How can we take it back?

Published on
Friday, March 17, 2017
Common Dreams

As Trump Divides, One Lawmaker Remains Huuugely Popular with American Voters
Conservative news survey suggests that Sanders' message of economic justice may be one of the few points of popular resonance in the US
Lauren McCauley, staff writer


smiley_sanders.jpeg

Sen. Bernie Sanders' rating is the highest yet for the Fox News poll, which has also taken samples in September 2015, as well as in March, June, and August 2016. (Photo: Win McNamee/Getty Images)

While it seems that the American public holds a dim view of most of its elected officials these days, a recent Fox News poll highlighted one lawmaker who has seemingly won over the majority of voters: Sen. Bernie Sanders.

The survey, published Wednesday, found that 61 percent of respondents said they view the Independent senator from Vermont, an avowed Democratic socialist, favorably.

At the same time, only 32 percent of respondents said they approve of the the job that Democrats are doing in Congress (60 percent disapprove), and even less (29 percent) agree with the work of the GOP.

Notably, the polling comes as Sanders, who caucuses with the Democrats and lost in a competitive presidential primary bid to Hillary Clinton, has faced antipathy from the party establishment.

[...]

http://www.commondreams.org/news/20...aker-remains-huuugely-popular-american-voters
 
Published on
Tuesday, March 21, 2017
Common Dreams
US Ditches Human Rights Hearing in 'Unprecedented Show of Disrespect'
ACLU had planned to drill officials on immigration, DAPL, and Muslim ban, but representatives from various departments never showed
Nadia Prupis, staff writer


trumpprotest.jpg

The civil rights group had filed an emergency request for the meeting in January, after President Donald Trump signed an executive order that banned travelers from seven Muslim-majority countries. (Photo: Karla Cote/flickr/cc)

The U.S. failed to show up to a human rights hearing in an "unprecedented show of disrespect to the international community," the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) said Tuesday.

In a surprise move, the government ditched a hearing with the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights (IACHR), an arm of the Organization of American States, where the ACLU had planned to drill officials on the Trump administration's crackdown on immigration; its ban on travelers from six Muslim-majority countries; and the Dakota Access Pipeline (DAPL), among other issues.

The civil rights group had filed an emergency request for the meeting in February, after President Donald Trump signed an executive order that banned travelers from seven Muslim-majority countries. That order, as well as its follow-up mandate, issued last month, have since been suspended.

Jamil Dakwar, director of the ACLU's human rights program, said the absence was a "deeply troubling" signal from the White House.

"Today's no-show is a new low. The Trump administration's decision is an unprecedented show of disrespect to the international community that will alienate democratic allies," Dakwar said. "Refusing to engage with the commission is an isolationist policy that mirrors the behavior of authoritarian regimes and will only serve to embolden them. This is another worrying sign that the Trump administration is not only launching an assault on human rights at home but is also trying to undermine international bodies charged with holding abusive governments accountable."

The government was expected to send representatives from the Department of Homeland Security, the Department of Justice, and the State Department.

"In the past, when U.S. governments have sought to express displeasure at having their records scrutinized, they have occasionally protested by sending lower-level officials," Dakwar wrote in a blog post later Tuesday. "But today's refusal to engage the commission at all is a deeply troubling indication of its disrespect for human rights norms and the institutions that oversee their protection."

"Survivors of the U.S. post-9/11 torture program have appealed to it, and even the Bush administration defended its policies before the IACHR," he added.

Mexico, Honduras, Panama, Chile, Bolivia, Guatemala, and Nicaragua have all given testimony to the council this week. More countries are facing scrutiny Tuesday and Wednesday.

"Let's hope the no-show is temporary, and not a sign of what's to come," Dakwar wrote.

http://commondreams.org/news/2017/0...-rights-hearing-unprecedented-show-disrespect


Lots of Latin American countries had military dictatorships in the past supported by the US. Of course that they [the Gringos] are afraid of exposure. ;)
 
America's #1 Again (In Healthcare Costs Around The World)

by Tyler Durden
Mar 24, 2017 2:45 AM

While the American Healthcare Act, President Trump’s first major legislative effort, is going to a vote in the House of Representatives on Friday - no matter what; for many years now, the American healthcare system has been flawed.

As Statista's Feliz Richter illustrates in the chart below, U.S. health spending per capita (including public and private spending) is higher than it is anywhere else in the world, and yet, the country lags behind other nations in several aspects such as life expectancy and health insurance coverage.



You will find more statistics at Statista

USA, USA, USA!

http://www.zerohedge.com/news/2017-03-23/americas-1-again-healthcare-costs-around-world


You could easily cut your cost by 30-50%, compared to equivalent EU countries.
 
