Lenin’s murderous regime is nothing to celebrate – The Conservative Woman

THURSDAY marked 150 years since the birth ofVladimir Ilyich Ulyanov, better known as Lenin, the communist revolutionary and political theorist who served as head of the Soviet government from 1917 to his death in 1924. Just another day for most of us but for London Young Labour (LYL), a Labour-affiliated group with more than 15,000 members aged 14-26, it was a cause for celebration. Accompanied by a striking image of Marx and Lenin on a British National Union of Mineworkers flag, the group tweeted that Lenins legacy and the legacy of the Russian revolution still inspires millions around the world to fight. For peace and socialism!

At the time of writing the tweet had received almost 2,000 likes and has even been defended by former coalition Business Minister Sir Vince Cable.

Yet rehabilitating Lenin and his mission is not an option for a civilised society.

The October Revolution afforded rose-tinted praise in this tweet was not the romantic popular uprising immortalised in Eisensteins storming of the Winter Palace in the 1927 filmOctober: Ten Days That Shook the World.This episode was nothing more than an illegitimate putsch of Russias provisional government which, although imperfect, had already toppled the Tsarist regime in February of the same year. It occurred because Lenin and his comrades were unhappy with the results of the first free election in Russias history which failed to deliver a mandate for their policies. Lenins political vision was inaugurated by the evil and unnecessary murder of the Romanov children, whose bullet-riddled bodies were tossed into unmarked graves, probably on Lenins personal orders. As detailed in Robert ServicesA History of Modern Russia, the USSR that Lenins coup begat, rather than alleviating poverty and oppression, enforced the worst elements ofancien regimetyranny on Russia and eventually on its expansive colonies in Eastern Europe and Central Asia. The Tsarist gulags of Siberia were expanded and transformed into an empire of brutal forced labour, staffed by exiles who had been torn from their homes and families, with no access to appeal. Victor Sebestyens 2017 biography,Lenin the Dictator,details how, amid the Russian civil war that eventually delivered the Bolshevik victory, sailors at the Kronstadt naval base revolted, drawing up a list of demands such as freedom of the press and abolition of the secret police. At this news, Lenin ordered that 20,000 troops be sent to show them no mercy.

We must crush the myth that Lenin was inspired by a noble idealism that was simply perverted by Stalin. Lenin was as pitiless a tyrant as his successor and conscience-free in the face of that which threatened his mission toward enforcing socialism. He was no freedom-loving humanitarian, but a ruthless tyrant, happy to suppress any inkling of opposition for his cause, advocating the violent repression of religion and press freedoms. We do not promise any freedom, or any democracy, Lenin exclaimed at the Third Congress of the Comintern in 1921. We were never concerned with the Kantian-priestly and vegetarian-Quaker prattle about the sacredness of human life, his comrade Trotsky declared inThe Defence of Terrorism.

During his time in the number one spot, Lenin willingly facilitated Trotsky and Stalins brutal commitment to preserving Bolshevik power irrespective of the violence and oppression it required. His government founded the institutional apparatus Stalin would use to send tens of millions to their deaths. He established murder and arrest quotas that allowed the NKVD to murder ordinary citizens on a mass scale asenemies of the people, often for the most minor of civil offences. Stalin may have died with more blood on his hands than Lenin, but he had a whole 30 years to flex his muscles compared with Lenins seven. The terror of the Soviet system was systemic. Stalin was not the innovator of the one-party state, secret police or the forced labour camps, he was simply the happy heir to them, and any honest history admits that Lenin was the brains behind their foundation.

It must be emphasised that, despite a mass of backlash toward their tweet, from myself included,LYL made no attempt to defend or apologise for their statement, and in fact, nonchalantly exclaimed how their post blew up (thats Twitter-speak for awe at a posts unexpected popularity). Yet even this articles quick rundown of Lenin and the revolution he stood for is a testament to the fact that anyone wishing to celebrate its legacy is either misled or immoral. The replacement of absolutism with totalitarianism does not seem worthy of applause to me. There is no shame in admitting one was wrong, and in fact, such an admission when genuine requires courage and should be met with warmth rather than rebuke. I invite London Young Labour to do so.

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Lenin's murderous regime is nothing to celebrate - The Conservative Woman

April 26 Letters to the Editor, Part 3 | Opinion – Lewiston Morning Tribune

I write this in regard to a letter in the April 19 edition of the Opinion Page.

The letter by Sophie Henderson was well-written and for the most part spot on.

I do find it interesting that she states each legislator must consider his personal values, the values of his caucus, and his constituents best interest. So in her words, I believe her to say the legislator when looking at any legislation must see to his values, the partys interest, then the people who elected him/her to office interest. Really?

I do understand the personal value issue, but that should be last. The constituents best interest should be first. And the partys interest, if even considered at all, in 10th place. They are elected to do the peoples business, not yours, not the partys, not the corporation operating within the legislators area, but the peoples.

It is apparent that has been forgotten. And that, my good people, is the reason those in Washington, D.C., cannot work together.

Their interests first, then the partys.

In the meantime, we the people are forgotten. It is time to change this attitude. It is time for term limits on both national and the state levels. Think about it.

I am ready to get back to work. These are scary times and I worry for small businesses and the economy.

The facts are that we have a worldwide problem right now that is killing mostly the elderly. I believe that this has spread a lot further in Nez Perce County than the numbers suggest. I find it hard to believe that almost all of our cases of this virus are only in one little nursing home.

If testing were more available, who knows how many more cases (most likely hundreds) there would be.

We have a free country and need to get back to work on May 1.

I believe in social distancing and we need to slow down this contagious virus. But I also feel that confining people to their homes is slowly leading to a possible anarchy.

Maybe we can prove that we can gather in protests and work places while wearing masks or keeping a 6-foot distance.

We can give kind reminders to friends and coworkers to use the guidelines of social distancing.

Lets reopen the country but be smart about it.

On April 16, the New York Times published an article titled WHO warned Trump about coronavirus early and often.

The first three paragraphs stated: On Jan. 22, two days after Chinese officials first publicized the serious threat posed by the new virus ravaging the city of Wuhan, the chief of the World Health Organization held the first of what would be months of almost daily media briefings, sounding the alarm, telling the world to take the outbreak seriously.

On Jan. 22 in an interview on CNBC, President Donald Trump was asked if he was worried that the coronavirus outbreak might become a pandemic. Trumps response was: Its going to be just fine. ... We have it totally under control. Since then, history has shown that Trump lied. His administration had done little to control it.

Trump fails to recall the sign that President Harry Truman had on his desk: The buck stops here.

He refuses to accept the responsibility for events that have happened while he has been president. He blames everything on former President Barack Obama. While Obama officials walked Trump aides through a global pandemic exercise in 2017, Trump has rejected everything associated with Obamas administration.

If Trump is truly doing an excellent job of fulfilling his responsibilities, why is he interfering with the legal governing of states by their governors in their attempts to slow the outbreak of the coronavirus? Dont Trumps liberate tweets incite insurrection and federal laws against overthrow of government? Where are the flag wavers?

Disregards the vulnerable

I understand and appreciate the First Amendment allows us to assemble, speak freely and practice religion. It also includes the press.

I do not understand why a group of Idaho Freedom Foundation citizens would gather at the courthouse to protest Gov. Brad Littles proclamation regarding COVID-19.

As of April 20, Nez Perce County had 30 cases and 11 deaths.

Apparently these protesters neither know nor love their friends and relatives who are at high risk.

Did they consider taking thank you signs to the vulnerable hospital and care center employees who are working overtime without adequate protection?

How about expressing a word of appreciation to the many clerks in the essential businesses?

Did anyone suggest supporting our overworked volunteers at the food banks, the Salvation Army, Interlink, Snake River Clinic, YWCA, Boys and Girls Club, etc?

We know the Freedom Foundation dwells on oppression and far-out causes, particularly where our lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender and questioning brothers, sisters and friends are concerned.

So why would they be expected to care about old people who would like to celebrate their next birthdays? More than likely, we would never be given a second thought.

Survival depends on our adherence to the governors guidelines. Stay the course and be well.

This is a national emergency. Tell your senators, representatives, governor and president. I just did. Widespread testing was needed two months ago. How is it possible that only 1 percent of Americans have been tested? Testing is being done at 150,000 per day (New York Times, April 17).

At this pace, it will take six years to test everyone.

When everyone can get a test, we will proceed on a lighted path. Without it, we are stumbling in darkness.

Opportunities Unlimited Inc., is an organization in Lewiston that has helped my 8-year-old severely autistic son tremendously.

Before their staff members worked with him, my son could barely make it through an hour of school. Because of the amazing trained therapists at OUI, my son was going to school eight hours a day and was in the classroom 80 percent of the time before COVID-19 hit.

They have helped him and so many other children and adults so much.

They are at risk of losing their business if the Paycheck Protection Program loans are not granted. It is crucial that the government take care of the people in this country who did not ask to be shuttered away from working and are now losing their livelihoods from it.

These programs are vital to the disabled and disenfranchised. They must be funded.

Most county sheriffs are wimps. Thats not me saying that but a Montana sheriff who referred to his more than 3,000 fellow sheriffs across the nation. He said it in a private conversation with a sheriff, who in turn related that to me. ...

Most will swear they are constitutional sheriffs. ... When the chips are down, they either fail to recognize a constitutional infringement, lack the guts to stand in defiance of such or simply go along to get along, all at the expense of God-given rights of county citizens. ...

I want a sheriff who will draw a line in the sand and tell the government to go to hell if necessary. ...

That is to say, call out the power of the county to aid him an extraordinary power the sheriff and only the sheriff has in defending the rights of the people of the county. ...

Had Idaho sheriffs fought back as a whole when environmentalism took its toll on once vibrant logging communities or when wolves were unleashed on Idaho destroying the peoples elk and moose as well as the guiding industry and its tourism here, those communities likely would not have suffered as they have. ...

I will stick with Sheriff Doug Giddings in Idaho County because he has the guts to stand up to the government when he has to, and has done it. Lots of cheap talk, campaign signs up and down the roads and full-page ads do not a sheriff make.

On page 2F of your April 19 edition, Elizabeth Kendrick wrote a provision was included (in the stimulus package) that will allow the super wealthy, such as Donald Trump and his family, to avoid $170 billion in federal taxes during the next 10 years.

I note that she did not name Michael Bloomberg, the Gates, the Obamas, the Clintons, the Pelosis, etc.

But, on to my point: If such a provision was included, please name the specific bill, the section, subsection, page number, paragraph, etc., that would direct anyone, such as myself, to read the alleged provision(s) for ourselves and make our own assessment.

All too often it seems, we read really juicy items such as Kendricks letter in your paper or on social media. But when pressed, the authors cannot point to an authoritative source. Nor can they support their comment by reference to a second source. (Sources often present conflicting evidence.)

Without supporting sources referenced, their comments remain simply hearsay. Worse yet, the authors may have committed slander. For those of you not familiar with the term, slander is a sin.

And in cases involving money or finances, the accusation may also suggest an underlying motivation of envy, which also is a sin.

So, folks, if you are going to make accusative statements, please include your sources.

Keep it civil out there, folks. Well all be better off and better informed.

To the family and friends of Larry Schetzle:

We send our sincere thanks for all of the delicious food, beautiful flowers, kind cards and much needed phone calls.

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April 26 Letters to the Editor, Part 3 | Opinion - Lewiston Morning Tribune

Yemen government condemns diversion of aid to Houthi rebels – The National

Vital humanitarian aid for millions of people in Yemen is not reaching those in need because it is being diverted by the Iran-backed Houthi rebels, officials say.

Yemens internationally recognised government flagged the issue again on Thursday after a video circulated on social media purportedly showed piles of aid from the World Food Programme in the Houthi-held area of Sirwah in Marib province.

The UN agency said it was aware of a video of WFP-marked boxes in the frontline area.

WFP cannot confirm the source or authenticity of the video, a spokesperson told The National.

WFP food assistance is for the most vulnerable Yemeni civilians. WFP cannot tolerate any diversion of food assistance that undermines our mandate to respond to the serious humanitarian crisis in Yemen.

The agency, which feeds more than 12 million Yemenis a month, 80 per cent of whom are in areas controlled by the Houthis, said this month it would halve the amount of aid delivered to rebel-held zones due to a funding crisis.

The UN says some donors have stopped their aid over concerns that Houthi forces were obstructing deliveries.

Local NGOs that operate in Houthi-held areas are diverting WFPs aid to the rebels, Hamza Al Kamaly, Yemens deputy youth minister, told The National.

The problem is that WFP and United Nations Development Programme are treating the NGOs as neutral organisations but in reality they are one-sided, Mr Al Kamaly said.

They are giving the relief to Houthi fighters instead of giving to those in desperate need and the rebels are using it as a weapon of war, he said.

Yemens Information Minister, Moammar Al Eryani, urged the United Nations to co-ordinate with the government to find new mechanisms to deliver aid to those in need in Houthi-held areas.

The measures must include ways to prevent civilians from being held hostage, under extortion and to prevent them from starvation, oppression and disease, Mr Al Eryani said on Twitter.

UN officials have had trouble in dealing with the Houthis. In January, they accused the rebels of looting an aid warehouse under their control.

The UN last year partially suspended its aid programme in Sanaa, the countrys Houthi-controlled capital, after the rebels refused to accept the imposition of a registration system designed to ensure aid supplies reached their intended recipients.

Updated: April 23, 2020 08:00 PM

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Yemen government condemns diversion of aid to Houthi rebels - The National

Tory MPs to scrutinise UKs relationship with China amid anger over Covid-19 response – City A.M.

Top Tory MPs have today launched a new research group aimed at reassessing the UKs relationship with China amid concerns over the countrys handling of the coronavirus crisis.

The China Research Group will gather and share information on Chinese foreign and industrial policy, as well as its ownership and development of new technologies.

Read more: China says Wuhan coronavirus death toll 50 per cent higher than previously reported

MPs said the new body would not be a campaigning group, but rather will aim to promote understanding, debate and fresh thinking on issues related to the countrys growing influence.

Tom Tugendhat, chair of the influential foreign affairs committee, will lead the group while Neil OBrien, a former economic adviser to Theresa May, will serve as secretary.

Tugendhat, in an exclusive column for City A.M., says we must come to terms with vast swathes of the global economy under the control of a Communist Party that prioritises its own political survival above all else.

Speaking to City A.M., OBrien said other European countries such as Germany were more advanced than the UK in their discussions about how to approach Beijing.

We needed to create the organisation were setting up in order to spur this thinking, he said. Coronavirus has crystallised our thinking that something is needed sooner than later.

The groups main areas of focus will be Chinas strategic investments around the world and the dominance of state-backed companies, as well as the countrys development and ownership of new technology.

The government has come under fire for its decision to allow tech giant Huawei to help build the UKs 5G networks amid allegations its technology could be used for spying by authorities in Beijing.

MPs have also raised concerns about the transferral of intellectual property from the UK to China, such as an attempt earlier this month to take control of British chipmaker Imagination Technologies.

Further issues such as Beijings soft power over third countries through its Belt and Road Initiative, as well as alleged corruption, will also be examined.

While the China Research Groups focus goes beyond the current pandemic, OBrien said concerns had been crystallised by Chinas handling of the Covid-19 outbreak.

A study by Hong Kong researchers this week revealed coronavirus cases in China may have been four times higher than official figures, with authorities accused of attempting to cover up the scale of the virus outbreak.

Tugendhat said Chinas long pattern of information oppression had contributed to the unfolding crisis, as well as its provision of faulty equipment.

The UK reportedly spent 16m on 2m Covid-19 home testing kits that were found to be ineffective and inaccurate.

We know that the Chinese government is not actually looking to help people, otherwise they wouldnt be sending out defective equipment, he told City A.M.

Instead what theyre trying to do is create a potemkin medical assistance programme which has the illusion of helping in order to boost propaganda.

Chinas ambassador to the UK Liu Xiaoming has denied a cover-up by his country, accusing western politicians of using gunboat diplomacy to bully China.

It comes after Dr Alan Mendoza, executive director of the Henry Jackson society, warned China could be facing a reckoning for causing economic and health carnage around the world.

In a report published earlier this month, the foreign policy think tank predicted that lawsuits against China for breaching international health regulations could run up to at least 3.2 trillion from G7 nations alone.

Speaking on City A.Ms City View podcast, Mendoza said the crisis was sparking a sea change in public opinion towards China, with the security, supply chain and disinformation fallout outweighing trade benefits.

Read more: China using Covid cover to seize control of Imagination Technologies

Sometimes a crisis like this is the kind of way that you do see a realignment of political positioning, he said. Taken in the round, I think that will lead to a long overdue reassessment of how China is viewed.

Mendoza last night said the launch of the China Research Group was timed perfectly to reflect the wave of British public outrage.

Coronavirus has reminded that there are significant costs, and not just benefits, to deeper ties with China, he said.

It is right that MPs now debate these with a view to reshaping a new relationship that cast not only in economic terms, but also strategic and values ones.

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Tory MPs to scrutinise UKs relationship with China amid anger over Covid-19 response - City A.M.

From Celtic to African Gospel: discover the sounds of international cinema – CBC.ca

"Music expresses that which cannot be put into words and that which cannot remain silent" - Victor Hugo.

