5.8%.

For most of the past decade, the COLA has remained around or below 2%, including in 2021 when it was 1.3% and 2020 when it was 1.6%, according to the SSA.


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10,000 John Deere Workers on Strike After Rejecting ContractMore than 10,000 John Deere workers in Iowa, Illinois, Kansas, Colorado and Georgia went on strike early Thursday after contract negotiations deadlocked. (photo: Nati Harnik/AP)

10,000 John Deere Workers on Strike After Rejecting Contract
Aaron Gregg, The Washington Post
Gregg writes: "Thousands of John Deere workers walked off the job early Thursday after members of the United Auto Workers union rejected the tractor maker's contract offer, launching the latest strike by an emboldened labor movement."

The walkout is the latest by an emboldened labor movement and affects 14 plants in Iowa, Illinois, Kansas, Colorado and Georgia.

Thousands of John Deere workers walked off the job early Thursday after members of the United Auto Workers union rejected the tractor maker’s contract offer, launching the latest strike by an emboldened labor movement.

The company’s offer included raises of 5 to 6 percent, but union officials said the proposed contract didn’t meet workers’ retirement and wage goals. With companies nationwide struggling to fill jobs and grappling with supply chain tie-ups, union officials say they are seizing the moment to regain benefits they lost in the late 1990s, when an era of assembly-line layoffs and outsourcing diminished unions’ leverage.

“The cards are in our favor right now … it’s never been lined up this well for us,” said Chris Laurson, a longtime worker at the John Deere plant in Ottumwa, Iowa.

Laurson pointed to the company’s record profits, as well as the huge pay raise awarded chief executive John May. “The labor shortage is in our favor too,” he said. “Deere can’t hire enough people with the package they’re offering right now.”

A John Deere spokesman said the company is committed to reaching a favorable outcome, one that would “put every employee in a better economic position and continue to make them the highest-paid employees in the agriculture and construction industries.”

The strike includes more than 10,000 workers at 14 Deere plants, including seven in Iowa, four in Illinois and one each in Kansas, Colorado and Georgia. The company has activated a continuity plan that will bring in nonunion employees to keep operations running. “Our immediate concern is meeting the needs of our customers, who work in time-sensitive and critical industries such as agriculture and construction,” the John Deere spokesman said.

The strikes are hitting a wide range of industries, encompassing skilled assembly-line workers, nurses, pharmacists and Hollywood stagehands. Thousands have gone on strike at food plants operated by Kellogg’sNabisco and Frito-Lay over work hours, pay and benefits. On Monday more than 24,000 Kaiser Permanente workers authorized a strike over a new two-tiered pay and benefits system opposed by the union. And Hollywood production workers announced plans to strike Monday in pursuit of improved pay and working conditions.

All of them are asking for a larger share of pandemic-era profits, as many of these companies have seen their fortunes surge over the past year. John Deere, for example, saw its earnings reach a record $1.79 billion during the second quarter of 2021, nearly doubling last year’s profits.

John Deere contends that its assembly-line workers already have some of the best wages and benefits in their respective industries. A typical employee makes about $60,000 per year, according to wage figures published by the company. The now-rejected contract offer would have increased it to nearly $72,000.

Laurson, the Iowa union official, said the strike is really about winning back benefits that workers lost long ago. The company currently operates under a two-tiered system with smaller pensions than workers enjoyed in the ’90s, he said.

“Fast-forward 19 years, after many concessionary contracts, here we are with a membership that’s better-informed,” Laurson said in an interview Thursday.

Toby Munley, an electrician at the Ottumwa plant, is in his 18th year with the company and worries whether he will be taken care in retirement.

He and his colleagues have been comparing their benefits to those of previous generations and believe they are coming up short. He notes that his father-in-law received health-care benefits in retirement that he won’t, as did his grandmother, who was married to a John Deere worker.

“We need a light at the end of the tunnel,” he said.

The autoworkers union is receiving some help from the Teamsters union of truck drivers, who Laurson said are helping hold the company’s picket line. Some other trucks working for a nonunionized contractor are crossing the picket line to deal with some concrete work, he said.

“A semi just tried to turn into the entrance to load up some bailers, and everybody shouted ‘NOOOOO!’,” Laurson said, taking a reporter’s call from the Iowa picket line. “He looked at us like ‘what do I do?’ and then kept going.”


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LA Clears Another Park Encampment in Battle Over Worsening Housing CrisisA unhoused person sleeps at MacArthur Park in Los Angeles in 2020. (photo: Apu Gomes/AFP/Getty Images)

LA Clears Another Park Encampment in Battle Over Worsening Housing Crisis
Sam Levin, Guardian UK
Levin writes: "Los Angeles officials are shutting down a large public park in an effort to remove homeless encampments from the area, reigniting bitter conflicts about the city's worsening housing crisis."

Unhoused residents fear they’ll end up back on the street after MacArthur Park closure: ‘This won’t solve the problem’

Los Angeles officials are shutting down a large public park in an effort to remove homeless encampments from the area, reigniting bitter conflicts about the city’s worsening housing crisis.

MacArthur Park, in the city’s Westlake neighborhood, is one of many public spaces in LA that became a popular camping spot for unhoused Angelenos during the pandemic, drawing hundreds of campers.

At the end of September, city leaders announced that the park would be closing for “maintenance” work, with officials giving unhoused residents until Friday at 10.30pm to vacate.

The closure, which officials say is temporary, follows the controversial clearing of an encampment in nearby Echo Park and comes as the city is struggling to grapple with a humanitarian crisis that has significantly worsened since the pandemic.

Advocates and unhoused people at the park said this week that there is confusion and anxiety about what lies ahead. “I don’t know how this is going to work out,” said Fatima Rodriguez, 28, as she cleaned the area outside her tent on Monday, four days before the closure.

The LA native said she had been living on the streets for about a year, sometimes in the park and sometimes under a bridge, and that she wasn’t sure what shelter options were available: “I just want to know how long the park will be closed.”

‘We had no options’

More than 66,000 people were homeless in LA county at the start of 2020. Once Covid hit, shelters and other programs reduced services, and large encampments grew. Pandemic rules restricted the city from evicting people from makeshift tent sites.

Some residents chose to move to park encampments with established communities of tents, saying they provided a better option than group shelters – which could expose them to Covid – or hidden alleys and underpasses, where they could be more vulnerable to violence.

Echo Park and MacArthur Park both drew large crowds of unhoused people.“It’s not that we want to be in the park, it’s just that we have no choice,” said Gustavo Otzoy, 55, wholived at MacArthur Park earlier this year after the city shut down the Echo Park encampment where he had been staying.

Located in a neighborhood home to many Central American immigrants, MacArthur Park is known for its lake and picturesque fountain, a popular soccer field, a pavilion for outdoor performances and a large population of geese.

