President Ramkalawan announced first phase of Government restructuring – Office of the President of the Republic of Seychelles

01 February 2021 | State House

Following his State of the Nation Address, the President of the Republic, Mr Wavel Ramkalawan announced the first phase of the Government restructuring, this morning at State House. The speech which was broadcast live on SBC radio and television as well as Telesesel saw the first round of reforms of Boards, CEOs and Agencies. A second phase of restructuring will be made at a later stage.

Today is exactly 99 days since the new administration took office. During these times we have had the opportunity to look at the different structure of institutions in the country. This include in the public administration as well as all the different agencies and other organisations. As you will recall, I did mentioned about some changes that will need to take place during my SONA and todays announcements is a reflection of what the government has already decided based on competences, impartiality and efficiency, said the President.

In regards to different Boards, President Ramkalawan noted that the existing Boards was costing the government 36.2 million of rupees whereby with the elimination of some and restructuring there will be a reduction of 12.2 million rupees. The President further call on all those that will stay on these boards, including Public employees sitting on the budget dependent boards and committees as well as new members, to consider giving their services voluntarily for a year.

The post of special advisors to be abolished and those with expertise will be given new positions.

1. Vice-President Office;

2. Office of the Designated Minister

3. Ministry of Finance, Economic Planning and Trade

4. Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Tourism

5. Ministry of Internal Affairs

6. Ministry of Transport

7. Ministry of Health

8. Ministry of Youth, Sports and Family

9. Ministry of Investment, Entrepreneurship and Industry

10. Ministry of Local Government and Community Affairs

11. Ministry of Agriculture, Climate Change and Environment

12. Ministry of Education

13. Ministry of Employment & Social Affairs

14. Independent Institutions

15. Boards

Seychelles Ports Authority

Mr. Gilbert Frichot Chairperson

Mr Nichol Elizabeth - Member Mr Brian Loveday - Member Ms Audrey Rose - Member Captain Philipe Hoareau Member

Seychelles Civil Aviation Authority (SCAA)

Mr. Marlon Orr - Chairperson

Mrs. Sherin Francis - Member Mrs Magalie Essack - Member Ms. Kelly Chetty - Member Mr. Garry Jupiter - Member Mr. Yannick Roucou Member

Financial Services Authority

Mr Patrick Payet - Chairperson

Ms Seylina Verghese

Mr David Esparon

Mr Robert Stravens

Mr Philip Moustache

Ms Samantha Esparon

Ms Cindy Vidot

Ms Wendy Pierre

Mr Richard Rampal

Postal Services Board

Mr Norman Weber - Chairperson

Mr Ayub Adam

Ms Audrina Dine

Ms Judeth Dodin

Ms Tessa Henderson

Seychelles Pension Fund Board

Mr Marc Hoareau - Chairperson

Mr Patrick Payet

Ms Elsie Morel

Ms Brenda Morin

Ms Jovinella Rath

Ms Shannon Jolicoeur

Ms Shella Mohideen

Mr Jos St Ange

Ms Sarah Lang

Ms Nisreen Abdul Majid - Chief Executive Officer of SPF

Seychelles Trading Company Board

Mr Imtiaz Umarji - Chairperson

Mr Ashik Hassan

Mr Jerry Adam

Mr Jamshed Pardiwalla

Mrs Siana Bistoquet

Ms Astride Tamatave

LUnion Estate Board

Mr Frank Hoareau - Chairperson

Mr Damien Thesee

Ms Nadine Maillet

Mr Vincent Cedras

Mrs Carline Jeannevol

Mr Carl Mills

Mr Melton Ernesta

National Bureau of Statistics

Ms Caroline Abel - Chairperson

Mrs Elizabeth Agathine

Ms Marquise David

Ms Shirley Adrienne

Mr Brian Commettant

Mr Gerard Adonis

Ms Raghavi Naidu

Ms Joelle Perreau

Mrs Jane Houareau

Industrial Estate Authority

Chief Executive Officer - Mr Roy Collie

The Boards of Seychelles International Mercantile Banking Company (Nouvobanq) and Development Bank of Seychelles will also be restructured once the proposed board of directors complete the due diligence process with the Central Bank of Seychelles.

Photo gallery Link:

https://www.facebook.com/StateHouseSey/

The rest is here:

President Ramkalawan announced first phase of Government restructuring - Office of the President of the Republic of Seychelles

COVID-19 vaccines and travel: The countries opening borders to vaccinated tourists – Traveller

About 65 per cent of the Seychelles' economy is derived from tourism.Photo: iStock

The Seychelles and Romaniahavereopened to visitors from anywhere in the world who have received two doses of an authorised vaccine for COVID-19.

Iceland also plans to waive quarantine rules for visitors with an international vaccine certificate (it already does so for travellers who can prove they previously had the virus). The country isdue to finalise a system for Icelanders who have beenfully vaccinated to obtain a COVID-19 vaccination certificate.

Theannouncementfrom the Seychelles followedthe start of itsvaccination roll-out:it plans to become the first countryto immunise more than 70 per cent of its population over 18. "From there we will be able to declare Seychelles as being COVID safe,"said President of the Republic of Seychelles, H E Wavel Ramkalawan.

International visitorsare vital to the economy of the Seychelles.The contribution of travel and tourism to the Seychelles' GDP is around65 per cent.

Indeed, Romania has also cited economic reasons for opening up to vaccinated visitors. The country'sNational Committee for Emergency Situations (CNSU) said that people coming from countries or areas of high risk, or who have come into direct contact with someone who's tested positive forCOVID, are exempt from quarantine measures if they are fully vaccinated. The CNSU said this decision was reached based on adownward trend in infections in Romania. It added that there is a"need to create the necessary socio-economic conditions"to benefit the national economy.

In December, Cyprus also announced a plan to waive testing requirements for arrivals who have been vaccinated, making it the first destination to specify that immunised travellers will not need to meet other COVID-related entry rules. However, the country's ministry of health is yet to confirm if this will go ahead, as planned, in March.

Other countries have also made steps towards allowing unrestricted, or less restricted, entry to those inoculated against the virus. European Union membersare lobbying for a "vaccination passport" and Brussels has givententative backingto the idea.Other nations, such as Israel, have firm plans to launch one.

Get the latest news and updates emailed straight to your inbox.

Meanwhile, holiday firmSagahas said that its customers will need to prove they have been inoculated against the virus to travel with the company.

It should be noted that no approved COVID-19 vaccine has yet been shown toprevent transmission of the virus.

But which countries might be among the next to re-open to immunised tourists? Based on vaccination roll-outs, economic dependence on tourism and support for vaccine passports, these could be in the running:

Tourists walk around the Parthenonat the Acropolis in Athens last year.Photo: AP

EU countries should adopt a "standardised"vaccination certificate in order to boost travel,Greek Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis saidin a letter to European Commission chief Ursula von der Leyen, which was released by his office on January 12.

Mr Mitsotakis said people who have been vaccinated should be free to travel.

"It is urgent to adopt a common understanding on how a vaccination certificate should be structured so as to be accepted in all member states," he said, calling for a "standardised certificate, which will prove that a person has been successfully vaccinated".

Greece is quite far down the worldwide leader board of vaccine roll-outs with just 1.7doses delivered per 100 people.

However, mainland Greece and its islands, which remained one of a limited number of quarantine-free destinations for Britons for much of last summer, rely heavily on tourism: the contribution to its GDP is around 21.5 per cent.

The United Arab Emirates is at second place in the worldwide race to immunise populations; 25.9COVID jabs have been administered per 100 people.

Meanwhile, the UAE has licence for the Sinopharm vaccine, which it can produce itself rather than importing it. It has begun to donate doses to other, less developed countries: 50,000 were delivered to the Seychelles.

Dubai specifically was keen to welcome back tourists in 2020, opening up in July and allowing entry with a short quarantine and negative COVID test. This has since been changed to a negative COVID test taken no more than 96 hours before departure for UK travellers. The contribution of travel and tourism to the UAE's economy is 10 per cent.

Most recently, a UAE airline has launched a vaccine passport. In partnership with the International Air Transport Association, Emirates is one of the first airlines worldwide to trail the IATA Travel Pass, which comes in the form of a mobile app.

The pass will allow passengers to create a digital passport to verify their pre-travel COVID test or vaccination meets the requirements of their destination. It will also be used to share test and vaccination certificates with authorities and airlines. Emirates plans to start the first phase of this trial in Dubai, from April; customers travelling to Dubai will be able to share their COVID-19 test results with the airline prior to arriving at the airport.

Israel has been praisedfor launching what is, to date, the world's fastest vaccination programme. Some 44.8doses have been deployed per 100 people. This puts Israel's immunisation roll-out far ahead of that of the United Arab Emirates, which is currently second in the vaccine league table. Israel's health ministry aims to see 5.2 million of its eight million citizens vaccinated by March.

Last week, the ministry announced a "green booklet" as a form of vaccination certification. This document, effectively an immunity passport, will be given out to people who have received both doses. The country is mulling two forms of this booklet, effectively avaccine passport, one which will be valid for the 72 hours following a negative COVID test result and another which would be permanent for those who have received the first dose of the vaccine.

The ministry website says that those in possession of this document would be "eligible for relaxed restrictions in destinations around the world". For the moment though, Israel's borders are closed. The government announced on Sunday the country's only major airport would close for at least a week, effectively sealing itself off from international travel in a bid to vaccinate more of its population before new variants of the coronavirus take hold here.

Border restrictions for visitors is not so major an economic blow as for some countries on this list: in Israel, travel and tourism's contribution to GDP is around 6 per cent.

The Royal Palace in Madrid, normally crowded with tourists, is empty in August last year.Photo: AP

Another tourism-dependent country, Spain is among the EU members backing plans for a vaccine certificate.

According to Online newspaper El Diario, Spanish government sources said: "there must be an agreement on a mutual recognition mechanism because it is urgent to consolidate levels of mobility, which have an impact on the economy in general, not just tourism".

Last month, health minister Salvador Illa said Spain would create a vaccination registry that would track people who refuse a COVID-19 vaccine, which would create a document that could be shared with other countries in Europe.

"What we will have is a registry, that will also be shared with our European partners of those who have been offered it and rejected it," Illa told the broadcaster La Sexta. "The document will not be made public and it will be done with the utmost respect for the legislation on data protection."

Spain has so far delivered 2.6vaccine doses per 100 people, putting it on par, or ahead of, most other EU countries.

However, after its summer tourist numbers were ravaged in 2020, Spain's travel industry will be keen to find a route around the current complex testing and quarantine rules. Last week,Reyes Maroto, Spain's ministerof industry, trade and tourism, said in a statement onJanuary 22: "Our priority in 2021 is to reactivate tourism and resume safe mobility on a global scale as soon as possible. We are working to adopt a common framework of a series of planned actions to give confidence to tourists.

"We hope that at the end of spring and especially during the summer, international travel will resume and travellers will choose Spain as their destination."

The UK is Spain's largest single visitor group, and in summer 2020 there were just three weeks when Britons could visit all of Spain without facing quarantine on return. The country garners around 15 per cent of its GDP from tourism.

In October, Estonia signed an agreement with the World Health Organisation (WHO) to develop a digital immunisation certificate that would enable cross-border exchange of vaccination information. The Estonian Prime Minister Jri Ratas said on Twitter that he had invited Finland to take part in the scheme. Estonia has, thus far, administered 1.9 jabs per 100 people.

However, it is not clear that this trial is a precursor to a vaccine passport that could reopen international travel. In a meeting on January 14, the WHO committee said: "Being vaccinated should not exempt international travellers from complying with other travel risk reduction measures."

Denmark has said it will look at the development of a vaccine certificate in order to ease restrictions on travel and freedom of movement. It has delivered 3.6 doses of vaccine per 100 people.

Poland, where travel and tourism contributes around 4.5 per cent to GDP, recently announced the introduction of vaccine passports. The country's deputy health minister Anna Goawska said Polish nationals would be able to access certification in the form of a downloadable QR code once they received the second dose of a coronavirus vaccine. The code would allow the recipient to "use the rights to which vaccinated people are entitled". Thus far, Poland has administered 1.3 doses of the vaccine per 100 people.

Hungary's government said it could require visitors to prove their vaccination status to gain access to the country via an app showing immunity to COVID-19. "The need for citizens to provide proof that they have gained protection against the coronavirus is increasing all over the world," a government spokesperson said. In Hungary, 1.6doses of vaccine have been administered per 100 people. The country's foreign minister Pter Szijjrt has criticized the European Commission for "appallingly slow vaccine procedures".

He said: "In the wake of Brussels's pledges at the end of last year and at the beginning of 2021 it was expected that the EU would start vaccination with enormous speed, and restrictions in member countries could be eased it has not happened out of the EC's fault."Tourism contributes around 8.5 percent to Hungary's GDP.

While Belgium has administered 1.5doses per 100 people, the country's government said it supports a "verifiable COVID-19 vaccination certificate"that would be recognised across the EU, or even globally.

That said, the country's own regulator has advised against a vaccination database. It said that the given purpose for storing such data and how it would be shared are vague, and that authorities would hold onto the data for too long. The regulator said such a database "undoubtedly constitutes considerable interference in the right to protection of personal data." This echoed the EU's data protection chief Wojciech Wiewirowski who in 2020 said the idea of an immunity passport was "extreme".

The Telegraph, London

See also:Australia among world's top 10 countries worst-hit by drop in tourists

See also:Why the COVID-19 vaccine won't be like other travel vaccines

Emma Featherstone

Go here to read the rest:

COVID-19 vaccines and travel: The countries opening borders to vaccinated tourists - Traveller

Liberland – Wikipedia

Liberland, officially the Free Republic of Liberland, is a micronation claiming an uninhabited parcel of disputed land on the western bank of the Danube, between Croatia and Serbia. It was proclaimed on 13 April 2015 by Czech libertarian politician and activist Vt Jedlika.[3][9]

The official website of Liberland states that the nation was created due to the ongoing CroatiaSerbia border dispute,[10][11][12] in which some areas to the east of the Danube are claimed by both Serbia and Croatia, while some areas to the west, including the area of Liberland, are considered part of Serbia by Croatia, but Serbia does not claim them.

The size of the land in question is 7km2 (2.7sqmi), or roughly the same as Gibraltar. It has been administered by Croatia since the Croatian War of Independence.[13]There has been no diplomatic recognition of Liberland, although it has established relations with Somaliland (also unrecognized).[14][15] The land lacks infrastructure and lies on a floodplain.[16][17]

The dispute regarding the border along the Danube River valley first arose in 1947 but was left unresolved during the existence of the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia. It became a contentious issue after the break-up of Yugoslavia. Serbia holds the opinion that the thalweg of the Danube valley and the centre line of the river represents the international border between the two countries. Croatia disagrees and claims that the international border lies along the boundaries of the cadastral municipalities located along the riverdeparting from the course at several pointsreflecting the course of the Danube which existed in the 19th century before meandering and hydraulic engineering works altered its course. As a result, Croatia claims a large part of the disputed area controlled by Serbia, while Serbia does not claim the much smaller parts controlled by Croatia.

Jedlika says that the land he has claimed, known as GornjaSiga (meaning upper tufa), was not claimed by either side.[3][9][11]

The area is about 700 hectares (1,700 acres), about the same size of Gibraltar, and most of it is covered with forests. There are no residents. A journalist from the Czech newspaper Parlamentn listy who visited the area in April 2015 found a house that had been abandoned for about thirty years, according to people living in the vicinity. The access road was reported to be in a bad condition.[18]

The Danube, an international waterway with free access to the Black Sea for several landlocked nations, runs along the self-proclaimed territory.

