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Monthly Archives: April 2021
Letters: Second Amendment requires context; Hard for young people to survive in paradise; Stairway to Heaven can be big tourist attraction – Honolulu…
Posted: April 21, 2021 at 9:31 am
In response to Brian Isaacson (2nd Amendment protects other rights, Star-Advertiser, Letters, April 12), the Second Amendment states: A well regulated Militia, being necessary to the security of a free State, the right of the the people to keep and bear Arms, shall not be infringed.
When this very terse statement was adopted in 1791, the United States was a newborn infant federation of loosely bound states still highly disorganized and trying to establish itself in the face of British tyranny. The militia of the founding era was the body of ordinary citizens capable of taking up arms to defend the nation; the intent was to augment the deficient, underfunded, poorly manned federal army that existed against future attacks from foreign aggressors.
A well regulated militia has become the National Guard in each state, not self-anointed, self-appointed domestic terrorists who hide behind the Second Amendment to carry out their random personal grievances.
Yes, there are many ways to prevent criminal behavior and they all need consideration, but the Second Amendment should be viewed through the lens of time and not misinterpreted and misapplied.
Kevin Johnson
Kaimuki
Think twice before firing top managers
I agree with Jennifer Chiwas deduction that the Police Commission was micromanaging Chief Susan Ballard with its improvement plan (Commission wrong to micromanage Ballard, Star-Advertiser, Letters, April 14). Most leaders work with the individual, not hand them a laundry list of what they think needs to be done.
I wonder how many of them could have handled 2020 any better than the chief? Was the commission trying to send a different message after having let Louis Kealoha get away with his criminal activities?
This is yet another example of getting rid of the top dog every time something doesnt go the way some commission, board or committee thinks it should. Schools Superintendent Christina Kishimoto is another example.
Perhaps its time we looked at ourselves rather than pouncing at the first sign of perceived mismanagement.
Sally L. Jones
Kailua
Social justice advocate for police commission
Mahalo to Benjamin Mahi for withdrawing his nomination from consideration to serve on the Honolulu Police Commission (Honolulu Mayor Rick Blangiardis pick for Police Commission withdraws nomination, Star- Advertiser, April 14).
It is my hope that Blangiardis next nominee will be a social justice advocate, ideally from one of the overrepresented communities in our criminal justice system. The commission is supposed to be the voice of the community, and for that to be assured, we need more diversity of thought on the commission.
Michael Golojuch Jr.
Makakilo
Key government posts will be difficult to fill
Hawaii is in a period of transition, with three major government positions to be filled Honolulu police chief, state superintendent of schools and director of the rail transit project. The current police chief and superintendent chose to resign, while the rail director was fired.
Im not certain whether any of their departures should be welcomed.
I do know that finding replacements who will be improvements on their predecessors wont be easy.
Those charged with this task have a major responsibility, especially if they criticized the departing persons.
Carl H. Zimmerman
Salt Lake
Hard for young people to survive in paradise
The high cost of living in Hawaii makes life very hard for most residents. More and more people will leave the islands as it becomes a place that caters mostly to the wealthy.
The economy should be serving the people living here, not selling the isles as a getaway from the pandemic.
We also are often told that a person needs to find a college on the mainland in order to be successful.
I experienced this myself when I was applying for college. Teachers and my peers questioned why I decided to attend the University of Hawaii at Manoa. However, I have enjoyed my experience so far.
Young people are the future of Hawaii, and if we can make Hawaii more affordable and provide opportunities for them, then they can stay to contribute. Why are our elected officials unwilling to lift the minimum wage?
Winnie Lau
Kapahulu
Stairway to Heaven can be big tourist attraction
The City and County of Honolulu will be making a big mistake if it closes the Stairway to Heaven. It is the ultimate tourist attraction, and probably one of the wonders of the world. People take spectacular photos from the top of the stairs and circulate them on the internet. The advertising value of these awesome Oahu panoramic pictures far outweighs any maintenance or liability costs.
The city should spend a few million dollars to repair and maintain the stairs and make them safer. The relatively few rescues that are required each year probably serve as an inexpensive on-the-job training activity for search and rescue crews.
Is the mayor kowtowing to boisterous landowners living near the entrance who want the stairs closed?
Keep the Stairway to Heaven open.
Ray Graham
Waikiki
Dont make everyone use 10-digit dialing
A recent story noted that all callers in Hawaii will be required to dial the area code 808 plus the telephone number for local calls beginning Oct. 24 (Transition to 10-digit dialing begins April 24, Star-Advertiser, April 9).
Wouldnt it be simpler to change the 988 prefix for the relatively small number of Hawaii residents with that prefix, rather than burden our million-plus population with this extra dialing? I would think that this would be a simpler solution.
It would be helpful to have an explanation as to why this cannot be done. Consider the inconvenience to every 808 subscriber.
Roy King
Waialae-Kahala
EXPRESS YOURSELF
The Honolulu Star-Advertiser welcomes all opinions. Want your voice to be heard? Submit a letter to the editor.
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The ‘Pandemial Generation’: How COVID is already beginning to shape our future – AL DIA News
Posted: at 9:31 am
We live in pandemic times that are provoking social changes that are not at all gradual: teleworking has become a reality for a majority of workers who used to go to offices, we have become accustomed to talking about family "bubbles,"social distance and reduced our activities in public or greeting each other with our elbows. And there are even those who have been dreaming of wearing a mask for the past year.
As has happened with other phenomena in our history neoliberalism, post-modernity, globalization, the emergence of the millennial and Z generations... media and academia have been trying to find a way to deal with these phenomena.
Because, somehow, only what is named can exist. And this is a reality for everyone.
Last week, the Argentine newspaper Clarn published an interview with the economist Federico Domnguez, who has just published a book in which he reflects on the new generation of these times, the "pandemials,"and the political, social and economic challenges they face. As well as the new philosophy of life that is being born around them.
In La Rebelin de los Pandemials (Editores Argentinos), Domnguez narrows down the term to remind us that not all of us are pandemials.
"Pandemials are those young people who are entering the world of work along with the COVID-19 crisis," he says.