The area has plenty of open space where people could set up tents and advocates say there are benefits when groups gather near each other. “Having people in one place has kept them in touch with services, has kept them fed, has got them water,” said Robin Lifland, an advocate who lives next to the park and has helped organize donations for the unhoused residents. Over the last year, the park has seen mobile shower programs, regular food drop-offs, outdoor church events, Covid testing and vaccine clinics.

But life at the park has also been extremely difficult, with unhoused residents raising concerns about physical and sexual assaults, frequent fights, fires and other safety hazards. Many encampment residents have struggled with severe mental health challenges, addiction, overdoses and health problems – oftentimes, conditions that were created or exacerbated by living outdoors.

Officials said gang-related violence in the area made the park particularly dangerous for homeless residents, though some advocates have argued the city was fear- mongering about crime and that high-profile cases of violence were not related to the unhoused community.

‘People scatter and disappear’

In January, the Los Angeles Homeless Services Authority (Lahsa) and People Assisting the Homeless (Path), a not-for-profit group working with the city to service the homeless, began sending outreach workers to the park.

“Our unhoused neighbors were really being preyed upon. So we’ve definitely seen an eagerness to go inside,” said Jennifer Hark-Dietz, Path’s deputy CEO.

In the past year, the city and its homeless service partners have increasingly focused on specific locations that developed large encampments during Covid. The goal, said Colleen Murphy, Lahsa’s manager for unsheltered strategies, was to build trust in a specific tent community through persistent outreach in one area, and to get them connected to appropriate shelter options, services and treatment. Outreach workers have primarily relied on Project Roomkey, a pandemic program, to offer residents temporary motel stays.

Meanwhile, the city has escalated its crackdown on tent communities and people sleeping outside. The city faced widespread backlash in March when it evicted the encampments at Echo Park Lake, aided by a militarized police force that arrested nearly 200 people who protested the park’s closure.

Over the summer, authorities cleared massive encampments from the Venice Beach boardwalk, and the city council also passed a new law further restricting sleeping on certain public property. City leaders have promised to offer shelter to unhoused people when requiring them to move. But in practice, the housing initiatives have had mixed success, with reports of many ending up back on the street.

In March, the police department spent $2m over four days enforcing the closure of Echo Park. A Lahsa spokesman said this week that of the 183 people who were living in the park before its shutdown, only four people have been placed in permanent housing. The majority of the remaining residents are still in temporary housing, Lahsa said.

But Ananya Roy, director of UCLA’s Institute on Inequality and Democracy, who is studying the Echo Park displacement, said her group was in contact with residents who returned to the streets after their initial placements, and that it was unclear if residents in shelters would receive permanent housing. “People are scattered and disappeared,” she said. “And there’s just a waning of what I call Covid compassion. We’re on the brink of a regime of pretty severe exclusion.”

The Venice efforts have been more successful: out of 213 people who were moved off the boardwalk, 46 are now in permanent housing, and 167 are in interim shelter, according to St Joseph Center, a local service provider.

Murphy noted that the vast majority of people who get permanent housing stay housed, but that the region couldn’t keep up with the demand: “We’ve helped a lot of people get indoors, but we don’t have the supply of permanent housing.” More than 200 people fall into homelessness every day in the region, according to government statistics – and the problem could soon get much worse with the state ending its Covid eviction restrictions.

The homelessness crisis has become a top issue in recent political races. Some Venice residents sued the city to try to force the closure of encampments, and groups across LA have pressured their local representatives to be tougher on residents living outdoors, arguing that tent sites can be dangerous and hazardous.

High-profile politicians have campaigned alongside encampment critics, promising to “clean up the streets” and “arrest” people who refuse to move.

The LA county sheriff, who is facing reelection, has warned that unhoused people were flocking to LA to “destroy our community”, and has criticized government assistance programs that aid “nomadic” people, even though the majority of the LA homeless population was living in LA when they became unhoused.

Preparing for the shutdown

At MacArthur Park, 257 people have moved into some kind of shelter since January, according to the office of Gil Cedillo, a council member whose district includes the park. Although the population has dramatically declined, tents remained scattered throughout the area in the final days before the shutdown.

Cedillo said that the park closure was necessary for electrical repairs, landscaping, irrigation upgrades, and sign and furniture replacement, and that part of the park would remain open.

At the park this week, police cars roamed throughout the pedestrian paths, at times questioning unhoused residents who remained. At least one individual was detained on Monday, though it’s unclear why.

“Their purpose is to harass and bully,” said Lesly Lynch, 70, an unhoused resident who was spending time at the park but no longer camps there. “This is not going to solve the problem,” he said of the closure, noting that some people won’t stay in shelters because of the strict rules and challenging environment.

Otzoy, who had stayed at Echo Park and MacArthur, works as a handyman and said the motel program felt “like a jail”. The curfews interfered with his work schedule, and he wasn’t allowed to keep his tools, he said, adding that the MacArthur Park renovations shouldn’t require a fenced-off closure: “That’s just an excuse.”

“They need to concentrate on more important things – like housing,” added Jimmy Glenwood Sr, 72, another unhoused resident sitting on a bench nearby.

“It’s security theater at best for people who are housed and complaining,” argued Sherin Varghese, the co-founder of Ktown for All, a volunteer advocacy group for unhoused people. “It’s an illogical approach that prioritizes aesthetics over humanity.”

Stacy White, an unhoused resident who was camping at MacArthur but has now moved into a shelter, recently returned to help friends who remained. She said she supported the park closure, given how dangerous it had become for unhoused people. “I don’t want to die outside,” she said. But she was not confident that people would get the help they need: “Nothing is gonna change.”

José Felix Cabrera Larios, vice-president of the MacArthur Park Neighborhood Council, said he was glad the park would be improved and was hopeful there would be no encampments in the future: “Before the pandemic, rules were followed. And the rules will be followed once the park reopens.”

Cedillo, the council member, declined an interview request. A spokesman said he could not say whether people who refused to leave would face arrest on Friday: “The park is closing, and we’re asking everyone to leave.”


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Sri Lanka Drops Charges Against Ex-Navy Chief Over 11 KillingsFormer Sri Lankan navy chief Admiral Wasantha Karannagoda. (photo: AP)

Sri Lanka Drops Charges Against Ex-Navy Chief Over 11 Killings
Al Jazeera
Excerpt: "Sri Lankan authorities have dropped charges, including conspiracy to murder, against a former navy chief linked to 11 killings that drew international condemnation, the country's attorney general has announced."

Probe against Admiral Wasantha Karannagoda was part of a case that cast a spotlight on extrajudicial killings during the nation’s 37-year ethnic war.

Sri Lankan authorities have dropped charges, including conspiracy to murder, against a former navy chief linked to 11 killings that drew international condemnation, the country’s attorney general has announced.