The flag raising in Gornja Siga was performed by Vt Jedlika and some of his associates on the same day the republic was proclaimed.[19][20] Jedlika is a member of the Czech Party of Free Citizens, which bases its values on the classical liberal ideology.[11]

Jedlika stated that no nation claims the land as its own and he therefore could claim it using the terra nullius doctrine. The border, he argued, was defined in accordance with Croatian and Serbian border claims and did not interfere with any other state's sovereignty.[3] Jedlika said in April 2015 that an official diplomatic note would be sent to both Croatia and Serbia, and later to all other states, with a formal request for international recognition.[21]

On 20 April 2015, Jedlika delivered a lecture at the Prague School of Economics, titled "Liberland how a state is born" (Czech: Liberland jak vznik stt). He discussed various aspects of the project and the interest it has attracted around the world. One topic that he brought up was the Montevideo Convention; he explained that Liberland intended to satisfy the principles of the convention, which is commonly used to define a state. At the time of the lecture, the Liberland project had assigned ten people willing to handle foreign relations.[22] Other topics covered in the lecture included the concept of voluntary taxation and how the large number of citizenship applications had made it necessary to restructure the citizenship process to be more effective, since it was only based on an e-mail account.[22]

On 18 December 2015, Jedlika held an event at which he presented the first provisional government of Liberland and its ministers of finance, foreign affairs, interior and justice as well as two vice presidents.[23]

The flag consists of a yellow backdrop (symbolizing libertarianism) with a black stripe running horizontally through the centre (symbolizing less government, anarchy/rebellion) and the coat of arms in the centre.[24][25] Within the coat of arms, the bird represents freedom, the tree represents prosperity, the blue river represents the Danube River, and the sun represents happiness.[26]

This section needs to be updated. Please update this article to reflect recent events or newly available information. (June 2018)

Croatian authorities have frequently blocked access to the area since the beginning of May 2015.[27][28]

In May 2015, Vt Jedlika and his translator Sven Sambunjak were briefly detained by Croatian police after making an attempt to cross the border. Jedlika spent one night in detention and then was convicted and ordered to pay a fine for illegal crossing of the Croatian border[29] but appealed the verdict. He claimed that there were at least three Liberland citizens inside the area, who came from Switzerland.[30][31][32][33] Later that month, Vt Jedlika was detained again.[34] Initially, reporters were able to enter the area with Jedlika[18] but subsequently they were also denied entry, including journalists from the Serbian public broadcast service Radio Television of Vojvodina,[35] and from the Bosnian newspaper Dnevni avaz.[36]

The detained were from various countries, including Ireland, Germany, Denmark, and the United States.[28] Croatian police have continued detaining people, including those that entered the area by boat (via an international waterway).[37][38][39] One of them, Danish activist Ulrik Grssel Haagensen, was placed in house arrest for 5 days before being sentenced to 15 days of prison, triggering some protests in Denmark.[40][41]

In May 2016, several appeals court decisions from Croatia were published. The court upheld that crossing into Liberland from Croatia is illegal, but found the convictions for entering Liberland from Serbia improper. The court said that the lower court committed "a fundamental breach of misdemeanour proceedings" and "essential procedural violations". It further ruled that "the facts were incorrectly and incompletely established [by the prosecutor] which could lead to misapplication of substantive law". A retrial was ordered in 6 of the 7 appeals. The lower court is required to determine the location of the border and the border crossing.[42]

Journalists have been uncertain as to how serious Jedlika is about his claims, with some calling it a publicity stunt.[43][44]

In an interview with Parlamentn Listy in April 2015, Jedlika claimed that he had received positive reactions for his initiative, mainly from his own party, the Party of Free Citizens, for which he was a regional chairman,[45] but also from some members of the Civic Democratic Party and the Pirate Party.[19]

On 20 May 2015, Petr Mach, the leader of the Party of Free Citizens, expressed support for the creation of a state based on ideas of freedom, adding that the Party of Free Citizens wants the Czech Republic to become a similarly free country.[46]

Dominik Stroukal from the Czech-Slovak branch of the Ludwig von Mises Institute wrote: "The escapade succeeded for Vt. The whole world reports about Liberland with words like 'tax competition', 'libertarianism', etc."[47]

Goran Vojkovi, professor of law and columnist from the Croatian news portal Index.hr, described Liberland as a "circus which threatens Croatian territory", and argued that there was a risk that Croatia's claim to control land on the other side of the Danube may be weakened by the attention that the Liberland project has drawn to the border dispute.[48]

In 2016, an article in Stratfor summarized the initiative as follows: "Liberland is a curious case because, in principle, none of the actors that could claim control over it seems interested in doing so. But this will probably remain a curiosity with negligible consequences at the international level. For the rest of the world's disputed territories, violence and diplomacy will remain the main tools to claim ownership."[49]

Legal experts in both Serbia and Croatia have said that, under international law, Jedlika lacks the right to claim the area, which is currently the subject of a dispute between the two nations.[27][50][51] Croatia and Serbia have dismissed Jedlika's claims as frivolous, although the two countries have reacted in different ways. On 24 April 2015, the Serbian Ministry of Foreign Affairs stated that while they consider the affair a trivial matter, the "new state" does not impinge upon the Serbian border, which is delineated by the Danube.[52] Croatia, which currently administers the land in question, has stated that after international arbitration, it should be awarded to Croatia or Serbia, not to a third party.[53]

An article in the Chicago Journal of International Law, the law review of the University of Chicago Law School, examined Liberland's claim to statehood in light of the criteria laid out by the Montevideo Convention. According to the author, "Croatias insistence that Liberland is part of Serbia could constitute a renunciation of Croatias legal rights to Liberland. Conversely, if the territory that Liberland claims as its own is Serbian, the Serbian governments renunciation of its title to that land could also be a quitclaim that would transform the legal status of the land to terra nullius. In both instances, the territory would belong to the first entity in this case Liberland to claim it. However, because of the complicated history of the Croatian-Serbian border region, it may be difficult to ascertain who the land belongs to under international law."[54]

An article in the Michigan Journal of International Law argues that the United Nations should recognize Liberland.[55]

A government with ten to twenty members has been suggested for the administration of Liberland, to be elected by electronic voting.[19] Liberland intends to operate on an open-border policy.[19] The goal of the micronation, as claimed by its website, is to create "a society where righteous people can prosper with minimal state regulations and taxes".[19][21] The founders are inspired by countries like Monaco and Liechtenstein.[21]

Liberland has published a draft version of a codified constitution[56] and a list of laws to be included in the constitution. These documents describe Liberland as a country governed under a three-power system with executive, legislative and judicial sectors that seek to promote individual rights, including property rights, freedom of speech and the right to keep and bear arms. It has also a list of criminal offences, which include "polluting environment", "public nuisance" in addition to crimes such as murder, manslaughter and theft.[57] There are plans for an official cryptocurrency called Merit,[58] although all other currencies would be allowed.[19] There will be a maximum of 700 million merits.[59]

In an attempt to gain recognition at the UN, Liberland appointed 70 representatives in over 60 countries within a year of proclamation.[60] As of February 2018, Liberland had recruited over 100 representatives in over 80 countries.[61]

According to its official web page, Liberland is currently looking for people who have respect for other people and their opinions, regardless of their race, ethnicity, orientation, or religion, have respect for private ownership which is untouchable, and have not been punished for past criminal offences.[6] Liberland received 200,000 applications in a week.[62] In the beginning of May 2015, Liberland accepted around thirty citizens. An event was supposed to take place in the claimed territory, but Croatian border police stopped the group from entering it from the Croatian side. An attempt to cross the river with fishing boats from Serbia failed because the local fishermen didn't have permits for transporting people with their boats. Serbian police informed Jedlika that anyone trying to cross the border illegally would be arrested. An improvised ceremony was instead held in Baki Monotor.[63]

On 16 February 2018, United States politician and former candidate for U.S. Presidency Ron Paul was officially presented with a Liberland passport and citizenship certificate by Jedlika and his cabinet.[64][65]

Jedlika initially offered "Liberland citizenship" for 10,000 merits, equivalent 1:1 to USD,[66][16] but later reduced it to 5,000.[6] There will be a cap of 140,000 citizenships.[59]

There has been no diplomatic recognition of Liberland by any member of the United Nations. However, Liberland has established relations with Somaliland, a self-declared state that proclaimed its independence from Somalia in 1991. Liberland and Somaliland signed a Memorandum of Understanding in September 2017 vowing to establish closer relations and cooperate in the areas of technology, energy and banking.[14][15]

Several minor parties with no elected representatives at their national level expressed support for the creation of Liberland.

A few micronations have expressed support for the idea of Liberland.

Coordinates: 45466N 185217E / 45.76833N 18.87139E / 45.76833; 18.87139

Read more here:

Liberland - Wikipedia

Native Americans are celebrating Rep. Haaland’s nomination – PBS NewsHour

Julian Brave Noisecat:

I think it's worth pointing out that Congresswoman Haaland was never a shoo0in for this job. And she is a relative newcomer here in Washington. It was just her first term in Congress. And unlike many of the other folks who have been put forward and nominated for cabinet positions, she does not have a long standing relationship with President-elect Biden, which is, I think, very important to the president-elect.

And despite those sort of concerns and also concerns about the very thin House Democratic majority, a very concerted and effective effort led by tribal leaders, environmentalists and progressive activists actually systematically, both in public and behind the scenes, was able to get her across the finish line and to make history. And, you know, I think that that is just a testament to what an incredible leader she is.

Folks like me and folks who have strong beliefs, injustice, justice, etc., aren't just going to go out there and advocate for anyone.

Continue reading here:

Native Americans are celebrating Rep. Haaland's nomination - PBS NewsHour

Matthew McConaughey: ‘The extreme left and the extreme right completely illegitimize the other side’ | TheHill – The Hill

Actor MatthewMcConaughey is doubling-down on comments he made last week about "illiberals" and the current state of politics in the United States.

While appearing on "Good Morning Britain" on Tuesday to promote his memoir "Greenlights," the "True Detective" star elaborated on his previousclaimsthat his Hollywood colleagues can have "condescending" and "arrogant" attitudes when it comes to the Trump supporters and the right.

Some liberals dont see theyre being cannibalised by the illiberals. @McConaughey explains he thinks free speech and both sides of being political debate are illegitimatised by the other side.@piersmorgan | @susannareid100 pic.twitter.com/fY5o4THqcs

"You need liberals. What I dont think we need is the illiberals," McConaugheytold hosts Piers Morgan and Susanna Reid while appearing on theBritish news program. "What I dont think that some liberals see is that theyre often being cannibalized by the illiberals."

He continued, stating that both sides can be problematic and tend to cancel each other out.

"There are extremes on both sides that I think are unfair, that I dont think are the right place to be. The extreme left and the extreme right completely illegitimize the other side, the liberal and conservative side, which we need in certain places," he said. "The two extremes illegitimize those two sides. Or they exaggerate that sides stance into an irrational state that makes no sense and thats not fair when either side does that."

The Oscar-winning actor briefly mentioned "cancel culture," and how it could possiblyinfluencefree speech in the future.

"Where the waterline is going to land on this freedom of speech and what we allow and what we dont and where this cancel culture goes, where that waterline lands is a very interesting place that we are engaged in right now as a society that were trying to figure out because we havent found the right spot."

AlthoughMcConaughey previously daredAmericans to get "aggressively centric," he noted that to some degree, conflict is a necessary evil.

"Youve got to have confrontation to have unity," he said, according to Deadline. "Thats when a democracy works really well."

Link:

Matthew McConaughey: 'The extreme left and the extreme right completely illegitimize the other side' | TheHill - The Hill