Activism is mainstream again … how can protests create change?
From the women’s march to climate change protests, people are taking to the streets in an attempt to get their voices heard. How can they make an impact?



Hundreds of thousands of people marched in cities around the world on 21 January 2017 to protest threats against women’s rights. Photograph: Barry Lewis/Getty
Protesting is back. People have woken up to the undeniable fact that power ultimately lies with them. We can’t change what’s already happened, but we can organise to ensure that the huge progress we have made tackling some of the world’s greatest problems is not lost.

We are returning to the traditional and most effective form of protest – marching, with placards, bull-horns and a collective, defiant voice.

The fragmenting of political systems across the globe has worrying implications for democracy. But it has also sparked greater determination. A visible, protesting public is one of the most effective ways to hold political leaders to account and push the agendas that matter.

In Romania, it’s estimated that 500,000 people recently took to the streets to protest about corruption. A friend, Bea, who took part in the protests, described them as driven by anger, but that people were left with a sense of community, hope and solidarity. Those protesting included families, professionals, creatives, journalists, students and more. They exchanged tea, snacks and water. Reminiscent of the days of Jubilee 2000, a human chain of 30,000 people was formed around parliament.

Bea believes the protests have produced a mindshift, people now understanding that we can only drive positive change together. That in itself is an incredible outcome.

Anyone who has been on a protest can attest to the exhilaration that people power provides. This renewed protest zeitgeist offers a golden opportunity to reawaken those causes. But how can this new found vigour have the most impact?

It would intensify impact if we link protests to the UN’s sustainable development goals, aiming to make the world a safer, fairer, cleaner and more peaceful place by 2030. In 2015, 193 countries signed up to the SDGs and it’s up to the people to hold their governments to account to achieve them.

Reminding our leaders of their duties requires everyone who cares to take action. With renewed purpose, activism must become as much a part of our civic duty as paying council tax or dividing rubbish up for recycling.

We at One campaign are marching all the way to 2030, armed with pens and placards, bull horns, biros and banners. We urge you join us to capitalise on the re-energised protest movement and join fellow global citizens to push for the SDGs to do as they are intended – make us all safer and the world a fairer place.

Five tips for making the most impact
  1. Clarity of message and a clear end goal are crucial. Think of Make Poverty History – a simple, clear ask.
  2. Balance political and news agenda opportunity with public zeitgeist – for example, the UK’s anti-corruption summit and perfect timing of the Panama Papers.
  3. Make it as easy as possible for people to get involved; they’re busy, they have other things going on, but with the right information and support they will join in.
  4. Make sure your protest targets know what’s happening and why. There’s no point in thousands of people taking to the streets if the targets don’t hear about it. That just making noise, not making change.
  5. Know that change is possible. We were was part of the campaign that secured legislation to enshrine in law that 0.7% of UK gross national income
    goes to overseas aid – the UN’s aid spending target.
There’s a saying: if you want to build a ship, don’t ask people to collect wood and assign them tasks, but teach them to long for the endless immensity of the sea.

It’s the same same principle for campaigning – if people care about an issue, they will take action.

Saira O’Mallie is the UK director (interim) at One Campaign.

Join our community of development professionals and humanitarians. Follow @GuardianGDP on Twitter. Join the conversation with the hashtag #Dev2030.

https://www.theguardian.com/global-...25/activism-mainstream-protests-create-change


Corruption is feeling the heat world-wide.

The sixties are back!!!! :m027: :m029: :m052: :m059: :m065: :m141:
 
America's #1 Again (In Healthcare Costs Around The World)

by Tyler Durden
Mar 24, 2017 2:45 AM

While the American Healthcare Act, President Trump’s first major legislative effort, is going to a vote in the House of Representatives on Friday - no matter what; for many years now, the American healthcare system has been flawed.

As Statista's Feliz Richter illustrates in the chart below, U.S. health spending per capita (including public and private spending) is higher than it is anywhere else in the world, and yet, the country lags behind other nations in several aspects such as life expectancy and health insurance coverage.



You will find more statistics at Statista

USA, USA, USA!

http://www.zerohedge.com/news/2017-03-23/americas-1-again-healthcare-costs-around-world


You could easily cut your cost by 30-50%, compared to equivalent EU countries.


It’s amazing how many people here are still ignorant to our medical system.
But it’s also amazing how many people are coming to the realization that they are getting fleeced.
We shall see what happens.
 