The economist describes this new generation in an optimistic way, as people with "strong ethical values and ecological awareness because they were born knowing that the planet is at risk."
Pandemials, in short, go out into the world to find themselves in societies where uncertainty, loneliness, resource depletion, the digital bubble and the end of meritocracy are our daily bread. Many of them, in search of a model with which to face these new times, are looking for the key in the past: in utopias of the 20th century and old systems.
For Federico Domnguez, the future will be even more liberal than the present, and he asserts this by analyzing the Human Cycles the Cycle of Inequity, the Cycle of Nature, the Cycle of Technologies and the Cycle of the Human Spirit and points out that while liberalism seemed to be the ideology for all, it has ended up being "a cruise ship company managed by its own elite."
In other words, very little of the essence of the original liberalism remains, and even the concept of "meritocracy" has been blurred and is almost a euphemism these days.
The Decade of Turbulence
Although the book postulates that new approaches are needed to confront the political and economic problems of this situation brought about by the pandemic - to which we must add the other problems we were already facing, such as climate change - and it is urgent to create a new global political agenda that seeks to democratize knowledge (how strange that in the digital era it is still a commodity in the hands of a few, "banned" and controlled) and lower taxes, liberalism will remain, and with greater force.
That is Domnguez's thesis in La Rebelin de los Pandemials, because the lifestyle based on hedonism and individualism will remain in place. This is his prediction:
"The Decade of Turbulence" that of 2020-2029 will be complex, intense and transformative. At times it will seem that authoritarians will prevail, that liberalism will seem to be relegated and that young people will march in the name of some populism to set cities on fire in different parts of the planet. But in the end, as has happened time and again throughout its 250-plus year history, liberalism will triumph. It will do so because of the economic, technological and social superiority that emerges from its formulations, institutions and the freedoms it offers. And it will do so because the citizens who live under the benefits of this system will not want to go back".
But don't be fooled by the word "rebellion" although it seems more a wish than a future trend because the society that Domnguez draws is characterised by the suppression of freedoms, especially in light of the social networks that have become the landscape and refuge of the pandemials and the attempts of the platforms to extend their control by investing in AI.
A political-economic landscape that is like the carrot and the horse and where no one can leave the fold. A fortress or an invisible megastructure of containment of dissent.
The question is whether the pandemials can really bring about a revolution that will dynamite the toxicities of extreme liberalism for a more humane world, or whether they will continue to thumb their cyber-thumbs and share in a bubble of viral threats and uncertainty.
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The 'Pandemial Generation': How COVID is already beginning to shape our future - AL DIA News
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Letter: Weber County should enforce all of the Second Amendment, not just the second half – Salt Lake Tribune
Posted: at 9:31 am
FILE - A man carries his weapon during a Second Amendment gun rally at Utah State Capitol on Feb. 8, 2020, in Salt Lake City. (AP Photo/Rick Bowmer, File)
By Stephen L. Black | The Public Forum
| April 18, 2021, 12:00 p.m.
I am intrigued by the recent declaration of Second Amendment sanctuary in Weber County. I wonder if the members of the Weber County Commission have ever read the Second Amendment. For their sakes, here it is in total: A well regulated Militia being necessary to the security of a free State, the right of the people to keep and bear Arms shall not be infringed. Thats it -- thats the entire text.
The meaning of militia makes a difference to the rights established by the Second Amendment. This is how militia is defined by Miriam-Websters online dictionary:
A: a part of the organized armed forces of a country liable to call only in emergency.
B : a body of citizens organized for military service
C : a private group of armed individuals that operates as a paramilitary force and is typically motivated by a political or religious ideology
I would hope that the intent of the framers of the Bill of Rights was A or B. Of course they might have meant C, but that seems less likely to constitutional scholars. Note the wording: A (singular) well regulated Militia (capital M). That does not seem to suggest multiple street gangs, cop cos-players, or lone wolves.
Does Weber County maintain a Militia, i.e., a body of citizens organized for military service? I for one have never seen their Militia, but hey, I live in a different county. If they dont have an organized armed force, must we conclude therefore that the Weber County Commissioners want to encourage militias as paramilitary forces motivated by ideology? Even if they encourage ideology-driven paramilitaries in Weber County those militias ought to be well regulated, per the literal text of the Second Amendment.
This brings me to my main question for the county commissioners: Are you regulating your militias, as required by the Constitution? And are they well regulated? The sanctuary which you declared last week to guarantee that the right of the people to keep and bear Arms shall not be infringed seems to require well regulation. Please enforce all of the Second Amendment, not just the second half. Thank you.
Stephen L. Black, South Jordan
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Letter: Weber County should enforce all of the Second Amendment, not just the second half - Salt Lake Tribune
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SWINDLE: Future of the Second Amendment – LaGrange Daily News – LaGrange Daily News
Posted: at 9:31 am
The definition of insanity is doing the same thing over and over and expecting different results. Author Unknown, but many attribute this quote to Albert Einstein.
Someone recently asked me, Will Washington ever do anything about semi-automatic assault weapons?
I asked him what his definition of a semi-automatic assault weapon was. The polite man admitted that he did not know. But, he was quick to point out that people get killed when a person has a firearm and unleashes the weapon against defenseless children and adults.
He was correct. Gun Free Zones (GFZ) are almost always the target of predatory killers because these areas alleviate the fear of the predator being shot himself. Predators always focus on the weak, old, young, and defenseless.
What is a semiautomatic assault weapon?
To answer this, the first step is to look back to the time when Washington tried to do something about assault weapons. The Federal Assault Weapons Ban (AWB) of 1994 was their answer.
Congress passed the law at a time when several mass shootings had raised public concern. Politicians were pressured to act in some manner. In order to relieve their pressure, Congress responded by passing a law restricting firearms defined as semiautomatic assault weapons and magazines that met the criteria for large capacity ammunition feeding devices.
AWB defined semiautomatic guns as those that fire once for each trigger pull. This includes hunting rifles and pistols. The term assault was never clearly defined.