The role of music in films; accentuating emotions, dialogue and even silence, creates an entire sensory experience for audiences.

To illustrate the breadth of music and its impact on films, we've listed a few genres of music from around the world, alongside a few select foreign films on CBC Gem that showcase these styles, which we hope will inspire you and take you on an immersive cinematic journey of your own.

If you're in the mood for something warm, breezy and uplifting, then Semba beats are what you need! A rhythmic form of music and dance from Angola, Africa, Semba originated from a creative culmination of African dance and colonial European influence.

Characterised by harmonies on the guitar accompanied by rhythms of the marimba, bass drums and rattles and shakers, Semba songs are usually sung in a witty rhetoric, the themes conveyed through the music are often related to everyday life and social engagements. The versatility of Semba enables an artist to convey a variety of emotions which is evident in its presence at events of celebration as well as at funerals.

In the film Rebelle (War Witch), Semba plays an influential part in bringing out the emotions in this war drama narrative where a child soldier is forced into civil war in Africa.

Listen to the soulful voice of Angolan music artist Artur Nunes in this trailer for the film Rebelle (War Witch)

A soothing feeling of being one with nature is the tranquility offered by Indigenous music. Indigenous music communities in Canada celebrate music as a part of daily life with music being central to spiritual and cultural beliefs. Traditional Indigenous music is composed from drums tambourine-shaped hand drums, water drums as well as large ceremonial drums, flutes and vocals.

In the 2017 Canadian historical drama Hochelaga: Land of Souls, father-son duo composers Gyan and Terry Riley paint a vivid musical score inspired by Indigenous influences.

Hochelaga: Land of Souls narrates the story of a Mohawk archeologist who finds the remains of Hochelaga his ancestral village under Montreal's Percival Molson Stadium.

Taking a trip back in time, classical music has stirred up strong emotions over centuries of storytelling. From concerto to opera, symphony to sonata, there's a classical style of music that may resonate for all.

Johann Sebastian Bach's chaconne (a repeated pattern of seven rising chords upon which the music is built), has been well illustrated in concerto style in the film The Red Violin (1999) which follows a single violin over the course of centuries, played by different people across continents, from Europe to Asia and finally North America.

Composer John Corigliano won an Oscar for The Red Violin's neoclassical score which featured celebrated violinist Joshua Bell and well-acclaimed conductor Esa-Pekka Salonen to execute it. Listening to the chaconne is a rich and layered experience that leaves you with a feeling of sublimity.

You can also listen to the entire soundtrack of The Red Violin on Spotify.

Another noteworthy style of classical music is opera. The 2011 historical film A Dangerous Method, directed by multiple-award winning Canadian filmmaker David Cronenberg, features the musical score of leitmotifs from Wagner's third Ring opera: Siegfried on piano by the Oscar award-winning Canadian composer Howard Shore.

Here is Howard Shore's TIFF (Toronto International Film Festival) interview on creating the musical score for A Dangerous Method.

A Dangerous Method showcases an adulterous affair between Swiss psychoanalyst Carl Jung (Michael Fassbender) and Sabina Spielrien (Keira Knightley), a young Russian patient suffering from hysteria, who share a common love for Wagner's Ring cycle operas.

On a balmy summer evening, folk music from Middle Eastern countries spanning from is sure to lead you into a state of dreaminess. Melodic instruments such as the oud, flute, double reed and tambourine are significant to the music from this region.

The origins of Middle Eastern folk music can be traced back to the Bedouins singing a simple caravan song, the ud', during their desert treks in 7th century BC, reflecting the culture of enjoying music collectively rather than individually.

The soundtrack of the 2017 Canadian-Irish-Luxembourgian adult animated drama film The Breadwinner is mysterious, pleasant and melodic taking you on an enchanting trip to the Middle East. The film depicts the story of Parvana, a girl in Taliban-controlled Afghanistan who has to dress as a boy in a bid to find work and support her mother and her sister.

Catch a glimpse of the music from The Breadwinner in this scene.

Picture yourself in a lush green meadow listening to the distinct sound of bagpipes coming from a distance. If this is a visual that makes you happy, you'll definitely love the uplifting, peppy notes of Celtic music.

Originating from the countries of Ireland, Scotland and Wales; Celtic music can be traced back to the 1600s. Popular for dancing as well as sung as a ballad, Celtic music has a varied melodic composition made up of instruments such as the violin, lute, flute, harp and bagpipes to name a few.

The Irish family drama film A Shine of Rainbows entwines Celtic music in its screenplay to complement the rugged and picturesque setting of County Donegal (Ireland). The film is based on an orphan boy who is helped by an extraordinary woman to transform his life by conquering grief.

Canadian music composer Keith Power collaborated with The Henry Girls who were finalists on You're a Star, an Irish singing competition-based reality show. For Power, composing music for the film was inspired by his experiences growing up on the Atlantic coastline in Newfoundland where he was surrounded by the rich traditions of Irish folk music.

Listen to The Henry Girls live performance, as a warm up to Celtic music.

Soulful and heartwarming, African Gospel music is one of the few genres that will strike an instant chord with you. Euphoric and rhythmic, this spiritual music is rooted in responsive church singing.

Starting out in the early 20th century, Zionist churches in South Africa included African musical instruments such as the djembe, mbira (thumb piano) as well as lively dancing during their gatherings for worship.

The Soweto Gospel Choir is a South African singing group who have performed an ensemble for the historical drama Winnie (2011) that focuses on the life journey of Nelson Mandela's wife Winnie Mandela.

Listen to Bleed for Love by Jennifer Hudson and the Soweto Gospel Choir from the official Winnie soundtrack for a soulful experience.

Reggae tunes tend to transport us to a tropical destination with sunny skies, swaying palms, sifting sands and rolling waves. It's the perfect mood uplifter when you aren't having the best of days.

The term reggae originates from 'rege-rege' a Jamaican phrase which means "rags or ragged clothing". The African nyah-bingi drumming style and themes on love, peace and rebellion against extreme violence, poverty, racism, and government oppression are central to Reggae.

The 2012 feature drama film Home Again will take you to Kingston, Jamaica, following the lives of three young Jamaicans who grew up in Toronto, New York and London respectively, but are deported to Jamaica. Their journey covers the struggles they have to face for survival.

Home Again's soundtrack is reggae-driven, which is solely used for an ironic effect. The background score's uplifting beats adds a contrast to the hardships faced by the young protagonists.

Merry-making and celebrating life is well orchestrated by notes of Russian folk music. Lending to the invigorating style of music are instruments such as the fiddle, mandolin, accordion and a double bass balalaika to name a few.

Russian folk songs are based on two main themes calendrical events associated with harvesting and other farming rituals and the second being family life such as birth, death and marriage.

Canadian composer Howard Shore's musical prowess shines through in the 2007 crime drama film Eastern Promises. Even though the story is set in London, the Russian angle elevates the plot coupled with the folk music backdrop.

Here's a clipping from the film featuring Russian musician Igor Outkine on the accordion performing Dark Eyes a popular Russian romance folk song.

Need a reason to let your hair down and dance like no one's watching? Bollywood's foot-tapping beats will not be a let-down. Adding a layer of flavour to it are the energetic beats of bhangra a folk dance and music genre originating from the Punjab region of India and Pakistan celebrating the arrival of spring.

Bollywood Bhangra is a melange of traditional bhangra beats and Bollywood techno which is a genre that has gained popularity in recent years because of its lively appeal.

Dr. Cabbie's soundtrack emanates a collaboration of east-meets-west with Bollywood Bhangra infused with techno beats. Dr. Cabbie's plot is as colourful as its music, following the life of a doctor from India who migrates to Toronto in search of a job.

If we've set up the scene with the right tunes for you, continue this cinematic journey by streaming a variety of films on CBC Gem!

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From Celtic to African Gospel: discover the sounds of international cinema - CBC.ca

Three Robust Bitcoin Services Power Crypto Platform in Cuba Amid US Efforts to Isolate the Government – The Daily Hodl

Cubans are now able to download a digital wallet to store Bitcoin, integrate a cryptocurrency payment gateway on websites and buy and sell BTC on a peer-to-peer exchange. The three crypto services are powered by QBita, developed by Italian-Cuban entrepreneur Mario Mazzola. The company launched Cubas first peer-to-peer Bitcoin (BTC) exchange earlier this month.

QBita is focused on enabling Cubans who have been impacted by US sanctions.

The US Treasury Department ramped up sanctions against Cuba in September of 2019, imposing more stringent measures to reduce access to money. The sanctions have placed a cap of $1,000 that one remitter can send to one Cuban national every three months.

According to Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin,

We are taking additional steps to financially isolate the Cuban regime. The United States holds the Cuban regime accountable for its oppression of the Cuban people and support of other dictatorships throughout the region, such as the illegitimate Maduro regime. Through these regulatory amendments, Treasury is denying Cuba access to hard currency, and we are curbing the Cuban governments bad behavior while continuing to support the long-suffering people of Cuba.

The team at QBita characterizes Bitcoin as a lifeline in light of the US blockade and Cubas inability to access fintech platforms.

Bitcoin in Cuba is a real necessity, to mitigate the problems of financial exclusion that the Cuban people suffer due to the economic and commercial blockade imposed unilaterally and illegally by the United States.

As a direct consequence of these sanctions, in 2019 Cubans still do not have access to many modern financial services such as Visa, Mastercard, American Express, PayPal, Skrill, Stripe or other international electronic payment gateways.

The development of the QBita Bitcoin Wallet was inspired by the heroic resistance of the Cuban people, who face financial censorship from the powerful enemy of the North.

Qbitas new peer-to-peer Bitcoin exchange allows users on the platform to buy and sell BTC from each other. The decentralized exchange is non-custodial, giving users full control of their own cryptocurrency and their own private keys. Website owners are also able to integrate the QBita wallet as a Bitcoin payment gateway for all types of e-commerce portals.

The company says users can be up and running with the click of a few buttons. Qbita runs a full Bitcoin node and is planning to introduce Lightning Network transactions later this year.

Featured Image: Shutterstock/Julian Peters Photography

Originally posted here:

Three Robust Bitcoin Services Power Crypto Platform in Cuba Amid US Efforts to Isolate the Government - The Daily Hodl

April 25 Letters to the Editor | Opinion – Lewiston Morning Tribune

Marty Trillhaase seems unable to mention Ammon Bundy without reminding readers of his past. Trillhaase should go with a Chris Berman style, Ammon twice took up armed insurrection against his own country Bundy.

On April 15, Trillhaase recounted Bundys ill-advised live and in-person Easter service held because Bundy feels such services cannot be constrained by the state order for public health reasons.

In answer to Bundys actions, Trillhaase cited Cardinal Timothy Michael I moved Vatican funds into a trust to cheat sex abuse victims Dolan. (Daily Telegraph July 2, 2013)

Ill pass on advice from both Bundy and Dolan.

Trillhaase has twice mentioned a 1905 U.S. Supreme Court decision giving the government the right to force vaccinations.

That ruling came in Jacobson v. Massachusetts. If you read the majority opinion in the case youll find this caveat from the justices.

All laws, this court has said, should receive a sensible construction. General terms should be so limited in their application as not to lead to injustice, oppression or absurd consequence. It will always, therefore, be presumed that the legislature intended exceptions to its language, which would avoid results of that character. The reason of the law in such cases should prevail over its letter.

Now thats good advice.

Like all crises, the COVID-19 outbreak reveals our character. Its revealing who thinks of themselves as our rulers and who see themselves as the publics servants. Among the people, its revealing who yearns to be free and who yearns to be ruled.

Good message from President Donald Trump for Easter.

I understand there is medicine being reported that helps stem the effects from the virus.

Of course, its not tested to be a choice for use.

Leave it to Rep. Adam Schiff and House Speaker Nancy Pelosi to start considering another impeachment.

Actually the impeachment of Trump may have delayed immediate actions against the coronavirus.

Trump did stop immediate travel from China.

Governors are saying the federal government has been helpful.

We are fortunate so far only a few cases have been reported in our area,

A smile: Our generation made flying to the moon possible.

Now we are learning how to wash our hands.

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April 25 Letters to the Editor | Opinion - Lewiston Morning Tribune

How Poetry Can Bear Witness to Crisis and Revolution – The Nation

Carolyn Forch. (Photo by Harry Mattison)

In poet Carolyn Forchs memoir of her multiple trips to El Salvador in the late 1970s and early 80s, What You Have Heard Is True, which was a finalist for the National Book Award in 2019, she quotes 18th century Spanish painter Francisco Goyas Yo lo vi (I saw it), which accompanies his series of sketches The Disasters of War. The quote is a neat encapsulation of Forchs oeuvre as a poet, anthologist, memoirist, and witness to political revolution and upheaval. I saw it, Forch writes, and this, and also this. Its what shes been writing in her poetry (the title of the memoir comes from the first line of her famous poem The Colonel) since the 1970s. Her poetry not only is sometimes hauntingly beautiful but also can be painful, pointing out to the world a moment of oppression or violence. She has written of the consequences of poems, of poems as trace, poem as evidence. Her poems are necessary in that they point to somethingimperceptible nuance or the psychic toll of indescribable sufferingwe havent seen or can barely believe.1Ad Policy

Forchs most lauded early works were inspired by her travel to precivil war El Salvador, where she bore witness to violence, atrocity, and fear: Broken bottles embedded in walls to scoop the kneecaps from a mans legs or cut his hands to lace. After returning to the United States, she wrote up evidence of what she witnessed and toured the country to educate Americans about the consequences of interventionism. (At some points in the 1980s, US aid to El Salvadormost of it destined for ruthless and murderous armed forceswas over a million dollars a day.) In later poems she continued exploring the same themes of oppression and violence, from Lebanon to the Holocaust to the atomic bomb. As an anthologist, she developed the concept of poetry as witness, or poetry in extremis, collecting international poets work responding to the 20th centurys many unprecedented upheavals, starting with the Armenian genocide and going through the Bosnian War. She expanded that collection with another anthology, exploring English language poetry of witness from 1500 to 2001.2

Now in Forchs latest book of poemsher first in 17 yearsIn the Lateness of the World, the it she has seen seems to have expanded beyond singular events and moments. Her new poems are more reflective and broader in scope, as if she has gained a higher vantage point. The poems seem elegies less of individual moments than of life itself.3

Forch wrote the memoir and the new book of poems simultaneously, and they tug and lean on each other. Part of my soul went into my memoir, and another part went into the poetry book, she told me. In the memoir, I was reliving a past self. I was inhabiting the woman I once was. In the poetry book, Im the woman I am now. In the nearly two decades it took to produce both works, she survived canceran experience she has called terrifying and illuminating. But the new poems hardly seem autobiographical, as they explore landscapes of migrations and mourning and the creation of tenuous spaces of refuge throughout the world. And like the rest of her poetry, they have a broad range, from Greece to El Salvador to Hangzhou.4

Her work here is anchored to place and, at the same time, placeless. Take the beguiling and mesmeric opening poem, Museum of Stones, which begins:5

These are your stones, assembled in matchbox and tin,collected from roadside, culvert, and viaduct,battlefield, threshing floor, basilica, abattoirstones, loosened by tanks in the streets,from a city whose earliest map was drawn in ink on linen,schoolyard stones in the hand of a corpse,pebble from Baudelaires oui,6

We are unfixed here to time or to place; we are nowhere, but we are in a meticulously particular nowhere. The rocks, pebbles, and stones are far from concepts, metaphors, or abstractions. The specificity almost takes on an animism, a beating element that Forch captures in a crescendoing, rhythmic drama, spiked with occasional shards of human agency:7

stones where the bells had fallen, where the bridges were blown,those that had flown through windows, weighted petitions,feldspar, rose quartz, blue schist, gneiss, and chert8

These traces of humanity are traces of violence as well. The collapsing of the fallen bells and the blown bridges into a single poem is a different approach: a survey rather than an autopsy. The poem ends with the hope that this assemblage of rubblethis beautiful and frightening litany of dead mattertaken together, would become / a shrine or holy place, an ossuary, immovable and sacred.9

Though there is a timeless quality to Forchs latest book of poems, plunking from one global crisis to another, the book is also explicitly of the now. In The Boatman, one the most explicitly localizable of her poems, a taxi driver tells of when he was one of the 31 souls in a raft in the gray sick of sea. They are Afghan refugees crossing the Mediterranean to Europe, fearing death by drowning and being sent to camp misery or camp remain here. Few turns of phrase capture the choice between Scylla and Charybdis facing todays refugees fleeing Afghanistan, Syria, Iraq, the Democratic Republic of the Congo, and Honduras, among other places. It is classic Forch. Are the abstractions of misery and remain here real places? Of course they are.10

Forch and I connected by phone in late March, a few weeks after the publication of her new book of poems. We spoke about the coronavirus precautions we were taking, then veered into politics and poetry and ended by talking about cooking. She gave me a one-pot pasta recipebrowned mushrooms in creamand a couple of days later, I made it. The following is an edited excerpt from our conversation.11

John Washington12

John Washington: You write in the last poem of In the Lateness of the World about the arrival of what has been, which seems like a neat encapsulation of the art of memoir. You also write, throughout your oeuvre, of hauntingthe past and people of the past appearing in ghostly forms in your work. Would you say these poems are in some way haunted as well? 13