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Friday, March 31, 2017
Common Dreams
Borrowers 'Chilled to the Bone' as DOE Reneges on Student Loan Forgiveness
Young people who took low-paying, public-sector jobs with promise of loan forgiveness now 'hosed'
Lauren McCauley, staff writer


student_loans.jpeg

As first wave of qualified workers prepare to apply for loan forgiveness, they may have an unpleasant surprise waiting for them. (Photo: thisisbossi/flickr/cc)

In a troubling development for the countless people saddled with student debt, the U.S. Department of Education (DOE) may be reneging on a promise made to over 550,000 such borrowers who were led to believe that their loans would be forgiven after ten years of work in the public service.

Responding to an ongoing lawsuit from four borrowers, the DOE has given no explanation but says that approval letters sent to individuals who signed up for the Public Service Loan Forgiveness Program are not in fact "binding," the New York Times reported Thursday.

Times reporter Stacy Cowley wrote:

In a legal filing submitted last week, the Education Department suggested that borrowers could not rely on the program's administrator to say accurately whether they qualify for debt forgiveness. The thousands of approval letters that have been sent by the administrator, FedLoan Servicing, are not binding and can be rescinded at any time, the agency said.

The filing adds to questions and concerns about the program just as the first potential beneficiaries reach the end of their 10-year commitment—and the clocks start ticking on the remainder of their debts.

The program, established in 2007, covers individuals who work for 10 years at an approved place of employment, such as a nonprofit or government organization. After an individual makes 120 monthly loan payments, the program ostensibly "forgives the remaining balance." As much as a quarter of the U.S. workforce could potentially qualify for the loan forgiveness, according to the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau.

However, for the 553,000 who have gone through the process, submitting forms to check their workplace eligibility and then receiving a note of approval, that guarantee is in doubt as they may now unexpectedly owe thousands of dollars to pay off those debts.

Journalist David Dayen compared the move to the Bonus Army scandal, when roughly 43,000 Depression-era World War I veterans and their supporters stormed Washington D.C. to demand payment on cash vouchers given to them for their service before they were forcibly driven out by Army Chief of Staff General Douglas MacArthur under order from President Herbert Hoover.

Another reader pointed out on Twitter:

Hundreds of thousands of people, mostly young, took public-interest jobs for lower pay relying on their govt’s promise. Now, hosed. pic.twitter.com/o4UnjDJG5j

— Blair Reeves (@BlairReeves) March 31, 2017

That same reader added, "This should chill every millennial with debt to the bone."

The program encourages individuals to resubmit the forms each year and with each job change, to make sure they still qualify. But, as Cowley notes, "some of those approved borrowers might get bad news because it is unclear whether the certifications are valid."

The reporting continues:

[Plaintiff Jamie] Rudert submitted the certification form in 2012 and received a letter from FedLoan affirming that his work as a lawyer at Vietnam Veterans of America, a nonprofit aid group, qualified him for the forgiveness program. But in 2016, after submitting his latest annual recertification note to FedLoan, he got a denial note.

The decision was retroactive, he was told. None of his previous work for the group would be considered valid for the loan forgiveness program. What changed? Mr. Rudert said he did not know. After filing a complaint with the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, he received a reply from FedLoan saying that his application "had initially been approved in error."

In December, Rudert and the American Bar Association filed suit against the DOE charging that the agency acted "arbitrarily and capriciously."


"The idea that approvals can be reversed at any time, with no explanation, is chilling for borrowers," Cowley observed, and is incredibly worrisome for the "first wave of qualified workers will be eligible to submit applications for debt forgiveness in October."


While the scandal falls under the purview of the Obama administration, many fear that recently-installed Education Secretary Betsy DeVos will be no friend of student borrowers. One of DeVos' first acts earlier this month was to reverse an Obama-era guidance which limited fees debt collectors could charge on student loans.

http://www.commondreams.org/news/20...led-bone-doe-reneges-student-loan-forgiveness


Signs of a Kafkaesque bureaucracy. :m075:
 
UPDATED: Trump's EPA Just Greenlighted a Pesticide Known to Damage Kids' Brains
EPA chief Scott Pruitt hails the move as a return to "using sound science in decision-making.

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UPDATE (3-29-2017): EPA director Scott Pruitt signed an order denying the agency's own proposal to ban chlorpyrifos, according to a Wednesday afternoon press release. "We need to provide regulatory certainty to the thousands of American farms that rely on chlorpyrifos, while still protecting human health and the environment,” Pruitt said in a written statement.

“By reversing the previous Administration’s steps to ban one of the most widely used pesticides in the world, we are returning to using sound science in decision-making – rather than predetermined results.”


By Friday, President Donald Trump's Environmental Protection Agency will have to make a momentous decision: whether to protect kids from a widely used pesticide that's known to harm their brains—or protect the interests of the chemical's maker, Dow AgroSciences.