As with most laws that are passed because of intense, emotional political pressure, rather than logic and reality, the law was unsuccessful.
Thankfully, AWB ended in 2004.
Despite the statistics that show mass killings almost always happen in GFZs, the ineffectiveness of gun control legislation for decades, and his own personal views regarding the 2nd Amendment, Joe Biden, one of the main proponents of the ban when he was in the Senate, claimed recently that it brought down these mass killings.
He failed to provide a single piece of credible evidence to support his statement.
However, Biden continues to push for a new assault weapons bans, along with restrictions on magazine size. He explained his reasoning by saying that he intends to apply lessons learned from the previous ban to a new one.
For example, the ban on assault weapons will be designed to prevent manufacturers from circumventing the law by making minor changes that dont limit the weapons lethality, Bidens campaign website stated.
Gun manufacturers are legal businesses that pay taxes, provide employment and should never be lectured to by a person who cannot even load a shotgun safely.
The fear of citizens owning guns has quickly spread throughout Congress. The House recently passed two gun-control measures to strengthen background checks. On March 23, Biden called for the Senate to immediately pass them and also called for Congress to take up a new assault-weapons ban.
While success is possible in the Democratic-controlled House, the chances in the Senate are a long shot because of that bodys cloture rule. This rule requires 60 votes to end debate on a topic and move to a vote. The challenge of convincing 10 Republicans to vote for any kind of gun control is probably impossible.
Does it end with the Senate? Perhaps not. On March 26, 2021, the White House announced that Biden is preparing to circumvent Congress by issuing executive orders on gun regulation. Ordering a full assault weapons ban is beyond the presidents power, but he can use regulatory authority to restrict guns. For instance, he could limit imports or expand the background-check system by redefining who is in the business of selling guns.
However, getting action on a broader range of assault weapons remains a challenge. Senate Majority Leader Charles Schumer, D-New York, has vowed to push gun-control legislation, saying, Make no mistake: Under the Democratic majority, the Senate will debate and address the epidemic of gun violence in this country.
This can be translated into, We are fully dedicated to taking your Constitutional right to own a firearm away.
For now, he will need 10 Republicans to agree.
Unless legal gun owner take a large and widespread stand, Biden and Schumer will eventually reach their goals.
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SWINDLE: Future of the Second Amendment - LaGrange Daily News - LaGrange Daily News
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LETTER TO THE EDITOR: If they wanted your guns, they’d have them by now – Bemidji Pioneer
Posted: at 9:31 am
I would like to take a moment to clarify some facts that Karl Kaufman got wrong in his letter published on April 17. First off, there are not 300,000 concealed carry holders, that number is the total number of permits issued since 2003.
Since these permits are required to be renewed this number includes the renewed permits. The number of active permits in Minnesota is about 96,000, less than a third of what Kaufman asserts.
The same is true of his hunting figures. Pew Research shows roughly 70,000 Minnesota residents hunt, this number aligns with numbers seen by Minnesota DNR reports. The reality is that there are roughly 100,000 legally obtained guns in Minn., a far cry from his numbers.
Why does that matter? Truth. His numbers are incorrect and so is his assertion that your Second Amendment rights are under siege.
Both the federal and supreme courts have ruled a number of times that for a gun to be protected it must have a legal use, and have ruled that weapons of war and assault weapons are not protected under the Second Amendment.
RELATED: Read more letters to the editor
The only laws under consideration for gun control are common sense background checks and assault weapon bans. All the rest of this is just right-wing hype.
Truth matters and the hype about the Second Amendment is to drive up donations to the NRA and sell guns. If you want to talk about reality, the reality is that the NRA is under investigation for fraud, embezzlement and misappropriation of funds all the while attempting to declare bankruptcy.
Wayne Lapierre has been forced to return more than 300,000 dollars or face charges and has been forced to take shelter on a 108-foot yacht after the number of shootings this year. The Irony is that it makes it obvious that Lapierre doesnt buy the gun for the protection line he sells.
If you are afraid the government is going to take your guns, you have probably been duped by a group of millionaires looking to get their hands on your money.
The truth is that if anyone had wanted to take your guns they would be gone by now. Meanwhile, people are dying in the street because some rich guys want to line their pockets. It is time to come out of the right-wing delusions and stop substituting someone elses brain for your own, start thinking critically about the world around you.
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LETTER TO THE EDITOR: If they wanted your guns, they'd have them by now - Bemidji Pioneer
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Letter: Biden’s attack on the second amendment ignores Constitution – The Independent
Posted: at 9:31 am
While announcing his half-dozen executive orders on April 8 to combat what he described as an epidemic of gun violence, President Biden proclaimed that the rights enumerated in the Constitution are not absolute. He was, of course, referring the Second Amendment in the Bill of Rights.
I wonder if his words also apply to the right to an abortion which he supports in contravention of the teachings of the church to which he professes to belong. This right is nowhere in the Constitution but seven men in black robes found it in the penumbra of the document.
Does Bidens interpretation extend to the 13th, 14th and 15th amendments to the Constitution that address the rights of former slaves or are they too subject to modification by executive action?
The president also seems to think the right to vote is plenary and absolute and not to be tampered with by state law. Democrats want to pass HR1 which would essentially supersede state control of elections as if the fifteenth, nineteenth, twenty-fourth and twenty-sixth articles are not enough.
If the Second Amendment is so onerous why doesnt Biden proposed an amendment rescinding it?
Just asking.
Richard J. August
North Kingstown
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Letter: Biden's attack on the second amendment ignores Constitution - The Independent
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Diving into the iconic denim moments of the 80s and 90s with Diesel – Dazed
Posted: at 9:31 am
Creatives Alfie Kungu, Aimee Gillingwater, and Matthew Josephs take us through their denim dreams and enduring 80s and 90s trends, styling themselves in DieselXDiesels capsule collection and vintage archive
Distressed denim, Americana workwear, acid washes. The 80s and 90s really defined the denim sensibilities that are once again of the moment were living in. Now were emerging from lockdown, its time to dig the denim out once again too, and say farewell to the sweats. And who else could Diesel, the heritage Italian denim brand spanning 40 years, collaborate with to truly celebrate the enduring aesthetics of denim across the decades... but itself? So welcome DieselXDiesel. And even though its rooted in days gone by with its vintage feels, collaboration with oneself feels very now in an era of isolation and uncertain connectedness, weve gotten to know ourselves intimately no?