Carolyn Forch: Yes, they are, not by ghosts in the supernatural sense but by presences, apparitions of memory, traces of the past still legible in the natural and built worlds, by silences, ruins, regions no longer inhabited, even regions of mind. You are right in saying that I am more interested in the presence of the past in the present than I am in the past itself, which is irrecoverable. The past itself can neither be remembered nor restored.14

JW: Staying on the ghostly track for a moment, is haunting a metaphor or perhaps just a simple description of what happens after a disaster? Your gaze seems pulled to existential disasters, not only in the anthology Against Forgetting but in your own poetry. 15

CF: It is not a metaphor and, in fact, resists becoming figural. We do not live after atrocity or trauma but in the aftermath of all that happened, all that remains with us, that scars and craters our memory, our consciousness, our vision of the world. I was born just after the Second World War and grew up in its silences and slow disclosures. The war ended, but the arms were not laid down. War flared again in our souls and in the world. Wislawa Szymborska wrote, War will no longer be declared / but only continued / and the shadow of eternal armament / darken the heavens. I have felt the pull of disaster as a centripetal force for as long as I can remember. This is the ground of Against Forgetting, and my awareness of this goes back to earliest childhood and has only become more acute with time.16

JW: Your experience, as well as that for plenty of other Americans, in El Salvadoror at least their consciousness of El Salvadorin the 1980s and 1990s was a politicizing or even radicalizing force. 17Current Issue

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CF: It was. During the period of the war, a lot of them got involved in the anti-intervention work, the sanctuary movement, Witness for Peace.18

JW: But are Americans reacting differently today to the situation and politics in Central America? There is another exodus of refugees, but it doesnt seem to be mobilizing the same spirit of political solidarity.19

CF: My experience in the early days of organizing on behalf of El Salvador is that many people had already been politicized during the Vietnam War, which had only ended in 1975, so by 1980 they had been, in a way, quiet, like a sleeping volcano. They had been marching and active against the war, and there was a lack of focus for their efforts, and Central America gave that back to them. So the solidarity movements grew like mushrooms all over the country. I thought it was going to be really challenging to persuade North Americans to be concerned, but it was not at all. I went to 49 states, and everywhere I went, communities were so immediately active that it was shocking to me. I think some of that came in the aftermath of Vietnam.20

And I think now the problem is you had that radicalization and politicization that happened during the war in El Salvador and during the contra war against Nicaragua, but thats now 35, 40 years ago. So there was a long period in between the present moment for refugees at our border and that movement that was organized 40 years ago. People were very active at the airports when the [travel] ban first went into effect, but theres been a really effective [Immigration and Customs Enforcement]Border Patrol lockdown. This administration lets no one in, no one out, so theres very little that activists can do other than appeal to moral conscience, appeal to the public to pressure the Congress. But as long as we have this White House, its going to be very difficult to effect any change through US American institutions of governance. We have these thousands of children and tens of thousands of adults in detention, and our government is not even willing to release them during a pandemic.21

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JW: We saw the first case in New Jersey of someone in ICE detention infected with the coronavirus just recently.22

CF: I dont know how aware US Americans are of the vast network of US detention centers. We tend to imagine them along the borders in Texas, but if you look at a map of detention centers, theres a detention center near you, is what I would say. I think this pandemic has overwhelmed everyone in so many respects. I dont want these children in detention to be forgotten. I dont have any answers regarding activation of political organizing and solidarity work at this time, because Im not sure, in an era of shelter in place and social distancing, its going to be very easy. We cant go out on the streets en masse and protest. Theres so much we cant do.23

Im not saying it was easy to organize prior to the pandemic. There was an element of frustration. No one exactly knew how to be efficacious, what could be done, other than initially bringing this into the eye, the idea of shocking people about the circumstances in the detention centers and the activities of ICE agents in our cities and towns and also the assault on sanctuary cities by the federal government. Theres a kind of rolling confusion that this administration has specialized in. If you cant see that you have any collective strength politically to influence your legislative representatives, then Im not sure what to do.24

JW: What does work?25

CF: Theres a limit to what people are willing to give up and risk on behalf of others. And Im not judging that. Im just pointing it out. Everyone has their own limit. In El Salvador, I met many people who had no limit. They would die for other people. Many people would die for other people. And that was what, when I came back to the United States for the last time, that was the commitment, that was the love of humanity that I felt I would have to live the rest of my life without. That sounds too melodramatic. I knew that I wasnt going to be experiencing that as vividly as before.26

JW: Theres a difference between what you were seeing in El Salvador and the situation in the United States. Though for parts of the population, maybe its not all that different. 27

CF: Were a very different country, but repression is repression. And we havent had the kind of repression that Salvadorans were sufferingyet. But I have glimpsed the seeds of it in various moments. I glimpse it with ICE SWAT teams entering houses.28

JW: I want to talk more about your poetry, but I have a couple of other big-picture political questions. 29

CF: Im not a sage, John.30

JW: One of the things we began discussing today is about taking people into your home and the danger of doing so during a pandemic. One of the false narratives and insidious clichs, throughout history, with refugees and migrants, is that they bring disease.31

CF: Thats racist and untrue, and it has always been. The people stepping off the boats in Ellis Island were seen the same way. They were doused for lice. My own great-grandfather was turned away for a sore on his leg. I have news for people who regard migrants that way: Their great grandparents were also regarded that way. We simply have to continue a relentless counternarrative that is anti-racist and scientific and compassionate and empathic. We have to cultivate our collective empathy. The contagion of lack of empathy is going to be more harmful to us in the long run than anything else, because it will have no bounds. If we lose our empathy, we lose our empathy for everyone. And we isolate and atomize our society until it dries up, until it has nothing left.32

JW: I bet people tell you their stories occasionally about how they came to your poetry. Im going to tell you mine briefly. I was camping on Mount Lemmon, outside Tucson, Arizona, the first time I heard any of your poetry, and a friend recited the entire poem The Colonel, and I was floored and flabbergasted by what I heard.33

CF: Its lovely for me to imagine a campfire and that poem being recited. Thats very moving.34

JW: It was moving for all of us. A line from that poem is the title of your memoir, What You Have Heard Is True. Theres something in that phrase that responds to a doubt. Theres an assumption that youre speaking to someone who needs assurance that what that person has heard is true. And that doubt or the desire to quell that doubt interests me a lot. 35

CF: Thats it. Thats very important. The US government was denying what we were saying. Therefore, we were thought to be either exaggerating or lying. And whenever I was talking about the most horrific things I had seen in El Salvador, people would ask me, Well, is that true? Or are you just a writer or a poet embellishing things? We were confronted with doubt at every turn in the United States.36

One of the things that I learned in working out the idea of poetry of witness, which studies poetry written in the aftermath of extremity: There were many qualities and gestures that these poems had in common, and one of themand this was all over the world in the 20th century, you find this gesture in Polish poetry, in poetry of the Holocaust[was] the gesture of the appeal to be believed. That opens many poems, and I began to notice this gesture, and then I realized that I myself had done it in The Colonel. This gesture is a fear that no one will believe you. This gesture is How do I say this in such a way that it can be taken in by another? How do I find the words?37

JW: That appeal comes across so clearly in your memoir and in your earlier books of poems, especially The Country Between Us and The Angel of History, but there seems to be a difference in In the Lateness of the World. Did you take a different approach to your poems in this book?38

CF: It has a different atmosphere, doesnt it? It was written alongside the memoir, so I think all of that anxiety about being believed was worked out in the writing of the memoir. The book of poems is more elegiac. Its a book of remembrance, and its a book of warning, I think. Its not a dark book. Its a book of having come to terms, a book about having found an inner peace. Part of my soul went into my memoir, and another part went into the poetry book. Because I had survived cancer during the writing of both books, I think that what I came to in the survival was a quietude that is manifest in the poetry book. In the memoir, I was reliving a past self. I was inhabiting the woman I once was. In the poetry book, Im the woman I am now.39

JW: I agree that its not a dark book, but you dont hold back, and you do go to some of todays places or moments of extremity.40

CF: Oh, yeah, its true, its true. The book is about extremity. Its about death. Its about collective humanity. I dont choose what to write when Im writing poetry. I move into a certain region of mind when I write, and I work out of that. I didnt hold back. There are a couple of poems that are as difficult in my mind as The Colonel. So its not held back. It could be accused, as The Country Between Us was, as being political, as Americans mean that term.41

Americans mean that term as anything ideologically oppositional or uncomfortable. They do not mean organized political activity, action. They mean the views or sentiments expressed are creating discomfort or challenging the belief systems of the reader. I had to learn what the US meant by that term political when it was applied pejoratively about my work. And thats the only explanation I came to. Because in El Salvador, for instance, if youre political, you go to meetings. You take risks. You organize. I wasnt political in that sense. I didnt belong to any political party or group or organization.42

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JW: This is something Ive thought a lot about as well, that the political writer is relegated into being exactly that, a political writer. 43

CF: Here in the US, its used to taint the work. To imagine that the work has designs upon us. That its not pure. That its not written as a literary work of art but that its infected or tainted with message. And in the United States theres also the fiction that theres nonpolitical or apolitical work. In other words, that somehow theres this little hermetically sealed egg that the poet writes within, uninfluenced by any events, by his or her time, outside of anything but this hopelessly solipsistic self. But I think thats changing. That notion is breaking down. If you take a look at the young poets publishing very exciting work in the United States, they are very rarely dismissed as being political. I think they are dismissed for their identities. Theres an element in literary culture that says, Oh, this work is just read because this person is from this or that group, which is another way of dismissing. But the political isnt a pejorative term anymore. Its an expectation that the most exciting work being done will be informed by awareness, part of which is political awareness.44

JW: Do you worry about making suffering too beautiful? What is the relationship in poetry between beauty and violence? Do they lend something to each other? What becomes of the truth of an event or its memory when it is ghastly and violent but its recording is lyrical and beautiful?45

CF: Im very much against the aestheticization of violence. I work hard not to beautify the ghastly. For this, the language must be pared, must be cold, in Chekhovs sense. It is a difficult thing to know when what one has erred in this sense. For me, it is a matter of not embellishing, dramatizing, of not lighting an unnecessary fire beneath the already sufficient words.46

JW: What are you reading or writing when were all holed up right now?47

CF: Im keeping a notebook, but I find myself unable to write in this moment. Im really trying to cope with worry and concern for certain others, and I dont have the tranquility of mind to write. Perhaps other writers do. Im also teaching online, for Georgetown University. Thats much more challenging for me than teaching in person, and Ive realized how much presence has mattered to my pedagogy, and Im deprived of that, so Ive had to compensate for lack of presence. So theres a lot of that.48

Im also going through the museum of my life. Because I cant leave the house, Ive decided to finally organize things and get rid of things. And that is a strange experience, because with photographs or old notebooks, its an excavation of memory and a realization of how long one has lived and how much one has seen and how many people are gone. Im in the fragmentary museum of my life.49

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How Poetry Can Bear Witness to Crisis and Revolution - The Nation

Pulse of the Voters: Health care, immigration and heartland votes – Terre Haute Tribune Star

Health care dominated political dialogue leading up to the coronavirus crisis, and if voters in the nations heartland are an accurate yardstick, the struggle over the best way to provide it will escalate on the road to Novembers election.

Voters differ widely on how to ensure accessible and affordable quality care.

Thomas Slusser/Johnstown, Pennsylvania, Tribune Democrat.Speaking her mind: Janet Lord of Daisytown answers questions during an interview at a downtown Johnstown, Pennsylvania, cafe.

Thats the sense based on interviews with scores of voters by CNHI newspapers in the Midwest, Rust Belt and Southern states over the last three months for the news groups periodic Pulse of the Voters 2020 election project.

We should not be doing away with a plan that provides millions of Americans with solid health insurance, said Doris Conyers, 76, a retired school teacher and administrator from Webb City, Missouri.

Janet Lord, 56, of Daisytown, Pennsylvania, said she loathes the concept of government-run health care, expressing confidence in the ingenuity of Americas private medical system.

Thats how America works, said Lord, an Air Force veteran. Thats what the best thing about America is; were the solution finders.

Clara Page of Palestine, Texas, leans heavily toward the progressive approach.

Health care is the biggest issue facing voters, she said. Cost and quality both cause concern, as does the availability of emergency room treatment. Health care should be available to all, regardless of whether people have insurance.

Record-Eagle/Jan-Michael StumpJanet Beebe of Rapid City, Michigan, a stay-at-home mom, worries about the rising cost of child care.

Janet Beebe of Rapid City, Michigan, a stay-at-home mom, said home sheltering orders during the coronavirus crisis underscore the need for affordable child care. She said the latest data shows monthly child care costs in the U.S. average between $800 and $1,230.

We have one of the best health care systems out there, she said. But it has flaws.

The Affordable Care Act, commonly known as Obamacare, remains center stage as the presidential and congressional campaigns wobble amidst the coronavirus calamity.

CNHI papers asked voters a series of issue questions in an unscientific, online survey from Feb. 14 to March 10, just before the coronavirus outbreak began to dominate American life.

Health care rated among the most important issue facing the country. More than 46 percent of the respondents favored repeal and replacement of Obamacare over reform and expansion of it.

That embrace of the Republican position on health care ran contrary to the 2018 mid-term elections when Democrats capitalized on President Donald Trumps resistance to Obamacare, gaining 41 seats to become the majority party in the U.S. House.

Cullman, Alabama, Times/Submitted photoCampaign trail: Denice Hand of Cullman, Alabama, a strong supporter of President Trump, chats with former Auburn football coach Tommy Tuberville during a campaign appearance for the U.S. Senate.

Democrat presidential candidates have proposed aggressive expansion of health care to cover the 30 million Americans who the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention report currently do not have health insurance.

Trump favors repeal and replacement of Obamacaare but promises to retain its most popular feature, protections for preexisting medical conditions. Democrats insist Republicans want to do away with the provision. It currently covers an estimated 52 million Americans under the age of 65, according to the Kaiser Family Foundation.

Immigration most important

While health care rated high among issues in the CNHI online survey, immigration polled as the most important problem facing the country. Voter interviews reflected the passions of those who seek tight immigrant entry controls and those who prefer relaxed restrictions on refugees.

Maynard Lewis Sr., 62, of Terre Haute, Indiana, said he considers himself a Democrat but hes voted for every Republican nominee for president since Ronald Reagan. He plans to cast his ballot a second time for Trump, in part, because of his hardline immigration policies.

He said he supports securing the U.S.-Mexican border to prevent illegal entry into the country. He said opposition is the result of people leaning toward a one-world government concept. But, he added, Mr. Trump has gotten in their way.

That attitude doesnt sit well with Carole Lynn King of Joplin. She said the building of a border wall is a slap in the face to every person who has immigrated to America over the years.

Lisa Tang/Palestine, Texas, Herald-PressExpand health care: Clara Page of Palestine, Texas, wants health care expanded to everybody without insurance.

As a nation of immigrants, there is a calling upon us to act generously toward those who come to us, fleeing from oppression and seeking safety, and not throw up walls and separate families, said King. America must shelter and protect those who have nowhere else to turn.

Swing states in play

Trump appears to remain popular in rural cities and towns of the solidly red states in middle America, more for his policies on immigration, economic programs and guns than his impromptu governance style and peppery tweets.

Yet national polls show the four crucial swing states Michigan, Ohio, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin are in play seven months before the next election. In 2016, they each went for Trump, giving him the margin he needed to win the Electoral College vote.

It is all but official former Vice President Joe Biden will be the Democrat presidential candidate. He ran up a 300-plus delegate lead over Sen. Bernie Sanders before the coronavirus pandemic delayed spring primaries.

Biden says hes working hard to put the four industrial states in his camp this time, appealing directly to blue collar and farmland voters that deserted the Democrats in 2016.

Kimberly Eaton of Middleburg, Pennsylvania, says shes a progressive Democrat who is disappointed with Sanders fading campaign. She will vote for Biden but he had better take notice of what the Berners want of him: no straddling the line on the subjects of health care or climate.

Getting out the vote

Democrats are counting on the throngs of young voters who support Sanders to bring energy to Bidens campaign. Many sat on their hands when Sanders lost the Democratic presidential nomination to Hillary Clinton four years ago.

Lark Jankewicz is a high school senior in the village of Kingsley in rural northwest Michigan. Shes eligible to vote for the first time and yet shes not sure she will do so. Shes not fond of any of the candidates, including Trump. Free college tops her issues list.

A lot of my friends and I have that conversation about how much free college could help, said Jankewicz. Its scary thinking about having to be an actual adult.

In contrast, 86-year-old L.O. Spray of Woodward, Oklahoma, considers voting a patriotic duty. He switched his registration from Democrat to Republican in 2016 to vote for Trump, but has since re-enrolled as a Democrat in anticipation of voting for Biden.

Chickasha, Oklahoma, Express Star/Submitted photoGary Rogers, pastor of the Grand Assembly of God Church, in Chickasha, Oklahoma, supports President Trump for his pro-life stance and support of the Christian faith.

His reason: The state of the nation is not good.

Were in the worst shape weve ever been in, said Spray. Were split, divided. Were in a bad way. People really need to pay attention to what is going on, and need to get out and vote.