The pesticide in question, chlorpyrifos, is a nasty piece of work. It's an organophosphate, a class of bug killers that work by "interrupting the electrochemical processes that nerves use to communicate with muscles and other nerves," as the Pesticide Encyclopedia puts it. Chlorpyrifos is also an endocrine disrupter, meaning it can cause "adverse developmental, reproductive, neurological, and immune effects," according to the National Institutes of Health.

 
Hmmm...a suicide?
Really?
I call BS.
First Muslim Judge to reach this court.
Suicide due to a conflict between her being a Muslim woman in a position of power....at 65?
Give me a break...at least make it look like a car accident or something...this is just sloppy and obvious.
No suicide note but police don’t consider it suspicious?
Era of Trump.


Mystery and Melancholy Surround Death of Judge Found in the Hudson
https://www.nytimes.com/2017/04/13/...ork-judge-hudson-river-committed-suicide.html

"Judge Abdus-Salaam was known for her steadfast liberal voice, regularly siding with immigrants, the poor, and people with mental illnesses against established interests. She also leaned toward injured parties who brought claims of fraud or misconduct against wealthy corporations.

She was admired by her colleagues for her thoughtfulness, candor and finely crafted writing style. And she was not one to use her decisions as a soapbox even when they set precedents."
 
But yet...we have infant mortality rates in the US that rival Somalia.
Brilliant!
Here's How Much the 'Mother of All Bombs’ Costs
MOAB%20GBU-43-B.jpg

They dropped the largest non-nuclear bomb against ISIS in the Nangarhar Province in Afghanistan.
The GBU-43B known as the Massive Ordnance Air Blast (MOAB) or the Mother of All Bombs, is a 20,000-pound monster.
It took $314 million to develop and has a unit cost of $16 million.
 
Arkansas executions: health giant sues state as federal judge issues injunction
Medical supply company McKesson says state deceptively purchased drugs for lethal injection, becoming first in history to sue a death penalty state for misuse



The death row inmates who were until recently scheduled for execution. The lawsuit highlight the extreme measures that states will take to secure drugs. Photograph: Arkansas Department of Corrections/EPA

Ed Pilkington in New York

@edpilkington

Saturday 15 April 2017 15.41 BST Last modified on Saturday 15 April 2017 16.45 BST

A US healthcare giant has accused the state of Arkansas of effectively lying to it over the sale of a pharmaceutical drug that the Republican governor had been poised to use in a historic killing spree of eight prisoners in 11 days.

The medical supply company McKesson has become the first private company in US legal history to sue a death penalty state for the misuse of its products in executions. Its unprecedented action has succeeded – for now – in frustrating the ambition of the Republican governor, Asa Hutchinson, to stage what critics have called a “conveyor belt” of death.

[...]

The dispute brings to a head a legal collision that has been pending since at least 2010, when the UK government unilaterally imposed export controls on several drugs used in US executions. The following year the European Union similarly moved to block exports, and at the same time individual drug manufacturers in America adopted stringent distribution controls designed to prevent their products falling into the executioners’ hands.

With the resulting dearth of supply, death penalty states turned to ever more extreme measures to try to secure the drugs. The Arkansas governor’s wild scheme of killing eight prisoners in 11 days was in itself an expression of desperation – Hutchinson made clear he was rushing the procedures in order to use up a batch of the sedative midazolam before it expired at the end of April.

Other states have been accused of using misleading tactics to bypass distribution controls. Texas audaciously obtained lethal injection drugs by pretending they were needed by a prison hospital unit that had been closed for many years.

In 2011, prison officials in Ohio attempted to acquire the barbiturate pentobarbital by posing as representatives of a mental health department.

“When you call them to see if they will sell to us make sure you say we are the department of mental health, do not mention anything about corrections or what we use the drug for,” one official said.

Now it is Arkansas’ turn to be under the spotlight, and with as powerful an adversary as McKesson the stakes could not be higher. Having intended to carry out would be the most intense burst of US executions in half a century, Hutchinson may find that his legacy falls in the opposite direction.

https://www.theguardian.com/world/2017/apr/15/arkansas-executions-mckesson-sues-lethal-injection


It is excellent that the death penalty is dying, albeit slowly. BTW, it was the European Union legislation that brought about the current difficult with acquiring drugs for lethal injection. It seldom happens that foreign states affect US domestic policy. And Ohio tried to purchase pentobarbital illegally!! Oops!
 
Sunday, April 16, 2017
Common Dreams
Keystone XL Opponents Target Banks Funding Climate Destruction
Week of action calls on financial institutions to divest from the controversial pipeline
Lauren McCauley, staff writer


nokxlreboot.png

After fierce nationwide opposition forced the Obama administration to halt the Keystone XL pipeline, President Donald Trump has given it the green light and the climate movement has vowed to fight it once again. (Image via Rainforest Action Network)

Kicking off a week of actions targeting the institutions financing the controversial Keystone XL (KXL) tar sands pipelines, activists on Saturday protested at banks in 25 cities to shine a spotlight on the roll they are having on climate destruction.