The investigation against Admiral Wasantha Karannagoda was part of a case that cast a spotlight on extrajudicial killings during Sri Lanka’s 37-year ethnic war that ended in 2009.

Attorney General Sanjay Rajaratnam on Wednesday told the Court of Appeal that the state will not pursue charges against Karannagoda, who was first indicted in 2019.

A court official told AFP news agency that a lower court would soon discharge Karannagoda, who is one of 14 people accused of abducting the teenaged children of wealthy families in 2008 and 2009 and killing them after extorting money.

Four charges had been laid against him, including conspiracy to murder, which carries the death penalty.

Rights watchdog Amnesty International urged Sri Lankan authorities to explain why they dropped the case.

The killing of the 11 youths was raised at the UN Human Rights Council, which called for independent investigations into atrocities during the separatist war.

Police told a court in 2019 that the 11 victims were killed while in the illegal custody of the navy, although their bodies have never been found.

Investigators believe the true number of victims from the abductions and killings to be at least three times higher.

Police said the victims were not linked to ethnic Tamil separatist rebels and were kidnapped purely to extort money from families. Some were killed even after cash was handed over.

Military figures have been widely accused of extrajudicial killings during the war.

The final days of the offensive against the Tamils were marked by serious abuses, according to rights groups.

A UN panel has said 40,000 civilians may have been killed in the final stages of the conflict.


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Chevron's Climate Plan: Use Wind and Solar Power to Drill for OilChevron. (photo: Joe Raedle/Getty Images)


Chevron's Climate Plan: Use Wind and Solar Power to Drill for Oil
Emily Pontecorvo, Grist
Pontecorvo writes: "Earlier this year, Chevron faced a reckoning when 61 percent of the company's shareholders backed a nonbinding resolution asking it to cut its emissions."

The oil giant's aspiration to reduce emissions just means "cleaner" fossil fuels.

Earlier this year, Chevron faced a reckoning when 61 percent of the company’s shareholders backed a nonbinding resolution asking it to cut its emissions. The oil and gas giant had previously announced goals to make its operations less carbon-intensive, but at its annual general meeting in May, shareholders effectively crossed their arms and shook their heads, demanding that the company cut emissions from the use of its products, too.

But even after the majority shareholder vote, Chevron is barely budging.

On Monday, Chevron announced a new “aspiration” to reduce emissions from its upstream operations to net-zero by 2050, along with a separate target of reducing the carbon intensity of its products by 5 percent by 2028. That mouthful of words means the company plans to keep producing just as much oil as it always has, if not more, but emit less carbon per barrel.

Activist shareholders were not impressed with the update.

“Expectations are that this company begins transitioning meaningfully, and we are simply not seeing that,” said Danielle Fugere, president of the investor advocacy nonprofit As You Sow. “The 5 percent reduction announced today is insufficient to demonstrate that the company is hearing investors.”

Shareholders voted for Chevron to reduce its so-called “scope 3 emissions,” the carbon released when customers burn its oil and gas in their cars and homes, which makes up about 90 percent of the company’s carbon footprint. The only way for Chevron to meaningfully reduce its scope 3 emissions would be to shift its business to produce different products that don’t emit carbon. Instead, the company is mostly doubling down on oil and gas, but committing to making its production processes cleaner, starting with its “upstream operations” — the industry term for activities associated with exploration and extraction.

Chevron’s upstream operations include drilling for oil and natural gas, pumping it out, transporting it via pipeline, and in some cases, converting natural gas into a liquid. Most of the company’s upstream greenhouse gas emissions come from powering heavy machinery or from “flaring,” the practice of burning off excess gases that rise up out of wells. Ironically, Chevron plans to reduce upstream emissions in part by electrifying equipment and powering it with solar and wind farms. Instead of supporting an economy-wide transition to renewable electricity, which would lower emissions in an absolute sense, the plan aims to exploit renewables to produce more fossil fuels, potentially holding total emissions at a steady level.

Chevron also plans to incorporate more carbon capture and storage technology into its operations, but the company has a poor track record on that front. Chevron’s Gorgon gas processing plant in Western Australia, which was supposed to be the largest carbon capture and storage project in the world, has so far failed to capture as much carbon as promised.

And to eliminate the last 50 percent or so of its upstream emissions by 2050, the company has no plan. In a report that accompanied the net-zero announcement, a vague roadmap says that “innovation and offsets” will eventually help the company go from emitting the equivalent of 15 kilograms of CO2 for every barrel of oil it produces down to zero. Offsets are payments made to reduce or remove carbon emissions somewhere else when you can’t do it directly — this is where the “net” in net-zero comes from — but the potential quantity of offsets is limited and their effectiveness is debated.

And at the end of the day, none of these plans will make any difference for the climate if Chevron is still producing just as much oil and gas in 2050. Andrew Logan, director of oil and gas programs at Ceres, an investor advocacy group, said in a statement that the commitment was behind the times. “Net zero operational emissions targets are simply table stakes at this point — and a number of Chevron’s U.S. peers like ConocoPhillips made such a commitment some time ago,” he said.

Chevron’s other “aspiration,” to reduce the carbon intensity of its energy products by 5 percent by 2028, came with no detailed plan. The report released on Monday explains that’s just where the company expects to be after implementing existing plans like reducing emissions from its drilling operations and refineries and growing its investments in its New Energies business unit, which aims to develop technologies like carbon capture and hydrogen.

If you’ve listened to a podcast or watched TV recently, you might get the impression that Chevron’s New Energies division is becoming the core of its business. The company has been bombarding viewers and listeners with ads about its investments in carbon capture, biofuels, and hydrogen in recent months. These are changes that actually could reduce Chevron’s scope 3 emissions if it were truly prioritizing them. But the company’s investments in them are nominal compared to its spending on oil and gas. Chevron plans to allocate only about 10 percent of its capital spending to its New Energies business over the next several years.

“These same companies have been looking into these technologies for decades, and they’ve been investing small amounts of capital in them,” said Fugere. “The amount of capital being invested in solutions is far less than the capital being invested in business as usual.”

In Chevron’s report, the company makes explicit that it doesn’t plan to invest much more in its New Energies branch unless major international changes occur, like the steep economy-wide carbon price envisioned in the International Energy Agency’s net-zero scenario. Chevron calls that scenario, which presents a transition to a world powered mostly by renewable energy, “highly unlikely.”


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Tuesday, October 12, 2021

RSN: Michael Moore | Circle-the-Wagons and Support India Walton

 

 

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12 October 21

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Filmmaker Michael Moore. (photo: Sacha Lecca)
Michael Moore | Circle-the-Wagons and Support India Walton
Michael Moore, Michael Moore's Facebook Page
Moore writes: "In June of this year, India Walton shocked the political world by defeating the four-term incumbent mayor of Buffalo, Byron Brown, in the Democratic primary."