Korean Liberals and the Sword of Justice? – koreatimes

Korean liberals and sword of justice? - The Korea Times Opinion 2020-12-2112:44 Korean liberals and sword of justice? By David TizzardLiberalism has an insatiable desire to extinguish all existing suffering. Some characterize it as irrepressible drive, fueled by ideology and the pursuit of a promised land that will see nothing stand in its way to achieve its ends. A noted political theorist of the mid-20th century, Ken Minogue (Australian but no relation to Kylie), likened this pursuit of glory to that of St. George and the slaying of dragons. The liberal wields his sword and advances on that which terrorizes and threatens society and its inhabitants: despotism, religious bigotry, slavery, racism, xenophobia, and corruption.The liberals thus live to fight the dragon: Their position, their power, their methods, and their very nature of being are all defined in opposition to their antithetical opponent. Christopher Nolan explored similar territory in his depictions of the Batman and Joker in his 21st century trilogy.But while this seems like a clear and comprehensible narrative digestible in the modern world, Minogue took this metaphor and made it both allegoric and didactic. What happens, he asked, if the sword-wielding liberal St. George continues on the quest unopposed?St. George will initially free society from despotic kingship and emancipate the people, liberating souls and providing salvation to serfs. He will then turn his blade unto religious intolerance. This will provide the hero some time to rest. And yet, as time passes, up will rise the problems of slavery and prison conditions, the societal role of the working class, the championing of human rights, and the emancipation of women. Once again, she will unsheathe her weapon and slay dragons. This time the attacks need to be more refined and sophisticated for the problems, while still of vital importance, are more nuanced and present inside a complex structure which is otherwise deemed beneficial or necessary. The fire-breathers once more sent packing, the hero puts her feet up. But she just can't get it out of her head. Even with her hand on her heart, this is not a case of better the devil you know: this is where the wild roses grow. And so once again, the liberal hero takes up his sword and now advances on the latest enemies. As society progresses, the dragons become even more camouflaged in the very fabric of the systemnow they are vested interests, privilege, and insolence. The point Minogue was trying to make was that the liberal does not know when to rest. There will always be dragons standing in the way of that desired heaven as a place on earth (yes, that's admittedly a Belinda Carlisle reference rather than the other Kylie ones above). And so the sword never gets put away. Bewitched by utopian thoughts and intoxicated by previous success, the liberal continues to fight. A normal life, a social life, is simply no longer enough. The Batman cannot simply be Bruce Wayne no matter how hard he tries for there will always be a villain to overcome. In an existential world in which actions define one's self and one's purpose, the hero can only live by fighting for the poor and the oppressed. The dragons keep him alive just as it is rumored does the whisky of Keith Richards: to stop now would surely be fatal. But the dragons become smaller and smaller. Even non-existent! We are presented with an image of Cervantes' ingenious knight of La Mancha, Don Quixote, tilting at windmills with his loyal servant Sancho Panza. It is of course a most honorable pursuit; chivalrous to the core. But at times society will simply look at these acts and chuckle at the absurdity. In more unpleasant situations, the innocent bystanders will be inadvertently cut down by the charging knight and his weapon. Minogue of course meant this talk of dragons and saints to be applied to politics, and so what of this allegory and its relation to South Korea?The ruling party members proclaim themselves as the rightful and legitimate continuation of the dragon slayers of yore. It is their group that opposed, in turn, Japanese colonial rule, American imperialism, domestic military rule, and suffocating neo-liberal economic conditions. They are the group that have freed Korean society from tyranny and oppression and have rightfully claimed the seat of power. Theirs is the position of saintliness.But what now that they have assumed the mantle? Is it possible they are still wielding a mighty sword despite a great many of their foes having been vanquished? Is it not the case that the warrior now needs to become a diplomat or a philosopher in order to foster the long-term stability of the state and prevent further collateral damage? The ruling party has a majority in the National Assembly that allows it to pass bills unopposed but is witnessing falling public support due to a series of scandals and policies enacted that have failed to live up to the expectations of the people. It speaks of its commitment to "eradicate deep-rooted evils perpetrated by those in authority" and "deep-rooted evil in everyday life."There will always be dragons for some people, and thus there will always be a sword. For everyone else, we toil and suffer with the realities of life. Our backs broken like the proverbial shrimp as we remember that ever apt phrase from Matthew 26:52, "Put your sword back into its place; for all those who take up the sword shall perish by the sword." Ultimately, is it not time for Korean politicians, on both sides of the aisle, to put the sword away?Dr. David Tizzard (datizzard@swu.ac.kr) has a Ph.D. in Korean studies and is an assistant professor at Seoul Women's University. He discusses the week's hottest issues on TBS eFM (101.3 FM) on "Life Abroad" live every Thursday from 9:35 a.m. to 10 a.m. By David TizzardLiberalism has an insatiable desire to extinguish all existing suffering. Some characterize it as irrepressible drive, fueled by ideology and the pursuit of a promised land that will see nothing stand in its way to achieve its ends. A noted political theorist of the mid-20th century, Ken Minogue (Australian but no relation to Kylie), likened this pursuit of glory to that of St. George and the slaying of dragons. The liberal wields his sword and advances on that which terrorizes and threatens society and its inhabitants: despotism, religious bigotry, slavery, racism, xenophobia, and corruption.The liberals thus live to fight the dragon: Their position, their power, their methods, and their very nature of being are all defined in opposition to their antithetical opponent. Christopher Nolan explored similar territory in his depictions of the Batman and Joker in his 21st century trilogy.But while this seems like a clear and comprehensible narrative digestible in the modern world, Minogue took this metaphor and made it both allegoric and didactic. What happens, he asked, if the sword-wielding liberal St. George continues on the quest unopposed?St. George will initially free society from despotic kingship and emancipate the people, liberating souls and providing salvation to serfs. He will then turn his blade unto religious intolerance. This will provide the hero some time to rest. And yet, as time passes, up will rise the problems of slavery and prison conditions, the societal role of the working class, the championing of human rights, and the emancipation of women. Once again, she will unsheathe her weapon and slay dragons. This time the attacks need to be more refined and sophisticated for the problems, while still of vital importance, are more nuanced and present inside a complex structure which is otherwise deemed beneficial or necessary. The fire-breathers once more sent packing, the hero puts her feet up. But she just can't get it out of her head. Even with her hand on her heart, this is not a case of better the devil you know: this is where the wild roses grow. And so once again, the liberal hero takes up his sword and now advances on the latest enemies. As society progresses, the dragons become even more camouflaged in the very fabric of the systemnow they are vested interests, privilege, and insolence. The point Minogue was trying to make was that the liberal does not know when to rest. There will always be dragons standing in the way of that desired heaven as a place on earth (yes, that's admittedly a Belinda Carlisle reference rather than the other Kylie ones above). And so the sword never gets put away. Bewitched by utopian thoughts and intoxicated by previous success, the liberal continues to fight. A normal life, a social life, is simply no longer enough. The Batman cannot simply be Bruce Wayne no matter how hard he tries for there will always be a villain to overcome. In an existential world in which actions define one's self and one's purpose, the hero can only live by fighting for the poor and the oppressed. The dragons keep him alive just as it is rumored does the whisky of Keith Richards: to stop now would surely be fatal. But the dragons become smaller and smaller. Even non-existent! We are presented with an image of Cervantes' ingenious knight of La Mancha, Don Quixote, tilting at windmills with his loyal servant Sancho Panza. It is of course a most honorable pursuit; chivalrous to the core. But at times society will simply look at these acts and chuckle at the absurdity. In more unpleasant situations, the innocent bystanders will be inadvertently cut down by the charging knight and his weapon. Minogue of course meant this talk of dragons and saints to be applied to politics, and so what of this allegory and its relation to South Korea?The ruling party members proclaim themselves as the rightful and legitimate continuation of the dragon slayers of yore. It is their group that opposed, in turn, Japanese colonial rule, American imperialism, domestic military rule, and suffocating neo-liberal economic conditions. They are the group that have freed Korean society from tyranny and oppression and have rightfully claimed the seat of power. Theirs is the position of saintliness.But what now that they have assumed the mantle? Is it possible they are still wielding a mighty sword despite a great many of their foes having been vanquished? Is it not the case that the warrior now needs to become a diplomat or a philosopher in order to foster the long-term stability of the state and prevent further collateral damage? The ruling party has a majority in the National Assembly that allows it to pass bills unopposed but is witnessing falling public support due to a series of scandals and policies enacted that have failed to live up to the expectations of the people. It speaks of its commitment to "eradicate deep-rooted evils perpetrated by those in authority" and "deep-rooted evil in everyday life."There will always be dragons for some people, and thus there will always be a sword. For everyone else, we toil and suffer with the realities of life. Our backs broken like the proverbial shrimp as we remember that ever apt phrase from Matthew 26:52, "Put your sword back into its place; for all those who take up the sword shall perish by the sword." Ultimately, is it not time for Korean politicians, on both sides of the aisle, to put the sword away?Dr. David Tizzard (datizzard@swu.ac.kr) has a Ph.D. in Korean studies and is an assistant professor at Seoul Women's University. He discusses the week's hottest issues on TBS eFM (101.3 FM) on "Life Abroad" live every Thursday from 9:35 a.m. to 10 a.m.

Excerpt from:

Korean Liberals and the Sword of Justice? - koreatimes

Tribal leaders respond to the idea of an Indigenous Interior secretary – High Country News

Editors note:On Dec. 17, President-elect Joe Biden announcedRep. Deb Haaland (D-NM) as his choice for Secretary of Interior, marking the first time a Native American will serve in the position, if confirmed by the Senate.

President-elect Joe Biden has pledged to make his administration the most diverse in history, a promise that so far he has fulfilled with several key appointments. For weeks now, momentum has been building behind a push for the Department of the Interior to be run by an Indigenous person for the first time in history. Dozens of tribal leaders have called upon Biden to appoint U.S. Rep. Deb Haaland, D-N.M, an enrolled tribal member of the Laguna Pueblo.

Beyond the obvious symbolic importance of having an Indigenous person lead Interior, a department with a long history of defying the best interests of tribal nations, the possibilities such a position would bring for tribal administrations and citizens alike are endless. Native leaders and advocates are hoping that a Haaland appointment would result in improved tribal consultationon everything from land protections to how agencies like the Environmental Protection Agency, interact with tribal communities.As the country awaits Bidens decision, Native communities are bracing for what could prove a seismic change in the way the federal government treats the interests of Indian Country.

Dozens of tribal leaders have called upon Biden to appoint U.S. Rep. Deb Haaland, D-N.M, an enrolled tribal member of the Laguna Pueblo.

It will be a moment to exhale for tribal leaders, said Judith Le Blanc, a citizen of the Caddo Tribe of Oklahoma and director of the Native Organizers Alliance, a national Native training and organizing network. An Indigenous person leading Interior, she said, would mean having someone who understands the legal and inherent rights of Indigenous peoples to govern their own lands.

Were the only peoples in this country who have a collectively owned land base that has been self-governed since the beginning of time, Le Blanc said. To have someone who understands that historic fact and therefore the rights and responsibilities to consult and to discuss before a decision is made that will affect treaty lands will be amazing. It creates opportunities and possibilities that tribal leaders will have to step into.

The possibility of an Indigenous person leading Interior comes after an election in which Indigenous voters supported the Biden/Harris ticket in critical states like Arizona, Nevada and Wisconsin. As IllumiNatives a nonprofit working to increase Native visibility put it in a social media post, Joe, Native people showed up for you. Now, show up for them. If Haaland or someone like Michael Connor, a member of Taos Pueblo and former deputy Interior director, whose name has also been floated as a possible nominee were to run the department, it would have a significant impact on Indian Country policy for the next several years not only for department policies and representation, but also for on-the-ground realities.

Under the Trump administration, environmental laws were significantly weakened, protections of places like the Tongass National Forest were rolled back and large-scale, high-impact projects like the Keystone XL and Dakota Access pipelines were expedited. Many of those policies included a rushed or, in the case of the U.S.-Mexico border wall, nonexistent tribal consultation process. While all bureaucracies have flaws, both Haaland and Connor understand that including tribal nations in a government-to-government consultation process is non-negotiable. They could also reverse some of the Trump administrations controversial decisions. Whoever is chosen, the stakes are high.

The Yurok Tribe was one of a host of tribes to sign a letter to President-elect Joe Biden, urging him to choose Haaland. The tribe has had a protracted battle with the federal government over keeping enough water in the Klamath River to support their lifeways and the rivers salmon population. In 2001, a government decision caused the largest fish kill in Yurok and U.S. history. Vice Chairman Frankie Myers says the representation and experience that would come with Haaland as an Indigenous person and lawmaker would be a welcome change: Ensuring that Indigenous voices are at the highest level of government, specifically when it comes to resources, is critical for us moving this country in a better, more positive way.

I cant believe it has taken this long. We have never been included in decisions that will affect our future.

Bernadette Demientieff, executive director of the Gwichin Steering Committee, agrees. In November, the Trump administration announced that it would auction off oil and gas leases in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge just two weeks before Biden takes office. The refuge, which lies within the ancestral lands of the Gwichin, supports the sensitive populations of Porcupine caribou, polar bears and walruses. The Gwichin Steering Committee has filed numerous lawsuits to stop the sale. This current administration has done nothing but disrespect and violate the rights of our people, Demientieff wrote in a statementtoHigh Country News. As for an Indigenous leader of Interior, I cant believe it has taken this long. We have never been included in decisions that will affect our future.

While Native voters tend to lean left, Indian Country issues on the Hill have typically found support with both Republicans and Democrats. The six Indigenous people who will join the next Congress are split evenly between the parties. And even though the political atmosphere has been considerably polarized under the Trump administration, the prevailing sentiment is that Haalands ability to work across the aisle will keep Indian Country policy from becoming a politically divisive issue.

Theres a reason why people like (Republican U.S. Reps.) Don Young and Tom Cole have publicly spoken out in very positive ways regarding Deb, said Keith Harper, a member of the Cherokee Nation and an Obama appointee who was the first Indigenous person to represent the U.S. on the United Nations Human Rights Council. Because theyve worked with her and know shes willing to put the party politics aside and get pragmatic about challenges.

Because we understand that Native American issues are not a matter of conservative versus liberal, we have accomplished a great deal together, said Rep. Cole. Out of all representatives in the House, Haalands bills have had the most bicameral support, and often bipartisan. And the political allies and partners shes made in Congress have some predicting that this would translate to consensus building across the government on issues affecting Native people.

Oftentimes, Interior is looked as the agency that handles Indian affairs, said Kim Teehee, the Cherokee Nations congressional delegate. We have HUD (Housing and Urban Development) that handles Indian housing, we have the FCC (Federal Communications Commission) that handles broadband, education, the USDA (Department of Agriculture). There is such a cross-cutting nature of Indian Country issues, and I think she has the unique ability as a Cabinet secretary to convene the agencies.

One non-Native whose name has been floated for the position is retiring Sen. Tom Udall, a Democrat from New Mexico, who has long been a champion of Indigenous affairs in Congress. His father, Stewart Udall, was secretary of Interior from 1961-1969 under presidents John F. Kennedy and Lyndon B. Johnson. A number of progressive Native-led organizations have called on him to remove his name from consideration. When asked what it could mean for an Indigenous person to lead Interior, Udall toldHigh Country News thatNative Americans should be in high positions throughout government in the White House and various agencies its not just about the Interior Department,adding that the next secretary mustprioritize tribal nations needs with inclusive consultation, and put inthe hard work to make sure Native voices are front and center throughout the department.

Graham Lee Brewer is an associate editor atHigh Country Newsand a member of the Cherokee Nation.Emailhimat [emailprotected]or submit aletter to the editor.

Anna V. Smith is an assistant editor for High Country News.

Get our Indigenous Affairs newsletter

Thank you for signing up for Indian Country News, an HCN newsletter service. Look for it in your email each month.

Continue reading here:

Tribal leaders respond to the idea of an Indigenous Interior secretary - High Country News

‘What Binds Us Together’: On What It Means to Support Indigenous Liberation – Palestine Chronicle

A depiction by the Navajo artist Remy of 16-year-old Fawzi al-Junaidi arrested by Israeli soldiers. (Photo: File)

In a recent interview with Michael Arria, Sumaya Awad and Brian Bean discuss their book Palestine: A Socialist Introduction (2020). The collection argues that socialism should be viewed as an important element in the struggle to liberate Palestine.

What binds us together, concludes Awad, is our class politics. The working class together is what will build a new kind of world and a different system. And what that means is standing with the oppressed outside of our borders and with Palestine.

While class is a clear connection around which to build campaigns, there are other avenues to explore. For example, in The Liberation of Palestine Represents an Alternative Path for Native Americans, Nick Estes (Lower Brule Sioux Tribe) describes Palestine as the moral barometer of Indigenous North America, thus adding the Indigeneity that Awad touches on to the commonalities that bind activists to the cause of Palestine.

Responding to the controversy that erupted in Santa Fe, New Mexico over a series of pro-Palestinian murals drawn by a local Navajo artist, Elena Ortiz (Ohkay Owingeh) expands on the historical connections between the Indigenous here and in Occupied Palestine.

The images on that stucco wall, explains Ortiz, show the truth of settler colonialism and the effects it has on indigenous people. They were put there to show solidarity with our Palestinian relatives in the face of brutal occupation; to illuminate injustice and shed light on this nations complicity in Israels treatment of the Palestinian people.

In that vein, she stresses the importance of acknowledging that the founding of the United States was a process that involved displacing and exploiting Indigenous nations that were living on the land prior to European conquest, a process very similar to the establishment, too, of the state of Israel.

Elaborating on the contradictions between Santa Fes reputation as a liberal art center and home to vibrant Native cultures, Ortiz asks how a Native-installed art exhibit could cause so much controversy. Because it illuminates a truth that many people do not want to face? she speculates, or, perhaps, it offends a lot of people?

In reality, those most offended were local Zionists who assumed the role of victim. Why is Israel singled out as an aggressor when there are many troubled spots in the world? asked Rabbi Berel Levertov of the Santa Fe Jewish Center-Chabad. There are many facets to the story and to highlight Israel is just anti-semitic propaganda.

Preferring a portrayal that depicts normalization of relations between the twoa work of art depictingJews and Arabs living in PeaceLevertov offered up an image very fitting, too, of Santa Fe, a City Different that hides its racism beneath a veneer of faux adobe.

Several months later another controversy arose when Native people and their comrades succeeded in taking down a memorial ostensibly to Union soldiers. As Elena Ortiz explains, those same combatants participated in massacring Native people and removing them from their homelands.

Under the shadow of that obelisk, Ortiz asserts, on Tewa homelands, in a place we call Ogha Pogeh, we still exist, despite ongoing efforts by some to prove the opposite.

Alan Webber, the liberal mayor of Santa Fe who might seem a likely ally, proposed a belated Cultures, Histories, Art, Reconciliation and Truth committee. Tasked with replacing other controversial monuments with alternate public art, the commission bears resemblance to similar efforts towards normalizing Israeli/Palestinian relations.

Indigenous activists know better, specifically that there can be no peace until there is substantive justice. Elena Ortiz, daughter of the late Alphonso Ortiz, an anthropology professor who was my mentor at the University of New Mexico, says that the citys mood and dialogue have exposed much deeper problems.

Santa Fe, with its pseudo-liberal, left-leaning politics, thinks its somehow above racial tensions that elsewhere have been exposed.

But when you look at the vitriol that has come out since the obelisk, were peeling back this onion and were showing the racism that is endemic in Santa Fe. And were showing that, hey, Donald Trump doesnt have anything on Santa Fe and this racism is so systemic.

A city that bears a liberal faade, but in which racist and anti-Palestinian sentiments have exploded, Santa Fe is a perfect example of the ways in which Indigeneity unites solidarity activists around the cause of liberation, but at the same time exposes that sometimes a wing of the left-liberal camp declines to be on board.

Finally, President-elect Joe Bidens selection of New Mexico Congressmember Deb Haaland (Laguna Pueblo) as secretary of the interior owes much to Indigenous movements who organized around land back as well as an end to fracking on and around Native land. An historic first, Haalands appointment marks a significant turn-around for an agency that for much of the nations history played a central role in the dislocation and abuse of all Indigenous tribes.