"It's back—and so are we," reads the call to action. After fierce nationwide opposition forced the Obama administration to halt the project, President Donald Trump has given it the green light and the climate movement has vowed to fight it once again.

The peaceful demonstrations are "designed to shine a spotlight on the the four key financial institutions bankrolling the KXL pipeline— Citibank, JPMorgan Chase, Wells Fargo, and TD Bank—and pressure them and the broader financial community to pull out and 'defund' the project," said the Rainforest Action Network, which is organizing the week of protest.

In addition to demonstrating outside banks, activists across the country are also planning a banner drop in Los Angeles and a protest targeting local government in San Franciscothroughout the week of action, which will culminate on Earth Day. Find an action near you here.

[...]

https://www.commondreams.org/news/2...ents-target-banks-funding-climate-destruction


This is positive. Global banking behemoths need a counterweight, or else psychopathic corporate power will go unchecked. They killed the unions starting in the 1970's. Now, we have the Internet.
 
Published on
Sunday, April 02, 2017
the Toronto Star
Fighting Fake News About Canadian Health Care
Whenever Americans start tinkering with their deeply dysfunctional health care system, we feel the reverberations up here, as right-wing commentators seek to denigrate our system of universal health care coverage.
Linda McQuaig


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Charles de Ganahl Koch and David Hamilton Koch are the notorious Koch Bothers. The brothers own Koch Industries and are major benefactors for organizations and candidates involved in pushing radical Republican policies. The Koch Brothers use their immense wealth to cast a shadow on American government at all levels and form it to their own design. (cc/donkeyHotey)

I recall my frustration years ago watching U.S. television while an “analyst” from the right-wing Cato Institute spewed blatant lies about Canada’s public health care system — including that all hospitals in Ontario, having run out of money at the end of the year, had completely shut down for the month of December.

This was back in pre-social media days, making it difficult (beyond yelling at the TV) to immediately challenge such a breathless release of alternative facts.

So it was with some pleasure last week that I watched as a Republican congressman tried to insist that Canadians routinely flock to the U.S. for health care, only to have MSNBC host Ali Velshi stop him dead in his tracks.

“Sir, I grew up in Canada,” Velshi declared. “I live in Canada. My entire family is in Canada. Nobody I know ever came to the United States for health care. I am sure you have a handful of stories about things like that. It is not actually statistically true.”

Whenever Americans start tinkering with their deeply dysfunctional health care system, we feel the reverberations up here, as right-wing commentators seek to denigrate our system of universal health care coverage, which they know sets a dangerous example.

With the ruling Republicans now poised to take health care coverage from 14 million Americans (eventually 24 million) and keep a straight face while insisting this is about increasing their “choice,” it’s worth reminding ourselves just how merciless, cruel (and stupid) so many of the Trump/Republican solutions truly are.

Health care is a particularly stark example, but it is symptomatic of the Republican keenness to fully embrace the private marketplace, even though that means abandoning vast numbers of their fellow citizens by the side of the road.

Americans have always had more of a taste for unbridled capitalism than Canadians, but today’s Republican party is infected by a particularly virulent strain — a strain that has been nurtured with ample funds from a few dozen billionaires, led by Charles and David Koch, who have a combined fortune of $84.5 billion.

The Koch brothers have long been radical libertarians, far to the right of even radical conservatives like Ronald Reagan.

When David Koch tried his hand at politics in 1980, running for vice-president on the Libertarian Party ticket that called for an end to public schools, social security and taxation, he and his running mate won only 1 per cent of the vote in the Reagan landslide.

Undeterred, the Koch brothers set about to push America, particularly the Republican Party, much farther right. Operating mostly behind the scenes, and driven by an abiding hatred of government and anything that smacked of distributing wealth more broadly, the Kochs invested massively over the next few decades in creating a vast network of think tanks, academic programs, front groups, political action groups and campaigns, lobbyists and politicians, as New Yorker writer Jane Meyer documents in her powerful book Dark Money.

(Indeed, the “analyst” I heard lying about the shutdown of Ontario hospitals was from the Cato Institute, which Charles Koch established in 1974.)

With the rise of Donald Trump, the media has tended to go along with Trump’s suggestion that, unlike other Republican politicians who depend on Koch money, he enjoys a rare independence from the brothers.

Trump’s independence may be overstated; his vice president, Mike Pence, has been a major recipient of Koch money and was Charles Koch’s first choice for president in 2012. Pence has brought Koch operatives into the White House and shows signs of becoming a Dick Cheney-style puppet master. For that matter, the Kochs are only an impeachment away from having their guy running the free world.