Patrick Lewis, 63, a retired civil engineer from Effingham, Illinois, says hes been a conservative Republican all his life and is also unhappy with the countrys direction.

With the election of Donald Trump, this country has become very polarized along political, religious, socioeconomic and ethnic lines, he said. Sadly, he has used his position to grant people permission to disparage and insult others, which is detrimental to our country and our democracy.

Denice Hand of Cullman, Alabama, dismissed criticism of Trump while waiting for Tommy Tuberville, the former Auburn football coach, to make a local campaign appearance in his bid for the Republican U.S. Senate nomination in Alabama.

Hand said she wasnt all that interested in politics until Trump ran for president as a non-politician. He was speaking exactly the way that I felt about all the issues going on in America, she said. Im sick of politicians.

She added: I dont think the media will ever stop being against him. They started off with Russia, then it was the [Brett] Kavanaugh [Supreme Court] nomination, and then they bashed him about the borders. No [other] president has stood up and done exactly what he said he was going to do.

Not just the White House

William Conn, 37, is a public school teacher and a Democrat in rural Whitley County, Kentucky. He noted voters will also pick 435 members of the U.S. House and 35 members of the Senate in November. Among those on the ballot in Kentucky is Republican Majority Leader Sen. Mitch McConnell.

Mitch McConnell has had over 35 years in the Senate, said Conn. And we still have some of the poorest counties in the U.S.

Amy McGrath, a former Marine fighter pilot, is expected to win the Democratic Senate primary, delayed from May 19 to June 23, for the right to face McConnell. She has already raised more than $10 million toward that end.

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Gary Rogers and Sherri Lambert of Chickasha, Oklahoma, are on the opposite sides of the political divide. They are heartland examples of cleaved voter attitudes.

Rogers is pastor of the Grand Assembly of God Church. He holds dear Trumps pro-life stance, his attendance at the National Day of Prayer and his support of the Christian faith.

Lambert shares the same faith as Rogers but believes the presidents action dont line up with Christian values.

Her response to Christians who support Trump is you do? He puts kids in cages and he doesnt care and he takes Meals on Wheels away from the elderly and he doesnt care. He does all these things that are anti-Jesus and you dont care. That scares me.

Bill Ketter is senior vice president for CNHI. Contact him at wketter@cnhi.com.

We are making critical coverage of the coronavirus available for free. Please consider subscribing so we can continue to bring you the latest news and information on this developing story.

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Pulse of the Voters: Health care, immigration and heartland votes - Terre Haute Tribune Star

Hong Kong dissident reopens Causeway Bay Bookstore in Taipei – The Straits Times

TAIPEI - Hong Kong dissident bookseller Lam Wing Kee reopened his bookstore in Taipei on Saturday (April 25), just days after being doused in red paint by three men who opposed his new business.

Books stand for the freedom of thought and speech...I think opening an independently-owned bookstore in Taiwan is a means to protect the values of Taiwan; this is how my bookstore slightly differs from other independent bookstores, he said.

There is another way out for Hong Kong people, and that is Taiwan, he added.

Mr Lam re-opened his book store on the one year anniversary of his escape to Taiwan. He made headlines initially in 2015 when he disappeared in Hong Kong, only to re-emerge later on the mainland and was subsequently detained for selling books banned by the Chinese authorities.

He fled Hong Kong last year when the territorys government moved to amend the Fugitive Offenders bill to allow for the extradition of suspects to the mainland. Many opponents of the move alleged that it was aimed at dissidents.

The speaker of Taiwans Legislative Assembly or Yuan, Mr Yu Shyi-kun, who visited the bookstore on Saturday, spoke privately with Mr Lam.

The fact that Lam Wing Kee is willing to restart his business in Taiwan makes me proud of Taiwans democracy, Mr Yu told reporters before meeting Mr Lam.

Aside from the parliament speaker, flower baskets from Taiwanese politicians and journalists alike were delivered yesterday, filling the narrow hall leading up to the small bookstore. May equality flow like the rolling waves, making justice like the rushing river, read the card on the floral basket from President Tsai Ing-wen.

Mr Lam has credited the Taiwanese government for assisting him in reopening his bookstore.

Im a Hong Konger, so I follow the news of persecuted young (Hong Kong) people closely as well. What the Taiwanese government is doing, we all know clearly is all about helping Hong Kongers - I am grateful on their behalf, said Mr Lam, who has relied on some NT$6 million (S$285,000) raised online through crowd-funding last year to continue his business.

Many Taiwanese visited the bookstore yesterday, no doubt intrigued by its owner. They lined up to take the elevator to the 10th floor of the building where the small shop is located.

Two high school freshmen had travelled for over an hour from Taoyuan, saying they had been following Hong Kong current affairs closely since the protests against the extradition Bill last year.

Were so moved by Mr Lam; he decided to open this bookstore even as he faced oppression from the Chinese Communist Party. Some people even threw paint at him, said Hsu Shih-hsun, 16.

Wang Tsung-fan, also 16, chimed in: I think hes really brave. He knew the risks (of reopening his bookstore), and yet here he is doing it.

Another visitor, Mr Chen Yu-hai, 50, who brought along his nine-year-old son, said:Id been to the original Causeway Bay Bookstore before, about five or six years ago, and have been following the news of Hong Kongs unrest quite closely since the Umbrella Movement.

He added that the Taiwanese government should make clear to Hong Kong people fleeing to Taiwan that it is a safe place for them to stay.

The three men who attacked Mr Lam with paint were arrested on Wednesday.

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Hong Kong dissident reopens Causeway Bay Bookstore in Taipei - The Straits Times

Return to school: The serious health risk of using public transport – The Age

So can we also safely see our grandchildren?

Scott Morrison considers it safe for children to be at school. Medical experts advise children pose no risk. Why then are grandparents isolated from children? Also, I note David Crowe's comment that "only when a school reopens could the medical experts really know if it is safe" (Comment, 24/4). Are teachers canaries, Mr Morrison, as you plead with them to return to the classroom?

Sue Bryan, Sandringham

It is wonderful news that schools are safe places for students due to their resistance to COVID-19 and that social distancing is unnecessary for them. However, it is very inconsiderate of teachers not to be similarly immune to COVID-19, and so selfish of them to consider their health and that of their families and the wider community, and be averse to returning to their closely populated workplaces, where every surface and every contact carries the risk of contagion.

Teaching, unlike the armed forces, emergency services, medicine and nursing, is not a profession entered into with the understanding that a requirement of the job is the potential sacrifice and loss of health and life.

Deborah Morrison, Malvern East

Children may suffer less from the COVID-19 but going back to school before it has been eradicated from the country is a threat to others such as teachers or adults in their own homes, especially if any of the latter is immune-compromised or has any other underlying illnesses. Governments should consider eradication as the aim while the chance is still with us to avoid further heartache to Australian families.

Loucille McGinley, Brighton East

If children pose no risk to the spreading of coronavirus when schools reopen, will all other activities such as sport, clubs etc for children also reopen? It cannot be one rule for schools and another for other activities.

I was at the scene of the horrific accident that killed four police officers. I want the public to know that the everyday people at the scene comforted, stroked and cared for Leading Senior Constable Lynette Taylor. The last words she heard were not from the Porsche driver, but from caring people and the paramedics who came to her aid. She and her colleagues were honoured and respected in every way.

Dr Amanda Sampson, Alphington

Boundless respect and gratitude to the four police officers who lost their lives while protecting the lives of road users. Special respect and gratitude to Todd Robinson, the bereaved partner of Constable Glen Humphris, for sharing his grief with the community (The Age, 25/4) and silently reminding it that "love is love" in all its forms.

Mirna Cicioni, Brunswick East

I would like to suggest the planting of an Avenue of Honour to commemorate the lost lives of our police, fire, ambulance and other emergency services members. Such a memorial would give people a place to go, all year round, and help to connect people to the cherished memories of their loved ones. An old idea, a new purpose.

Simon Clegg, Donvale

If any good could possibly come out of this horror, it would be that Victoria Police will have no doubt they have the support and respect of the Victorian community.

Barbara Abell, Essendon

An excellent article by Farrah Tomazin on the Royal Children's Hospital and paediatrician Michelle Telfer's work at its gender clinic (Sunday Age, 19/4).

As a teacher of more than 40 years, it was always obvious to me that some students battled with their gender identity. We are in a much healthier space when we can acknowledge the issue of gender identity and provide the support needed to help those dealing with it.

Anne Maki, Alphington

Lia Timson's article, "Treating dignity as a social good" (Sunday Age, 19/4) should help provide a platform for social and economic reform in post-pandemic Australia. Access for all to quality health and education, a liveable basic wage and pension should be a cornerstone for any government. This would involve significant investment and tax reform and a genuine effort to eradicate the stigma associated with those on JobSeeker.

During the pandemic, we have seen the importance of a fairer distribution of wealth and the need to look after each other. We are also reaping the benefits of this changing mindset. Why can't we continue to put dignity at the centre of our policies and create a better "new normal"?

Craig Jory, Glenroy, NSW

While Australia has the benefit of a natural physical isolation and low population density, its comparatively low COVID-19 infection and death rates can be attributed to a collective response across the community. It speaks of a "quiet patriotism".

It manifests itself as respect for our institutions and the rule of law, a natural sense of community and an overwhelming generosity. There have been the whingers, the idiots and the selfish, but the response from the vast majority of Australians in combatting the virus has been magnificent, and has shown our country as its very best.

Paul Jurkovsky, Ferntree Gully

The upside of the government's tracing app includes earlier warning you of possible contact with a confirmed case, and a better chance of not passing the virus on to your loved ones. It includes allowing greater relaxation of social distancing requirements, letting more people get back to work. Why do the commentators and media focus on the possible downside? Most people provide much of the same information to Google, Facebook, WhatsApp or Instagram.

Carl Prowse, Ivanhoe

Encouraged by the federal government's mature, independent response to the coronavirus, I was carefully considering whether to download the tracing app. This decision has now been resolved with news that the government has entered a contract for data storage of the system with Amazon, the overseas (American) provider.

Linette Hawkins, Prahran

I read daily about privacy concerns surrounding the government's tracking app but almost nothing about its efficacy.

It will record a contact when I am within 1.5 metres of that person for a period of 15 minutes (continuously). This criterion is overly simplistic and inadequate. What about being in the same room for 30minutes? Or touching or brushing past? Or being within a metre for 14 minutes? Privacy matters but we need to know if the app will work. Please can we have more information and discussion about how well it will protect me.

Stephen Mills, Blackburn South

Robina Hunnam's suggestion of coughing loudly and blowing one's nose to clear pathways of approaching people (Sunday Age, Letters, 19/4) is one of the most reckless I have heard to date. I am quite shocked you chose to publish it. It is appalling that anyone would suggest deliberately projecting air droplets from the mouth or nose during this pandemic.

Kim Lyons, Melbourne

We remember those who died and those who suffered, those who were lost and those who mourned them, those who showed the greatest love in dying for their fellow human beings. And yet, we must never forget what it was they gave so much for: freedom from oppression, hatred, prejudice and superiority of race. We belie their sacrifice, demean their cause, when we show hatred for those who are of other races, when we refuse to aid the weak and helpless and when we are indifferent to suffering of our fellow beings.

Karin Hawkins, Balwyn

Very few (if any) modern wars have been worth the cost of lives and destruction they have demanded. The lionising of soldiers in modern culture is largely a cynical exercise in ensuring that there will always be cannon fodder willing to sacrifice themselves (usually) only for the economic and political benefit of others. Maybe Australians volunteering for the Great War were doing so in more innocent and gullible times, but those times are well and truly over.

Anthony Hitchman, St Andrews

Ben Groundwater says, "I need a boarding pass in my hand. I need a train ticket in my pocket" (Comment, 23/4). He is a travel writer so perhaps he has a set idea of what "travel" means. But under a simpler definition, we can travel any time we choose.

I went for an hour's run yesterday morning. I startled two wallabies, said "g'day" to a couple of cyclists and felt the temperature change as I climbed out of the valley. I felt joy as I surged over a crest, felt the sun on my face and saw the far hills. I felt sadness as I passed a fire smouldering in a driveway; someone's Anzac remembrance. To travel you need only head out your door. And just keep going until you are ready to come back.

Grant Morgan, Hurstbridge

Perhaps as an incentive for those people withdrawing funds from their superannuation during the pandemic, their future deposits up to the amount deducted could be exempt from the 15per cent contributions tax as they try to re-establish their balances. The initial deposits that are being withdrawn have already been taxed.

Bob Speed, Trafalgar

A not-very-bright six-year-old boy: "Mummy, why don't they get some disinfectant and inject it in the body to kill the coronavirus?"

Mother: "Great idea, Donald. Now why don't you go to your room and play with your real estate set or send a few tweets. One day you could grow up to be president of the United States."

Chris Hughes, Southbank

Barnaby Joyce again shows leadership, this time in his approach to the coronavirus tracing app (Sunday Age, 19/4). But can someone please tell him that his fears are unfounded? The public has already been told too much about his private life and does not want to know any more.

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Return to school: The serious health risk of using public transport - The Age

COVID-19 catastrophe, capitalism and policy alternatives for the future world – newagebd.net

Brain Stauffer

The COVID-19 is giving us a chance to rethink the future world. It teaches us that the future cannot be always reliably calculated by science and we need to reconfigure our economic structure which is too fragile to confront any uncertainty fuelled by itself. We need to cut the monopoly of Big Pharma and democratise the healthcare system, bury the old energy sources and invest in the renewable energy sector and implement policies to empower the people instead of corporations, writes Md Nazmul Arefin

THE COVID-19 epidemic confronts us with numerous new forms of uncertainties around the world. These uncertainties have brought about a competition between different systems of governments. Is the Chinese authoritarian system model superior to democratic models? This question is getting more and more attention as we find the US model of health system absolutely dysfunctional in dealing with such a crisis. After a successful domestic dealing, now China is gaining soft power through providing assistance in affected countries.

To reclaim Chinas global greatness Xi Jinping wants to restore its image as the Good Samaritan by portraying optimism and participating in the global fight against the virus. On the other hand, Donald Trump has received wide criticisms for not only cutting funding from essential health services and research before the crisis and downplaying the effect of the virus, but also regarding his reluctant, reckless and criminally incompetent policy implementations. Furthermore, the US image as a superpower is critically questioned as the Trump administration spectacularly failed to even coordinate an international response.

However, the problem does not lie within the USA alone. The deep-rooted dysfunctional public health care systems and ineffective handling of the pandemic have unmasked a number of structural flaws in the political-economic arrangements of the whole western world. The capitalist states could not become radical enough to take decisions for its people superseding the neo-liberal values. They are more guarantors of free enterprise rather than being the guarantors of citizen lives. In the light of the situation, many neoliberal-sceptics are speculating that this crisis could finally herald the long-awaited end of neoliberal ideology.

The question then arises, what can the COVID-19 tell us about socialism in 2020? Lets take Fidel Castros Cuba as a case study. Despite Cubas lack of resources unlike the rich western countries, it has ensured an incredibly benign pro-people health care system. Based on the socialist concept that everyone should have the same opportunities in life, the country strongly maintains free universal healthcare, one of the worlds highest ratio of doctors to population and positive health indicators such as high life expectancy and low infant mortality. Besides that, as a token of medical diplomacy and in solidarity with those in need, Cuba is sending medical teams around the world to help with the coronavirus response.

It is true that the centrally planned, state-controlled economy like China and Cuba are setting extremely good examples in domestic and international response to the pandemic. Whereas, the capitalist system has proved itself impotent, incoherent and incomprehensible to save public lives.

Globalisation has collapsed. The antibiotic revolution of the Big Pharma has been proved unsustainable. Class division in global health care is profoundly exposed. But does that mean the post-COVID-19 world would be a new one in terms of dropping dependency on neo-liberal credos?

Well, at a time when the global economy is already proceeding towards a deep recession, we can only imagine how far its repercussions shall reach. But we have to be bold enough to state that to start building a more inclusive and sustainable political-economy, the world must learn lessons from this crisis and consider developing policy alternatives to the faulty existing ones.

Rethinking monopoly of the Big Pharma: social ownership of a vaccine and healthcareFOR the left-wing American historian and sociologist Mike Davis, this pandemic provides the world a wonderful opportunity for the nation states to learn from the failure and to rethink the monopoly of the large pharmaceutical companies and profit driven healthcare industry. He further believes that this is high time we bring in consideration social ownership and the democratisation of economic power. Without having a vaccine, the fight against COVID-19 reaches nowhere.

But who are the main in-charge of discovering vaccine of this disease? Of course the answer is big corporations. States are increasingly doing less to have authority over the discovery. But why? According to the US linguist and philosopher Noam Chomsky, the neoliberal bodies have snatched away that authority from the states. Or in other words, states have created room for the free markets to take over; even though in the 1950s we witnessed that in response to Polio epidemic, Salk vaccine was discovered by the government institution and was made available to everyone without patent. That was a wonderful demonstration of social ownership of a vaccine which is absent now. The coronavirus pandemic definitely illustrates that this pro-people measures should be re-introduced now, by any means.