That was a very, very important step for the Biden administration, says Winona LaDuke, executive director of Honor the Earth, rural development economist and Native American activist. Indian people know how to take care of this land.

According to the Red Nation, Haalands nomination is also significant because she hails from a state that ranks fifth in the country for oil and gas production, much of which is on Indigenous land claimed by the federal and state governments. Moreover, the group explains,

these conditions, and ongoing struggle against them, put NM at the center of the land back movement in which a first step is returning public lands back to Indigenous people for any kind of sound environmental policy. Because of this context, Haalands appointment is significant.

Because Haaland has taken a position against fracking on public land and has supported Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and Girls (MMIWG) legislation, her selection plays out within this context.

We have yet to see, however, how this will all play out when she becomes secretary of DOI, concludes the Red Nation statement. Regardless, movements are pushing in this direction.

While there is widespread agreement among Native people that European colonialism and Indigenous genocide is criminal and immoral, writes Nick Estes, there are a surprisingly high number of Native politicians, elites, and public figures who dont extend the same sympathies to Palestinians, Arabs, and Muslims. He continues that the term anti-Palestinian opportunism describes how profitable and career-advancing it is for Indigenous people to align with the Zionist project.

The future Secretary of the Interior falls into this category. Its profound to think about the history of this countrys policies to exterminate Native Americans and the resilience of our ancestors that gave me a place here today, Haaland said.

Nevertheless, she does not view Palestine in the same light. For example, during her campaign for US Congress, Haaland compared Native Americans getting the right to vote in New Mexico in 1948 to the creation of the state of Israel. Reflecting on this statement, Estes concludes that Haalands opportunism demonstrates that she is anything but an ally to Palestine and more of an opportunist willing to throw Palestinians under the bus when it benefits her political career.

Recalling a panel in which she participated during the Palestine Writes festival, author and activist Susan Albuhawa explained that true solidarity has a cost. What is it really worth to the oppressed if its easy and cheap and popular? Solidarity matters most when its hard, unpopular, and costly.

Hopefully, in her upcoming appointed position, Haaland will use her platform to point out the ties that bind the Indigenous in this country with their relatives the Palestinians. Both have undergone ethnic cleansing and displacement, parallel experiences that should be called for what it is, crimes against humanity.

Recounting how the Intifada changed the political trajectory of the Palestinian people, Ramzy Baroud explains thatthanks to the Intifada, the Palestinian people have demonstrated their own capacity at challenging Israel without having their own military, challenging the Palestinian leadership by organically generating their own leaders, confronting the Arabs and, in fact, the whole world, regarding their own moral and legal responsibilities towards Palestine and the Palestinian people.

Perhaps it is this acknowledgment of the need for a grassroots struggle against colonialism that is the tie that binds Indigenous resistance around the world. Commemorating the 2020 election which saw the ouster of Donald Trump, the Red Nation put out the following statement. Regarding what needs to be done, it puts forward the following view on socialism as the tie that binds.

The battle of ideas against the ideology of greed and individualism, and the need for communal organization are keyIndigenous peoples, peoples of tribal nations, peoples of Maroon communities, peoples of the land have lived before capitalism and against capitalism. They have cultivated relations with each other and the land that do not rely on conquest and surplus but bring abundance and joy and dignity to all. These communal forms should be developed and become schools for freedom. We call these schools for Indigenous socialism. Join us in the struggle to create a better future.

To be a socialist you must be a principled champion for Palestine (p. 6), write Awad and Bean. Their book bears out that certainly, this is true.

Benay Blend earned her doctorate in American Studies from the University of New Mexico. Her scholarly works include Douglas Vakoch and Sam Mickey, Eds. (2017), Neither Homeland Nor Exile are Words: Situated Knowledge in the Works of Palestinian and Native American Writers. She contributed this article to The Palestine Chronicle.

Continued here:

'What Binds Us Together': On What It Means to Support Indigenous Liberation - Palestine Chronicle

LD17 thin victory margins and a tie – Arizona Capitol Times

The interactive map above shows precinct-level results of the 2020 election in Maricopa County.

Out in the Southeast Valley, the Loop 202 freeway is often seen as a political compass. To the north of it is dense with Democratic voters; to the south, suburbs that start with a kiss of GOP pink but soon deepen to a solid red.

Political eyes were on the area this election to see whether Democrats had the chance to flip Arizonas Legislative District 17 blue. In the end, with all votes tallied and certified, the district narrowly chose Democrat Joe Biden for president by 3.7%, or 5,000 votes, but no seats shifted in the state Legislature.

In the aftermath, candidates and community members wait to see what this years results, a precinct patchwork of red and blue, spell for the future.

Paula Feely

Paula Feely is a Democratic precinct committeeperson in Chandler. It was President Donald Trumps win in 2016 that pushed her, out of frustration, to become more involved with campaign efforts in her community. She represents Germann Precinct, part of a widening stretch of blue bleeding south of the Loop 202.

Ive become more aware of the Democrats around here, Feely said. Theyre less shy now.

Biden won a handful of precincts around Feelys turf this year that previously went for Trump, including Lantana Canyon, Laredo and Dobson Park with margins ranging from .6% to 2%, or 10 to 110 votes. Voters in Germann Precinct supported Biden, too, after giving Hillary Clinton a 1% lead in 2016.

Since becoming a committeeperson, Feely has written hundreds of letters, dropped party literature on doorsteps and made phone calls to people throughout LD17. And she has become more comfortable talking about politics with non-Democrats, she said, although close to the election, I did have to cut myself off from some people.

Her counterpart in Germann Precinct might be Anne Kirkham, a longtime Chandler resident who is precinct committeeperson for the Republican Party. With new housing going up in the district and people moving in from out-of-state, Kirkham said she sees the ground shifting in the city.

For her, maintaining Republican leadership will depend on finding the right messaging.

Theres been a lot of outreach to what are called soft Democrats and all the independents, she said. It all comes down to policies and platforms.

Despite partisan tensions in Arizona, and the ongoing, if largely dismissed, concerns about the elections integrity concerns that Kirkham shares she refrains from villainizing Democrats. Many of them are her neighbors in this battleground district.

I have dear friends who look at things differently than I do politically, and I dont let that get in the way of our friendship, she said.

To the east of Kirkham and Feelys precinct is Layton Lakes, a precinct that neither Biden nor Trump could claim. At 253 votes each, they were tied.

Raghu Srinivasan

The triangular stretch of land near Queen Creek and Lindsay roads became a precinct in 2017, and is home to 576 registered voters. Raghu Srinivasan, vice chair for District 17 Democrats and an engineer with a penchant for analyzing election data, said Layton Lakes was carved out of Appleby Precinct as a result of new housing in the area.

It wasnt long ago that the area was mostly farms, empty land and single family homes, he said. But as neighborhoods grow and newcomers arrive, theyre probably bringing their outlook with them, Srinivasan said.

Layton Lakes is one of three precincts in the county where Biden and Trump faced a draw. Steven Slugocki, chair of the Maricopa County Democratic Party, said the ties illustrate the closeness of elections here, and how much of the county is up for grabs.

One of the most closely watched races in LD17 was for the state Senate seat held by J.D. Mesnard, a Republican.

Democratic challenger A.J. Kurdoglu lost the race, but said he had no doubts that the district is changing. Still, it will take work to decide the political future of the East Valley, he said liberal and conservative leaders cant simply wait for the demographics to change.

I always believe it is our job as candidates or as a party to reach out to your neighbors, your constituency and explain what you stand for, Kurdoglu said.

Mesnard comfortably won his Senate seat, but doesnt deny the potential of the region turning blue in years to come. He lost his own precinct to Kurdoglu by 5.3% of the vote, or 277 votes. Biden carried it by a wider margin of 15%, or 827 votes.

The senator said he has no plans to change his policies in response to a constituency that is becoming more liberal.

I ran for office in the first place under a certain set of principles. I maintain those principles, Mesnard said. And if theres an avalanche of people that come in with different principles, itll probably just mean that Ill lose, eventually.

He said he hopes to convince newcomers that his policies and the Republican platform more broadly have helped make Arizona an attractive place to live.

Even as pundits make predictions for the next election, the competitive status of LD17 could soon recede into history when officials begin redrawing legislative districts next year.

Feely, the Democratic precinct committeeperson, said she thinks the liberal tilt in her neighborhood is a credit to people engaging with the issues more than any sea change in political beliefs.

As a retired school district employee, she said she thinks candidates who are focused on education will find supporters in the East Valley, just as Democrat Jennifer Pawlik did when she ran for the state House two years ago and won. Pawlik was re-elected last month.

Its not just a red and blue thing, Feely said of the political map. Its what people think you can do to improve our community.

Read this article:

LD17 thin victory margins and a tie - Arizona Capitol Times

Centrists have a solution for Trumpism: Trump Lite – The Week

Self-described centrists have had a hard time of it for the last four years. With President Trump utterly dominant on the right, and the Democrats moving at least rhetorically to the left, the apparent space in the middle has shrunk virtually to nothing. And with ideological polarization and mutual animosity between the parties higher than it's been in over a century, there is little prospect for the sort of bipartisan compromise beloved by Washington establishment organizations like No Labels, the ostensibly nonpartisan group that pushes for sensible, moderate, pro-growth policy.

But now that Joe Biden is president-elect and promising a return to bipartisan comity, No Labels is bringing forth a new champion: Maryland Governor Larry Hogan. This Republican will bring honor and decency back to the GOP by being openly corrupt and racist just like Trump, but in a quieter and more plausibly-deniable fashion. No Labels, and the school of centrism they typify, couldn't ask for a better mascot.

As Eric Cortellessa reports at Washington Monthly, Hogan's most notable act as governor has been canceling a public transit project in Baltimore and spending Maryland money on highway developments adjacent to land he owns personally. Just like Trump, instead of divesting himself of conflicts of interest, he put his business operations in the hands of a relative who keeps him abreast of what is happening. He "has advanced a number of major state transportation projects that are near properties his company owns," Cortellessa writes, including "millions of dollars in road and sidewalk improvements near property he had bought approximately two years earlier and was turning into a housing development." Hogan is making millions, more than any Maryland governor in history, yet just like Trump refuses to release his tax returns so his constituents can see where the money is coming from.

In addition to being wildly corrupt in basically exactly the same way that Trump is corrupt again, Hogan shamelessly funneled public money into his own pockets this decision was also racist, a climate disaster, and hugely wasteful. The Red Line metro rail project was a tentative, inadequate, and long-overdue effort to reverse just a little of the decades of disinvestment that have left majority-Black Baltimore as one of the poorest and most crime-ridden cities in the country. Taking that money to spend on largely-white suburban roads is exactly what racist conservatives did in the 1970s to capitalize on post-civil rights white backlash, while of course cars and car-dependent suburbs consume dramatically more energy than dense urban cores. Hogan also had to flush millions down the toilet to kill the Red Line not only foregoing $900 million in matching funds from the Obama administration, but also wasting a ton of money the state had spent on land acquisition prior to construction.

The choice of a guy like this is a perfect illustration of what No Labels "centrism" amounts to in practice. It is not about good government, or "problem solving," or bridging the partisan divide, or any of the other things these organizations say they are about. It's instead an attempt to paint a nanometer-thin veneer of honor and civility over the same corrupt neoliberal self-dealing that has saturated American politics for the last 30 years. As Alex Pareene writes:

Hogan is exactly the "normal" to which politicians like Joe Biden promise to return us when they try to speak into existence a Republican Party that they can "work with." Here he is: a self-dealing crook whose racist policymaking will speed the destructive effects of climate change while making him even richer. [The New Republic]

But we can see also why No Labels has fixated on Hogan he is a Republican who is extremely popular in Democratic Maryland, registering 73 percent approval among Democrats in the state, and 87 percent among Black voters there. Frankly, that level of popularity is baffling, but it seems liberal Democrats are depressingly willing to embrace a conservative who keeps taxes low, quietly starves the poor out of sight, and proves their open-mindedness, so long as he isn't too much a loudmouth. For his part, Hogan, whose second term in office expires in 2022 and is clearly angling for a future presidential run, gets a higher media profile and to appear Responsible.

The problem with "centrism" in an American context is that it is not actually anywhere close to the middle of the political spectrum, and its signature ideas are not popular at all. Now, some of the ideas No Labels advocates for are perfectly sensible and poll well, like treating capital gains as normal income or reforming the filibuster. But many others, like cutting the deficit and the corporate tax rate, are not. Its overall policy orientation is pure neoliberalism: removing regulatory "barriers" and bettering "incentives" supposedly to create growth, policies which the last 40 years of economic history have demonstrated do the opposite.

The real unoccupied center in American politics is genuine economic populism, where most rank-and-file Democrats and a nontrivial number of socially conservative Republicans agree that taxes on the rich should be jacked up, that the minimum wage should be $15 an hour, that workers should have some control over the means of production, and so on.

The political function of No Labels is to keep such supposedly radical policies off the political menu at any cost, which is why it gets so much corporate funding. Joe Biden served a similar purpose for many years in the Senate as a stooge of the credit card companies that use Delaware as a corporate flag of convenience. His recent promise to obtain more bipartisan compromise probably will not work out, but if it does, it will likely involve exactly the kind of hideously unpopular cuts to social programs that he's been pushing for decades that way both parties can launder responsibility for something Americans as a whole hate.

Pushing up a Republican who has figured out how to satisfy well-off liberals by quietly pandering to their most retrograde instincts is all part of the plan. We may end up with Trump Lite as president, but at least the corruption and racism will be out of sight and the pocketbooks of the rich will be safe.

Read more:

Centrists have a solution for Trumpism: Trump Lite - The Week

Coalition should commit to halving emissions this decade, says conservative thinktank – The Guardian

A centre-right thinktank with links to former Liberal ministers Robert Hill and Christopher Pyne has said the Morrison government should commit to halving emissions from coal-fired electricity this decade, and the Coalition could drive the change by using some existing policies.

A report from the Blueprint Institute said the latest emissions projections released by the government indicated Australia would not meet its 2030 target. The only way to permanently reduce carbon emissions was to reduce our economys structural reliance on them.

Coal-fired power generation was now in permanent decline, it said, and in 2019, 21% of Australias electricity came from renewable sources. Since the last coal plant was commissioned in 2009, wind power had grown by 15% a year, solar by almost 50% a year, and that pace is accelerating.

The report, to be released on Monday, said the transformation trend was so baked in it was no longer a question of the government making a decision to end coal-fired generation: Its end is inevitable, its role in permanent decline.

All thats left for the commonwealth to decide is whether its willing to step up and coordinate an orderly phase-down that provides certainty for communities, workers, consumers, and investors.

The Blueprint Institute is a relatively new thinktank drawing staff who have worked for federal Liberal MPs including Julie Bishop and Dave Sharma and policy experts. A number of board members have worked in state politics, and the strategic council of the organisation includes Hill, Pyne, former NSW Liberal parliamentarian Michael Photios, and former state and federal minister Bruce Baird.

Its report, Phasing Down Gracefully, suggested the government could manage the retirement of coal generation in an orderly fashion and with fewer job losses than was sometimes claimed in Australias hyper-partisan brawling about climate policy by announcing new sectoral emissions reduction targets for 2026, 2028 and beyond the current medium-term target for 2030.

It said under the Coalitions existing safeguard mechanism sectoral emissions caps could be imposed to drive participation in a new coal-generation phase-down mechanism that would be administered by the clean energy regulator. The safeguard mechanism, which began in 2016, applies to facilities emitting more than 100,000 tonnes of carbon dioxide equivalent a year.

Having set targets, the government could then offer contracts for emissions reductions that would both cap pollution and guarantee a minimum electricity supply until the contract expired.

Generators would participate in a sealed bid auction system. The scheme the thinktank proposed would also contain requirements that generators offer redeployment and retraining opportunities for workers.