DieselXDiesel is a capsule that spans the brands dynasty, with a line-up of 24 pieces inspired by the archive with a 2021 take think relaxed 90s straight leg jeans and 80s varsity bomber jackets, green and reddish washed denim, Route 66-traversing, patch-covered vests, and workwear silhouettes. Its playful and deliciously nostalgic. The collection follows recently appointed creative director Glenn Martens first label campaign When Together, which featured eight IRL couples reuniting after time apart to celebrate Valentines day. This new capsule is a collaboration between Martens and Diesels founder, Renzo Rosso, as they work to build a contemporary Diesel landscape that nods to the Italian denim connoisseur's vast legacy while innovating for the future.
So why are the best looks those that are borrowed from the past? Showing us exactly that are musician, model, and all-girl skate collective Bowl Babes founder Aimee Gillingwater, bold and evocative artist Alfie Kungu, and the playfully high-glam stylist and creative director Matthew Josephs. In this fun and free campaign film, the trio dive deep into the Diesel collection, iconic archive, and vintage finds from their own personal wardrobes. Shot from their homes and studios, they playfully experiment with the 80s and 90s ideals that speak to Diesels singular, textured, nostalgia-expanding vision. Below, we hear how they worked the DieselXDiesel capsule, the denim trends they hold dear, and how their style and artistic practices echo the 80s and 90s forever.
Yorkshire-bred, London-based Alfie Kungu is an artist that plays with the traditional conventions of painting in his bold, textural work, with a fearless use of colour, and strong characters that hark back to childhood ephemera. Having collaborated with Nike, Folk, and Liam Hodges, his bright and eye-catching work is a much-needed dose of playfulness that makes nostalgia for the joys of youth physical. Its a sentiment that aligns with the values of Diesel and its capsule, taking inspo from 80s and 90s cartoons, streetwear designs, and rave culture. For Kungu, the joyful sensory elements of childhood mucky hands from playing in the park, ripped denim knees, a much-loved hat his mum knitted for him are rooted in the 90s.
Streetwear is quite print heavy with really loud, bold colours. I think I really try to translate that use of pattern in bold colour palettes within my work, Kungu says. 90s rave culture has had a massive influence especially rave culture in the North, really dope , the 90s hip-hop scene, anything underground.
In the campaign video, Kungu dives into his own wardrobe to style looks with the DieselXDiesel collection, selecting the bleached denim jeans as a personal favourite. I think vintage styles have endured through time because they were quite iconic when they came out, he says. As styles progress, theyre maintained because they don't need to be fixed. Trends always repeat themselves. For Kungu, that enduring element is laid bare in his own personal style the straight leg jeans and a varsity bomber as in his art.
Musician, model, and skater Aimee Gillingwaters creative output speaks to the DIY spirit of the 90s Gillingwater co-founded Bowl Babes, an all-girl skate collective encouraging girls to take up the sport, while her music recalls the dreamy, hazy qualities of Mazzy Star. She finds herself most at home in the aesthetics and sounds of the 80s and 90s, having listened to grunge and punk through childhood and into her teens. It really helped me deal with a lot of emotion I didnt understand back then, Gillingwater says of her affinity to punk, but also how to express myself with clothes and style and dealing with judgment from peers.
In the campaign visual, Aimee explores her own vintage collection pulling out sweater vests, silk scarves, and her mothers own denim jacket and dons the Diesel collections patched suede jacket, which she describes as a super unique visual piece, and the loose, soft denim boiler suit that reflects those punk and riot grrrl sensibilities. Feeling good in her clothes, she believes, helps her creative process.
Pieces were just so well made that theyve lasted incredibly over the years, Gillingwater says. Denim from 30 years ago can still look so good today, and the time and effort that went into the cuts is quite frankly priceless. And what denim styles does she predict well hang onto? Double denim, without a doubt.
From styling Charles Jeffreys AW21 homage to the Club Kid to FKA twigs ethereal and otherworldly fashion moments, stylist and creative director Matthew Josephs malleable, irreverent creative vision plays with pop culture, gender, and cultural iconography. The 80s and 90s then from underground subcultures to Ab Fab, Aaliyah, Spandau Ballet, and the Spice Girls are a well of inspiration for the most romantic and high-drama. I love the hedonism and fun of parts of the 80s, and 90s hip hop aesthetics, says Josephs. Recently I did a shoot and the reference for the hair was an image of RuPaul from the 90s.
I think the New Romantics and the Blitz kids influence my work a lot, he adds, recalling the escapism the subcultures offered. I really love fashion when it's extreme and fantasy, and I think that's what we need right now, a bit of glamour after spending a year in pyjamas!
Shot in his eclectic studio avec a very cute dog Josephs takes us through his DieselxDiesel faves and own vintage finds (check those snakeprint platforms immediately). I am obsessed with these trousers with the leather panels down the front, he says of the Diesel piece. I really enjoyed pairing them with my spice girl boots for something unexpected, and a silk neckerchief to soften it. The final look is very east London Blitz Kid strutting through Covent Garden.
Josephs reflects on the timeliness of Diesels capsule collection. Theres a fondness for the 90's now as it was a really great time for culture, there's not so much like that now in my opinion. Looking to a future where he can wear his new looks out, he adds: I love going out even though Im actually quite shy, I can't wait to put on some real clothes (not sweatpants) and go for a dance. I keep thinking to myself, when everything opens you have to get overdressed for every occasion to make up for the year we just missed out on. I hope we're going into another roaring 20s and people have fun with expressing themselves through fashion.
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Diving into the iconic denim moments of the 80s and 90s with Diesel - Dazed
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Campaigners call for global response to unprecedented oppression in Xinjiang – The Guardian
Posted: at 9:30 am
The Chinese government is committing crimes against humanity in Xinjiang, where it has escalated its oppression of Turkic Muslims to unprecedented levels, Human Rights Watch has said, as the NGO called on governments to take direct action against officials and companies that profit from labour in the region.