Green New Deal: patronising the clean industriesBASED on the earlier experiences of great global crises, the Canadian author, activist Naomi Klein anticipates that the COVID-19 crisis can bring a transformative change in the world by showering aid on the greater interests in society. It could be a catalyst for a kind of evolutionary leap which she calls Green New Deal.

She advocates that the post-Corona world should patronise the clean industries that will lead us into safety in the coming century, instead of rescuing the dirty, old, abusive industries that have damaged the planet, relied on massive public subsidies and worsened economic inequality. The goal of the Green New Deal is to ensure clean air, clean water and healthy food as basic human rights, reduce racial injustice and end all forms of oppression.

According to the chief of the International Labour Organisation, COVID-19 could cause 195 million job losses in the next three months alone and the full or partial lockdown affecting almost 2.7 billion workers around the world. In face of that, a stark revolution will be needed in the global economic order. And as the transformative policy measure, the Global Green New Deal can be a solution to the coronavirus recession that might allow workers around the world to prosper.

Coordination in a guardian-less galaxy: empowering WHO and other organisationsTODAY we reside in a leaderless global village. COVID-19 has exposed that nakedly. Despite being desperately needed, a global integrated plan to combat the crisis is absolutely missing. Gradually this pandemic is turning into a global food and humanitarian crisis but there is no guardian to hit a plan and pool resources. The world needs a coordinator. But who can play the due role?

For Slovenian political philosopher and cultural critic Slavoj iek, the World Health Organisation can be a primary model of such a global coordination. But for making the WHO and other UN organisations free from producing only bureaucratic gibberish and panic-loaded warnings, they need to be empowered with more executive power and be not governed by the major donor nations.

There is no doubt that the coronavirus crisis has brought about unprecedented sufferings and uncertainties in the modern world. But the pandemic also has its advantages. It has exposed the hollows of the capitalist system. It has delivered a powerful global message that in midst of a crisis, the invincible global capitalist market is not ready to save its workers for even one month without the state support.

The current crisis expands the argument about the need for new societal and economic systems all across the world. We believe that the world must adopt new policy alternatives wiping out the old faulty ones. The coronavirus is giving us a chance to rethink the future world. It teaches us that the future cannot be always reliably calculated by science and we need to reconfigure our economic structure which is too fragile to confront any uncertainty fuelled by itself.

Md Nazmul Arefin is an independent researcher.

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COVID-19 catastrophe, capitalism and policy alternatives for the future world - newagebd.net

Iran Regime Sending People Back to Work Amid Coronavirus Will Result in Humanitarian Catastrophe – NCRI – National Council of Resistance of Iran…

Iran: Coronavirus outbreak

As the coronavirus death toll continues to rise in Iran, the regimes officialsreluctantly acknowledge an inevitable new peak of the disease due totheircriminal decision to send people back to work.Yet due to societys restiveness this decision might result in an uprising.

The Peoples Mojahedin Organization of Iran (PMOI, Mujahedin-e Khalq or MEK) announced on Friday that the coronavirus death tollin Iranis nearly 35,000.

Following the meeting of Health Ministers of member states of the World Health Organization, SaeedNamaki, the regimes Health Minister, said:We are still halfway through. We may still lose the game (the ball may elude our keeper) in the last minute, and we will be defeated and left humiliated in every corner of the globe.

Ali Akbari,amember of parliament from the city of Shiraz, in an interview on Friday with the state-runEntekhab daily,said: There has been a rise intheCoronavirusspread in Fars Province over the past ten days. There is concern that the medical staff will suffer from fatigue andwillbe exhausted as the disease lingers on.

In addition,Ali Maher, a member of theAnti-Corona Headquarters in Tehran, said: In Tehran, it cannot be said that the situation has improved. We are waiting for the effects of the new conditions toappear.

Meanwhile, the regimes president Hassan Rouhani is insisting on the regimes criminal decision to send people back to work.Trying to avoid further condemnationof the regimes decision to send people back towork evenfrom withinthe regime,on April 18, Rouhani spoke ofaso-calledSmart Social DistancingPlan

The implementation of the Smart Social Distancing Plan has reduced the spread of the disease in some provinces and created a steady trend in other provinces,he said.

In another development,Mohammad-Reza ZafarGhandi, head oftheregimes Medical System Organization,in a letter to Rouhanion Thursday, wrote: Any rush to open unnecessary and uncontrolled gathering sites such as places of worship, schools,anduniversities,will spread the disease, take lives, and waste past efforts. It will also exhaust the countrys medical staff.

The regimes reason for sending people back to work

Since the coronavirus outbreak in Iran, the regime resorted toacover-upin order touse the disease to oppress and control the restive Iranian society.Therefore, for days, themullahs avoided quarantining people and when they did, unlike other governments,the Iranianregimedid notfinancially help people. The regime wastesthe national wealth and resources on terrorism to export chaos abroad,andbillions of dollars arelost inthe regimes black hole of corruption. The regimes attitude increased the pressure on Iranian societywhich is grappling with poverty and economic hardships.This financial hardship, which was rapidly creating an army of hungry people, terrified the regimes officials.The last two series of Iran protestsin 2017and 2019,that shook the regimes foundation and pushed it to the edge of downfall, were triggered due to the economic hardships.

In this regard, the state-runSharqdaily wrote on April 8: The relationship between the people and government has reached a crucial point. The events of November 2019 and January 2020 (Iran Protests) and the kind of slogans used at the time and the rate of participation in the March elections, along with the international attitude of the U.S. government and targeting the Islamic systems existence have created a situation that leaving it requires tough decisions.

Since its foundation, the mullahs regimehas beenprioritizing its security and holding its grasp on powerover peoples lives and well-being. The regimes founder, Ruhollah Khomeini, blatantly said that preserving the system is the top priority. With thistheory, Khomeini continued prolonged the Iran-Iraq War with millions of casualties, and ifwas notfor the IranianResistancesinternational and regional activities and thelooming possibility ofa social turmoil, Khomeiniwould havecontinued this devastating war, as hesaid: until the last house standingin Tehran.

Due to its medieval ideology, institutionalized corruption, and oppressive nature, the regime was quickly rejected by the Iranian society,therefore,to hold their grasp on power,themullahs seized every opportunity they had to massacre and oppress Iranian people.Sending Iranian people back to work amid the coronavirus outbreak, likemanipulating and sending children to swipetheminefields duringtheIran-Iraq war, or massacringhundreds of thousands of Iranian youth and opposition members and supporters, is another criminal decision by the religious fascism tooppress Iranian people andpreserveits rule.

Yet this is a strategic mistake. The Iranian people,with their glorious uprising in November and sacrificing over 1500 martyrs, their general boycottof the regimes sham parliamentary elections and with the MEKs ResistanceUnits as theiravant-gardes,will not succumb to thegrief of this tragedy, as heartbreaking it is, andthey willrise up. In a nutshell, the restive Iranian society which is scorching because of the regimes fourdecades of injustice, imposing poverty, corruption, and oppression awaitsa spark to explode.

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Iran Regime Sending People Back to Work Amid Coronavirus Will Result in Humanitarian Catastrophe - NCRI - National Council of Resistance of Iran...

Remembering the Largest-Ever Peaceful Protest in China – NTD

The largest-ever peaceful protest in Chinese history was held 21 years ago to put forward a simple request: to be able to freely practice meditation and live by the three principles of truthfulness, compassion, and tolerance.

Thousands of people gathered on [April 25,] 1999, to protest the detention and harassment of Falun Gong practitioners, says Peter Kent, a Conservative MP and co-chair of the Parliamentary Friends of Falun Gong.

The gathering of over 10,000 adherents of Falun Gong, also known asFalun Dafa, was held near the headquarters of the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) in Beijing.

A few days before the gathering, over a dozen Falun Gong adherents were detained in the city of Tianjin after they requested a correction be run in a state-run magazine slandering their practice. The government had also banned publication of the practices teachings.

They just wanted to let the government know that Falun Dafa practitioners are good people, and to call on the government to allow them to follow their practice free from harassment, says Xun Li, president of the Falun Dafa Association of Canada. Li says the peaceful meditation discipline consists of five gentle exercises and the three moral principles.

The initial response from the authorities on the day of the protest was positive, Kent says. After then-premier Zhu Rongji came out to meet with representatives of the petitioners and listened to their concerns, everyone went home.

But then only a few months later in July, [then-Chinese leader] Jiang Zemins regime started a brutal crackdown, and the persecution has continued ever since, Kent says.

Kent has been going to events marking the anniversary of the peaceful protest consistently. This year, due to social distancing rules amidst the COVID-19 pandemic, he marked the event remotely.

Its important that we mark this anniversary, even though the world is preoccupied with the COVID-19 pandemic, he said.

Its important that we remember that many of the elements that have made this pandemic so serious, tragically deadly, are a result of the same repressive, cruel, deadly, brutal policies of the regime in Beijing.

As reported previously by The Epoch Times, the Chinese regimehid the factsabout the outbreak of the CCP virus, commonly known as the coronavirus, and warned medical professionals to refrain from spreading information on the virus, even reprimanding one doctor for having done so. According to a study by the University of Southampton, earlier detection and action on containing the outbreak could have reduced cases by as much as 95 percent.

We know how cruelly desperate the communist regime can be, Kent says, citing as examples the Tiananmen Square massacre and the persecution campaign against Falun Gong adherents, which includes live organ harvesting from Falun Gong prisoners of conscience.

There may indeed be an accounting for China for the communist government if the democracies of the world stand together in the same way they did in the cold war against the Soviet Union.

Judy Sgro, a Liberal MP and fellow co-chair of the Parliamentary Friends of Falun Gong, also marked the anniversary of the historic gathering remotely.

This is an event that many of us on the [Parliament] Hill have attended for many years in recognition of the persecution of Falun Gong, Sgro said.

Liberal MP Judy Sgro addresses the crowd celebrating Falun Dafa Day on Parliament Hill in Ottawa on May 9, 2018. (Jonathon Ren/The Epoch Times)

Conservative MP Garnett Genuis, his partys shadow minister for Canada-China relations, says the Conservatives continue to be deeply concerned about the persecution of Falun Gong practitioners in China.

Conservative MP Garnett Genuis speaks at a celebration on Parliament Hill marking the 25th anniversary of Falun Gong, on May 9, 2017. (Evan Ning/Epoch Times)Conservative MP Garnett Genuis speaks at a celebration on Parliament Hill marking the 25th anniversary of Falun Gong, on May 9, 2017. (Evan Ning/Epoch Times)

Genuis has proposed legislation in consecutive parliaments related to the issue of transplant abuse. Although the legislation doesnt directly name China, Genuis has said it can be used for a case such as Chinas state-sanctioned forced organ harvesting from Falun Gong prisoners of conscience. This includes banning the entry of individuals responsible for transplant abuse into Canada, and preventing Canadians from receiving organs in countries that have questionable sources of organs.

We will continue to stand up for Falun Gong practitioners every step of the way, he said. All of our engagement with the Chinese government needs to keep human rights top of mind.

Conservative MP James Bezan championed Canada having its own version of a Magnitsky Act for a long time. His efforts finally came to fruition in late 2017 when Parliament passed theJustice for Victims of Corrupt Foreign Officials Act into law. The legislation imposes sanctions on individuals who perpetrate human rights violations in other countries, such as banning their entry into Canada or engaging in financial transactions with Canadians.

Conservative MP James Bezan speaks at an event celebrating Falun Dafa Day on Parliament Hill on May 8, 2019. (Jonathan Ren/The Epoch Times)Conservative MP James Bezan speaks at an event celebrating Falun Dafa Day on Parliament Hill on May 8, 2019. (Jonathan Ren/The Epoch Times)

Now, he says, this legislation should be used to hold those who persecute Falun Gong adherents to account.

We stand in solidarity with [Falun Gong adherents] that are still in China, Bezan says.

For those who have been able to escape the communist regime in Beijing [but] have family and friends and loved ones back in mainland China, we stand with [them] as well and we will stand in the battle against oppression.

From The Epoch Times

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Remembering the Largest-Ever Peaceful Protest in China - NTD

Today’s COVID-19 Data Will be Tomorrow’s Tools of Oppression – The Daily Beast

Getting on top of COVID-19 is a stress test for governments globally. One of their key strategies for containing the virus is tracking cases. On a national and global scale, that is impossible, unless you have a lot of health data.

Luckily for public health officials, theres no shortage of health surveillance in the U.S. In the spirit of flattening the curve, privacy watchdogs and surveillance skeptics increasingly are debating if heightened tracking might be an appropriate approach to safeguarding public health under the exceptional circumstances the COVID-19 pandemic has created.

But even at a time when the benefits of these public health tools is clear, their privacy impact are uncertain and pose long-term risks to American citizens. For example, we simply cannot fathom how the information we collect to combat todays emergency will be repurposed tomorrow.

Everything becomes health data

In order to expand government and corporate surveillance in the name of public health, we are enlarging what counts as health data. It was an ambiguous term before coronavirus became a household name, but now the Centers for Disease Control (CDC) iscontact tracingtravelers movements with the help ofairline passenger manifests. Social media check-ins where users post their location to Facebook and other platforms, now are a tool for monitoring transmission sites. Suddenly, what movies you watch, where you travel, how you commute to work, and where you eat go from being consumer data into a metric of your COVID-19 exposure. This may, ultimately, inform whether we can work in the office, attend school, access mass transit or, indeed, see a doctor.

There are certainly cases in which this method has proved helpful. After the deadly spread ofsevere acute respiratory syndrome (SARS) in 2002, Taiwan implemented travel monitoring systems that proved helpful in combatting COVID-19. Usingcustoms, immigration, and other travel records, officials were able to quickly identify individuals who had come into contact with the virus, conducting rapid testing and quarantine measures. Unlike in the U.S., this health surveillance has informed strict policies, ranging from total lock-downs to the rapid deployment of tests and other government-funded public health interventions. This type of evidence-based policy making is currently absent on American shores.

COVID-19 data can be re-used for oppression

In the U.S., COVID-19 has us rapidly developing new and invasive data collection practices that go far beyond what is needed to protect public health in the long-term. This weekend, for instance, the Wall Street Journal reported a previously undisclosed partnership by federal, state, and local agencies to monitor social distancing in over 500 cities using cellphone location data. This endangers democratic systems in the process. It should come as no surprise that the very same data that helps public health authorities to carry out contact tracing in the context of COVID-19 can easily be repurposed to monitor political movements, religious minorities, and other historically marginalized communities.

There are few restrictions on how much of the data being collected by the CDC. Private health-monitoring firms can be used by federal law enforcement, local police, or even ICE. Many of these records are subject to the third-party doctrine, the long-standing Supreme Court doctrine that holds that information provided to a commercial third party (e.g., a bank, a credit card company, etc.) often can be obtained without a warrant.

Some types of location tracking, such as the prolonged use of cellphone tower data, have recently been held to require a warrant, but nearly identical forms of tracking (such as automated license plate readers, GPS-based cell phone applications, and facial recognition), have yet to be addressed by the high court.

Bad laws stick, good laws are needed

In the U.S. there currently is nearly no legal guidance on how tracking and surveillance data should be treated in the public health context. History shows us that the American people are unlikely to get a nuanced response to that situation and face the danger of seeing a new law hastily passed that gives a free hand to the government, ignoring the risks to historically over-surveilled communities.

Notably, COVID-19 tracking sees these risks now crossing class lines: as of last week, New Yorkers who can afford to flee the city must pass traffic check points and enter mandatory quarantines. And while the outcry now is significant, it should have been from the get-go. Even though it remains to be seen how all Big Apple refugees will be monitored, we have to understand that we all face the risk that surveillance will turn state borders into 21st-century Iron Curtains, raising constitutional conundrums that would have been unthinkable just days ago.

For proof of the danger, one need only look at the aftermath of September 11th. When Congress enacted the USA PATRIOT Act, just a few weeks after the deadly attacks, the fear of terrorism blinded lawmakers to the threat of broad-based, suspicionless surveillance.Decades later, those same provisions, many ofwhich were supposed to sunset in 2005, were still being renewed as recently asthis week. If we pass hastily drafted measures to address the privacy impact of COVID-19 surveillance, there is no reason to think their impact would fade any sooner.

We need laws that protect citizens from the new privacy risks posed by COVID-19-induced data exploitation. This is even more crucial when we're including profit-motivated entities. Days ago, President Trump announced a larger private sector partnership as part of the White Houses COVID-19 response that included large-scale collaborations with Google, Walmart, CVS, Walgreens and others. New legal frameworks need to impose clear limits on how health data from the COVID-19 response can be exploited for other business lines.

To protect our democratic institutions inand aftertimes of crisis and trauma, we need these frameworks fast, but we also need them to be resilient. We have all the information, tools and experts we need. We should get to work now.

Originally posted here:

Today's COVID-19 Data Will be Tomorrow's Tools of Oppression - The Daily Beast

‘It’s a place where they try to destroy you’: why concentration camps are still with us – The Guardian

At the start of the 21st century, the following things did not exist. In the US, a large network of purpose-built immigration prisons, some of which are run for profit. In western China, political education camps designed to hold hundreds of thousands of people, supported by a high-tech surveillance system. In Syria, a prison complex dedicated to the torture and mass execution of civilians. In north-east India, a detention centre capable of holding 3,000 people who may have lived in the country for decades but are unable to prove they are citizens. In Myanmar, rural encampments where thousands of people are being forced to live on the basis of their ethnicity. On small islands and in deserts at the edges of wealthy regions Greeces Aegean islands, the Negev Desert in Israel, the Pacific Ocean near Australia, the southern Mediterranean coastline various types of large holding centres for would-be migrants.