Friends,

In June of this year, India Walton shocked the political world by defeating the four-term incumbent mayor of Buffalo, Byron Brown, in the Democratic primary, setting the table for her to become the favorite to win the Mayoral race in November because it’s a heavily Democratic city.

She would be the first democratic socialist to be elected mayor of a major American city in more than half a century, and the first woman — and first Black woman — to lead New York’s second-largest city. India Walton is a registered nurse, a union member and organizer, a community activist, a single mother of 4 boys — and come November, we’ll start addressing her as “Mayor.”

Of course, the corporate Democratic establishment only knows how to fight like hell when they are punching left - so India is now facing a barrage of attacks, personal threats, and a write-in campaign from the man she already defeated in the Democratic primary. And it is being funded and supported by some Republicans and Trump-aligned figures.

The general election is next month, on November 2nd. We must all circle-the-wagons and support India Walton in any way that we can. You can also help by listening to her story in this week’s episode of Rumble with Michael Moore and sharing it with others.

Just listen to India Walton’s conversation with me and hear how it’s done.

-Mike

[listen at MichaelMoore.com or on Spotify, Apple, etc]


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Jon Gruden Resigns as Raiders Coach After Reports of Derogatory Language in EmailsJon Gruden. (photo: Rick Scuteri/AP)

Jon Gruden Resigns as Raiders Coach After Reports of Derogatory Language in Emails
Laurel Wamsley, NPR
Wamsley writes: "Among the targets for Gruden's insults were DeMaurice Smith, executive director of the NFL Players Association, NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell and then-Vice President Joe Biden."

Jon Gruden, the coach of the Las Vegas Raiders, has resigned following news reports that he used derogatory language in emails dating back to 2011.

"I have resigned as Head Coach of the Las Vegas Raiders," Gruden said in a statement. "I love the Raiders and do not want to be a distraction. Thank you to all the players, coaches, staff, and fans of Raider Nation. I'm sorry, I never meant to hurt anyone."

Among the targets for Gruden's insults were DeMaurice Smith, executive director of the NFL Players Association, NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell and then-Vice President Joe Biden.

The emails emerged from an investigation into workplace misconduct at the Washington Football Club. The offensive terms were used in emails sent from Gruden to former Washington team president Bruce Allen and others. Allen was fired in 2019.

Gruden sent the emails between 2011 and 2018, while he was a color analyst for ESPN's Monday Night Football. Before joining ESPN, Gruden coached the Raiders and the Tampa Bay Buccaneers.

The existence of racially disparaging emails were first reported on Friday by The Wall Street Journal. On Monday evening, The New York Times reported on emails that included homophobic and misogynistic comments.

Gruden, 58, signed a 10-year, $100 million deal with the Raiders in 2018. By Monday evening, the Raiders had already removed Gruden's profile from the team's website.


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Steven Mnuchin Stepped In to Prevent Ivanka Trump World Bank AppointmentSteven Mnuchin. (photo: Alex Brandon/AP)

Steven Mnuchin Stepped In to Prevent Ivanka Trump World Bank Appointment
Ryan Grim and Max Ufberg, The Intercept
Excerpt: "As the White House moved to select its new leader, one name very dear to Trump's heart kept floating around: his daughter Ivanka Trump."

President Donald Trump very much wanted Ivanka at the helm, and it was the Treasury secretary who blocked her ascent.

In January 2019, Jim Yong Kim threw the global financial development sector into a state of disarray: The former academic and health official announced he would be stepping down the following month from his role as president of the World Bank, opting instead for a cushier gig at a Wall Street private equity firm. For an institution that was already struggling with heightened competition from China and private capital, Kim’s departure — which came as a total surprise — was seen as a setback, as it handed an opportunity to choose a new leader to President Donald Trump, creating worries that the America First champion would pick somebody ill suited for the global role.

As the White House moved to select its new leader, one name very dear to Trump’s heart kept floating around: his daughter Ivanka Trump. That never came to fruition, though, with Ivanka later telling reporters that though her father had raised the subject, she declined to pursue the position as she was “happy with the work” she was doing as his senior adviser.

Ivanka Trump did, however, aid Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin and White House Chief of Staff Mick Mulvaney in the selection process. When the Treasury Department announced Under Secretary of the Treasury for International Affairs David Malpass as the World Bank’s new president, Ivanka released a statement predicting Malpass would be “an extraordinary leader of the World Bank.” (Malpass was in fact a controversial pick, due in large part to his past criticisms of the World Bank.)

But two sources, not authorized to speak publicly, tell The Intercept the talk of Ivanka at the helm went far beyond the realm of Beltway chatter: Trump very much wanted Ivanka as World Bank president, and it was Mnuchin who actually blocked her ascent to the leadership role.

“It came incredibly close to happening,” said one well-placed source.

Representatives for Mnuchin and Ivanka Trump did not respond to requests for comment, nor did the World Bank or the Trump Organization.

Since the World Bank’s creation in 1944, the U.S. has always led the prerogative to name the bank’s president in an informal agreement with European leaders, who are given the job of naming the head of the International Monetary Fund (an arrangement that rather bluntly underscores the Western imperial nature of the international financial institutions).

Prior to her role at White House adviser, Ivanka spent 12 years at the Trump Organization as executive vice president of development and acquisitions. She also launched her own line of fashion products which, according to 2019 financial disclosures, reportedly brought in between $100,000 and $1,000,000 in rent or royalties.

Once in 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue, Ivanka helped launch the Women Entrepreneurs Finance Initiative, colloquially known as the “Ivanka Fund”: a World Bank-supported project to raise money for female entrepreneurs in developing nations. It was her work on the Women Entrepreneurs Finance Initiative that White House spokesperson Jessica Ditto cited in explaining Ivanka’s qualification for selecting the next World Bank leader. “She’s worked closely with the World Bank’s leadership for the past two years,” Ditto said.

But that initiative still left her pretty light on experience. “That’s a very thin base to try to establish credibility in this multilateral institution,” said Scott Morris, director of the U.S. development policy program at the Center for Global Development in D.C. “It’s hard to imagine that she would have been viewed as a credible leader. It would be the worst kind of exercise of U.S. power. I have to think as a candidate she would have encountered some resistance. But maybe [the bank’s members] would not have wanted to provoke the U.S. president.”

From the moment her father won the presidential election, Ivanka has been wrapped up in controversy: She falsely testified that she was uninvolved in the 2017 inauguration (a lawsuit alleged that the Inaugural Committee overpaid for event space at the Trump International Hotel in D.C.); she and her husband, fellow presidential adviser Jared Kushner, earned hundreds of millions in outside income while working in the White House; and her Women Entrepreneurs Finance Initiative was ultimately a flop.