HRW also recommended the EU delay ratifying its recent trade agreement with China until forced labour allegations were investigated, victims compensated, and there was substantial progress toward holding perpetrators to account.
In a report produced with Stanford Law Schools Human Rights and Conflict Resolution Clinic, HRW called for stronger UN investigations and responses, and for allied countries to impose further sanctions as well as visa and travel bans, and to use domestic laws to prosecute perpetrators.
HRW said the governments oppression of Turkic Muslims, including Uyghurs, was not a new phenomenon but had reached unprecedented levels.
Since Xi Jinpings rise to power in 2013, the Chinese government has aggressively pursued assimilationist policies in ethnic minority regions, increasingly insisting on the Sinicization of those communities, driven by nationalism and in many instances Islamophobia inside and outside China, it said.
Defining crimes against humanity as serious specified offences that are knowingly committed as part of a widespread or systematic attack against any civilian population, the report found the strongest evidence in relation to enslavement, imprisonment or other severe deprivation of liberty, torture, persecution, and enforced disappearances.
The report says the extent to which other violations were being perpetrated including sexual violence against women and coercive fertility controls was unclear, and the gravity of sexual violence allegations warranted further investigation.
The HRW report draws on new and recent research documenting the enactment of government policies in Xinjiang, and alleged human rights violations, finding many were supported by vast amounts of documentary evidence.
Chinese authorities have continued to deny due process and have arbitrarily detained an estimated 1 million people in hundreds of facilities, subjecting them to political and cultural indoctrination, torture and other ill-treatment, the report says. Outside the detention facilities Beijing operates a a pervasive system of mass surveillance, controls on movement, arbitrary arrest and enforced disappearance, cultural and religious erasure, and family separation.
HRW said it had not yet documented the existence of the necessary genocidal intent to make a finding of genocide, as the Canadian, Dutch and Belgian parliaments, the US state department, and legal groups had done. Nonetheless, nothing in this report precludes such a finding.
China resolutely denies all accusations of wrongdoing in Xinjiang, and runs an increasingly vociferous global campaign to discredit accusers, deny allegations and findings, and promote the region as a wonderful land where minority communities are protected and celebrated. It refuses journalists and human rights groups free access to the area and repeatedly dismisses investigative findings as lies.
Chinese authorities have systematically persecuted Turkic Muslims their lives, their religion, their culture, said Sophie Richardson, the HRW China director. Beijing has said it is providing vocational training and deradicalisation but that rhetoric cannot obscure a grim reality of crimes against humanity.
HRW noted the difficulties in investigating abuses in Xinjiang and ensuring justice. Beijing frequently claims sovereignty to reject accusations against it, or coordinates letters of support to counter joint statements at the UN.
China is also not a signatory to the international criminal court and so the ICC has no jurisdiction to investigate and prosecute individuals alleged to have committed international crimes. The only way for the ICC to assume jurisdiction is if the matter is referred to it by the UN security council, of which China is a permanent member with veto powers.
To address the worsening situation, HRW called for more coordination by world governments, which it described as increasingly critical. This could include targeted and other sanctions of government officials and agencies and companies implicated in violations of peoples rights, and joint government statements. These sanctions will be more effective if pursued collectively, it said.
Domestically, HRW recommended individual countries consider pursuing criminal cases under universal jurisdiction laws that permit a prosecution of certain crimes committed elsewhere if the victim was one of their own.
Government agencies should also review all investments in Xinjiang and impose trade sanctions, including divestment, in sectors facing credible allegations of serious abuses such as forced labour, it said, and on technology companies contributing to Chinas mass surveillance operations. Any company operating in Xinjiang should also be subject to legally binding requirements for human rights due diligence.
To countries with Turkic Muslim diasporas, HRW called for guarantees of a fair asylum assessment and support process, the facilitation of family reunions, and an end to refoulement and other forced returns of people back to China.
Given the gravity of the abuses against Turkic Muslims, there is a pressing need for concerned governments to take strong, coordinated action to advance accountability, HRW said. It suggested the creation of a UN commission of inquiry, consisting of experts with a mandate to determine facts, identify perpetrators and make recommendations.
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Oppression of journalists in China may have been factor in Covid pandemic – The Guardian
Posted: at 9:30 am
Persecution of journalists in China may have contributed to the global coronavirus outbreak by stopping whistleblowers coming forward in the early days of the pandemic, according to the press freedom group Reporters Without Borders.
China ranks 177th out of 180 countries on the organisations annual Press Freedom Index, with the organisation warning that persecution of journalists in totalitarian regimes affects citizens in western democracies.
We can sit in the UK and think its mostly OK here but actually whats happening on the other side of the world can affect us, said Rebecca Vincent, director of international campaigns at the organisation. Weve argued and still argue that if the press had been freer in China then its possible a global pandemic could have been averted.
China initially attempted to restrict reporting of a new infectious outbreak with the states online censorship tools, keeping other countries in the dark even as the disease began to spread around the world. Officials also persecuted whistleblower Dr Li Wenliang who later died from Covid-19 after he tried to share information in late December on patients with a new highly infectious disease in his Wuhan hospital.
Vincent said Chinas growing global influence meant its government was exporting its attitude to the media throughout the world through state-backed news services such as CGTN: Its not just a danger for the people of China they have more journalists in jail than anyone else but its trickling throughout our international information systems. Theyre trying to influence how we get and perceive information everywhere.
Reporters Without Borders latest index places the UK at 33rd behind countries such as Ghana, Spain and Lithuania, a slight improvement on last year. The organisation praised the governments national action plan to protect journalists from abuse and harassment. But it said concerns remained about the attacks on journalists in Northern Ireland and the treatment of Julian Assange, who is being held in prison despite winning the latest round of his legal battle against deportation to the US.