The role of Koch money in shaping Republican politics gets surprisingly little media attention. But it helps explain the otherwise baffling behaviour of Republican politicians scrambling to justify stripping health coverage from their constituents and using the savings to pay for $600 billion worth of tax cuts for the rich. Awkward.

Meanwhile, many Republicans in the “freedom caucus,” who’ve been heavily funded by the Kochs, consider the proposed reform too generous to the disadvantaged.

American commentators talk about how “complicated” reforming health care is. True, if you utterly reject the simple solution that works — a Canadian-style public system — it does become awfully complicated devising a solution that pleases the broader American public while also satisfying two radical extremists who together have the world’s largest fortune and a deep aversion to sharing.

https://www.commondreams.org/views/2017/04/02/fighting-fake-news-about-canadian-health-care


Interesting story.
 
Yes...I would like to hear from some Canadians and those of you in countries with universal healthcare...what do you pay?
How hard is it to get a procedure you need and how long do you have to wait?
How long are your ER wait times?
What kind of medical bills do you get in the mail?
How could your system be improved??
 
Some Americans May Get Stranded On The 'Mexican Side' Of Trump's 'Beautiful' Border Wall

by Tyler Durden
Apr 17, 2017 10:15 PM


While happy campaign rhetoric made it sound like building a 2,000 foot wall along the U.S. southern border would be a walk in the park, in reality, much like repealing and replacing Obamacare and/or passing meaningful tax reform, various regulatory and other hurdles could tie up the project for years.

One such issue that threatens the viability of Trump's 'beautiful' border wall stems from the fact that most of the southern border of Texas is owned by private individuals which means the U.S. government will have to take 100s landowners to court to exert its power of eminent domain. Moreover, as NBC points out, some folks live so close to the Rio Grand River that they may end up on the 'Mexican side' of the wall. Of course, these landowner fights could provide all the leverage needed for liberal lawyers to hold up the border wall construction forever, or at least until Trump gets voted out of office.


When the U.S. government built the fence, it had to take hundreds of landowners to court to use its power of eminent domain. That's because unlike in other southern border states, most Texas border land is privately owned, and tough terrain and water use agreements with Mexico meant some fence was built a mile or more north of the river.


With court fights also expected over Trump's wall, the Texas Civil Rights Project has begun signing up landowners and identifying people who might be affected.


Under the U.S. Constitution, the government must prove it wants to seize land for public use and must offer a landowner "just compensation." While challenging the wall's "public use" would be difficult, those who believe they're not getting the full value of their land could take the case to court, setting up trials that could take years.


Even if they don't win, lawyers hope to tie up the wall in court long enough that politics could effectively stop it, either in Congress or after another election.

"That's a fight that we've been ready to fight," said Efren Olivares, a lawyer with the Texas Civil Rights Project.

2017.04.17%20-%20Border%201_0.JPG



Of course, when it comes to conservatives in Texas, almost nothing draws more ire from voters than the idea of stripping them of their private property rights through the assertion of eminent domain. Moreover, in this specific instance, those voters will find unlikely support from any number of liberal organizations who will be all too willing to fund their legal costs to fight Trump and his wall.


In San Benito, Eloisa Tamez spent seven years trying to stop the government from running the fence through her property, which had been in her family since the 1700s. The government eventually won, but only after agreeing to pay about $56,000, many times what it initially offered. She uses a gate to access the part of her property that's on the other side of the fence.


Now, she's preparing for the possibility of another court battle.


"I probably have one more decade to live, and I had one decade of torture," said Tamez, 82. "I think if they start that business again, I don't know how much fight I'll have left in me, but I'm going to fight it until the end."

Something tells us that yet another Trump initiative just got demoted from a 'near certainty' to a 'maybe'...right along with healthcare and tax reform.

http://www.zerohedge.com/news/2017-...nded-mexican-side-trump-beautiful-border-wall


Trump is painting himself into a corner.
 
Published on
Saturday, April 15, 2017
Common Dreams
Prison and Profits
Christopher Brauchli


prison_cell.jpg

(Photo: Dan Buczynsky/cc/flickr)

Under a government which imprisons any unjustly, the true place for a just man is also a prison.
— Henry David Thoreau, Civil Disobedience

It turns out that the immigration crackdown that DJT’s ICE is pursuing, though hard on illegals and their families by producing terrible uncertainty for them, is not without its bright side. The light that provides a bright side is shining on the shares of stock in the Geo Group and CoreCivic, and on jails in a number of Texas counties.