The scale and purpose of these places vary considerably, as do the political regimes that have created them, but they share certain things in common. Most were established as temporary or emergency measures, but have outgrown their original stated purpose and become seemingly permanent. Most exist thanks to a mix of legal ambiguity detention centres operating outside the regular prison system, for instance and physical isolation. And most, if not all, have at times been described by their critics as concentration camps.

We tend to associate the idea of concentration camps with their most extreme instances the Nazi Holocaust, and the Soviet Gulag system; genocide in Cambodia and Bosnia. But the disturbing truth is that concentration camps have been widespread throughout recent history, used to intern civilians that a state considers hostile, to control the movement of people in transit and to extract forced labour. The author Andrea Pitzer, in One Long Night, her recent history of concentration camps, estimates that at least one such camp has existed somewhere on Earth throughout the past 100 years.

The definition of a concentration camp is sometimes fuzzy, but at root, such camps represent a combination of physical and legal power. They are a way for modern states to segregate groups of civilians by placing them in a closed or isolated location via special rules that are distinct from a countrys main system of rights and punishments. Many have been set up under military jurisdiction by the British during the Boer war, for instance while others, such as the Soviet gulags, have been used in peacetime to deal with social undesirables.

Cruelty and the abuse of power have existed throughout human history, but concentration camps have not. They are little more than a century old. The earliest began as wartime measures, but on numerous occasions since then they have become lasting features. They are a product of technologically advanced societies with sophisticated legal and political systems and have been made possible by a range of modern inventions. Military technologies such as automatic weapons or barbed wire made it easier for small groups of officials to hold much larger groups of people captive. Advanced bureaucracy and surveillance techniques enabled states to watch, count and categorise civilians in ways they couldnt have done in earlier eras. As Pitzer writes, such camps belong in the company of the atomic bomb as one of the few advanced innovations in violence.

This innovation haunts the political imagination of liberal democracies. The concentration camp is a symbol of everything such societies are supposed to stand against: the arbitrary use of power and the stripping of peoples rights, the systematic removal of liberty; dehumanisation, abuse, torture, murder and genocide. When it is used to refer to contemporary places, the term concentration camp is often reserved for the locations of the most serious human rights abuses, as when Amnesty International used it in a 2017 report estimating that 13,000 people had been murdered by Syrias Assad regime in the Saydnaya military prison outside Damascus. But politicians, Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez among them, have also used the term to describe camps such as the ones the Trump administration has been running on the US border with Mexico.

To some, these comparisons minimise the use of concentration camps by Nazi Germany in its effort to exterminate Jews. For others, the comparisons are a necessary warning, not least because one kind of camp can easily transform into another. Pitzer gives the example of a refugee camp: if people are not allowed to leave, and are systematically denied their rights, then it starts to resemble more sinister creations. As authoritarians and rightwing populists reach positions of power in various parts of the world, liberals are voicing fears that history is repeating itself.

Surveying what he called a century of camps in the mid-90s, the sociologist Zygmunt Bauman warned that the temptation for governments to use them would always be strong when certain humans are declared redundant or forced into a superfluous condition. There is no shortage of threats in the current century from environmental catastrophe to the unfolding coronavirus pandemic that are creating such conditions. The question is how to ensure that the concentration camp is not the states inevitable response.

It is tempting to regard the concentration camp as an anomaly, but for some observers, such camps are a grim reflection of the way modern states work. After the second world war, as knowledge of the Holocaust became widespread, leading theorists sought to offer explanations for the genocide that had taken place, and the methods used to carry it out. Writing in 1950, the Martiniquan poet and politician Aim Csaire argued that the Holocaust applied to Europe colonialist procedures that until then had been reserved exclusively for people of colour.

Concentration camps were indeed colonial in origin. Their earliest uses came at the turn of the 20th century by the Spanish in 1896 to put down a rebellion in Cuba, by the US in 1899 to do similar in the Philippines, and by the British empire in southern Africa during the Boer war of 1899-1902. The first use of concentration camps for a deliberate policy of extermination was not in Europe but in German South West Africa modern-day Namibia between 1904 and 1907. (Germany only recently officially acknowledged its treatment of the Herero and Nama tribes as genocide.)

For Csaire, the appearance of camps in Europe itself was a direct result of the way in which Europeans had attempted to dehumanise their colonial subjects in order to exploit them, but ended up dehumanising themselves. Colonisation, he wrote, works to decivilise the coloniser, to brutalise him in the true sense of the word, to degrade him, to awaken him to buried instincts, to covetousness, violence, race hatred and moral relativism.

The German-Jewish political theorist Hannah Arendt also turned her attention to camps after the war. Like Csaire, Arendt drew links between the behaviour of European powers in their colonies and their conduct at home, but she also highlighted how some of the tools wielded by authoritarians had been put in place by democracies before the rise of fascism. In her 1951 book The Origins of Totalitarianism, Arendt pointed out that when France was occupied by Nazi Germany, for instance, the Gestapo was able to make use of draconian police powers already in existence to round up and detain civilians. These existed because France, like many other states in Europe, had been unable to deal with the mass displacement of people in the aftermath of the first world war and had instituted harsh measures to deal with unwanted migrants.

In 1940, Arendt had her own direct experience of this relatively novel form of containment. After fleeing Germany for France, she was placed in an internment camp at Gurs, near the Pyrenees. The camp had been established a few years earlier to detain republican refugees from the Spanish civil war; it was repurposed in 1939 for enemy aliens a practice instigated by the British in the first world war and subsequently copied by many countries. The inmates had to endure overcrowding, disease and insufficient food rations, and were made to live together regardless of the fact that some were Nazi party members and others, like Arendt, were Jewish refugees. It was partly the memory of this that led Arendt to place internment on a continuum with the Soviet gulags and the Nazi death camps as she saw it, the Hades, Purgatory and Hell of state violence.

That the British, Americans, Spanish, French and Germans, among other nations, had all used concentration camps led some thinkers to ask whether such camps were inevitable features of the modern state. Perhaps the most provocative answer comes from the Italian philosopher Giorgio Agamben, whose ideas have grown in prominence in the past two decades. For Agamben, the existence of the concentration camp reveals something fundamental about power who holds it, and what gives them the authority to wield it. His work is dense, ranging across ancient Greek and Roman law, Biblical texts and Renaissance literature, but it has been influential on a generation of scholars and activists in the past two decades particularly among those who wanted to understand the camp established by the US at Guantnamo Bay, under an emergency policy after 9/11, or the growing phenomenon of immigration detention at the borders of the rich world.

Sovereignty, as Agamben sees it, is founded on absolute power over human life, and has been since ancient times. The sovereign has the power not only to kill, but to strip people of rights through forms of banishment, reducing them to a state of what he calls bare life. In the past, sovereignty would have been concentrated in the figure of the monarch; modern states are supposed to have improved upon monarchy by restraining the arbitrary use of power through democratic checks and balances. But, according to Agamben, the tendency to banish and dehumanise keeps on coming back in the form of the concentration camp: a space where people are outside the law, yet more subject to its power than anywhere else.

For Agamben, this reveals the basis on which power is exercised by modern states. In his words, the concentration camp is the nomos or fundamental principle of modern societies, the hidden matrix of politics in our age. While they may only sometimes use it, governments retain the power to declare emergency measures a state of exception in Agambens words to strip us of rights, and confine us to spaces in which we live a kind of exile. The camps logic, he implies, pervades seemingly free societies through modern state techniques of surveillance, bureaucracy, violence and other forms of coercion.

Grand theories such as those of Csaire, Arendt and Agamben are valuable, but risky. By seeking to identify common patterns across specific societies, at different moments in history, they warn that all modern states have the potential to set up concentration camps. Misconstrued, however, they can end up obscuring crucial differences such as the distinction between camps used in a deliberate policy of extermination, and those where people die through neglect. Holocaust deniers, for instance, or people who seek to downplay the severity of colonial massacres, often try to muddy these distinctions.

When theory becomes dogma, it can also limit our understanding of the present. Agambens own recent trajectory offers a cautionary tale: in late February 2020, he published a short essay in the leftwing Italian newspaper Il Manifesto criticising his governments draconian restrictions on public freedoms aimed at halting the spread of the coronavirus. The piece referred to the invention of an epidemic, and went further than merely questioning the long-term impact of these restrictions; it condemned them as frenetic, irrational, and entirely unfounded, arguing the virus was not too different from the normal flu. The piece has been widely criticised, and provoked a retort from the French philosopher Jean-Luc Nancy that had he listened to Agambens advice not to have a heart operation 30 years ago, he would now be dead.

Agamben is hardly the only person to have underestimated the threat posed by the coronavirus in recent months. As more governments pass emergency laws to deal with the pandemic, in some cases including draconian surveillance measures and the establishment of segregated quarantine camps, it is right to ask where these might lead, and whether states will be willing to give up their new powers once the immediate danger to public health has passed. But that shouldnt obscure the fact that some emergencies are real: in these situations, the most important question is whether societies can respond to them without permanently destroying peoples rights.

Concentration camps are uniquely dangerous spaces. Their effects may vary considerably, from the horror of Auschwitz to the more mundane misery that Arendt experienced in Gurs, but the people caught up in them almost always end up being treated as less than human. And if the political and technological innovations of the late 19th century made them possible, does the 21st century make them any more likely?

In 2014, the Chinese government launched an initiative it called the Strike Hard Campaign Against Violent Terrorism, focused on the province of Xinjiang, in the countrys far west. In the English-speaking world, details of the programme remained scarce until 2017, when reports started to filter through that thousands of people from Xinjiangs ethnic Uighur population, most of whom are Muslims, were being detained. The following year, researchers who trawled through Chinese government procurement documents and satellite imagery pointed to the existence of a vast, newly constructed complex of internment camps, which they estimated had the capacity to hold anywhere between several hundred thousand and 1.5 million people. Former inmates have given testimony to journalists and researchers that they were forced into education programmes, made to eat pork and drink alcohol, and given compulsory sterilisation and abortions.

This is just one example of how globalisation and technology have added a new dimension to an old problem. China has a long history of running camps the political re-education programme launched by Mao in the 50s was one of the worlds most extensive gulag networks. But the latest crackdown has new features. First, the Xinjiang camps are backed up by state-of-the-art digital surveillance methods provided by leaders in the global tech industry: a computerised CCTV network developed by a state-run defence manufacturer, designed to apply the ideas of military cybersystems to civilian public security, which tracks individuals and analyses their behaviour to anticipate potential crime; a tracking app that visitors to Xinjiang are obliged to install on their smartphones; DNA analysis equipment partly supplied by US biotech firms. Second, China has justified its crackdown to the rest of the world by adopting the same rhetoric that the US and its allies used after 9/11. In 2014, the Communist party launched its so-called peoples war on terror in Xinjiang. Chinas methods may be extreme, but it is by no means the first country to have introduced policies that subject Muslims to collective suspicion and punishment, in response to violent Islamic fundamentalist groups.

What else could tempt states to open camps? In her 2014 book Expulsions, the sociologist Saskia Sassen argues that the particular form of globalisation the world has experienced in recent decades driven by a new form of laissez-faire economics has unleashed a dangerous new dynamic that excludes large numbers of people from economic and social life. The global shift to privatisations, deregulation and open borders for some has brutally punished the vulnerable and accelerated environmental destruction.

In richer countries, Sassen argues, this leads to low-income workers being forced out of established welfare and healthcare programmes into more punitive systems (such as the UKs universal credit scheme), the impoverishment of sections of the middle class through austerity policies, and more and more people being locked up in prison. In poorer parts of the world, this means mass displacement and the warehousing of migrants as they try to move elsewhere.

One result of these global pressures has been the rise of political movements that promise to shore up national, religious or ethnic identities. But identities are ambiguous, and when governments start using the tools of state power to reinforce the line between insider and outsider, there are always large numbers of people who get caught in between. In India, the government of Narendra Modi has been trying to reshape the country along Hindu nationalist lines, undermining the secular and pluralist principles that have held sway since independence. The emerging camps in Assam, a north-eastern state on the border with Bangladesh, are a result: they target thousands of mainly Muslim residents who may have lived in India for decades, but because they originally came from across the border in Bangladesh a legacy of partition have never been registered as citizens.

The understandable response when confronted with injustice is to look for someone to blame. Its easier to do so when oppression is perpetrated by villainous leaders, or in other peoples societies. But particularly in liberal democracies, the chains of responsibility can be complex. Who, for instance, is responsible for the arbitrary imprisonment, torture and slave-labour conditions that migrants and refugees in Libya are subjected to? The immediate answer seems fairly simple: the state officials and local militias, some linked to trafficking networks, who run the detention centres. Thousands of people, mainly from sub-Saharan Africa, are imprisoned in a network of these centres where they are regularly subjected to starvation, disease, torture, rape, and forced labour.

But the reason those detention centres exist is because a range of European governments have been trying to get Libya to act as a block on unwanted migration across the Mediterranean for almost 20 years. The system was built with European support, both from national governments and at EU level first through agreements with the government of Muammar Gaddafi, then, as the country collapsed after he was overthrown by a Nato-backed uprising, a patchwork of arrangements with state officials and local militias.

There is no shortage of information about what happens in Libyan detention centres and European governments frequently profess their horror at the atrocities committed there. Yet the system persists, because those governments broadly agree that the goal of limiting migration is more important than dismantling Libyas detention system. The political consensus in most European countries, including the UK, is that limiting unwanted migration is a reasonable and desirable aim, and large numbers of their citizens have voted in support of it.

When Zygmunt Bauman turned his attention to camps in the 90s, he argued that what characterises violence in our age is distance not just the physical or geographical distance that technology allows, but the social and psychological distance produced by complex systems in which it seems everybody and nobody is complicit. This, for Bauman, works on three levels. First, actions are carried out by a long chain of performers, in which people are both givers and takers of orders. Second, everybody involved has a specific, focused job to perform. And third, the people affected hardly ever appear fully human to those within the system. Modernity did not make people more cruel, Bauman wrote, it only invented a way in which cruel things could be done by non-cruel people.

When something today is described as a concentration camp, it almost always provokes an angry dispute. If camps arent being used to exterminate people, as they have been in their worst instances, then the comparison is frequently condemned as inappropriate. But condemnation can be a way for governments to shield themselves from criticism of their decisions, and from criticism of the legitimacy of state power itself.

In 2018, Donald Trumps government responded to a rise in the number of undocumented migrants many of whom were asylum-seekers fleeing violence in Central America crossing the US-Mexico border by drastically increasing the use of long-term immigration detention. Reports of overcrowding, filthy conditions and the denial of due process for asylum claims soon followed, accompanied by measures that seemed intended to make a symbolic display of cruelty, such as the separation of young children from their parents. In June 2019, amid the outcry from opponents of this policy, congresswoman Ocasio-Cortez recorded a video for her Instagram followers: The US is running concentration camps on our southern border, she stated, and that is exactly what they are I want to talk to the people that are concerned enough with humanity to say that never again means something.

This was a political intervention intended to shock people into challenging the Trump governments immigration policy and in the row that ensued, some commentators objected that Ocasio-Cortezs reference to concentration camps and her use of the phrase never again was an inappropriate Holocaust analogy. As the historian Deborah Lipstadt commented, something can be horrible and not be like the Holocaust.

But much of the response from Ocasio-Cortezs Republican opponents was to downplay the extent of abuses happening as a result of Trumps policies, or to portray what was happening as normal and routine. Some pointed out, for instance, that Trump was only making modifications to a system built by his predecessors: deportations of undocumented immigrants, for instance, reached their peak under Barack Obama. These sorts of equivocations have accompanied the use of camps from their inception, and they always try to give the same impression: that whats being done is normal and legitimate, that criticisms are overblown, marginal and extreme; and that states have the right to behave this way.

The story of Britains concentration camps during the Boer war illustrates how a society that thinks of itself as liberal can make excuses for a mass crime. In 1899, when the British empire went to war against two breakaway Afrikaner republics in South Africa, it set up a network of camps that quickly expanded to detain several hundred thousand people. At first the camps were justified as protection for Boer civilians who had signed an oath of loyalty; later, they were used to imprison Boer undesirables who had not signed the oath, as well as black South Africans who the British forced off their land to make them act as lookouts for troops. Due to poor sanitation, meagre food rations and overcrowding, diseases such as typhoid and measles frequently ripped through the camps; at least 28,000 white people and 20,000 black people were killed by this system in just a few years.

The two most prominent critics of Britains camps the feminist campaigners Emily Hobhouse and Millicent Fawcett both had to struggle against political and public opinion that initially saw the camps as a wartime necessity, and both fought hard to alleviate suffering. But the grounds on which they did so were radically different, as the author Vron Ware has recently argued. Fawcett, who visited South Africa with the governments approval to produce a report on the camps, saw her concern for the welfare of vulnerable civilians as compatible with the wider aims of the camps. Saving the children, for her, was as true a service to the country as that which men were rendering by going into the armies to serve in the field. But for Hobhouse, who was the first prominent activist to visit South Africa and expose conditions in the camps, British military values and the nationalism that underpinned them were the fundamental problem. She was challenging the legitimacy of state power itself.