The top spot on the press freedom index once again went to Norway, while Australia ranked 25th and the US came in at 44th. The biggest year-on-year fall on the index was in Malaysia, which fell 18 places to 119th, reflecting wider clampdowns on press freedoms across Asia.
The index is based on a survey of Reporters Without Borders regional correspondents and takes into account issues such as the level of attacks on journalists, media independence, and transparency of government institutions.
As in previous years, the countries with the worst record on press freedom tend to be dictatorships or one-party states such as North Korea or Turkmenistan, although the authors noted growing global animosity towards journalists.
Top 10 best countries for press freedom:1. Norway2. Finland3. Sweden4. Denmark5. Costa Rica6. The Netherlands7. Jamaica8. New Zealand9. Portugal10. Switzerland
Top 10 worst countries for press freedom:1. Eritrea2. North Korea3. Turkmenistan4. China5. Djibouti6. Vietnam7. Iran8. Syria9. Laos10. Cuba
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A century of oppression: The Kurds and the Turkish state – Green Left
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In recent weeks, the autocratic Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has moved to ban the pro-Kurdish left-wing Peoples Democratic Party (HDP) and jailed the 14th member of the partys 56-strong parliamentary caucus.
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Erdogans attack is the latest iteration of repressive, and at times genocidal, anti-Kurdish policies that go back to the foundation of the Turkish Republic in 1923. The banning of the HDP will mark the transition of Turkey to outright dictatorship.
Not coincidentally, Turkey has also just quit the Istanbul Convention on violence against women this, as the writer Elif Shafak warns in a country where three women are killed daily and femicide is a huge crisis". The HDPs strong pro-feminism contrasts starkly with Erdogans crude misogynism.
HDP MP Omer Faruk Gergerlioglu was stripped of his parliamentary immunity on March 17 and given a one-year prison sentence for a social media post he made five years ago. The partys imprisoned co-leaders, Leyla Guven and Selahattin Demirtas, are facing decades behind bars Demirtas up to 132 years.
The indictment against the HDP MPs alleges support for terrorism is a catch-all charge, applied at the whim of Erdogans ruling party, the Law and Development Party (AKP), to any opponent of his corrupt and repressive government and enforced by his creatures in the judiciary.
Earlier hopes that Erdogan was a liberalising reformer have been dashed. Under pressure from the European Union at a time when Turkey wanted EU membership, Erdogan had lifted restrictions on the Kurdish language and in 2013 opened peace negotiations with the Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK). Now, he has thrown all of that into reverse; the price of EU membership being too steep.
The HDP ban and withdrawal from the Istanbul Convention cap a wave of terror that began in 2016 when elements of the Turkish military staged an abortive coup, allegedly in concert with followers of Erdogans former ally, the exiled cleric Fethullah Gulen. The HDP unequivocally opposed the coup, but this did not save it from Erdogans confected wrath.
In effect, the coup was Erdogans Reichstag Fire moment, giving him the pretext to repress his real and imagined enemies, particularly the Kurds, despite the HDPs unequivocal opposition to the conspirators.
There have been vast purges of the civil service, schools and universities, and Islamist functionaries have replaced secular officials and academics. Simultaneously, there has been an enormous increase in government funding for religious education 68% in 2018 alone as Erdogan seeks to overturn the original secular character of the Republic and usher in clerical fascism.
The repression has raged most fiercely in the majority Kurdish districts of southeast Anatolia, centered on the city of Diyarbakir. The military and police have attacked Kurdish towns and villages, including with artillery and jet fighters.
Since 2016, the government has arrested 20,000 HDP members and jailed 10,000 of them. It has dissolved about 48 local government administrations headed by the HDP and installed pliant Islamist stooges against the wishes of the population. Hundreds of the HDPs militants, including the partys former co-chair Guven, have staged hunger strikes to back demands for the release of imprisoned PKK leader Abdullah Ocalan and a resumption of the peace negotiations that Erdogan broke off in 2015.
Erdogan launched the Orwellian sounding Operation Olive Branch in March 2018, an illegal invasion of the majority Kurdish districts of northern Syria, which the Kurds call Rojava. The Turkish military, acting in concert with Syrian jihadis, has been guilty of serious war crimes and crimes against humanity, including the ethnic cleansing of Kurds and Assyrians from towns such as Afrin and along a so-called cordon sanitaire along the border. Many of those who drove the Kurds and Assyrians from their homes in Rojava were recycled Islamic State (ISIS) fighters.
Earlier, while the Syrian Kurds and their allies in the Syrian Democratic Forces were fighting to liberate their homeland from the genocidal barbarians of ISIS, Erdogan and his cronies were acting in concert with the jihadis, providing them with hospitals and selling oil for them on the international market. Erdogan was appalled and furious when the Kurdish fighters of the People's Protection Units (YPG) and Women's Protection Units (YPJ) lifted the siege of Kobane, put ISIS to flight, to defeat it at Raqqa.
Although he pays lip service to democracy when it suits him, Erdogan is an instinctive and ideological autocrat with a visceral hatred of the Kurds. He is also the quintessential sexist who insists that women are not equal to men; that their sole role is housewifery; that women who work outside the home are half persons supposedly denying their femininity; and that Turkish Muslims who practice birth control and family planning are denying the divine will. Erdogan also fears that the Kurds, who have higher birth rates, might one day outnumber Turks.
Erdogan and his family are deeply corrupt and he fears that losing power will lead to his prosecution and jailing. While living standards drastically decline in a crisis-stricken economy, and two out of every three children live in poverty, the tyrant lives the life of a caliph in a 1100-room palace on the outskirts of Ankara. Built at a cost to taxpayers of about US$686 million, this monstrosity costs almost $700,000 in heating bills each winter. At a time when the number of Turkish billionaires has risen, total wealth has fallen, and the poorest 10% of the population own only 2.1% of it.
It is unclear what the future holds. On the one hand, Erdogan is faced with a mounting economic crisis and rising disgust over the regimes corruption and brutality. On the other hand, many poor rural Turks have been indoctrinated since birth with the governments bigoted anti-Kurdish ideology and its appeal to religious obscurantism.