Geo Group and CoreCivic operate private, for-profit prisons. Before DJT became president, they were on hard times. For good reason. In August 2016, the U.S. Department of Justice Office of the Inspector General issued a report that was highly critical of the way those companies treated prisoners entrusted with their care. The report found that inmates in facilities run by those corporations “were nine times more likely to be placed on lockdown than inmates at other federal prisons and were frequently subjected to arbitrary solitary confinement simply because there was not space for them among the general population.” Although placing them in solitary confinement so they would not add to overcrowding in the general prison population had the desired effect, solitary confinement is generally acknowledged to be equivalent to torture and has been repeatedly criticized for its excessive use in United States prisons. According to the report, the Bureau of Prisons was using the private prisons on a large scale to “confine federal inmates who are primarily low security, criminal alien adult males with 90 months or less remaining to serve on their sentences.” The report stated that “in a majority of the categories we examined, contract prisons incurred more safety and security incidents per capita than comparable Bureau of Prisons institutions.” It said that the contract prisons “do not provide comparable services [to those operated by the Federal Bureau of Prisons] do not save substantially on costs, and do not maintain ‘the same level of safety and security.’”

At almost the same time that that report was issued, Deputy Attorney General Sally Yates, issued instructions to federal officials to reduce the use of private prisons because of the falling prison population throughout the country. The result was that stock in CoreCivic and GEO, the two largest private prison companies in the United States, fell precipitously. The election of DJT reversed their fortunes.


The day after the election shares in CoreCivic rose 43 percent and share in GEO rose 21 percent. The investors’ optimism was rewarded when on February 21, 2017, Attorney General Sessions, rescinded the order that the private prisons be phased out. Following the announcement, the prison companies enjoyed another jump in share prices.
The order should not have been a surprise. Notwithstanding the Justice Department report that was highly critical of the private prisons, DJT, for whom facts are notoriously unimportant, said: “I do think we can do a lot of privatizations and private prisons. It seems to work a lot better.” Of course, private prisons are not the only ones rejoicing in the prospect of more inmates, thanks to the increased attention being paid to illegal immigrants and their incarceration. Jailers in small Texas counties are also excited.

Because of reforms to the criminal justice system, a number of Texas counties are having a tough time making ends meet because their jails are underperforming. An underperforming jail is one located in a community in which the residents do not engage in sufficient criminal activity to provide residents for the local jails. According to a report by the Associated Press, the current problem traces its beginning to the 1990s and the early 2000s. Counties that were losing employment prospects for their citizens, addressed the problem by building new jails with lots of beds. The plan was that, in addition to housing their residents, the jails could be rented out to other counties and the federal government when those entities found themselves short of space. It was a great idea and worked until criminal justice reform took place and alternative sentencing provisions were adopted. Now many of the counties that eagerly built new jails, find themselves trying to pay off the cost of construction without adequate occupants to pay the debt that was incurred to build them. The good news for them is that since DJT has encouraged ICE to round up and jail illegal immigrants, the glut of jail space will soon vanish. Cells that were empty and non-income producing, will once again be fully occupied with illegal immigrants and their families. (In a speech delivered to Police Chiefs Association on April 11, 2017, Attorney General Sessions announced a number of increased enforcement policies including a provision that those who get married to avoid immigration laws, will be charged with offenses that carry a two-year mandatory minimum prison sentence.) If, notwithstanding the prospect of new occupants, counties no longer want to maintain their facilities, they may be able to sell them to private prison companies that will use the space for housing illegal immigrants. It’s a win-win situation for private prisons and Texas counties. The only loser is the pre-DJT United States we knew and loved. The only loser is the pre-DJT United States we knew and loved.

https://www.commondreams.org/views/2017/04/15/prison-and-profits


The prison-industrial complex loves Trump. :m055:
 
The man who studies the spread of ignorance

How do people or companies with vested interests spread ignorance and obfuscate knowledge?
Georgina Kenyon finds there is a term which defines this phenomenon.
  • By Georgina Kenyon

In 1979, a secret memo from the tobacco industry was revealed to the public.
Called the Smoking and Health Proposal, and written a decade earlier by the Brown & Williamson tobacco company, it revealed many of the tactics employed by big tobacco to counter “anti-cigarette forces”.

In one of the paper’s most revealing sections, it looks at how to market cigarettes to the mass public: “Doubt is our product since it is the best means of competing with the ‘body of fact’ that exists in the mind of the general public. It is also the means of establishing a controversy.”

This revelation piqued the interest of Robert Proctor, a science historian from Stanford University, who started delving into the practices of tobacco firms and how they had spread confusion about whether smoking caused cancer.