Mnuchin often placed himself between the president and what the Treasury secretary saw as colossally counterproductive moves. His time as a Hollywood producer — making him a representative of the set whose approval Trump craved — gave him influence that others in the administration lacked. He pushed Trump to name Jerome Powell as head of the Federal Reserve and routinely talked him out of random government shutdowns. His successful effort to talk Trump into backing and signing the CARES Act was among his other significant achievements. He also had a habit of dodging responsibility for Trump’s worst excesses. On January 6, he made sure that he was in Sudan.

But given that there’s a growing discontent among the World Bank’s member nations over the U.S.’s unilateral ability to nominate the institution’s leadership, the Ivanka saga could serve as a warning against the status quo. “A growing number of countries don’t like this whole arrangement,” said Morris. “For them to hear how close it was to being the U.S. president’s daughter probably adds fuel to the fire that the Americans are so cavalier about this.”


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The Amazingly Bad Voter-Fraud Theories Behind Trump's DOJ SchemeDonald Trump. (photo: Getty Images)

The Amazingly Bad Voter-Fraud Theories Behind Trump's DOJ Scheme
Aaron Blake, The Washington Post
Blake writes: "As former president Donald Trump endorsed his reelection bid this weekend, Sen. Charles E. Grassley (R-Iowa) pressed forward with his remarkable turnabout on Trump's actions vis-a-vis Jan. 6."

As former president Donald Trump endorsed his reelection bid this weekend, Sen. Charles E. Grassley (R-Iowa) pressed forward with his remarkable turnabout on Trump’s actions vis-a-vis Jan. 6. While Grassley sharply criticized Trump’s voter-fraud rhetoric shortly after Jan. 6, he is now defending Trump’s efforts to get the Justice Department to help overturn the election.

“That was the advice that one person in the Justice Department was suggesting — but just one person. And [Trump] rejected all that,” Grassley told Newsmax of Justice Department official Jeffrey Clark’s gambit to get state legislatures to designate new electors. “And they’re trying to make it a scenario [where] he was trying to get the Justice Department” to get alternate electors.

We’ve already laid out the huge problems with this defense — most notable among them being the implication that Trump backed off the scheme for moral reasons. (The reasons were clear: It wasn’t going to work.)

But another aspect of this hasn’t been explored enough. And that’s this: the sheer desperation and ridiculousness of what undergirded this entire effort.

An interim Senate Judiciary Committee report released Thursday showed this effort revolved around some of the most specious conspiracy theories at the Trump team’s disposal — theories that in several cases had already been debunked and in every case didn’t pass the smell test.

On Dec. 27, Rep. Scott Perry (R-Pa.) contacted acting deputy attorney general Richard Donoghue at Trump’s behest. Perry proceeded to share a few theories with Donoghue, including that there were 205,000 more votes than voters in Pennsylvania and that more than 4,000 Pennsylvanians voted twice.

The same day, Trump called acting attorney general Jeffrey A. Rosen and offered both the former theory — about more votes than voters in Pennsylvania — and a theory that video from State Farm Arena in Atlanta “shows fraud” by election workers who counted ballots hidden under a table multiple times.

The theory about State Farm Arena had already been debunked extensively weeks earlier (indeed it was one of the most talked-about and debunked theories). The 4,000 voters-voting-twice theory came from matching first names, last names and dates of birth in voting records, but this too had been debunked as a fraud-finding method in the weeks prior.

As for the idea that there were more votes than voters (here’s what Perry sent Donoghue)? This was also pretty easily explained — and was just as quickly debunked. While there were nearly 7 million votes cast, a system used by the Pennsylvania secretary of state, called the Statewide Uniform of Registered Electors (SURE), recorded only 6.8 million voters at the time. The reason: The SURE data lagged, because it involved manually entering records about people’s voter histories.

The gap was due to incomplete data in multiple counties, but mostly in Pittsburgh-based Allegheny County, which accounted for 120,000 votes of the approximately 200,000-vote gap. How do you know the data was, in fact, incomplete? Because at the time, it would have meant the turnout rate in Allegheny County was less than 64 percent of registered voters, while statewide it was 76 percent. That doesn’t make any sense.

What’s more, it was clear that such data could lag, because even those pushing the theory acknowledged it:

Even the state GOP lawmakers’ news release notes that “three small rural counties have not fully posted results online” and that, thus, the totals aren’t complete. Why not allow for the possibility of other data also being incomplete, particularly data involving extensive voting histories?

Closer to the turn of the year, White House Chief of Staff Mark Meadows began barraging DOJ officials with yet more theories. Here’s a look at what they were, and when they were debunked (in parenthesis):

One thing to keep in mind in all of this is that these weren’t just theories the White House and its allies were floating for public consumption; these were the things they used to try to convince seasoned, smart lawyers at the Justice Department that their claims had merit — merit enough to get the Justice Department to call the election results into question.

The theories were bad enough that Donoghue and Rosen privately derided them in their then-private correspondence:

When then-acting attorney general Jeffrey A. Rosen shared the email from Meadows with Donoghue, Donoghue responded, “Pure insanity.”

About an hour later, Meadows shared previously debunked claims about “signature matching anomalies in Fulton county, Ga.”

“Can you believe this?” Rosen wrote to Donoghue. “I am not going to respond to the message below.”

Donoghue responded: “At least it’s better than the last one, but that doesn’t say much.”

It is indeed a veritable smorgasbord of what the dregs of the Internet and extreme figures in the GOP had to offer on this stuff. But given that so many of the Trump team’s claims had been rejected in courts and otherwise debunked, this was apparently what they had to work with when the clock was ticking toward midnight and they badly needed an assist from DOJ.

It all can perhaps be best summed up by a Trump quote that Donoghue jotted down in his notes from their Dec. 27 meeting: “You guys are not following the internet the way I do.”

That much was certainly true.

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Texas Governor Bars Vaccine Mandates in State, Including for Private BusinessesTexas governor Greg Abbott. (photo: Jordan Vonderhaar/The Texas Tribune)

Texas Governor Bars Vaccine Mandates in State, Including for Private Businesses
Associated Press
Excerpt: "The move comes as the Biden administration is to issue rules requiring employers with more than 100 workers to be vaccinated or test weekly for the coronavirus."

Greg Abbott’s move comes as Biden administration set to issue federal vaccine rules for employers with more than 100 workers

The Texas governor, Greg Abbott, issued an executive order Monday to prohibit any entity, including private business, from enforcing a Covid-19 vaccine mandate on workers and called on state lawmakers to pass a similar ban into law.

The move comes as the Biden administration is to issue rules requiring employers with more than 100 workers to be vaccinated or test weekly for the coronavirus. Several major companies, including Texas-based American Airlines and Southwest Airlines, have said they would abide by the federal mandate.

“No entity in Texas can compel receipt of a Covid-19 vaccine by any individual, including an employee or a consumer, who objects to such vaccination for any reason of personal conscience, based on a religious belief, or for medical reasons, including prior recovery from Covid-19,” Abbott wrote in his order.