The mechanism could either generate revenue that could be distributed in communities impacted by the closures, or alternatively the government could pay out the generators for the profits they would lose because of an early exit from the system an option that would cost taxpayers billions.

In terms of job losses, the report noted Australias coal industry employed 50,000 workers directly and 120,000 workers indirectly.

But it said the coal-fired generation sector employed fewer than 10,000 workers, including the thermal coalminers who supply the generators. It acknowledged the emissions reduction commitment it proposed would see roughly half these workers lose their jobs.

But the report said it was entirely possible for Australia to continue to export coal for a time while shutting down coal generation domestically.

Any suggestion that an Australian commitment to net zero by 2050 or a drive to decarbonise our electricity sector risks the future of our coal industry is simply false, the report said.

The export market for thermal coal would decline in this decade. It said: Over 74% of our thermal coal exports go to China, Japan, and South Korea which have all pledged net-zero.

But it said metallurgical coal which is required for steel making formed most coal exports from Australia. Metallurgical coal would be required for at least the next decade because we are yet to develop and commercialise zero-emissions alternatives.

Notwithstanding their net-zero commitments, robust steel production by our major trading partners is likely to continue to underpin robust demand for our metallurgical coal for some time.

This will secure the majority of jobs in our coal industry, as well as generating economic activity in local communities and revenues for state governments.

Australia had time to be part of developing alternatives, and transition was consistent with the Morrison governments technology investment roadmap.

The Morrison government should face up to the inevitable and take responsibility for what is a national problem, and set out a plan for how our electricity market will evolve this decade and beyond.

While Scott Morrisons language on a climate policy pivot has warmed up since Joe Biden was declared the winner of the American presidential contest, the government continues to say it will not sign up to a mid-century emissions reduction target unless it can explain the costs to the public.

Morrison had planned to flag the likelihood that Australia would meet its 2030 target without having to resort to controversial Kyoto-era carryover credits at a climate ambition summit last weekend, but Australia was not granted a speaking slot at an event reserved for significant new commitments.

Australias target for 2030 is a cut of 26%-28% on 2005 levels. As the Blueprint Institute report noted, current projections suggest the country is falling short of that objective. On current projections Australia was likely to land at 22% below 2005 levels at the end of the decade.

More:

Coalition should commit to halving emissions this decade, says conservative thinktank - The Guardian

Year in Review: Long-sought ANWR sale tops 2020 in oil and gas – Alaskajournal.com

Trump administration officials nearly waited until the last minute to make it happen, but opening bids for an Arctic National Wildlife Refuge coastal plain lease sale will be one of the first things Bureau of Land Management Alaska officials do in 2021.

BLM Alaska leaders announced Dec. 3 that the hotly contested lease sale will be held Jan. 6. Barring a last-minute court injunction from one of the several lawsuits filed against BLM for its environmental evaluation of the lease sale, it will be held before the Biden administration could do anything to stop the bidding. At least two lease sales are required under the 2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act.

Interior Secretary David Bernhardt signed the record of decision approving BLMs plan to lease all of the available acreage in the 1.5 million-acre coastal plain Aug. 17, allowing the agency to move ahead with the final administrative procedures to hold the sale.

Several Alaska Native and conservation organizations sued the Interior Department earlier this year on the grounds that the environmental impact statement and subsequent agency decision approving the leasing plan was rushed and ignored numerous environmental considerations. Those lawsuits are pending.

Earlier this month BLM leaders announced they plan to offer nearly all of the 1.5 million acres parsed into 32 tracts ranging from approximately 34,000-60,000 acres each. The acreage will come with a 10-year lease term and minimum bids must be for at least $25 per acre.

Industry advocates and Alaskas congressional delegation continue to stress the anticipated economic boon coastal plain oil development could be for the state. They insist that despite current prices the potential large oil pools some geologists believe are likely under ANWR could attract significant long-term investment in the North Slope.

2. Ballot Measure 1 rejected

Alaskas oil industry notched another win at the ballot box Nov. 3 when voters rejected a citizen-led initiative to significantly raise oil taxes by a 15 percent margin.

Known as the Fair Share Act, or Ballot Measure 1, the initiative would have raised both the gross minimum and net profits tax rates on the largest oil fields on the North Slope: currently Alpine, Kuparuk and Prudhoe Bay.

The nearly 55,000-vote margin against the oil tax initiative was in sharp contrast to the 2014 referendum to repeal Senate Bill 21, the tax system Ballot Measure 1 sought to replace.

The Republican-backed oil tax survived 2014 primary election vote by approximately 10,000 votes and a 5 percent margin.

Public opposition to the ballot measure reached beyond the oil industry, partly because the pandemic took the bottom out of oil markets just as a proposal to significantly raise state taxes was making its way to the ballot.

Typically non-political business groups such as the Alaska Economic Development Corp. formally opposed Ballot Measure 1 and the OneAlaska campaign against it raised nearly $25 million, while Vote Yes for Alaskas Fair Share generated approximately $1.3 million to promote the initiative.

The election result does not mean the issue of oil taxes is settled in the Legislature, however, as even some traditional industry backers have said some change to oil taxes will likely have to be a part of a broader fiscal plan. It remains to be seen how strict Gov. Mike Dunleavy would be in adhering to his strong opposition to any new taxes should that situation arise.

3. Prudhoe Bay transition

In typical Hilcorp fashion the biggest move the company has ever made was finalized quietly when it took over operations at Prudhoe Bay July 1. The transition from BP to Houston-based Hilcorp Energy was the practical end to BPs decades-long run in Alaska.

Hilcorp has since increased production in November approximately 15,000 barrels per day compared to last year, with daily production averaging 305,000 barrels last month.

In December the Regulatory Commission of Alaska approved the sale of BPs 49 percent stake in the Trans-Alaska Pipeline System to Hilcorp, nearly a year-and-a-half after the $5.6 billion deal was announced in August 2019.

As part of the deal, BP retains the financial responsibility to dismantle TAPS and restore the disturbed area commensurate to its prior ownership stake in the pipeline.

4. Willow gains approval

One of the largest North Slope oil prospects in decades received clearance from the federal government for development Oct. 26 when Interior Secretary David Bernhardt signed a record of decision approving ConocoPhillips $6 billion Willow project master development plan.

The remote oil prospect in the National Petroleum Reserve-Alaska west of the established North Slope fields was discovered in 2016 and ConocoPhillips now believes it can produce up to 160,000 barrels of oil per day.

BLM approved construction of three drill sites, a processing facility and ancillary infrastructure and said plans for two more drill pads and subsequent roads and pipelines could be reviewed later.

Interior leaders have since been sued by conservation groups over the veracity of the agencys environmental impact statement for Willow, but ConocoPhillips Alaska representatives have said early construction could begin next year if other regulatory approvals are granted.

5. NPR-A plan gets overhaul

As the Bureau of Land Management worked to approve one oil development in the National Petroleum Reserve-Alaska, agency officials also generated plans to open more of the 23 million-acre reserve to industry over the year.

ConocoPhillips Willow project gained federal approval in August, and in late June BLM Alaska leaders announced their intent to make 18.7 million acres of the NPR-A available for oil and gas leasing under the agencys preferred alternative in the final environmental impact statement for the NPR-A Integrated Activity Plan.

The new plan would add 6.9 million acres to the area open for leasing, or about 100,000 acres more than was evaluated under the most liberal leasing option discussed in the draft NPR-A land-use EIS released last November. Currently, about 11.8 million acres, or a little more than half of the reserve, is available for leasing by industry under the NPR-A plan finalized by the Obama administration in 2013.

The plan would open the entire Teshekpuk Lake Special Area in the northeast portion of the reserve an area of particular importance to both industry for its oil potential and conservation and subsistence interests for its waterfowl and caribou-rearing habitat to leasing.

It would also eliminate the Colville River Special Area, which provides habitat protections over 2.4 million acres adjacent to the river as well. The Colville River makes up much of the eastern boundary of the NPR-A.

More:

Year in Review: Long-sought ANWR sale tops 2020 in oil and gas - Alaskajournal.com

A new approach to studying religion and politics – MIT News

Associate Professor Richard Nielsen is an MIT political scientist with an innovative research program: He studies clerics in the Islamic world, combining textual analysis, ethnographic insights, on-the-ground research in the Middle East, and a big-data approach to charting online tracts.

This method has generated novel conclusions about religious doctrine and authority although Nielsen, who has graduate degrees in both government and statistics and does his primary research in Arabic, downplays his versatility.

I basically tell people that Im not the best in the world at any of the things I do, Nielsen says. Its just that theres a real dearth of people who are trying to do all of them.

Nielsens first book, Deadly Clerics: Blocked Ambition and the Paths to Jihad, published in 2017, drew praise for both its insights and methods. After scrutinizing the online writings of about 200 radical clerics, Nielsen concluded that a substantial portion of these clerics had come from academic backgrounds, but found their career paths blocked. Disenchanted, many became jihadists, preaching war against their perceived enemies.

Nielsens follow-up book project, in progress now, looks at authority in the Islamic world, with an increasing focus on women who have become online preachers.

Most people dont think of Islam as having female preachers, Nielsen says. However, he notes, Theyre helping this movement expand. These people help reach new audiences on the Internet. So the question is how do women gain authority in these conservative religious spaces?

As with his first book, this project combines a close study of society with large-scale analysis of textual trends. Nielsen has refined many of those analytical techniques over time, and has published numerous papers about data and research methods as well.

The ethnographic type of approach is not often combined with the statistical approach, Nielsen observes. My personal view is thats where a lot of scientific discovery happens, from people who are willing to try multiple things.

For his research and teaching, Nielsen was granted tenure at MIT in 2020.

No place like home

Long before he became a professor, Nielsen spent some quality time at MIT. Nielsens father received a PhD in chemistry from MIT and lived in campus graduate housing along with his young family.

Its really a homecoming for me to be here, because my earliest memories are of living in Eastgate and Westgate [apartment buildings] as a toddler, Nielsen says. Another memory: The MIT boathouse master taking my mom and me out in one of the motorboats, which I thought was an amazing thing. They let me hold the steering wheel, and thats the first thing I think I remember.

After MIT, the Nielsen family moved around a bit. They lived in upstate New York and eventually San Jose, California, where Nielsen attended high school and became an avid surfer, finding some overlooked breaks on the Northern California coast.

Nielsen attended college at Brigham Young University, and after watching the terrorist attacks of September 2001 unfold on television became interested in studying the politics of the Islamic world. That alone might not have led him into academia. But one summer, when Nielsen was working part-time as a campus security guard, a professor of his stopped by a campus event, saw Nielsen monitoring the door, and asked him, Would you like another job?

That professor Daniel Nielson, an expert in international politics had a National Science Foundation grant to study foreign aid; he encouraged Nielsen to jump into serious research. By the time Nielsen graduated from college, he had presented work at conferences and helped co-author a paper that would be published in the American Journal of Political Science.

That was a huge break for me, and really when I cut my teeth on research, Nielsen says. He [Nielson] gave me and a couple other people really meaningful opportunities.

That also helped Nielsen get accepted into Harvard University for graduate school. Nielsen received a masters degree in statistics in 2010 and his PhD in government in 2013. He made two trips to Egypt during his dissertation research, starting by grasping the dynamics of a prominent teaching mosque.

On the ground, watching students interact with their teachers is where I had the core insight of my first book, that these people, who I had thought were so different from me, were really just students and professors, Nielsen says. The story I was hearing about the folks who got more extreme in their beliefs was that they werent making the connections they needed to, so they got frustrated, [leading to] more extreme religious and political beliefs. I took that insight which Id had qualitatively, back to this very large corpus of [textual] data, and could confirm that pattern was indeed happening.

Nielsen joined the MIT faculty in 2013; his dissertation research became the basis of Deadly Clerics.

Riding the waves

At the Institute, Nielsen teaches a range of graduate and undergraduate classes, and describes his students as the sharpest people imaginable.

I teach a fairly large undergraduate class on introduction to international relations, Nielsen says, and every time I get up at the beginning, I say, All of you are smarter than me, Ive just been doing this for longer. And every time, its true.

While teaching, Nielsen is continuing with the second book project, which was also helped by a prestigious Carnegie Foundation fellowship in 2017. Nielsens new work took shape in part because he noticed that some online female preachers had larger audiences than their male counterparts; those female preachers, Nielsen says, generate a lot of positive reactions and fairly minimal negative reactions.

Nielsen adds that there clearly is a broader segment of the Islamic world that is interested in womens authority. And I think that is because people do things on the internet that they would feel awkward about if meeting in public. Women are asserting their authority to speak to womens experiences and more generally to a broad Islamic experience that commenters are not aware of. Im not saying this a bastion of classic liberal feminism. It isnt. But I do think there are the seeds of new perspectives happening in the preaching of these women.

If that were not enough, Nielsen is also working on an additional project, about female white nationalists in the U.S., analyzing some 15,000 videos to better understand how and why women join the movement.

I love working on multiple projects, Nielsen says. I think its a creative stew for myself. And Im really glad MIT sees the promise in the whole stew.

When Nielsen is not teaching, doing research, or at home with his family, he is likely doing one other thing: surfing. Having learned to surf in California, Nielsen still seeks out good waves in Massachusetts. To this day, Nielsen says, surfing clears his mind of everyday worries, including the Covid-19 pandemic.

During the shutdown it was almost the only reason I was leaving the house, Nielsen says, adding: Its been my sanity outlet all the way through grad school, and the tenure track. Its one time when my mind stops thinking about work.

And when hes back on land, Nielsen recognizes how well his distinctive brand of political science fits the interdisciplinary ethos of the Institute he again calls home.

MIT is a special place to me and has given me opportunities I couldnt have imagined almost anywhere else, Nielsen says.

Visit link:

A new approach to studying religion and politics - MIT News

Kevin McKenna: SNP neo-liberalism must be fought, but we cannot while in the UK – The National

IT was a nationalist friend, a socialist and trade union activist, raised in Labours Lanarkshire heartlands, who asked me the nuclear question: are there any circumstances in which you might not now vote for Scottish independence?

Like me, shed lately come to resent the influence of neo-liberal managerialism which currently holds sway at the top of the SNP. We both considered the beguiling possibility of how we might have felt had Jeremy Corbyn ever become prime minister of the UK.

Here was an authentic Labour leader whose entire adult life had been dedicated to fighting inequality and class-driven social injustice and who was committed to restoring some balance in the economy in favour of our poorest communities. As soon as the English political establishment realised he was serious they destroyed him. They then sent in the multi-millionaire Sir Keir Starmer to preserve their interests and to hang the false charge of antisemitism around Corbyns neck to ensure the threat of a genuinely radical UK Labour Party would be neutralised.

Yet, Corbyn would likely only have been a one-term prime minister and thus Scotland would always remain tied to the whims of the English electorate.

READ MORE:Ruth Wishart: Book of Boris in Brexit makes the case for independence rather nicely

My journey towards Yes began seven years ago after it became clear that England was about to journey into a long journey into darkness. The Tories had committed themselves to a hard-right suite of social policies. At the heart of this lay a commitment to a programme of austerity which discriminated against communities just recovering from the iniquities of Thatcherism while providing tax breaks for its most affluent supporters.

Later, they would come to be influenced by the racist agenda of Nigel Farages support base. In truth though, the Tories had already signalled their intent to promote racism with its creation of a hostile environment for those deemed to be the wrong type of immigrants and the Windrush scandal.

I could never have predicted though, how inequality and the celebration of it would become embedded in present-day Tory policy. The chaos of Brexit has left us with a political class whose justification for a No-Deal divorce is that well get through it because we always do. What they mean of course is that it doesnt really matter because they and their supporters have the finances to absorb the consequences. All reasonable criticism of the EU and its neo-liberal instincts was swamped by the sewage of British superiority and hostility to foreigners.