The tactics of big tobacco to obscure the facts of smoking’s harmful effects led Robert Proctor to create a new word (Credit: Getty Images)​

Proctor had found that the cigarette industry did not want consumers to know the harms of its product, and it spent billions obscuring the facts of the health effects of smoking.

This search led him to create a word for the study of deliberate propagation of ignorance: agnotology.

It comes from agnosis, the neoclassical Greek word for ignorance or ‘not knowing’, and ontology, the branch of metaphysics which deals with the nature of being.

Agnotology is the study of wilful acts to spread confusion and deceit, usually to sell a product or win favour.

“I was exploring how powerful industries could promote ignorance to sell their wares.
Ignorance is power… and agnotology is about the deliberate creation of ignorance.

“In looking into agnotology, I discovered the secret world of classified science, and thought historians should be giving this more attention.”

The 1969 memo and the tactics used by the tobacco industry became the perfect example of agnotology, Proctor says.
“Ignorance is not just the not-yet-known, it’s also a political ploy, a deliberate creation by powerful agents who want you ‘not to know’.”

To help him in his search, Proctor enlisted the help of UC Berkeley linguist Iain Boal, and together they came up with the term – the neologism was coined in 1995, although much of Proctor’s analysis of the phenomenon had occurred in the previous decades.

Balancing act

Agnotology is as important today as it was back when Proctor studied the tobacco industry’s obfuscation of facts about cancer and smoking.
For example, politically motivated doubt was sown over US President Barack Obama’s nationality for many months by opponents until he revealed his birth certificate in 2011.

In another case, some political commentators in Australia attempted to stoke panic by likening the country’s credit rating to that of Greece, despite readily available public information from ratings agencies showing the two economies are very different.


The spread of ignorance is as relevant today as it was when Proctor coined his term (Credit: Thinkstock)​

Proctor explains that ignorance can often be propagated under the guise of balanced debate.
For example, the common idea that there will always be two opposing views does not always result in a rational conclusion.

This was behind how tobacco firms used science to make their products look harmless, and is used today by climate change deniers to argue against the scientific evidence.

“This ‘balance routine’ has allowed the cigarette men, or climate deniers today, to claim that there are two sides to every story, that ‘experts disagree’ – creating a false picture of the truth, hence ignorance.”

For example, says Proctor, many of the studies linking carcinogens in tobacco were conducted in mice initially, and the tobacco industry responded by saying that studies into mice did not mean that people were at risk, despite adverse health outcomes in many smokers.

A new era of ignorance

“We live in a world of radical ignorance, and the marvel is that any kind of truth cuts through the noise,” says Proctor.
Even though knowledge is ‘accessible’, it does not mean it is accessed, he warns.

“Although for most things this is trivial – like, for example, the boiling point of mercury – but for bigger questions of political and philosophical import, the knowledge people have often comes from faith or tradition, or propaganda, more than anywhere else.”


When people do not understand a concept or fact, they are prey for special interest groups who work hard to create confusion (Credit: Thinkstock)​

Proctor found that ignorance spreads when firstly, many people do not understand a concept or fact and secondly, when special interest groups – like a commercial firm or a political group – then work hard to create confusion about an issue.

In the case of ignorance about tobacco and climate change, a scientifically illiterate society will probably be more susceptible to the tactics used by those wishing to confuse and cloud the truth.

Consider climate change as an example.
“The fight is not just over the existence of climate change, it’s over whether God has created the Earth for us to exploit, whether government has the right to regulate industry, whether environmentalists should be empowered, and so on. It’s not just about the facts, it’s about what is imagined to flow from and into such facts,” says Proctor.

Making up our own minds

Another academic studying ignorance is David Dunning, from Cornell University.
Dunning warns that the internet is helping propagate ignorance – it is a place where everyone has a chance to be their own expert, he says, which makes them prey for powerful interests wishing to deliberately spread ignorance.

"While some smart people will profit from all the information now just a click away, many will be misled into a false sense of expertise. My worry is not that we are losing the ability to make up our own minds, but that it’s becoming too easy to do so. We should consult with others much more than we imagine. Other people may be imperfect as well, but often their opinions go a long way toward correcting our own imperfections, as our own imperfect expertise helps to correct their errors,” warns Dunning.


US presidential candidate Donald Trump's solutions that are either unworkable or unconstitutional are an example of agnotology, says Dunning (Credit: Getty Images)​

Dunning and Proctor also warn that the wilful spread of ignorance is rampant throughout the US presidential primaries on both sides of the political spectrum.

“Donald Trump is the obvious current example in the US, suggesting easy solutions to followers that are either unworkable or unconstitutional,” says Dunning.

So while agnotology may have had its origins in the heyday of the tobacco industry, today the need for both a word and the study of human ignorance is as strong as ever.
 
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