Abbott, who was previously vaccinated and also later tested positive for Covid-19, said in his order that “vaccines are strongly encouraged for those eligible to receive one, but must always be voluntary for Texans”.

Abbott previously barred vaccine mandates by state and local government agencies, but until now had let private companies make their own rules for their workers. It was not immediately clear if Abbott’s latest executive order would face a quick court challenge.

Abbott’s new order also carries political implications. The two-term Republican is facing pressure from two candidates in next year’s GOP primary, former state senator Don Huffines and former Florida congressman and Texas state party chairman Allen West, have attacked Abbott’s Coovid-19 policies and have strongly opposed vaccine mandates.

“He knows which the way the wind is blowing. He knows conservative Republican voters are tired of the vaccine mandates and tired of him being a failed leader,” Huffines tweeted.

West announced this this week he tested positive for Covid-19 and has been hospitalized, but also tweeted he remains opposed to vaccine mandates.

Texas has seen a recent decrease in new Covid-19 cases and hospitalizations. But a rising death toll from the recent surge caused by the delta variant has the state rapidly approaching 67,000 total fatalities since the pandemic began in 2020.


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Mexico: In Oaxaca, Indigenous People Are the VanguardMembers of the Popular Assembly of the Peoples of Oaxaca (APPO) take part in a demonstration against then governor Ulises Ruiz in November 2006. (photo: Alfredo Estrella/Getty Images)


Mexico: In Oaxaca, Indigenous People Are the Vanguard
Jonah Walters, Jacobin
Walters writes: "In a new book, historian A. S. Dillingham narrates the prehistory of [the Oaxaca teachers' strike], focusing on the role of bilingual indigenous teachers in the Oaxacan teachers' union throughout the twentieth century."

The southern Mexican state of Oaxaca is known for its tradition of left political militancy. And its indigenous people have often been at the vanguard of that struggle.

In 2006, the southern Mexican state of Oaxaca became an object of international attention when a mass movement emerged in support of a statewide teachers’ strike. Responding to violent repression, a broad-based coalition of social movements soon took control of Oaxaca City and demanded the governor’s resignation.

In a new book, historian A. S. Dillingham narrates the prehistory of that explosive moment, focusing on the role of bilingual indigenous teachers in the Oaxacan teachers’ union throughout the twentieth century. Oaxaca Resurgent: Indigeneity, Development, and Inequality in Twentieth Century Mexico reveals the rich tradition of indigenous militancy and trade union struggle in Oaxaca.

Oaxaca Resurgent is the culmination of more than a decade of research, and Dillingham’s sources range from oral histories shared by trade union militants to secret documents produced by the Mexican security state. Against commonplace narratives of political acquiescence in Oaxaca, it reveals “a different history, a history in which questions of cultural liberation and social transformation were intimately linked,” as Dillingham writes in the book’s introduction.

In this conversation with Jacobin’s Jonah Walters, Dillingham describes the rich history of indigenous and trade union militancy in Oaxaca — including the 2006 movement, which some compared to the Paris Commune.

JW: When you set out to write Oaxaca Resurgent, did you think of it as a labor history or a history of indigenous political movements in Oaxaca?

ASD: I thought of it as a prehistory of a particular strike.

In 2006, I enrolled in a graduate seminar that took place annually in Oaxaca City. The seminar was interrupted by a massive teachers’ strike. It began as a traditional May Day strike, something Oaxacan teachers had engaged in since 1980. But that year, Governor Ulises Ruiz Ortiz chose to brutally repress it.

A large social movement blossomed in support of the teachers. Walking around Oaxaca City in 2006, when activists controlled much of the city center, it became clear to me that I was witnessing a vibrant and historic social movement. Some people have even compared it to the Paris Commune of 1871. How did it emerge? The book began as an attempt to answer that question.

The teachers’ union in Oaxaca is the largest trade union in the state, with roughly seventy thousand members in 2006 and a range of political currents contained within it. As I talked to Oaxacan activists and intellectuals, a number of people encouraged me to look at the role of Indigenous bilingual teachers in the union, even arguing that they acted as a kind of militant vanguard for the movement as a whole.

Because I came to focus on those bilingual teachers — who are bilingual in Spanish and one (or more) Indigenous languages — I had to think deeply about the history of indigeneity in Oaxaca. This led me to examine a broader ideological project in Mexico called indigenismo, or “indiginism,” which became another key focus of the book.

ASD: In the nineteenth century, Mexican elites succeeded in liberating themselves from Spanish control. And after independence, one of the ways they tried to distinguish themselves from their former European colonizers was by invoking the pre-Hispanic past. This was also true well beyond Mexico: romantic invocations of a pre-Hispanic Indigenous past characterized elite discourse in nearly all the former Iberian colonies in the Americas.

The Mexican Revolution was one of the great social revolutions of the twentieth century, taking place roughly contemporaneously with the Russian Revolution of 1917. And because the revolution involved the mass participation of ordinary people, it brought Mexico’s Indigenous population, which is quite large and diverse, into the public light. This prompted a shift in elite ideology.

In the postrevolutionary period, a new state discourse coalesced that celebrated the Indigenous past while frequently marking living Indigenous people as barriers to modernization or progress. Even some left-wing intellectuals participated in a version of this discourse, identifying Indigenous people as barriers to the kind of class politics represented by peasant federations and trade unions.

But the official discourse of indigenismo never went without a response by people marked as Indigenous. There was a contradictory dynamic within indigenista politics, which in the book I call “the double bind of indigenismo.” Indigenismo rhetorically celebrated Indigenous people, but it also cast them as a problem to be overcome. For that reason, and perhaps counterintuitively, it sometimes proved valuable for Indigenous social movements, because they could use its vocabulary to make various demands on the state.

JW: What kind of place is Oaxaca?

ASD: Oaxaca, which is in southern Mexico, is today one of the poorest states in the country. But in the colonial period, when Mexico was New Spain, Oaxaca was a center of commerce and wealth. It was the center of an Indigenous population that maintained its own hierarchies and leaders, and which was able to negotiate with Spanish intermediaries to sustain several very successful industries, including silk and cochineal (a bug that creates a red dye).

Oaxaca became a center of colonial prosperity because of its varied topography — multiple mountain ridges, high-altitude valleys, a Pacific coastal plain. Microclimates in Oaxaca allowed for self-sufficient regional economies that could together buoy a large population. But with the increasing nationalization of the Mexican economy in the twentieth century, those same advantages became disadvantages.

The mid-twentieth century saw the rise of commercial agriculture, and Oaxaca’s topography did not fit with that model of capitalist development. Oaxaca did become increasingly integrated into the national economy, but that integration took the form of mass migration out of the state, as Oaxacans sought seasonal wage labor in other parts of Mexico and beyond. Today there’s a veritable Oaxacan diaspora that spans the continent.