Here I must admit that some sections of the SNP, the main vehicle for independence, drive me nuts. Each time I vote for this party I must fortify myself with a stiff drink and be reminded that its for the greater good. I reassure myself that immediately following a Yes vote there will be a Scottish General Election and that perhaps the Labour Party in Scotland will have rediscovered its socialism. Hell, maybe the radical independence movement might stop dancing on pinheads and produce a broad-based political party capable of fighting a Scottish election with a reasonable chance of success.

In every sector of SNP governance, the influence of big business and global corporations is clear. From its agricultural and fisheries policies to its failure to unstitch the feudal patterns of land ownership its easy to detect the influence of multi-nationals. Those investments in lobbying fees and a willingness to meet the astronomical asking price for a berth at SNP conferences has paid off handsomely.

Yet, while eager to protect the interests of a powerful few they are happy to abandon working-class communities on the pretext that their hands are tied by EU state aid rules. The real reason of course is that the leadership has an obsession with cosying up to Brussels even though there is virtually no chance of an early entry into the EU.

I have grown dismayed at how the party has permitted a large number of fakes and opportunists to hitch their careers and finances to the only political show in town. In lieu of undertaking the painstaking task of finding long-term solutions to multi-deprivation they have contrived a culture war around the proposed Gender Recognition Act reforms. This and the proposed hate crime legislation are counterfeit radicalism which, instead of helping the poor, are actually a means of gaslighting them.

More than 13 years of SNP rule has seen the party lapse into complacency with too many of its senior figures, especially at Westminster, living a superannuated idyll while contributing nothing of any note to the movement. Im reminded of this each time Pete Wishart rises to speak. And its yet to be explained to me why a party that seeks the break-up of the UK chooses still to legitimise the Union by sitting in its main chamber of power and drawing six-figure salaries and expenses from it while taking an oath of loyalty to a toy-town royal house.

READ MORE:Michael Fry: Nothing's federal about the UK, and its too late to start now

If they had the courage of their purported convictions theyd refuse to take their seats at Westminster and make a serious declaration of intent about Scottish independence. Theyd also seriously undermine the authority of Westminster to act as the pre-eminent UK legislature. Instead, they choose to denigrate the wider Yes movement for daring to do what the party refuses to: engage in an intellectual debate about what an independent Scotland might look like.

Yet I have to conclude that independence is indeed everything, not least because gaining it would land a massive blow on an increasingly corrupt and elitist British state, whos cheating and duplicity is made flesh in the person of the UK Prime Minister.

Following the 16th consecutive poll indicating majority support for independence, those of us whose hearts desire is an independent, socialist republic of Scotland must start preparing for the battle which immediately follows independence.

This will be to drive back the forces of capitalism and neo-liberalism who currently wield disproportionate influence on Scottish life. Their main strategists, even now, are seeking ways to ensure their writ runs unhindered in an independent Scotland as it does in the rest of the UK.

In public, these people profess hostility towards independence.

In truth though, it matters not a jot to them; just so long as their bank accounts and property portfolios remain healthy. What do you think the Growth Commission was all about?

They will start the second referendum campaign three goals up and its about time the SNP and its loyalists stopped sleep-walking and woke up to the fact.

Continued here:

Kevin McKenna: SNP neo-liberalism must be fought, but we cannot while in the UK - The National

The Remedy to the Agricultural Crisis That No One Is Talking About – The Wire

Five weeks after the Farmers agitation began, and a day after the Supreme Court urged the government to put the three farm bills passed in September on hold, Prime Minister Modi has finally agreed to hold talks with their leaders.

But what will he hold talks about when neither he, nor anyone else in his government, has shown any understanding of what has driven the entire community of farmers from North India to the edge of despair?

Theirignorance is writ large on his party propagandists attempts to ascribe political, even traitorous, motives to the farm leaders. That is the reaction of schoolyard bullies who, when they find themselves losing an argument, start hitting their opponents.

Now that Modi has decided to talk to the farmers himself, he would do well to understand the predicament that has driven them to desperation. In a nutshell, it is this: India is now a chronically food surplus economy. So while opening up the foodgrains trade to traders from all over the country will benefit rich farmers who have the maximum bargaining power and can contact, or be contacted by, buyers in other states and countries most easily the entire price shock of the foodgrains surplus will be felt by the small landholders who make up four-fifths of the farming community.

The governments recent decision not to abolish the Minimum Sale Price system will cushion this shock, but no one knows to what extent it will do so if the thriving mandis of Punjab, Haryana, Western UP and northern Rajasthan lose the bulk of their business to private buyers and start closing down.

Even if the Agricultural Produce Marketing Committees that manage these mandis survive no one can foretell how far their straitened finances will permit them to provide the small farmers with the host of ancillary services, such as advances to buy seed and fertiliser in time to sow the next crop, that they are doing today. In sum, these reforms will plunge the largest, most vulnerable, segment of the countrys population into a sea of uncertainty, in which they presently have no idea, of how they will stay afloat.

Also read: The Protests Against the Farm Laws Present a Familiar Pattern

Liberal economists are treating this as the unavoidable price of economic development. The solution, they say, lies in product diversification. The cereals market will automatically come back into balance if farmers divert some of their land to horticulture, dairy and poultry farming. What they seem to be unaware of is that farmers have been doing this since the early 1990s. Those with small and marginal holdings were the first to attempt it.

But the world they entered was frighteningly different from the world they were leaving, for it was one in which near-complete market security was replaced by equally complete market insecurity. While cereals are not perishable and can easily be stored for six months or more (wheat) to several years ( lentils), fruit, vegetables (other than onions and potatoes), milk and eggs perish in days. Horticulturalists have therefore found that, from the moment they harvest their crop, they are at the utter mercy of the trader.

Despite this more and more farmers have taken to growing vegetables, fruit and flowers because of the rapid and unexpected growth of exports. Since exporters offer contracted prices to ensure, and often pre-empt, supply, a degree of income stability has been given to horticulturists. As a result, the area under horticulture has more than doubled in the past twenty years to 25 million hectares, and exports have grown eightfold from Rs 8,000 crores in 2000-01 to Rs 63,700 crores in 2018-19.

Farmers protest against the farm bills at Singhu border near Delhi, India, December 4, 2020. Photo: Reuters/Anushree Fadnavis

But only traders, exporters and well-to-do farmers have benefited from this windfall. To manage the growing volume of horticultural produce giant cold storages that can store up to 40,000 tonnes of produce, have sprung up all over India in the last two decades. In March 2019, there were an estimated 7,645 large cold storages with a refrigerated space of 150 million cubic metres, capable of storing 37 to 39 million tonnes of perishable produce.

But the small farmers, who have grown most of the fruits and vegetables, have been left out in the cold because, even today, almost three-quarters of a century after independence, there are no cold storages in the villages.

The following data from the agriculture ministrys report, Horticulture Statistics at a Glance 2018 shows how this single omission has chained the small farmers to poverty. In Punjab, one hectare under horticulture yields four tonnes of paddy and five tonnes of wheat, but close to 20 tonnes of vegetables.

But between 2013 and 2018, the wholesale price of onions, potatoes and tomatoes the three principal horticulture crops has averaged Rs 10,000 to Rs 12,000 per tonne in March and April at the end of the growing season, when the farmers have no option but to sell their produce. Since farm-gate prices average at most half of the wholesale price, the vegetable growers earn at best Rs 6,000 per tonne for their produce, and a gross income, therefore, of Rs 120,000 in the year.

Also read: Protesting Agri Reform: Why Do Farmers Feel the Deck Is Stacked Against Them?

But the procurement price fixed by the central government for both paddy and wheat is over Rs 18,000 per tonne. So four tonnes of paddy and five tonnes of wheat a year fetch the farmer a gross income of Rs 162,000, one-third more than vegetables fetch the marginal farmers. Vegetable farming is therefore not only less secure, but also pays less than cereal farming. That is the second reason why the farmers are not only insisting upon the retention of the MSP but the repeal of all the three farm bills. If the present marketing structure is weakened or destroyed, all of them, from the largest landholders to the smallest, have no place to go but down.

The bitter experience of vegetable growers has shown the farmers who are surrounding Delhi today that the market upon whose mercy Modi wants to cast them is exploitative and merciless. That is why they are not only insisting upon the retention of the MSP but the repeal of all the three farm bills as a prelude to negotiation.

If Modi wants to pull India out of the Cereals Trap, the path lies through the creation of infrastructure for agriculture that Indias governments and intelligentsia had promised to farmers when the Congress party made land reform its first national policy initiative in 1948, but subsequently forgot.

Prem Shankar Jhais a Delhi based former journalist and editor. He is the author ofManaged Chaos: The Fragility of the Chinese Miracle,andCrouching Dragon, Hidden TigerCan China and India Dominate the West.

Follow this link:

The Remedy to the Agricultural Crisis That No One Is Talking About - The Wire

Forward Fest public conversation series with faculty experts and alumni continues as part of A Year of Forward Thinking – Princeton University

Princetons Forward Fest a virtual public conversation series and a monthly highlight of the Universitys yearlong A Year of Forward Thinking community engagement campaign continues Thursday, Dec. 17, with a deep-dive into the arts and humanities.

Faculty and alumni will explore the many ways a humanist perspective is critical during these challenging times, interspersed with armchair peeks into the vibrant cultural and artistic achievements of Princeton faculty, alumni and students, followed by a performing arts showcase. The streaming event highlights how the Universitys forward thinkers are using interdisciplinary research, teaching and scholarship for real-world impact.

At a moment when we are all grasping for ways to make sense of the uncertainties our society is facing from global health to social equity and environmental concerns humanistic inquiry provides us tools for understanding what it means to be human, what matters in life and how we might find meaning in our rapidly changing world, said Eric Gregory, professor of religion, director of the Program in Humanistic Studies and chair of the Humanities Council.

He continued: The humanities have long been at the core of Princetons liberal arts tradition and today across nearly 50 academic departments, programs and centers scholars continue the interdisciplinary work of engaging diverse perspectives past and present and helping us better understand the complexity and grandeur of the human condition. I am pleased that this months Forward Fest will underscore how the Universitys faculty in the arts and humanities are addressing lifes big questions and our sense of its possibilities.

Gathering a range of voices, Forward Fest aims to spark dialogue across the global Princeton community students, faculty, staff, alumni and other interested thinkers to engage with and explore big ideas and their infinite possibilities for shaping the future.

Forward Fest events are free and open to the public. All programming will be livestreamed on the Forward Fest website and on the University's YouTube channel. Registration is not required, but attendees can RSVP to receive a resource guide and event updates. Captioning will be available for all sessions. After the event, all programming will be viewable on the Universitys YouTube channel.

The first Forward Fest, Oct. 23-24, focused on public health, justice and the 2020 election. The Nov. 20 Forward Fest plumbed the promise and peril of data science and artificial intelligence. View all the sessions on Princetons YouTube channel.

Lou Chen, a 2019 alumnus and program manager for arts outreach who oversees the Trenton Arts at Princeton initiative and conducts the Trenton Youth Orchestra, which he started as a sophomore, will provide the welcome and introduction to Thinking Forward Arts and Humanities.

Photo by

Denise Applewhite, Office of Communications

In this time of physical distancing, our need to remain connected to one another is one thing that signals our humanity. Professors in a variety of disciplines will talk about how humanistic inquiry provides a useful lens for thinking about our current times and how reflecting on art and visual culture, music and literature helps us uncover connections that help us think forward new ideas in a variety of domains.

Thinking Forward Arts and Humanities

RakeshSatyal, a 2002 alumnus, will serve as moderator for the live discussion on Dec. 17. Forward Fest is free and open to the public.All programming will be livestreamed on the Forward Fest website and on theUniversitys YouTube channel.

Photo by Melisa Melling 02

The live 75-minute program at 4 p.m. will feature one-on-one conversations with four faculty members and conclude with a lively Q&A period. Attendees can engage in Q&A by emailing questions in advance to forwardfest@princeton.edu or in real-time in the chat on YouTube.

Lou Chen, a 2019 alumnus and program manager for arts outreach who oversees the Trenton Arts at Princeton initiative, will provide the welcome and introduction. Rakesh Satyal, a 2002 alumnus, novelist and executive editor at HarperCollins, will serve as moderator for the live discussion. Featured faculty panelists are:

Additional multimedia programming on Dec. 17 will highlight the creative process and societal impact of the visual and performing arts through teaching and performance in the virtual space.

Speakers in the virtual Dec. 17 event include: Rachael DeLue (left), the Christopher Binyon Sarofim '86 Professor in American Arts, and professor of art and archaeology and American studies; Beatriz Colomina, the Howard Crosby Butler Professor of the History of Architecture, professor architecture and co-director of the Program in Media and Modernity; Elizabeth Margulis, professor of music; and Autumn Womack, assistant professor of African American studies and English.

Photos (left to right): Denise Applewhite, Office of Communications; Andrew Wilkinson; and Sameer A. Khan/Fotobuddy

Arts Showcase

At 8 p.m., sit back, relax and settle into your own front row seat for a vibrant arts showcase featuring a cast of notable faculty, alumni, students and guests engaged in the performing and visual arts. Program highlights include:

Forward Fest will continue monthly throughout A Year of Forward Thinking, Oct. 2020-June 2021.

Learn more about A Year of Forward Thinking and Forward Fest on the website. Watch a video about A Year of Forward Thinking. Engage on social media with the hashtags #PrincetonForward, #ForwardThinkers and #ForwardFest, and follow Princeton University and Princeton Alumni on Twitter, Instagram and Facebook.

Go here to see the original:

Forward Fest public conversation series with faculty experts and alumni continues as part of A Year of Forward Thinking - Princeton University

Highlights from recent stories featuring Temple in the media – Temple University News

Temple faculty discussed the impact the coronavirus pandemic is having on children and the economy, scientists came one step closer to an HIV cure and alumni made standout contributions in fields as diverse as politics, entertainment, business and philanthropy.