Cynically making political capital from poverty, the AKP has tied access to food relief and loans to support for the government, and posed as a good Muslim benefactor for dispensing zakat or alms for the poor.
The HDP opposes everything Erdogan stands for. It is a pro-feminist, pro-ecology, left-wing party and although pro-Kurdish, it is multi-ethnic and seeks to embrace progressive Turks. It is an associate member of the Party of European Socialists, a consultative member of the Socialist International, and a full member of the Progressive Alliance.
Formed in 2012, the HDP is now the third largest party in Turkey. In the 2018 elections, despite vicious repression, official chicanery, a virtual government monopoly of the media, and rigged ballots, it secured 11.7% of the vote and won 56 out of 600 parliamentary seats.
The party has continued to reach out to the Turkish population and, although the success of this should not be overestimated, its growth has spooked Erdogan because it threatens to undermine the chauvinist anti-Kurdish consensus that has existed since the creation of the Turkish Republic in 1923.
One thing is clear. Despite a century of persecution since the creation of the Turkish Republic, the 15-20 million-strong Kurdish minority will never agree to be Turkified, and many Kurds have developed a high level of political sophistication. Many, too, have never given up the dream of an independent Kurdish state, and millions support the Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK).
The tragedy of the Kurds is that their awakening as a people and demand for self-determination coincided with the decline of the old Ottoman Empire and the rise of virulent, ethnically hegemonic Turkish nationalism. The tragedy has been compounded by the indifference of the outside world, and the alliance of the Western Powers with the Turkish Republic.
For centuries, the Ottoman Empire had practised what was at best a rough form of multiculturalism exemplified by the decision to grant sanctuary to the Sephardic Jews after their expulsion from Catholic Spain in 1492. Although the population was mainly Muslim, large Jewish and Christian minorities were tolerated as peoples of the book. By the 1890s, however, with the empire in terminal decline, Turkish ethnic nationalism was taking root and the Young Turks began to favour the creation of an ethnically homogeneous Turkish state in Anatolia and the Ottoman European districts.
One model for the modernisers was the centralised French state, which sought to assimilate its large non-French populations.
World War I saw the increasingly ruthless Young Turks organise the genocide of the empires Christian Armenian, Greek, and Assyrian populations; the aim being the creation of an ethnically and religiously homogeneous state. This genocide was followed up in 1923 by the mass population transfer of Muslims and Christians between Greece and Turkey. The Young Turks grand design had been that non-Turks could make up no more than 5% of any town or district, and that they should become good Turks.
Defeated by the Western Allies, the Ottoman rulers had no choice but to accept the carve-up of the empire along the artificial lines decided by Britain and France in the 1916 Sykes-Picot agreement. They were, however, determined to hang on to the core regions in Anatolia and Europe and fought a war of independence to secure them against foreign intervention.
The Turkish government declined to ratify the Treaty of Svres, signed with the victorious Allies in 1920, which provided for the creation of a Kurdish state in eastern Anatolia. When, in 1923, the final peace settlement with the Allies was ratified at Lausanne, all mention of Kurdish independence or autonomy had been dropped. The Lausanne Treaty made no reference to the Kurds, but did stipulate the right to language and cultural rights for non-Turkish subjects of the new Republic.
The language clauses proved to be a dead letter. The Allies looked the other way when Mustapha Kemal Ataturk, the dictatorial Turkish ruler and former Ottoman general, banned the use of the Kurdish language, along with Kurdish place and given names and Kurdish customs. Continuing the genocidal program of the Young Turks, Ataturk was determined to create a linguistic and culturally homogeneous Turkish state.
The Kurds rose in revolt, but the uprising was drowned in blood. In scenes reminiscent of the Armenian genocide, Kurdish villages were razed, crops and livestock destroyed, and whole populations massacred or deported. Once again, according to the Young Turks 5% rule, Kurds were to comprise small and manageable minorities in all towns and districts.
In 1934, the Turkish government passed a Resettlement Law, which sought to break up non-Turkish populations. Thereafter, periodic uprisings such as at Dersim in 1937-38[1] were stamped out with such appalling brutality against civilians that some Turkish officers refused to continue to serve. Turkish scholars have described the massacres and deportations as genocide. Vast swathes of countryside, already devastated by the Armenian genocide with the concomitant elimination of entrepreneurs and skilled artisans, fell into long-term economic and social regression.
Large sections of eastern Anatolia remained off-limits to foreigners until 1965, and the very existence of the Kurdish people was denied: they were Mountain Turks earmarked for forced assimilation. Mention of the Armenian genocide was made a crime, along with insulting Turkishness, and a falsified version of history was taught in schools the unthinkable corollary would be if the German state criminalised mention of the Holocaust.
The most recent revolt has been the guerrilla insurgency of the PKK, which was launched in 1984 with the aim of creating an independent Kurdish state.
Despite ceasefires between 1999-2004, and 2013-15, the war has caused some 40,000 deaths and led to widespread devastation. Some 2 million Kurds were driven from their homes and the civilian suffering has been horrendous. Predictably, the Turkish government has prevailed upon its allies, including the United States, Australia, the EU and Britain to proscribe the PKK as a terrorist organisation.
In the past, the Wests slavish devotion to Turkish interests was explicable in part by Turkeys role as a frontline NATO state, and while this is still the case up to a point despite the fall of the Soviet Union, it is clear that the imperialists are happy for Turkey to crush any prospect of a genuinely independent Kurdish state that might threaten their strategic and economic interests.
The PKK has proven to be a remarkably resilient and disciplined force capable of resisting the powerful Turkish military, which is armed to the teeth with high-tech weaponry, much of it supplied by Turkeys NATO allies. Nevertheless, the war has reached a stalemate; it is unlikely that the current Turkish offensive will be successful, but neither will the PKK defeat the Turkish military.
The stalemate has caused the PKK leadership to re-examine its original aims and ideology. The PKK has twice declared ceasefires and sought to negotiate. Indeed, Erdogan negotiated with Ocalan, before calling talks off in 2015.