JW: As you point out, at the very moment that economic modernization was devastating Oaxaca, there was a wave of academic interest in the supposedly backward or primitive ways of indigenous people there. How has that kind of elite attention contributed to the politics of the place?

ASD: I begin Oaxaca Resurgent with a story about a group of people in a Triqui community on the western edge of the state. In 1899, this community encountered an early anthropologist named Frederick Starr, who was traveling throughout Central America and southern Mexico attempting to photograph and measure the heads of various Indigenous peoples.

In Starr’s travel journals, I discovered the story of a group of Triqui women and girls who refused to be measured or photographed. They fled the town market where they had been selling their wares and were chased down by Starr and his assistants. Starr’s team eventually captured the women and forcibly measured them; I found their photographs in a research library in Oaxaca.

This story is a reminder that to chart the trajectory of a politics of representation for Indigenous people in Mexico, you must also consider the ways Indigenous peoples have refused representation, whether by the state or anthropologists.

By the mid-twentieth century, Mexico saw the rise of development thinking — what people sometimes call modernization theory. Applied anthropologists working on development programs tried to solve the “problem” of bringing Indigenous regions into the national economy and the nation-building project it represented. Predictably, in Mexico, Oaxaca was a site of much academic and government interest in thinking these questions through.

Some of those anthropologists and development workers were well-meaning left intellectuals. But even when they wanted to uplift these regions marked as unintegrated or impoverished, they often ended up equating poverty with indigeneity. Rather than confronting more structural issues, they ended up talking about the supposed need to change the behaviors of the poor. They thought these populations were poor because they didn’t speak the national language (Spanish), or because they were too tied to cultures and customs and traditions, or that they spent too much money on saints’ day festivals (which are essentially annual block parties).

At the same time, while there was that top-down dynamic, many of these development projects required local brokers to implement them successfully. Development agencies had to contract local “extensionists” who were fluent in Indigenous languages to serve as bridges between federal policies and local communities.

In the book, I follow how those local development workers, those bilingual “promoters,” became politicized and radicalized, oftentimes through their own frustrations with government efforts, which led them to develop alternative proposals for Indigenous development.

JW: What is the history of teachers’ unionism in Oaxaca?

ASD: As I mentioned before, Mexico created a new state in the aftermath of the revolution. In 1917, it ratified one of the most radical constitutions in the world, which guaranteed labor rights, including the right to join a trade union, as well as other social rights that far exceeded those enumerated in the eighteenth-century constitution of the United States.

The revolution was followed by a civil war that lasted ten years. The postrevolutionary state built itself, or rather reconstituted itself, through mass organizations, such as peasant federations and trade unions. For most of the twentieth century, the teachers’ union in Mexico — the National Union of Education Workers (SNTE) — was an instrument of state policy. It was also often a way for individuals to move up the political ladder of the ruling Institutional Revolutionary Party (PRI).

One of the guarantees of the 1917 constitution was free secular education for all Mexicans. This meant that state actors eventually had to start reckoning with the diversity of the country itself — especially in terms of education policy. In the first half of the twentieth century, the Ministry of Education accomplished this by contracting auxiliary teachers — or bilingual “promoters” — to help facilitate Spanish language acquisition in the classroom. By the 1960s, many of the people who had been contracted as auxiliary teachers or bilingual promoters started to make demands to become fully trained federal teachers.

They wanted to be designated as federal teachers because then they would have access to the union, and through the union receive better pay and benefits. But this was also an anti-racist struggle to respect and value Indigenous educators as equal to the traditional federal teacher, who had prestige. They eventually won by the mid-1970s, and at that point those bilingual teachers were incorporated into the teachers’ union in Mexico.

Bilingual teachers brought with them an experience of political mobilization and radical politics, and allied with other reformers who wanted to democratize the union by taking control away from PRI leaders. Indigenous bilingual teachers ended up playing a crucial role in the fight to democratize the teachers’ union and the fight against austerity, which was on the rise in Mexico.

By the late 1970s, Mexico was participating in the US-led “war on drugs.” The Mexican government was conducting anti-narcotics raids in which they fumigated marijuana and poppy fields throughout southern Mexico. I found declassified state records that documented a counter-narcotic raid in Oaxaca in 1977 — in this case, the Mexican army and judicial police landed in a rural town and ended up detaining a principal and two teachers from a local primary school. This was because dissident teachers in Oaxaca were increasingly speaking out against the PRI. It was clear to me that security agents were more concerned about dissident teachers than drug production or trafficking.

State repression in Oaxaca connected to the drug war was a major contributor to the general dissatisfaction that, much later, found expression in the teachers’ strike and related social movement in 2006.

In 2006, Oaxacans established a mass social movement organization called Popular Assembly of the Peoples of Oaxaca (APPO). This was basically an umbrella coalition that included representatives of the teachers’ union, but also members of other social movements, progressive Catholic organizations, radical urban youth, and nonprofits active in progressive causes. The APPO brought all these people together in a movement not just to address the education question but to transform politics in Oaxaca writ large.

It was the combination of national political calculations and brutal repression that put an end to the Oaxacan movement in 2006. Federal police, which are basically a militarized police force, were brought in. Some came on a highway from Mexico City and others arrived on planes, and they launched a siege to take control of Oaxaca City.

We know now that the Oaxacan governor also used escuadrones de la muerte, “death squads.” Unmarked vehicles full of ununiformed, armed men seized activists off the road to torture or disappear them. Many ended up in federal jails across the country. And in that movement’s wake, there was a massive escalation of violence and militarization all around Mexico.

JW: You consulted a wide range of archives in your research. But I understand you looked at Mexican state security archives in particular. What did you learn from those sources?

ASD: Mexico had its own equivalent of the United States’ FBI, which was the Federal Security Directorate (DFS). This was a state espionage agency, which during the second half of the twentieth century spied on everyone from dissident teachers to peasants to anthropologists who worked for government agencies, even high-ranking political officials and federal functionaries.

The records of the DFS were classified until the presidency of Vicente Fox in the early 2000s. Around 2008 or so, together with other historians, I began opening those boxes. The files are held in the national archives in Mexico City — a converted Porfirian prison called Lecumberri.

These security files ended up being an important source base for me, because state officials were keeping tabs on dissident teachers and anthropologists and others involved in Indigenous politics.

Obviously, one has to read files like that with a critical eye, because security agents often overstate threats. I compared what I learned in those files to the conversations I was having with retired teachers and government bureaucrats. In that way, I could cross-reference the security files with oral history. It was also nice to turn government spying around and use it to critique the state and tell a story of grassroots activism.

Unfortunately, during the presidency of Enrique Peña Nieto [2012–2018], access to those files was effectively closed. Now there’s an uphill battle for people who are interested in studying twentieth-century Mexico, especially topics related to the dirty war or the Cold War. The state has highly restricted the public’s ability to look at those files.