Remote learning has become a gateway to social mediaLearning on digital devices at home has exposed many children to social media much earlier than their parents had expected. Jordan Shapiro, an assistant professor of instruction specializing in intellectual heritage, believes children should be introduced to social media earlier than traditionally advised. If you want to teach people how to deal with problematic interactions within a space that is part of our lives, then you dont do it by ignoring it, he said.New York TimesDec. 10, 2020

Considering the long-term effect the coronavirus pandemic is having on childrenCOVID-19 has stopped toddlers from going to day care, parties and playdatesand parents are beginning to worry about the effect the extended isolation might be having on their children. Social interaction and physical and verbal exchanges build structure and connectivity in the brain, said Kathryn Hirsh-Pasek, a professor of psychology in the College of Liberal Arts.New York TimesDec. 9, 2020

Three Owls part of this years Martin Luther King Leadership Development InstituteArrion Bethea, CLA 96, Damon Green, KLN 03 and Taiwan Martinez, CLA 08, are among this years participants in the Martin Luther King Leadership Development Institute, which trains leaders to bring about positive change in their communities. There are no divisions of class, race, age, economic status. Participants need only have a commitment to Kingian principles and a desire to make a difference, said Joe Robinson, the institutes president.Penn LiveDec. 9, 2020

Is it safe to get a massage right now?A tense year has left many people looking for ways to relax, including visits to wellness centers and spas. Although getting a massage is considered less risky than dining out in a crowd without a mask, experts believe its important to consider the current COVID-19 rates. Its a risk-benefit scenario, but right now with the percentage of positive tests were dealing with in Pennsylvania, the risk probably outweighs the benefit, said Krys Johnson, epidemiologist and assistant professor in the College of Public Health.Philadelphia InquirerDec. 7, 2020

Few studies look at high blood pressure treatments for African AmericansHigh blood pressure affects African Americans more than any other group in the U.S. But as a new study in the Journal of the American Heart Association points out, few clinical trials have focused on Black adults with hypertension. The lack of research really thwarts our ability to deal with a problem that has more grave consequences for this population than others, said Deborah Crabbe, a professor of medicine in the Lewis Katz School of Medicine.American Heart AssociationDec. 7, 2020

Tyler professor shines in MiamiVogue chose a Kamala Harris teapot by Roberto Lugo, a potter and assistant professor at Tyler School of Art and Architecture, as one of the five most fascinating objets dart featured at Design Miami.VogueDec. 5, 2020

Owl lands a Grammy nominationWhen entrepreneur and mixing engineer Benjamin Thomas, FOX 18, graduated, he said his next stop would be winning a Grammy. Now hes one step closer to his dream, with a Grammy nomination for his work on Ingrid Andress country music album, Lady Like. I did not think this would be possible this soon. Thats why my first reaction was shock. I didnt see it coming, Thomas said.6ABCDec. 4, 2020

How coronavirus survivors can deal with sensory lossMany people who recover from COVID-19 are left with a lingering symptom: the loss of their sense of smell and taste. Valentina Parma, a research assistant professor in the Department of Psychology at the College of Liberal Arts, and her colleagues have gathered and analyzed thousands of surveys from survivors with this issue. Although there is no known cure, the body can heal itself, eventually. Time is an important variable for recovery, she said. There is plasticity in our system, and olfactory neurons can regenerate and reestablish function. How long this process can take following a COVID infection is still under scrutiny.HuffPostDec. 4, 2020

Using martial arts to stem the tide of youth gun violenceTemple football alumnus Jeffrey Whittingham, CLA 14, took up jiu-jitsu a year ago and its taught him to step outside his comfort zone and see the world differently. Now hes offering a free weekly jiu-jitsu class for Philadelphia children and teenagers, doing his part to keep them off the street and safe from gun violence. Being in the inner city, were used to trauma, so I think mindfulness is important because a lot of these kids, unfortunately, are seeing whats going on out here, he said. So, I want them to come here and I want them to be at peace.CBS3Dec. 3, 2020

Temple researchers use CRISPR to cure the simian equivalent of HIVA team of researchers led by Kamel Khalili, Laura H. Carnell Professor and chair, Department of Neuroscience, and Tricia Burdo, associate professor of neuroscience at the Lewis Katz School of Medicine, have used CRISPR gene editing to eliminate simian immunodeficiency virus (SIV), the primate equivalent of HIV. Our technology is designed to cut out the viral DNA from the persons genetic material so once ART [antiretroviral therapy] is stopped, there is nothing there to reactivate and cause disease, Burdo said.SalonDec. 2, 2020

Owl one of Forbes 30 under 30Forbes selected David Silver, KLN 13, as one of the magazines 30 under 30 for 2021. The co-founder of REC Philly (Resources for Every Creator), which offers artists access to resources including space and education, Silver has helped build the organization into one that has raised over $3 million.ForbesDecember, 2020

From music to streetwearBrian Nadav, CLA 05, has swapped life as a touring musician, playing the guitar and oud, for one running Lapstone & Hammer, the Philadelphia-based streetwear shop. Fashion is an unspoken language, a way of expressing yourself, he said. You walk into a room, and you get a vibe about a person, by the way they dress, by the way they carry themselves, by the way they groom themselves.Jewish ExponentNov. 29, 2020

The Biden campaigns national advisor for Black engagement is Temple MadeAdjoa Asamoah, CLA 98, was part of a team that worked to galvanize African American voters for the Joe Biden-Kamala Harris ticket. I helped another Black woman ascend to the second-highest office in the land, she said. I was just so proud. The weight of the world was lifted off my shoulders.Philadelphia InquirerNov. 29, 2020

Checking in on Californias Main StreetsCOVID-19 has taken a toll on Californias Main Streets, places which were once symbols of prosperity and community. People love community. They love sidewalks. They love streets with activity, said Miles Orvell, professor of English and American studies. They love the idea of living in a place that has a sense of identity.Los Angeles TimesNov. 27, 2020

Rising coronavirus cases are putting pressure on front-line healthcare workersAs the number of COVID-19 cases continues to climb, doctors and nurses have become frustrated with people who remain reluctant to wear masks or follow basic safety measures. Our families are suffering horribly and disproportionately, said Maura Sammon, MED 99, an emergency medicine specialist at Temple Health. Of course I am feeling burned out, but I dont have the time to be burned out.Philadelphia InquirerNov. 27, 2020

Owl owns the same Dunkin store where he got his startSonny Ho, FOX 94, landed his first job in high school, working as a porter at a Dunkin store. Now he owns that store and 44 more and has donated $100,000 to the Fund for the School District of Philadelphia. I call Philly my hometown, he said. It feels great to be able to give back to my community.Philadelphia InquirerNov. 26, 2020

Temple doctors use ultrasound to detect pneumonia in COVID-19 patientsDoctors at the Lewis Katz School of Medicine, including Ryan Gibbons, MED 07, have found that a portable ultrasound device is an effective way of identifying which patients suffer from pneumonia, a common complication in those with severe COVID-19.Philadelphia InquirerNov. 25, 2020

COVID-19 vaccinations could become mandatory for healthcare workersTony Reed, executive vice president and chief medical officer for the Temple University Health System, believes institutions like Temple havent made a COVID-19 vaccine mandatory because you cant do so until you have enough supply and, since the vaccine is new, compelling people to take it might not be the best approach. However, he believes it might become a requirement for health system employees in the future. If this becomes a recurring, seasonal virus like the flu, then yes, I would see it becoming mandatory, he said.Philadelphia magazineNov. 24, 2020

Temple University Jazz Bands Covid Sessions swingsCovid Sessions, the Temple University Jazz Bands new album, was recorded, mixed and mastered during the COVID-19 pandemic. Great under any circumstances, but under the present circumstances Covid Sessions is a triumph that Temple ought to celebrate like an American [Athletic] Conference championship, said reviewer Matt Silver.WRTINov. 23, 2020

See the article here:

Highlights from recent stories featuring Temple in the media - Temple University News

Fracking on Country in the NT – The Saturday Paper

About 900 kilometres south-east of Darwin, hidden in the tropical savanna woodland of the McArthur River region, there is a sacred site, on Gundanji Country, somewhere off the Carpentaria Highway.

This land has been returned to traditional owners. Only they know how to find the site. The last seven kilometres must be covered on foot: there are no tracks.

Weve got to keep an eye out for feral pigs and buffalo because we dont carry guns when we go bush, says Rikki Dank, aKaranjini Gundanji woman.

When you come closer to the sacred site, we walk softer and our voices are lowered. We dont talk unnecessarily.

The entrance to the site itself, she says, is other-worldly. The woodland opens up onto a large body of water, fed by a waterfall, ringed by enormous paperbark trees so big that you cant wrap your arms around them.

The fallen bark from the trees floats on the water, completely covering its surface.

You dont actually walk here, you kind of sink and float, says Dank.

And there is a huge rock that you sit on and all of a sudden there is a big gust of wind, it happens all the time, this huge gust hits your face, and it feels like the old people are saying, Welcome home, youve come home.

Rikki Danks people are a matriarchal group and the most senior traditional owners are her grandmothers, Katie Baker and Peggy Lawson. In Gundanji law, Dank has been nominated as Bakers jungkayi or jungai, which gives her the responsibility of talking for the land, especially sacred sites.

It is a privilege she takes seriously. Much of the Country she calls home is part of the Mermaids Dreaming. Here, as the Dreaming story goes, the travelling ladies, or mermaids, have come down from the coastal waters.

So, theyve settled there [in Gundanji Country] and have called up the ocean, and the water has then come up over this big rock that is forming this waterfall.

Water is key to Gundanji connection to Country, says Dank. It explains the rituals and the customs, the ecosystem. Water is life itself.

But this connection is now threatened. In September, the Empire Energy Group Limited announced to the Australian Stock Exchange that it had mobilised a 27-metre-tall Schlumberger land rig to a site on Danks Country, over which the company has exploration permits.

My grandmother was out bush one day and just rocked up and has seen all of these trucks, says Dank. Shes in her mid-80s. You can imagine how stressful it was for her to see so many people and so much machinery on her Country.

The drill site, known as Carpentaria-1, is located just 30 kilometres from the sacred site.

By December, Empire Energy had drilled to a depth of more than two kilometres and is pushing ahead to hit nearly three kilometres underground in a bid to intersect the thick Velkerri shale formation.

Carpentaria-1 is the latest development in the gas rush in the Beetaloo Basin, which was spurred on by the Northern Territory Labor government ending a moratorium on fracking in 2018. It has been kicked into overdrive by the federal Coalitions push for a gas-fired economic recovery from Covid-19.

Less than a fortnight after the federal government released its delayed budget in October, the federal minister for Energy and Emissions Reduction, Angus Taylor, visited the Empire Energy drill site.

He was spruiking $28.3 million in federal funding to unlock and accelerate the development of vast gas reserves.

The Beetaloo Basin is a world-class resource, Taylor said, that has the potential to drive significant development in the Top End to create local jobs and help Australia remain a world leader in gas.

However, many traditional owners want nothing to do with the plan, and have mounted a fight that threatens to bypass the Northern Land Council (NLC).

This council manages Aboriginal land granted through native title, or freehold ownership, on behalf of 50,000 Indigenous people. They make decisions and facilitate land usage and are required by law to negotiate with, and for, traditional owners. However, some say that does not always happen.

A few weeks before Taylors announcement, the ABC reported that native title holders in the Beetaloo Basin had requested the NLC to withdraw from negotiations with gas companies. Nine land groups have joined in that request.

Until now, Rikki Dank and her family have chosen not to talk publicly about fracking. Her grandmothers discovery of the massive drilling rig changed that.

Before we realised Empire had their eyes on our place, weve been on the sideline working and quietly supporting the others because all of the fracking has been happening on their Country, she says.

We dont want to step out of line in terms of cultural protocol and speak for anyone because they have their own voices. But now it feels like we have to be included in this fight.

Empire Energy estimates the potential shale gas projects in the NT rival the prolific US Marcellus Shale, which produces about 25billion cubic feet of gas a day.

In a market update on December 14, Empires managing director, Alex Underwood, said that 2020 has been a breakout year for Empire, specifically citing the companys first well in the Betaloo Basin, Carpentaria-1.

The concern for Rikki Dank and her family is the risk Carpentaria-1 poses to groundwater aquifers, which are still being studied by researchers.

In November 2019, the CSIRO, in partnership with state and territory governments and gas companies, released results from its preliminary studies of the water sources. It found that the whole area of the basins Cambrian Limestone Aquifer is at potential risk to possible contamination from surface spills from any source.

Vast swaths of the woodland, and Rikki Danks sacred site, sit above and interact with this aquifer.

The fracking will also require enormous volumes of water, and chemicals to exploit fractures in gas seams.

The NT government has not updated public chemical disclosure reports for fracking projects since 2016 but the most recent entry, for an Origin Energy project, lists surfactant F112 and sodium bromate, which carries a may cause cancer danger rating.

Other chemicals used include a product called Crosslinker J604, which combines ethylene glycol found in automotive antifreeze or household cleaners with sodium tetraborate and boric acid. Prolonged or repeated exposure may damage human organs.

We are worried about those poisonous things, and the disruption of those underground water systems will disturb our sacred site because our site, its focus is around water, says Rikki Dank.

Water is very strongly connected to this site and we are aware if this water table, these systems, are disturbed, we are worried about our sacred site and those large trees that are there supporting all of those structures.

What troubles Dank and her family the most is that they have never been consulted by Empire Energy. She tried to speak to the company but was told she had to speak with the Northern Land Council.

The NLC, Dank says, has held meetings where these matters have been discussed at short notice.

Danks land stretches across both a native title grant and freehold country that was handed back by the Commonwealth in 2000 as part of the Mambaliya Rrumburriya Wuyaliya Aboriginal Land Trust. The NLC represents this trust but did not respond to a request for comment from The Saturday Paper.

Weve got less rights over native title Country than freehold, says Dank. So that really scares me.

Earlier this month, the federal parliaments joint standing committee on Northern Australia released its interim report into the deliberate destruction of 46,000-year-old caves at Juukan Gorge in Western Australia.

In a scathing report, titled Never Again, the committee outlines its findings that the Puutu Kunti Kurrama and Pinikura people were offered no support or protection from anywhere.

Not from Rio Tinto, or the Western Australian or federal governments, or their own lawyers, and not under native title law.

On the final point, the inquiry flagged a deeper look in future at the failures of native title legislation and whether the Native Title Act needs to be amended.

Underlying these problems is the vexed issue of Native Title, the inquiry said. Ironically, Native Title has become another means to destroy Indigenous heritage.

The committee, chaired by the Queensland Liberal National Party MP Warren Entsch, also found that two other laws intended to offer protection to Aboriginal sites of cultural significance the Environment Protection and Biodiversity Conservation Act and the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Heritage Protection Act were so rarely invoked for this purpose as to be nearly pointless.

Both these Acts will require substantial revision to make them effective and bring them in line with community expectations and international obligations, the inquiry said.

According to the Kimberley Land Councils submission to the inquiry, negotiations with native title holders are often rendered meaningless because companies, when they dont win agreement, can apply to the National Native Title Tribunal for permission to forge ahead anyway.

Since 1994, there have been 163 such applications where native title holders did not agree. In all but three, the company was granted permission to continue either in full or with some conditions.

In Rikki Danks view, the tangle of laws favours those who want to cut traditional owners out of the approval process.

The government is primarily thinking about money, she says. And they are thinking about how much money they can get off Country and how much money they can get off blackfellas before blackfellas realise what is happening. The system from the ground up is corrupt.

Dank and her family have witnessed the degradation allowed by this system: the overgrazing of land; the development of the Glencore underground and then open-cut zinc and lead mine at the other end of the McArthur River; the rerouting of the river itself.

Like colonisation, these environmental changes are gradual but devastating.

My great-grandmother remembers when she was a little girl seeing non-Indigenous people for the first time. Its so close, Dank says.

Ive seen the pain in my grannies and my grandfathers eyes when theyve told me the stories of what has happened, and that is close enough for me. And its heartbreaking.

Empire Energy did not respond to a request for comment.

This article was first published in the print edition of The Saturday Paper onDec 19, 2020 as "Nerve fracking".

A free press is one you pay for. In the short term, the economic fallout from coronavirus has taken about a third of our revenue. We will survive this crisis, but we need the support of readers. Now is the time to subscribe.

Go here to see the original:

Fracking on Country in the NT - The Saturday Paper

2020 Was the Year of Indigenous Activism in Canada – Foreign Policy

In late March, just after COVID-19 was declared a pandemic, a couple from Quebec, fearing the end was nigh, sold everything they owned and flew to the remote Indigenous community of Old Crow in the Yukon territory. When the couple arrived in the fly-in-only village of about 250 people, they sought temporary accommodations and offered to work. But they were astounded to discover the community didnt have sufficient housing or jobs available for its own residents, let alone pandemic refugees from Quebec.

The peculiar story was quickly forgotten as coronavirus cases spiked, but it speaks to the uneasy coexistence of two Canadas: one Indigenous, one not. The non-Indigenous Quebecers were so ill-prepared for life in the Arctic, they were an immediate imposition, the villages chief said. The thoughtless couple put the entire community at risk of infection, since, like many Indigenous communities, Old Crow has no doctor or resources to handle a deadly outbreak.

The relative isolation of Indigenous communities has been both a blessing and a curse. It has preserved languages and customs the Canadian government once tried to eliminate, but its also kept the lived experiences of more than 1.6 million Indigenous people and the issues they face largely out of Canadians sight and mind for most of the countrys history.

For all that was unexpected about 2020, few analysts could have anticipated the wave of Indigenous-led protests that swept across Canada this year. Since protests against the construction of a natural gas pipeline through Wetsuweten territory began in January, demonstrations have erupted countrywide on a variety of Indigenous issues, from lobster fishing in New Brunswick to trophy hunting in Quebec wildlife reserves. The largest and most significant since the Wetsuweten protests are the ongoing demonstrations over a residential subdivision proposed to be built on Indigenous territory in Southwestern Ontario.