Hobhouse, who in her day was derided in sexist terms as a mad old lady, is now largely forgotten, while it is safe to say that Britains concentration camps are not well remembered: last year the Conservative politician Jacob Rees-Mogg defended their use on an episode of Question Time, erroneously claiming that their mortality rate was only the same as that of Glasgows at the time. But without Hobhouses radical critique, it would have been harder to oppose the harm done by Britains camps a century ago, and would be harder to understand why camps still appear in the world today.

The point of historical comparisons should not be to find identical situations no two events in history are identical but to alert us to potential dangers in the way states exercise power. Not everyone, for instance, reacted with outrage to Ocasio-Cortezs comments last year. While she drew criticism from some Jewish organisations, including a rebuke from the Yad Vashem Holocaust memorial in Jerusalem, the row also energised a US protest movement against Trumps immigration policy led by leftwing Jewish activists. The movement calls itself Never Again Action, explicitly drawing on a collective memory of persecution.

In his final book, The Drowned and the Saved, the Auschwitz survivor and author Primo Levi reflected on the conditions that had made the Nazi camps possible, and wondered what lessons, if any, could be applied to a world that had moved on. The unique combination of factors that had unleashed the horror of Nazism was unlikely to return, he thought, but that should not obscure the danger of violence in our own time, or the politicians who seek to wield it. Violence, he wrote, is there before our eyes it only awaits its new buffoon (there is no dearth of candidates) to organise it, legalise it, declare it necessary and mandatory and so contaminate the world.

If the state as we know it is here to stay, then what can people do when governments start building camps? The history of the concentration camp has also been a history of peoples resistance to camps, from both inside and out. Even in the most seemingly hopeless situations there are stories of people who have fought back against their treatment. The uprisings in the Nazi death camps of Sobibor and Treblinka are among the most famous; and the Soviet Gulag system was beset by strikes and revolts. On their own, these may not have been enough, but camps work by enforcing a rigid distinction between people on opposite sides of the barbed-wire fence. Those inside are kept silent and invisible, while those outside are encouraged to ignore or accept what is happening. Successful resistance aims at breaking down this distinction: governments know this, and even states that operate relatively mild forms of mass detention make significant efforts to obscure the conditions inside, and to deter their own citizens from prying too closely.

One evening in February this year, I watched the Kurdish author Behrouz Boochani give a talk by video link to an audience at Birkbeck, University of London. Boochani, who currently lives in New Zealand, spent four years in Australias regional offshore processing centre for asylum-seekers on Manus Island, Papua New Guinea. Australia has pioneered a type of long-term detention for unwanted migrants that is now becoming more common elsewhere in the world. Boochani and his fellow detainees were not merely being held for processing, but in harsh conditions intended to act as a deterrent to future travellers. The Australian government forbade journalists to report on the full extent of these conditions, which included the beating and abuse of detainees, and introduced a law threatening doctors and social workers with up to two years in prison if they spoke in public about what they had witnessed.

Boochani, however, smuggled out accounts of life in detention, via text messages sent to his translator by WhatsApp, that were turned into articles for the Guardian and other outlets as well as a memoir, No Friend But the Mountains. Boochani explained to us how he saw his detention as part of Australias and Britains longer history of treating non-white people as disposable. Its worse than a prison, he said of the Manus camp. Its a place where they take your identity and freedom from you, and try to destroy you. Detainees were given numbers, he said, which the guards used instead of their names; his was MEG45.

The camp on Manus Island was eventually shut down by the Australian government, after widespread public criticism, although its broader asylum policies remain largely the same. For Boochani, writing was not simply a way to expose his conditions and link up with campaigners against detention on the outside, but to challenge the very basis on which the treatment of people like him was justified. I never use the language and the words that the [Australian] government use, he said. I say systematic torture, I say political prisoner. One of the things that gave him hope in confinement, he said, was the fact that animals could wander in and out of the spaces where human freedom was limited a reminder that the structure which held him was built by people, and could therefore also be dismantled. Nature, he said, always tried to reimpose itself on the prison.

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'It's a place where they try to destroy you': why concentration camps are still with us - The Guardian

Palestinians all too familiar with oppression of lockdowns – The Arab Daily News

If you think the coronavirus pandemic is the worst thing you have experienced, you havent experienced the Israeli occupation of Palestine, which has been far more brutal and lethal than any virus could ever be.

I was in occupied Palestine during the First Intifada, writing on the resilience and strength of the Palestinian people in the face of Israeli military oppression. My family lives in East Jerusalem, Bethlehem, Nazareth, Beit Jala, Beit Hanina and Beit Sahour. I know what they are forced to experience every day by Israels oppressive government.

For many, the words and phrases most associated with the coronavirus outbreak lockdown, stay at home, and shelter in place may be new, but they arent to the Palestinians. They have lived with curfews, lockdowns and severe restrictions, and often been unable to buy groceries, get medical attention or even visit relatives for more than 70 years. They know what it is like to go without food, without schooling, without celebrations or events.

Israel has adopted more than 65 laws that discriminate against the Palestinian people simply because they are Christian and Muslim, rather than Jewish. One of the first grants immediate citizenship to any Jew from any country around the world and of any nationality or origin, but denies that same privilege to the Palestinians, who have been living on that land since time immemorial.

My family name, Hanania, is a Hebrew Word not Israeli, by the way. It means God has been gracious. My family, we believe, originated from the Hebrews and converted to Christianity in the first century, while even some converted to Islam in the seventh century. We have Christian, Muslim and Jewish relatives, so our history and rights are clear to everyone, except the Israelis. As heavily armed Israeli soldiers wandered through Palestinian cities and villages, we hunkered down eating mujaddara, the rice and lentil dish that became the symbol of Palestinian resistance to Israels brutality.

As I watch Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu urge unity with his political rivals, I wonder where that has been in the countrys dealings with the Palestinians.

There have been so many Palestinian deaths over the years that the world has become desensitized to them

Ray Hanania

So far, there have been more than 420,000 cases of the coronavirus worldwide, and there have been about 19,000 deaths. But those numbers continue to change so, by the time you read this, they will be less than what is reality. And yet the Palestinians have seen even worse statistics that continue to increase daily. The deaths have been staggering over the years. Tens of thousands died during the war of 1947-49. More than 20,000 were killed during the Israeli assault on Palestinian refugee camps in Lebanon, including the civilians massacred under Ariel Sharons terrorist direction in Sabra and Shatila. Another 2,000 Palestinians were killed during the First Intifada, during which I secretly walked the streets at night with my cousins, collecting rubber bullets that were in reality lethal metal balls covered in a thin plastic coating. More than 2,300 were killed during Israels invasion of Gaza in 2014.

There have been so many Palestinian deaths over the years that the world has become desensitized to them. Palestinian deaths are little more than numbers in a news report, usually presented in such a way as to defend Israels extremist government. But those deaths are dwarfed by the injuries to hundreds of thousands of Palestinians, maybe even millions.

This week, Israels government and the Palestinian Authority it controls issued orders to lock down citizens, block immigration and travel, and close all cultural and educational activities and events to help stop the spread of the coronavirus. But, when it is over, life will return to normal for the Israelis and Palestinians. The Israelis will be free to live a fantasy life of happiness, blocking the trauma they cause from their eyesight with an 8-meter-high concrete wall. The Palestinians will return to being oppressed, brutally beaten, and arrested by Israeli soldiers and the Shin Bet. They will continue to scramble for food, any work, and see power outages, restrictions on their movement, and punishments that range from beatings to killings for actions involving protest and militancy, which Israel labels as terrorism.

Pandemics are not as bad as occupation. If you want to know how to survive this coronavirus pandemic, take a look at how the Palestinians have managed to survive Israeli brutality. And why not take a minute to eat a plate of mujaddara with your family to show some solidarity.

What Palestinians have been forced to go through over the years under Israels oppression is no different than what the world is now going through as a result of the coronavirus. Although the truth is that Israels oppression has been far worse and there still is no antidote for that virus.

Ray Hanania is an award-winning former Chicago City Hall political reporter and columnist. He can be reached on his personal website at http://www.Hanania.com. Twitter: @RayHanania

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Ray Hanania is an award winning political and humor columnist who analyzes American and Middle East politics, and life in general. He is an author of several books.

Hanania covered Chicago Politics and Chicago City Hall from 1976 through 1992. He began writing in 1975 publishing The Middle Eastern Voice newspaper in Chicago (1975-1977). He later published The National Arab American Times newspaper (2004-2007).

Hanania writes weekly columns on Middle East and American Arab issues as Special US Correspondent for the Arab News ArabNews.com, at TheArabDailyNews.com, and at SuburbanChicagoland.com. He has published weekly columns in the Jerusalem Post newspaper, YNetNews.com, Newsday, the Orlando Sentinel, Houston Chronical, and Arlington Heights Daily Herald.

Hanania is the recipient of four (4) Chicago Headline Club Peter Lisagor Awards for Column writing. In November 2006, he was named Best Ethnic American Columnist by the New American Media. In 2009, Hanania received the prestigious Sigma Delta Chi Award for Writing from the Society of Professional Journalists. He is the recipient of the MT Mehdi Courage in Journalism Award. He was honored for his writing skills with two (2) Chicago Stick-o-Type awards from the Chicago Newspaper Guild. In 1990, Hanania was nominated by the Chicago Sun-Times editors for a Pulitzer Prize for his four-part series on the Palestinian Intifada.

His writings have also been honored by two national Awards from ADC for his writing, and from the National Arab American Journalists Association.

Click here to send Ray Hanania email.

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Palestinians all too familiar with oppression of lockdowns - The Arab Daily News

Paul Theroux Recalls a Fear-Filled Lockdown – The New York Times

In this season of infection, the stock market little more than a twitching corpse, in an atmosphere of alarm and despondency, I am reminded of the enlightenments of the strict curfew Uganda endured in 1966. It was, for all its miseries, an episode of life lessons, as well as monotonous moralizing (because most crises enliven bores and provoke sententiousness). I would not have missed it for anything.

That curfew evoked like today the world turned upside-down. This peculiarity that we are now experiencing, the nearest thing to a world war, is the key theme in many of Shakespeares plays and Jacobean dramas, of old ballads, apocalyptic paintings and morality tales. It is the essence of tragedy and an occasion for license or retribution. As Hamlet says to his fathers ghost, Time is out of joint.

In Uganda, the palace of the king of Buganda, the Kabaka, Mutesa II also known as King Freddie had been attacked by government troops on the orders of the prime minister, Milton Obote. From my office window at Makerere University, where I was a lecturer in English in the Extra Mural department, I heard the volleys of heavy artillery, and saw smoke rising from the royal enclosure on Mengo Hill. The assault, led by Gen. Idi Amin, resulted in many deaths. But the king eluded capture; he escaped the country in disguise and fled to Britain. The period that followed was one of oppression and confusion, marked by the enforced isolation of a dusk-to-dawn curfew. But, given the disorder and uncertainty, most people seldom dared to leave home at all.

The curfew was a period of fear, bad advice, arbitrary searches, intimidation and the nastiness common in most civil unrest, people taking advantage of chaos to settle scores. Uganda had a sizable Indian population, and Indian people were casually mugged, their shops ransacked and other minorities victimized or sidelined. It was also an interlude of hoarding, and of drunkenness, lawlessness and licentiousness, born of boredom and anarchy.

Kifugo! I heard again and again of the curfew a Swahili word, because it was the lingua franca there. Imprisonment! Yes, it was enforced confinement, but I also felt privileged to be a witness: I had never seen anything like it. I experienced the stages of the coup, the suspension of the constitution, the panic buying and the effects of the emergency. My clearest memory is of the retailing of rumors outrageous, frightening, seemingly improbable but who could dispute them? Our saying then was, Dont believe anything you hear until the government officially denies it.

Speaking for myself, as a traveler, any great crisis war, famine, natural disaster or outrage ought to be an occasion to bear witness, even if it means leaving the safety of home. The fact that it was the manipulative monster Chairman Mao who said, All genuine knowledge originates in direct experience, does not make the apothegm less true. It is or should be the subtext for all travelers chronicles.

The curfew three years into my time in Africa was my initiation into the misuse of power, of greed, cowardice and selfishness; as well as, also, their opposites compassion, bravery, mutual aid and generosity. Even at the time, 24-years-old and fairly callow, I felt I was lucky in some way to be witnessing this convulsion. It was not just that it helped me to understand Africa better; it offered me insights into crowds and power and civil unrest generally, allowing me to observe in extreme conditions the nuances of human nature.

I kept a journal. In times of crisis we should all be diarists and documentarians. Were bound to wail and complain, but its also useful to record the particularities of our plight. We know the progress of Englands Great plague of 1665 because Samuel Pepys anatomized it in his diary. On April 30 he wrote: Great fears of the sickness here in the City it being said that two or three houses are already shut up. God preserve us all! Later, on June 25, The plague increases mightily. And by July 26: The Sicknesse is got into our parish this week; and is endeed everywhere.

A month later he notes the contraction of business: To the Exchange, which I have not been a great while. But Lord how sad a sight it is to see the streets empty of people, and very few upon the Change, jealous of every door that one sees shut up lest it should be the plague and about us, two shops in three, if not more, generally shut up.

In that outbreak of bubonic plague, spread by rat fleas, a quarter of Londons population died.

My diary these days sounds a lot like Pepys, though without the womanizing, snobbery or name dropping. The progress of the Covid 19 pandemic is remarkably similar to that of the plague year, the same upside-down-ness and the dizziness it produces, the muddle of daily life, the collapse of commerce, the darkness at noon, a haunting paranoia in the sudden proximity to death. And so much of what concerned me as important in the earlier pages of my diary now seems mawkish, trivial or beneath notice. This virus has halted the routine of the day to day and impelled us, in a rare reflex from our usual hustling, to seek purification.

Still writing gives order to the day and helps inform history. In my journal of the Ugandan curfew I made lists of the rumors and tried to estimate the rate at which they traveled; I noted the instances of panic and distraction there were many more car crashes than usual, as drivers minds were on other things. Ordinary life was suspended, so we had more excuses to do as we pleased.

My parents habits were formed during the Great Depression, which this present crisis much resembles. They were ever after frugal, cautious and scornful of wasters: My father developed a habit of saving string, paper bags, nails and screws that he pried out of old boards. The Depression made them distrustful of the stock market, regarding it as a casino. They were believers in education, yet their enduring memory was of highly educated people rendered destitute college graduates selling apples on street corners in Boston! My mother became a recycler and a mender, patching clothes, socking money away. This pandemic will likely make us a nation of habitual hand-washers and doorknob avoiders.

In the Great Depression, Americans like my parents saw the country fail and though it rose and became vibrant once more, they fully expected to witness another bust in their lifetime. Generally speaking, we have known prosperity in the United States since the end of World War II. But the same cannot be said for other countries, and this, of course, is something many travelers know, because travel often allows us glimpses of upheaval or political strife, epidemics or revolution. Uganda evolved after the curfew into a dictatorship, and then Idi Amin took over and governed sadistically.

But Id lived in the dictatorship and thuggery of the Malawi of Dr. Hastings Banda (Ngwazi the Conqueror), so Ugandas oppression was not a shock. And these experiences in Africa helped me deconstruct the gaudy dictatorship of Saparmurat Niyazov, who styled himself Tukmenbashi Great Head of the Turks when, years later, I traveled through Turkmenistan; the Mongolia of Jambyn Batmnkh, the Syria of Hafiz Assad, the muddy dispirited China of Maos chosen successor, Hua Guo Feng. As for plague, there have been recent outbreaks of bubonic plague in Madagascar, Congo, Mongolia and China, producing national moods of blame-shifting and paranoia, not much different from that of Albert Camuss The Plague.

Were told not to travel right now, and its probably good advice, though there are people who say that this ban on travel limits our freedom. But in fact, travel produces its own peculiar sorts of confinement.

The freedom that most travelers feel is often a delusion, for there is as much confinement in travel as liberation. This is not the case in the United States, where I have felt nothing but fresh air on road trips. It is possible to travel in the United States without making onward plans. But I cant think of any other country where you can get into a car and be certain at the end of the day of finding a place to sleep (though it might be scruffy) or something to eat (and it might be junk food). For my last book, I managed a road trip in Mexico but with hiccups (bowel-shattering meals, extortionate police, bed bugs). But the improvisational journey is very difficult elsewhere, even in Europe, and is next to impossible in Africa. It is only by careful planning that a traveler experiences a degree of freedom, but he or she will have to stick to the itinerary, nagged by instructions, which is a sort of confinement.

In fact, most travel is a reminder of boundaries and limits. For example, millions of travelers go to Bangkok or Los Cabos, but of them, a great number head for a posh hotel and rarely leave: The hotel is the destination, not the city. The same can be said for many other places, where the guest in the resort or spa essentially a gated and guarded palace luxuriates in splendid isolation.

The most enlightening trips Ive taken have been the riskiest, the most crisis-ridden, in countries gripped by turmoil, enlarging my vision, offering glimpses of the future elsewhere. We are living in just such a moment of risk; and it is global. This crisis makes me want to light out for the territory ahead of the rest. It would be a great shame if it were not somehow witnessed and documented.