JW: How do you understand the relationship between indigeneity, neoliberalism, and multiculturalism?

ASD: The multicultural turn at the end of the twentieth century was a moment of historical contingency that I think we’ve failed to fully appreciate. When I look at the rise of multiculturalism, I don’t just view it as a top-down project — elites and their savvy technocrats duping us all. Instead, I locate its origins historically, from the bottom up. I think this is a history we should try to keep in mind as we imagine a better future.

On the Left, people have long had a healthy skepticism of neoliberalism and the rise of multicultural frameworks. That’s why many left and Indigenous activists have denounced these multicultural gestures as superficial and hollow — a way for powerful actors and institutions to superficially celebrate cultural difference without considering ongoing inequalities.

I sympathize with that position deeply, but I think it gives a bit too much power to the idea that neoliberalism has successfully defeated all forms of resistance. People sometimes argue that multiculturalism is the cultural logic of late capitalism without acknowledging that many multicultural policies — such as bilingual education in Mexico or ethnic studies in the United States — resulted from the demands activists were making, in the 1970s in particular.

The New Left in the late 1960s, and even more so in the 1970s, produced its own forms of cultural pluralism. New Left activists in Mexico and beyond tried to think about how to connect a politics of liberation, a politics of revolution, with the particular experiences of the marginalized communities they found themselves in. For many of these activists, the struggle against material inequality was linked to struggles around racism and cultural liberation.

Neoliberalism has effectively delinked those struggles. But that’s not because they’re inherently contradictory. Unfortunately, on the Left, you sometimes encounter people who tacitly accept that delinking, and say that to recognize the political value of cultural pluralism is to somehow not take class inequality seriously. But this is a poor form of revolutionary politics we need to move beyond.

How might we imagine more egalitarian and reciprocal forms of articulating our politics — and ultimately reorganizing society? I think there are lessons the international left can learn from the kind of political radicalism that emerged in Oaxaca in the 1970s.

To understand the global history of the Left, it’s worth looking closely at how Indigenous activists engaged with and transformed Marxism. In places like Oaxaca, radicals strove to understand how Marxism as a theory of emancipation could inform the experiences of their own communities, which oftentimes operated (and still do, to this day) under communal structures (usos y costumbres) through which people have both rights and obligations to the broader community.

Oaxacan intellectuals and activists developed a particular kind of theory in response to these questions — comunalidad, or “communality.” There are different versions of comunalidad, but it is generally concerned with transposing the mutual-aid dynamics of Indigenous communities onto a national or global scale. Rather than a society based on individuals and personal profit, comunalidad posits a society based on community, reciprocity, and mutual aid. It’s a tradition that has been overlooked that I think speaks to many of the pressing concerns of our world today.


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Idaho Reaches Deal to Reimburse Hunters Who Kill WolvesA gray wolf. (photo: National Geographic)


Idaho Reaches Deal to Reimburse Hunters Who Kill Wolves
Keith Ridler, Associated Press
Ridler writes: "Idaho officials will make available up to $200,000 to be divided into payments for hunters and trappers who kill wolves in the state through next summer."

Idaho officials will make available up to $200,000 to be divided into payments for hunters and trappers who kill wolves in the state through next summer.

The Idaho Department of Fish and Game late last month entered into an agreement with a nonprofit hunting group to reimburse the expenses for a proven kill.

The agreement follows a change in Idaho law aimed at killing more wolves that are blamed for attacking livestock and reducing deer and elk herds. Montana this year also expanded when, where and how wolves can be killed.

The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, at the request of environmental groups concerned about the expanded wolf killing in the two states, last month announced a yearlong review to see if wolves in the U.S. West should be relisted under the Endangered Species Act.

Idaho has managed wolves since they were taken off the list in 2011. State wildlife managers had been incrementally increasing wolf harvest during that time, but not fast enough for lawmakers, who earlier this year passed the law backed by some trappers and the powerful ranching sector.

Idaho Fish and Game Director Ed Schriever told lawmakers on the state Natural Resources Interim Committee during an informational meeting last month that the agency has been carefully tracking wolf kills.

“It is my opinion that they (U.S. Fish and Wildlife) will be looking at the change in harvest in Idaho over the next 12 months and looking at the components of that, and if there is a large change, and if it can be attributed to a change in regulatory mechanisms, that might be of considerable interest to them,” Schriever told lawmakers.

“I don’t think this thing is going to jump off of the rails, but I will assure you we are watching this very closely,” he said.

Schriever told lawmakers that wolf mortality through early September has not had a big spike compared to previous years. The new law took effect on July 1.

Idaho is also facing a potential lawsuit concerning the possible killing of federally protected grizzly bears and lynx due to the new law. Another environmental group has asked the U.S. Forest Service to protect wolves in wilderness areas in the two states from professional contract hunters and private reimbursement programs.

Idaho Republican Gov. Brad Little earlier this year signed the measure lawmakers said could lead to killing 90% of the state’s 1,500 wolves before federal authorities would take over management. Schriever said a new wolf population estimate will be available in January.

The $200,000 to pay for the reimbursement program is coming from licenses and fees paid by hunters to Fish and Game. That money will then be distributed by the state's Wolf Depredation Control Board in the agreement with the Foundation for Wildlife Management, a hunting group that describes its mission as protecting deer and elk herds.

According the group's website, the reimbursement program pays $2,500 for killing a wolf in an area where Fish and Game says wolves are chronically preying on livestock. The agency defines that as areas where at least one confirmed or probable livestock depredation has occurred each year for five years.

The group is paying $2,000 per wolf in hunting units where Fish and Game says predators are keeping elk from meeting management objectives. Hunters will get $1,000 per wolf in the northern tip of the state, and $500 elsewhere. The group notes reimbursements will be cut significantly if the money starts running out before June 2022.

Most of the high-dollar reimbursements are in central and west-central Idaho, and include designated wilderness areas.

Justin Webb, the group's executive director, didn't return a call from The Associated Press.

“This bounty system for wolves is one of the things that would contribute to the relisting of wolves,” said Jonathan Oppenheimer of the Idaho Conservation League, one of the groups that requested federal officials consider relisting. “This was a foreseeable consequence that the Fish and Wildlife Service would take a close look at some of the changes that were made.”

Besides setting up the reimbursement program, the new law also expands killing methods to include trapping and snaring wolves on a single hunting tag, no restriction on hunting hours, using night-vision equipment with a permit, using bait and dogs, and allowing hunting from motor vehicles. It also authorizes year-round wolf trapping on private property.

In Montana, state wildlife authorities approved a statewide harvest quota of 450 wolves, about 40% of the state’s wolf population. Methods for killing wolves that were previously outlawed can now be used. Those include snaring, baiting and night hunting. Trapping seasons have also been expanded.


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