In the past, Canadian prime ministers have too often relied on arms-length government agencies or provincial governments to address such complaints. But as the protests have shown, the federal government needs to take a more active role in conflict resolution. Indigenous people may make up only about 5 percent of Canadas population, but vast swathes of the country are 25 to 90 percent Indigenous. And the Indigenous population is growing rapidly, at roughly four times the speed of the rest of the population.

Since more than 600 recognized Indigenous governments are spread out across the country, the Indigenous in Canada are hardly a homogenous voting bloc. Yet while this may have made coordinated action hard in the past, their collective issues, over 150 years in the making, have become increasingly difficult for Canadas leaders to ignore. Not only is Indigenous participation in federal elections increasing, but so has the number of Indigenous people elected to parliament in recent years. In close races, the Indigenous vote may be the deciding factor.

Amid these shifts in Canadian politics, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau promoted himself as a pro-Indigenous candidate, but has, for the most part, shied away from direct federal government intervention in conflict resolution and failed to deliver on campaign promises. Trudeau and his government have publicly committed to reconciliation, the sustained improvement of relations between Canadas federal government and the countrys Indigenous communities based on the recommendations of Canadas Truth and Reconciliation Commission. But despite this commitmentand his campaign sloganeering that promised a brighter day for Indigenous people in CanadaTrudeau has underdelivered.

He has failed to ratify the United Nations Declaration of the Rights of Indigenous Peoples (UNDRIP), a long-standing campaign promise, and has been accused of prioritizing the needs of a moribund oil and gas sector over Indigenous land rights. Thats no longer enough for Canadians. It would be difficult, if not inopportune, for Trudeau to continue to sideline Indigenous issues. The prime minister, who built his political reputation as a centrist who can appeal to leftists and progressivesand doubtless more than a few Indigenous voters at one time or anothermust become a more ardent defender of Indigenous interests.

Solidarity with Indigenous communities is growing among voters, but its also a key platform of the New Democratic Party (NDP), whose support Trudeau desperately needs. Since Trudeaus Liberal party became a minority government in 2019, Trudeau has generally needed to work with the NDP to pass legislation, such as annual budgets. Without the NDP, hed lose the confidence of Canadas parliament and Canadians would likely head back to the polls.

Trudeau can reasonably depend on NDP support for the foreseeable future, especially through the pandemic, since its the major federal party thats most closely aligned with the Liberals. But hell likely have to cater more to NDP desires, and NDPs strong advocacy for Indigenous rights may finally push Trudeau from his middle-of-the-road approach.

The influence of the NDP on Trudeau is promising, but in order to enact change, the stumbling block Trudeau is facing isnt so much Canadas parliament, but rather the relationship between its federal and provincial governments.

One of the main reasons Trudeaus government has not made sufficient progress on Indigenous affairs is because they often throw the federal government into conflict with provincial ones over jurisdictional powerand particularly over resource management. In addition, the Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP) is responsible for law enforcement in rural areas in seven out of ten provinces, where most Indigenous people live. The RCMP is the direct descendant of the North-West Mounted Police, which was created in 1873 to police Indigenous peoples and force them from their land.

Thereafter, Mounties were used to remove Indigenous children from their parents and place them in Canadas infamous residential schools, in a scandal thats been called a cultural genocide. More recently, the force has come under fire for its systemic inaction (and in some cases possible involvement) in the unsolved disappearances of hundreds, perhaps thousands, of Indigenous women and girls. Despite its history, provincial governments continue to routinely call upon the RCMP for Indigenous policing. Throughout 2020, Trudeaus strategy has been to not cross these jurisdictional lines, even when provincial governments have instigated crises or fumbled their responses.

Trudeaus reluctance to act is at least partly due to the shadow of his father, former Prime Minister Pierre Elliott Trudeau. Because Pierre Trudeau promoted a strong central government, in some parts of the country, the Trudeau name is synonymous with federal overreach. And since Trudeaus election in 2015, several of the more powerful provinces have elected populist premiers who have vowed to protect provincial interests against a perceived return of Trudeauism.

In practice, this has left Indigenous people caught between a rock and a hard placetheir interests are often at odds with provinces keen to develop natural resources and too politically sensitive to warrant federal government assistance much of the time. This dynamic played out amid the Wetsuweten protests, and its partly what has left negotiations there so unsatisfying.

Widespread protests began in in Wetsuweten Territory in January after the British Columbia government called on the RCMP to enforce a court injunction and dismantle a largely symbolic Indigenous barricade. Indigenous land defenders and water protectors from the WetsuwetenFirst Nation hereditary government opposed the construction of a natural gas pipeline through their unceded territory, as they had not been consulted and have legitimate concerns about potential environmental degradation.

Soon enough, photographs of heavily armed police in tactical gear pointing submachine guns at elderly protesters made the rounds. Those images, along with the detention and arrest of journalists, reminded the Canadian public of police brutality in the United Stateseven as Canadian politicians have been quick to dismiss police violence and systemic racism as an American problem.

Indigenous communities across Canada responded with solidarity protests targeting key pieces of infrastructurenamely railways that were deliberately built through Indigenous territories so that they wouldnt disrupt non-Indigenous communities. These actions, in turn, sparked non-Indigenous solidarity protests in major cities across the country.

The Wetsuweten crisis exposed the public, perhaps for the first time, to the interconnectedness of several long-standing problems in Canada, such as excessive force used by police against Indigenous people; the governments failure to consult with Indigenous communities over energy projects that are potentially harmful to the environmental sanctity of both their territory and the planet; and the expansion of natural gas and oil pipelines despite global warming and Trudeaus commitments to reaching Paris Accord carbon-reduction targets of net-zero emissions by 2050.

As the blockades and street protests gained steamand were accused of affecting the economyTrudeau was forced to intervene. Conservative politicians and pundits blamed the demonstrations for shuttering two major energy projects, although proof of these claims was less than compelling. Regardless, the national perception of political and economic instability was sufficient enough to merit direct federal intervention.

For now, the issue has been patched over: Though the pipeline remains controversialand its construction is still opposed by Wetsuweten hereditary chiefsafter three days of negotiations in May between the chiefs, the provincial authorities, and the federal government, the Canadian government recognized land-title rights that set clear protocols to a court decision reached 23 years ago. Though hereditary chiefs and Indigenous councils are now recognized as parties who need to be consultedwhich may avoid issues of Indigenous consent in the futurethe decision is not retroactive to ongoing projects such as the Coastal GasLink pipeline project at the center of the dispute.

So while the negotiations were productive, the central tension in Wetsuweten remains: The hereditary chiefs are still opposed to the pipeline, while the British Columbia government is committed to seeing it completed. And while both the pandemic and successful negotiations in March and April curtailed the protest movement, work on the pipeline slowed but never came to a full halt. Protests recommenced in mid-October at the drill site as pipeline developer TC Energy resumed construction.

This years unrest is a far cry from the Indigenous protests of the 1990s, nearly all of which involved violentand occasionally fatalclashes instigated by the police. The Kanienkeh:ka (Mohawk) resistance outside Montreal in July 1990, for instance, began with a botched Quebec provincial police raid over Mohawk protests about the planned expansion of a golf course into their territory, and continued throughout the summer with blocked bridges and anti-Indigenous counterprotests. A police officer was likely killed by friendly fire in the initial raid, and an elderly Indigenous man was struck and killed by a brick during an evacuation. The 78-day-long standoff culminated in the Canadian armys occupation of Indigenous territory.

What sets this year apart is both the relative restraint of the police and provincial governments, and how widespread the protests have been. Its clear that its no longer politically tenable for provincial governments and their police forces to take a tough law and order approach to Indigenous concerns. Now, more Canadians are refusing to ignore the abuse suffered by generations of Indigenous people for more than four centuries at the hands of French and British colonial officials, and then Canadas federal, provincial, and territorial governmentsas well as police forces and religious organizations.

Whether Trudeaus election-season commitmentsincluding implementing UNDRIP, bringing safe drinking water to all Indigenous reserves, and reducing the number of Indigenous children in foster carewere sincere or merely more lip service may not to matter anymore: Protests, blockades, and other forms of direct action secured negotiations with the government. And, because of the protests this year, Canadas non-Indigenous population may be slightly more aware of the systematic racism Indigenous communities face and have started to support them in their demands for change.

That Indigenous people in Canada can appeal toand possibly count onnon-Indigenous support is a hopeful sign that Canada has passed an important milestone. Now, official reconciliation efforts may not be limited to initiatives by the federal government alone. The clear racism suffered by Indigenous people in Canadasuch as the verbal and physical abuse recorded by an Atikamekw woman as she lay dying in a Quebec hospital in Septemberhas pushed even the most obstinate of Canadians to reconsider their adamant belief that racism doesnt exist in their country. In some cases, major Canadian cities are even pushing forward on their own reconciliation initiatives, such as Montreal, when provincial or federal support is lacking.

Canada is a nation built on unceded Indigenous territory. This historical truth is finally making its way into public discoursewhether thats in town hall meetings or university lectures. If Trudeau wishes to leave his mark as the prime minister who pushed the needle forward on reconciliation and raising Indigenous quality of life, he will have to accept this fully. That means preparing himselfand the country he leadsto acknowledge that many of the nations future power brokers wont be found in the skyscrapers of Montreal, Toronto, Vancouver, or Calgary, but in remote corners of the worlds second largest country.

Many will be women, some will be elders, and most likely wont be too interested in building pipelines or logging old-growth forests. Indigenous people in Canada have always been the rightful stewards of the land. If Trudeau is serious about his commitment to reform a post-pandemic Canada into a greener, cleaner, and more equitable and just version of its former self, hell need to recognize that the balance of power is beginning to shift towards those who have been denied it for so long.

The rest is here:

2020 Was the Year of Indigenous Activism in Canada - Foreign Policy

Herald: Letters to the editor (21 Dec 2020) – Oherald

21 Dec 2020 | 04:57am IST

Maintain health centres, sulabh toilets

Under BJP government in Goa there are many issues which are long pending. Firstly is the government health centres in villages. Some health centres do not even have permanent houses. They keep on shifting every now and then. In some health centres there are no full time doctors and some do not have full time nurses even. No proper facilities are available for the villagers. Some villagers are forced to travel to neighbouring villages to avail facilities. Some village health centres are badly in need of renovation due to the failure of maintenance.

Government should intervene and do something to upgrade and raise the standards of these village health centres.

Secondly the Sulabh Toilets; they are so filthy and badly maintained, that no one likes to visit these places. Most of them are mostly used by migrants who leave the toilets dirty after use. Nobody is paying attention to this maintenance and upgradation. These Sulabh Toilets are built by the govt for the benefit of the people.

Thirdly the public gardens. There are many public gardens in each and every corner of Goa which are badly in need of upgradation and maintenance. These gardens are inaugurated and left just like that to rot.

So I would like Goa Government to spend some money from that hundred crores to upgrade and maintain village health centres, Sulabh Toilets and public gardens.

Natividade Fernandes, Cavelossim

Christmas celebrations with a difference

Christmas is round the corner. It is that time of the year to spread happiness and cheer all around. One way is by serenading activities when the young and the old go from door-to-door singing Christmas carols along with a person dressed as Santa Claus. There used to be a live crib moving around town on a truck. Every parish would hold Carol singing competition, crib competition, star making competition, fancy dress competition, etc. However, due to the pandemic this year Christmas celebrations will see a sea change. It may not be possible to maintain social-distancing during the programmes.

House-to-house serenading may not be possible. This year Christmas competitions could be restricted to live streaming on social media. Individuals and small carol singing groups could perform online. Parishioners could send videos of their crib made at home as well as the star to their parish where it could be judged by the parish priest. The winners could be announced at the Christmas midnight mass.

A live crib could be organised with a minimum of participants. Wishing one another after the mid-night mass could also undergo a change. Shaking hands, hugging and cheek-to-cheek kissing could be restricted to only family members.

Visiting homes during the festive season could also be restricted. All-in-all this year Christmas will be celebrated like never before in our lifetime. However, the joy of the season will never fade.

Adelmo Fernandes, Vasco

Sorrowing lies my land

The summary of the 59 years of Goa's Liberation can be summed up in four words, "Sorrowing lies my land".

On the one hand the original inhabitants of Goa have to spend sleepless nights on railway tracks and on the other hand the CM of Goa can spend Rs 100 crore of public money to entertain sanghis who have done nothing for Goa. I too support those who have asked the Sanghis to refrain from visiting Goa as they are blind to the suffering of the people not just of Goans but also the poor farmers who are dying on the cold streets of the capital of India.

The letters to the editor titled "What is left for Goans to celebrate"by Jerry Fernandes and "Portuguese colony to Delhi coalony" by DC Dias of December 19 are proof of the state in which we live in the State of Goa.

Matias Lobo, Tivim

Goa violating SC diktats

On December 18, the SC declared that the Covid 19 was spreading like wildfire across the country due to lack of implementation of national guidelines and SOPs. Terming it a world war against Covid-19 the Apex court said everybody around the world is suffering in one way or the other. Further, healthcare workers were physically and mentally exhausted and a mechanism to grant intermittent rest is needed.

And finally, the Apex Court stated, It is the time to rise to the occasion. Safety and health of the citizens must be the first priority, rather than any other considerations.Each and every citizen must ponder their wise contributions made in this reference.

In Goa:1) SOPs by tourists are violated and the Govt does nothing; 2) Govt did nothing to test people coming from States suffering a 2nd and 3rd wave; 3)Govt opened up tourism for all with no SOP implementation because safety and health of the citizens was not the first priority but the profits of TTAG; 4) Every world war had memorials for the dead: nothing is being done to build a Covid memorial in memory of the many Covid-19 deaths in Goa: many who should not have died; 5) Govt is not testing the 47,000 cured patients even though 40% may have increased risk to strokes and severe breathing problems necessitating oxygen therapy; 6) Govt is still pushing for holding of IFFI and New Year parties; 7) Govt refused leave to key frontline doctors; 8) Key failure: Safety and health of the citizens is the last priority of the Govt and businessmen of Goa.

This is the collective administration failure of the incumbent Govt. and the Opposition and Lok Sabha Members. There is a singular lack of maturity exhibited by all. If the former wishes to be excused then why hold the posts?

R Fernandes, Margao

National alternative

In the early days the Congress encompassed the liberal Hindus, the SC/STs and the minorities. Gradually the SC/STs found their own leaders like the Yadavs, Mayavati and others. Then a section of Congressmen broke away to form NCP, TMC. A chunk of liberal Hindus moved towards Hindutva.So the Congress of today is not the same force it was before.

What the nation needs is a strong counter force. For that to happen the Congress, which still has a fair presence all over, must reinvent itself. Loyalty to Party must replace loyalty to Gandhis.

JO Barneto, Margao

The climate change conundrum

The green and climate activist Greta Thunberg has taken a strong swipe at the world leaders again for inaction on the "looming" climate crisis. Handling the climate crisis is out and out about collective responsibility of everyone. There are hardly actions on this serious issue. Even serious talks have been taking place on and off. But this Swede has been pitching for green cause on and on. "Still, we all have been speeding in the wrong direction," speaks Greta Thunberg of the climate conundrum.

Besides, the UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres has strongly reacted to this issue, discussing the actual challenges posed by it. This news piece has caught the attention of the world community, having been highlighted by the media houses like CNN. It is time to create serious climate change talks in the world.

The factors like carbon dioxide-greenhouse gases contributing to the climate crisis have to be dealt with in a proper way as chalked out at climate change summits so far.

Volatile weather patterns and climate change impacts have started eating into the growth of the world.

Therefore, the international community should get ready to handle the climate challenges through mutual cooperation and strong green strategies.

PS Saravana Durai, Mumbai

Link:

Herald: Letters to the editor (21 Dec 2020) - Oherald