Formed in 1978 as a Marxist-Leninist party, the PKK aimed to create an independent Kurdish state. This has proved chimerical. The Turkish state has been implacably opposed to ceding even an inch of territory; has been able to secure the support of the big powers in labelling the PKK as terrorist; and has, at times, received support from the corrupt Kurdish Regional Government in Iraq. Moreover, most of the Turkish population has backed the war, indoctrinated by Kemalist ideology that sees Turkeys boundaries as fixed and immutable, and Turkey as a state exclusively for Turks.
At the same time, the government has used the perceived threat of the Kurdish other to cement its control over the Turkish population. This has been as true of the Kemalist military and the secular Republican Peoples Party as it is of the Islamist AKP.
Since his capture 22 years ago, however, Ocalan has read widely outside of the orthodox Marxist-Leninist canon, most notably works by Benedict Anderson on imagined communities, and by Murray Bookchin on libertarian socialism. Under his influence, the PKK has abandoned its aim of the creation of a separate Kurdish state in favour of the demand for autonomy, and advocates what he calls democratic confederalism in place of statist solutions.
Orthodox Marxist-Leninist theory has insisted on the right of peoples to self-determination (although in practice, in its degenerate Stalinist iteration, it trampled all over it for raisons dtat). Arguing against Marxists who regarded all nationalism as reactionary diversions from the internationalist struggle, Russian revolutionary leader Vladimir Lenin insisted there were two types of nationalism that of the oppressor and the oppressed and that it was the duty of Marxists to support the struggles for self-determination of Ireland and other oppressed nations.
So far, so good, but as poet Johann Wolfgang von Goethe famously wrote: All theory is grey, my friend. But forever green is the tree of life. The theory ran the risk of becoming a dogmatic prescription rather than a guide to action. Whereas application of the theory to, say, Vietnam, is straightforward, not even Ireland was plain sailing with its large pro-British majority in the countrys northeast. In the case of the territories of the former Austro-Hungarian and Ottoman empires, the problems of competing nationalisms continue to this day.
In the former Ottoman territories inhabited by a myriad of different ethnic and religious groups, often living cheek by jowl in the same town or village the problem was compounded by the emergence of states and boundaries artificially created by the victorious western imperialists in the aftermath of World War I.
Lenin was indubitably correct to insist on the distinction between the nationalism of the oppressed and the oppressor, but in practice the difference could be difficult to discern in regions of mixed ethnicity. Moreover, the nationalism of an oppressed people can mutate into the nationalism of an oppressor, as is the case with the Jewish people in Israel/Palestine today. In any case, as Anderson and other writers have demonstrated, nationalism is itself a relatively recent phenomenon and attempts to read back its existence into history to justify a contemporary nationalism are inventions.
Turkish nationalism and that of the Baathists in Syria and Iraq is virulently reactionary and repressive, even genocidal, and the Kurds have every right to oppose it, even by force of arms. The problem is that, in part because of social engineering deportations, resettlement of Turks, forced assimilation, etc by the Turkish state, the Kurds are spread far outside their heartlands in southeast Anatolia.
Outside of Turkey, in Iraq, Syria, and Iran, the Kurdish population is often inextricably intermingled with a bewildering plurality of other ethnic and religious groups, including Turkmen, Arabs, Assyrians, Armenians, Ajam (Persians), Circassians, Chechens, Shabaks, Yazidi Kurds and Roma.
Confronted with a similar situation 100 years ago, in the multinational Austro-Hungarian Empire, the Austro-Marxists advocated replacing the dual monarchy with a democratic federation of the peoples. In light of subsequent horrors, including mass deportations, forced assimilation, internecine wars and ethnic cleansing, we may ask if their ideas were so wrong.
These were the problems Ocalan wrestled with in his cell in the prison on Imrali island in the Sea of Marmara. His solution is democratic confederalism, based on direct democracy, mutual respect for ethnic and religious difference, equality for women in all spheres, and respect for the Earth that gives life to all.
Ocalan today is revered as a leader by millions of Kurds, and his ideas have spread far beyond the PKK. The Rojava Kurds have attempted, even during war against ISIS and Turkey, to put his ideas into practice, notably in the case of the all-female YPJ (although it should be stressed that the PKK has always favoured equality for women in both theory and practice) and in a system of democratic councils. The same is true of the HDP, which is implacably feminist and multicultural.
The Great Powers have always looked the other way when the various post-Ottoman states, including Turkey, have viciously repressed the Kurds and other peoples. The phrase that the Kurds have no friends but the mountains may be hackneyed, but it is all too true.
Just a few years after promising the Kurds their own state at Svres, British leader Winston Churchill was demanding they be bombed and gassed. At the end of World War II, the Soviet Union abandoned the Mahabad Republic, which they had sponsored in the Kurdish regions of Iran, leaving the people to suffer cruel repression. The Republics elected President, Qadhi Muhammad, was publicly hanged.
The United States, too, incited the Kurds in Iraq to revolt against Saddam Husseins dictatorship, only to abandon them. Most recently, under Donald Trump, the US rubber-stamped Erdogans illegal invasion of Rojava this after the Kurds had sacrificed their blood to rid the world of ISIS.
It should be clear that the Left has an internationalist duty to support the Kurds, but painful to admit, all too many western socialists and Marxists have been indifferent or even hostile to the Kurdish peoples long struggle for justice. With honourable exceptions, this has also been the case with the Turkish left.
It would be wrong, though, to see the Kurds merely as victims. They have resisted their oppressors, sometimes by armed struggle, at other times by peaceful mass mobilisation. It is the duty of all progressive people, and especially of socialists, to stand by them, because the Great Powers will not break from the pattern of using and abusing the Kurds. Their struggle is also an inspiration, pointing the way forward for western socialists. This is the context in which we should view the current struggle of the HDP against Erdogans fascist dictatorship.
Notes
[1] In 2011, Erdogan admitted the Dersim massacres and apologised for them. The apology may have been sincere, but he also pointed the finger at his Republican Peoples Party opponents, who were in power at the time of the massacres. It is also likely that he hoped to undercut support for the PKK.
[This article also appears in Links International Journal of Socialist Renewal.]
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