Paul Therouxs latest book, On the Plain of Snakes: A Mexican Journey, was published in 2019 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt.

Follow New York Times Travel on Instagram, Twitter and Facebook. And sign up for our weekly Travel Dispatch newsletter to receive expert tips on traveling smarter and inspiration for your next vacation.

Originally posted here:

Paul Theroux Recalls a Fear-Filled Lockdown - The New York Times

China’s Government Lies: Tiananmen Square and Mao’s Great Leap – Science 2.0

Donald Trump has been roundly criticized for calling the virus that causes Covid-19 a "Chinese virus" it has been said that using a term invented by Chinese state media the "Wuhan Virus" is also racist. He is trying to rebut the propaganda and lies of the Chinese government, the Chinese Communist Party which has said via official channels that they think it came from an American serviceman who visited Wuhan China. That it was developed by the US Army to use against China. That is a lie on the order of stating that the Great Leap Forward was a huge success and the Tiananmen Square protest never occurred. It must be rebutted with all available force. However, Asian Americans have suffered "racist" xenophobic and discriminatory attacks because of this. That said, a stern lesson from history shows why we cannot simply concede to the language chosen by the Chinese Communist Party in the name of not being called racist. To criticize this party is to stand up for over one billion Chinese people who cannot dare speak out. According to the Chinese communist party the Tiananmen square massacre never occurred. That is a lie,a huge lie.Compared to that lie a bit of propaganda about a virus is nothing.

Asian Americans, Casualties of a Propaganda Battle.

East Asians are a smaller group here in the US who have a complex relationship to racism. Suffering greatly yet also being thought of as an treated as a "model minority". Accepted in some context yet rejected in others. Thought of as smarter than the other students and so not needing as much help YET being no more able than any other students. As a result, they may struggle latter on in school unless they study hard on their own. This virus has reminded people that both sides of that status are rooted in the idea of Asians as "other" than white. No it is not quite the same as that which was done to Africans the world over. We were as Robin DiAngleo describes it treated as the ultimate racial other. (Chinese and Japanese people got the exclusion acts black people were property.) This makes it hard for some people to see this discrimination for how bad it is even if it does not rise to the level of something like chattel slavery or the holocaust. Yet it is a great evil and can lead to such thing if unchecked.Asian Americans have suffered hundreds of xenophobic attacks in the last few weeks as foolish people think that a virus originating in China means that all Asian people are responsible. Those people are the same kind who when told bleach will kill the virus might drink a cup of bleach.

It is a very real problem that fighting this propaganda battle with the CCP will cause as a casualty suffering for Asian Americans. The blame for that lies on the fools and bigots who firstly cannot see the difference between people from China VS Vietnam VS Japan VS Korea. The same ignorant people, and even many who think themselves enlightened cannot see that the Chinese Communist Party is not of by or for the Chinese people.

The story of the tank man. In 1989 students in Beijing China created a protest camp in Tiananmen square. It started out as mourning a communist party official who had died and evolved in time into a pro-democracy movement. The military was called in once and backed off. Then they came one night with tanks and live ammo and cleared Tiananmen square with deadly force. To this day if you try to discuss it on the internet or in public in the Peoples republic of China you may be disappeared.

The great leap forward was portrayed as a huge success by the CCP. This economic program of Maos lead to approximately 45-50 million deaths due to famine. He had the children of city people shipped to the country to work on collective farms called peoples communes. He had people who lived on the communes try to produce steel in back yard furnaces. Both agricultural production and steel production were lied about. The deaths due to starvation were lied about. Then the whole thing was covered up. Mao was out and free years latter to launch a cultural revolution which would devastate traditional Chinese culture.

Beware of Chinese Communist Party Propaganda Not Random Asian People You Meet.

The Chinese Communist Party whose propaganda has been unwittingly spread by western media and social media is the greatest oppressor of Asian people inside and outside of China in history. They have killed millions via their inability to punish the incompetence of party members including their paramount leaders. They have made criminal their negligence by refusing to acknowledge even that mistakes were made. In the covid-19 situation their same old pattern has repeated.

The largest country by population on Earth is China to hate China is to hate a large fraction of humanity. To love Chinese people is not to love the Chinese government. To equate China or Chinese people with all Asians is ignorant. To attack Asian people in America for a situation that is, at worst, due to the mismanagement of a government they never had anything to do with is criminally stupid.

The only thing worst is to mindlessly parrot the CCP propaganda and to prolong, even slightly, the brutal oppression of over 1.4 Billion people. Including the specific oppression of minorities in Tibet, Uighurs of Xinjiang in concentration camps, and the repression of Falun Gong practitioners. In all cases chiefly for having a cultural identity that is not in lock step with that of the Han Chinese dominated CCP. That is an evil that must be opposed right along with our own domestic racism.

We in the west can and must do both.

Do not believe anything the CCP says about this virus. Do protect the rights and lives of Asian Americans.

More reading on this.

"Coronavirus Is More Fodder for Chinese Propaganda" By Jonah Goldberg, National Review

"Life in China Has Not Returned to Normal, Despite What the Government Says" Charlie Campbell Time.

The Comprehensive Timeline of Chinas COVID-19 Lies By Jim Geragthy, National Review

Visit link:

China's Government Lies: Tiananmen Square and Mao's Great Leap - Science 2.0

Visions Of The Post-Coronavirus World Part III: 100 Academics And Political Activists In Iran Tell Supreme Leader Khamenei: ‘You Are The No. 1…

On March 29, 2020, a group of 100 Iranian academics and political and social activists published a letter holding Irans Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei chiefly responsible for the COVID-19 epidemic becoming a national disaster. The letter was posted on the Kalame.com website, identified with the supporters of Green Movement leader Mir Hossein Mousavi, who has been under house arrest since 2011 for criticizing Khamenei and other regime officials for their oppression of the Green Movement protests and for falsifying the 2009 presidential elections.

The signatories of the letter list a series of failures for which they hold Khamenei and the regime officials directly responsible, including concealing information about the coronavirus outbreak from the public and failing to take measures to curb the spread of the disease, out of political and religious considerations. Instead of acting to save the Iranian people, they state, Irans sole leader, Khamenei, explains the situation using conspiracy theories about bio-terror and demons who assist Irans enemies,[1] and even prevents the people from receiving American or other humanitarian aid, while he and other regime officials do have access to medical treatment. The signatories also accuse President Rouhani of being complicit in the disaster by cooperating with Khamenei in inciting and attributing the crisis to an enemy plot.

The regimes financial and media apparatuses, which Khamenei controls, add the signatories, are not being used to serve the people but only the small hedonistic sector of regime henchmen. The large funds serve the regimes project of exporting the revolution; the security apparatuses, who put down even the slightest protest, fail to follow the guidelines of the medical experts and minimize public movement in order to restrain the spread of the disease, while the broadcasting authority and media hide information from the public and even blame the public itself for the situation.

Criticism of the regimes handling of the coronavirus crisis was also expressed by Parvaneh Salahshouri, a member of the outgoing Majlis, in a March 15 interview with the Jahan-i Sanat daily. She accused the authorities of hiding the truth about the epidemic from the public, refusing to take measures to limit its spread from the outset, evading responsibility and circulating conspiracy theories blaming Irans enemies, the U.S. and Israel, for the epidemic instead of helping the people.

The following are the main points of the academics letter condemning Khamenei and of MP Salahshouris interview.

The 100 Academics Protest: Khamenei, You Are Responsible For This National Disaster

The March 29, 2020 academics' letter stated:

"Mr. Khamenei, you are the No. 1 culprit in the COVID-19 pandemic becoming a national disaster!

"According to senior staff in Iran's Department of Health, one person is infected with the coronavirus every minute, while every 10 minutes, someone dies from the virus. Iran's doctors, as well as the heads of the World Health Organization, estimate that the number of officially recognized deaths [in Iran] is much smaller than the true number. The evidence suggests we are facing a national disaster.

"Everyone now knows that the initial obfuscation by the regime and its security forces robbed the Iranian people of their chance to curtail this dangerous virus. Everyone knows the facts of how the lives of Iranian citizens were sacrificed, irresponsibly and inhumanely, in service of the regime's political interests both within the country, as in the February 11 [Revolution Day] parade, the [February 21] Majlis elections, and the failure to quarantine the city of Qom [the epicenter of the virus' spread because of its long-standing connection with China], as well as outside the country, as in the China policy [allowing Mahan Air flights to continue even after the scope of the pandemic became known].[2] All these were terrible blows to us, the citizens of Iran. Everyone knows that the regime's irresponsible handling of the reactionary traditions[3] contributed to the accelerated spread of this virus, etc.

"We now bear witness as the regime's most powerful and senior [official, Iranian Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei], the man who makes all the important decisions, leverages a preposterous theory about bio-terrorism, in an effort to defend his conspiracy-based worldview and excuse his foolish decision to reject several offers of international assistance.[4] As the crisis is reaching its peak, Leader [Khamenei] adds demons to his list of perpetual enemies, and aid from Doctors Without Borders is turned away. While all citizens are forbidden from performing burial rites, military personnel under the leader's command held a funeral for the IRGC general who died of the coronavirus, calling him a martyr, and misinforming citizens with the utter falsehood that the funeral was a spontaneous event.

"The life of every single Iranian citizen is in the hands of the leader, his advisors, and the police and security forces. [Iranian President Rouhani's] obedient government is also abiding by these policies, and failing to take the necessary actions, despite all the warnings of officials in the health and hygiene systems. Thus, Iran's citizens, including its medical personnel who are risking their lives, are paying the price of this stupidity and ineffectualness. It should be noted that even low-income sectors have yet to receive anything but promises.

"Everywhere the world, politicians are deferring to the words and directions of [medical] experts. But here in our Iran, [medical] experts must obey the commands and directions of political and military officials...!

"Now more than ever, Mr. Khamenei must face the questions posed by the Iranian public:

"Should the National Development Fund [Irans] foreign currency reserves which belongs to all Iranians but is controlled by [Khamenei], be spent on the [IRGC's] Qods Force in service of Iran's regional interests alone, or should it support the pressing issue of public health in laying the groundwork to minimize public movements, equip hospitals, and offer low-income populations [aid] and mitigate further misery?

"Can the regime, so practiced at suppressing even the smallest public protest, not act to minimize intra- and interurban traffic?

"Should the capital and many resources of the vast organizations controlled by Khamenei including Imam Reza's Shrine [Foundation], the Foundation of the Oppressed and Disabled, the Executive Headquarters of Imam's Directive, and so on all of which in fact belong to the Iranian people, be spent on the Arba'een pilgrimage[5] and [cover] the vast expenditures of the leader's office, instead of [being spent on] on the vital national issue [of fighting the coronavirus]?

"Why are Khamenei, and other senior officials, who live in ideal quarantine conditions, selfishly and stubbornly withholding international aid from the Iranian people, on the most absurd pretexts?[6] Following the [2003] earthquake in the city of Bam [in Kerman province], they accepted U.S. aid and American presence in that region, and allowed the field hospital built [by the Americans] to continue to provide services for a long time. Why are they now deporting the highly reputable Doctors Without Borders organization?

"Why are the Leader [Khamenei] and his security forces and judicial authority insisting on blocking the release of all political prisoners? Why are those who help spread free information still being arrested, despite the current circumstances?

"Why is the [Iranian] broadcasting service, which acts against the nation and obeys Khamenei, so busy obfuscating facts, spreading superstitious ideas, and blaming the public, instead of acting with transparency on this vital matter and providing accurate, useful, and well-coordinated information to improve national cooperation in the fight against the coronavirus?

"During the fuel [protests] crisis,[7] which was supposed to impact public budgeting, Khamenei personally and immediately entered the fray, silencing critics, including religious scholars affiliated with [President Rouhani's] government. Why then, now that there is a crisis in which the lives of the public are at stake, is the regime leader maintaining an opportunistic silence in the face of superstition and conservative reactionaries who squandered their chance to quarantine the city of Qom and ban large gatherings for a few weeks?

"There is no need to spell out the fundamental critique of the initial (and ongoing) obfuscation and lies, as it is already known to all.

"In the opinion of the signatories of this document, Khamenei is the main culprit in the making of the current crisis into a national disaster. Furthermore, [President] Rouhani is complicit in exacerbating this process, because of his cooperation with Khamenei in inciting and attributing the crisis to an enemy plot.

"We conclude with a few words for our alert, overwhelmed, yet concerned and endangered countrymen:

"Dear people of our homeland!

"In the absence of a responsible, efficient, and truthful regime, only doctors and medical professionals are devoted to protecting citizens from this virus. They can be the source for citizens seeking to carry on with life despite all the limitations... "[8]

Outgoing Majlis Member Parvaneh Salahshouri: "The Authorities Hid The Outbreak Of The Virus From The Outset, And Told The Public About It Only After It Had Peaked"

Two weeks earlier outgoing Majlis member Parvaneh Salahshouri criticized the regime's conduct as exposed by the coronavirus crisis. In an interview published March 15, 2020 in the Jahan-i Sanat daily, she said openly that the authorities had concealed the truth about the outbreak from the public, had refused to take steps to stop it from the outset, had evaded responsibility and propagated conspiracy theories according to which the virus was created by Iran's enemies, the U.S. and Israel. The following are the main points of her statements:

"Let us not forget that in Iran, the running [of the country] is not in the hands of a single organization [hinting that in addition to the executive branch, i.e. the government, there are many other bodies such as Khamenei's office, the IRGC, and parallel organizations]. As usual, in recent years those in charge are avoiding the responsibility with which they are charged. They are passing the buck from one to the other. Recently, they have been calling for fighting the 'bio-terror' of the coronavirus and saying that the ultimate responsibility [for defeating it] rests upon the shoulders of the armed forces...

"In our country, there are three common elements: one, concealing the truth; two, lying; and three, politicizing various things. That is, if the authorities do not manage to conceal the truth and to lie, but the matter still heads the agenda, then they offer conspiracy theories and turn the [matter] into a political affair.

"Our country's administrative weakness is almost unmatched in the world. All these elements together have created a situation in which not only [the cities of] Tehran, Qom, and Gilan but most of the provinces in Iran have been impacted by the coronavirus. Indeed, the public no longer believes the authorities and the media as they once did. The most dangerous thing is public's lack of confidence in the system, and this is even more dangerous than the coronavirus... It appears that there is a real shortage of information in the country which enables the broadcasting authority to play a double game with the public. That is, on the one hand they tell the public to stay home, while on other they conceal the scope of the catastrophe from it...

Parvaneh Salahshour (Source: Iran-emrooz.net, March 15, 2020)

"In my view, it is impossible to quarantine the capital [Tehran], but the authorities could have quarantined the city of Qom [where the outbreak in Iran began] from the beginning, instead of concealing reality. In this way, they could have acted to prevent the virus from spreading to other cities. Those who prevented the quarantining of Qom are accountable to the public and to God.

"In another country in such a crisis, the [national] airline [a reference to the Iranian national carrier] Mahan would surely be recognized as the main factor in the outbreak of this disease, because of its negligence [Mahan's continuing its Iran-China flights even after the disease spread through Iran], and the judiciary would certainly have held it to account. But in our country, they arrest those who care about the matter [and warned about the spread of the disease]...

"These days, everyone is saying 'stay home.' When some of the public has no choice but to leave the safety of their homes in order to make a living, the government must allocate aid packages for supporting the poor so that the lives of as few as possible are in danger. For a long time, our country's economy has been in shambles, and therefore neither the government nor any other organization can quarantine Tehran. Quarantining would only be possible if they used the 200 million euros that the Majlis allocated to the IRGC a short time ago, and only if the IRGC wanted to use these funds to help the public since it is obliged to use this money for the public... Due to ineffective administration, we have no positive outcome. The authorities hid the outbreak of the virus from the outset, and told the public about it only after it had peaked, and now everyone's work is difficult...

"In Iran, the senior officials were infected with the coronavirus before the people. The only way to control the virus is quarantine, but there is no such option for our country... The meaning of quarantine is that the government must bring food products to all the homes. But is our government capable of this?

"Thus, the only solution is to maintain personal and public hygiene and to stay home as much as possible. But we cannot actually order the worker who needs to be out on the street [to earn] a single loaf of bread to stay home, because we cannot support him...

"There is no greater disgrace than a public afflicted with poverty and starvation in a country awash in petroleum."[9]

[5] The Arbaeen Pilgrimage is a political/religious march from Najaf, Iran to Karbala, Iraq, established by the Iranian regime to mark the anniversary of the 40th day after the death of the Third Shi'ite Imam Hussain bin Ali, the grandson of the Prophet Muhammad, in the Battle of Karbala in 680 CE. The Iranian regime is promoting this pilgrimage as a rival to the Sunni Hajj to Mecca in Saudi Arabia.

[6] A reference to the expulsion of a Doctors Without Borders delegation and the rejection of humanitarian aid offered by the U.S.

[8] Kaleme.com, March 29, 2020.

[9] Jihan-i Sanat (Iran), March 15, 2020.

Excerpt from:

Visions Of The Post-Coronavirus World Part III: 100 Academics And Political Activists In Iran Tell Supreme Leader Khamenei: 'You Are The No. 1...