How can we take it back?

Brazilian president Temer charged with obstruction of justice and racketeering
  • Office of the prosecutor general announces charges against Michel Temer
  • Lower house of Congress to vote on whether president should stand trial


Michel Temer. The charge is related to the plea-bargain testimony by executives at the meatpacking giant JBS SA. Photograph: Evaristo Sa/AFP/Getty Images

Dom Phillips in Rio de Janeiro


@domphillips

Thursday 14 September 2017 22.00 BST Last modified on Thursday 14 September 2017 22.07 BST

Brazil’s prosecutor general’s office has filed charges of racketeering and obstruction of justice against President Michel Temer and six other leading politicians from his party – three of whom are already in jail. They are all accused of racketeering.

“They practiced illicit acts in exchange for bribes by way of diverse public organs,” prosecutors said. “Michel Temer is accused of having acted as the leader of the criminal organisation since May 2016.”

Temer and two others are also accused of obstruction of justice.

It will now be up to the lower house of Congress to vote on whether or not the president should stand trial before the supreme court.

Last month, the lower house rejected a prior corruption charge Temer faced.

https://www.theguardian.com/world/2017/sep/14/brazil-president-michel-temer-charged


This is really good. I am waiting for Dilma to be reinserted and/or new presidential elections to take place in Brazil. :)
 
May suffers humiliation as DUP backs Labour on NHS pay and tuition fees
Party propping up May’s minority government breaks with Tories for first time since election deal, voting to increase NHS workers’ pay and scrap tuition fee rise


Arlene Foster’s Democratic Unionist party is propping up the Tory government. Photograph: Daniel Leal-Olivas/AFP/Getty Images

Rowena Mason Deputy political editor and Henry McDonald Ireland correspondent

Wednesday 13 September 2017 20.39 BST First published on Wednesday 13 September 2017 14.08 BST

Theresa May has suffered a major embarrassment in the House of Commons after the Democratic Unionist party backed Labour motions in favour of increasing NHS pay and against a rise in tuition fees.

Labour’s motions passed on Wednesday without being pushed to a vote after it became clear the government had no majority to oppose the call for an end to the public sector pay cap for NHS workers nor the £250 a year increase in student fees.

It is the first example of the DUP breaking with May since they struck a confidence and supply agreement to vote together on crucial legislation after the general election.

The motions fell outside the Tory-DUP deal as they were not binding, but their passage was nevertheless a symbolic victory for Labour and a sign that there is no longer a majority in the House of Commons for many of the austerity policies introduced by the Conservatives.

[...]

https://www.theguardian.com/politic...-vote-with-labour-on-nhs-pay-and-tuition-fees


An end of austerity, an artificial lack of resources, is very much wanted. The Conservatives can no longer play the game of 'saving expenditure' and blaming public workers and the disabled.
 
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giphy.gif
 
Big surprise.
Here’s the money spent on lobbying in 2017 so far...

US Chamber of Commerce $39,960,000
National Assn of Realtors $21,132,697
Pharmaceutical Research & Manufacturers of America $14,227,500
American Medical Assn $12,455,000
Blue Cross/Blue Shield $12,299,100
American Hospital Assn $10,625,050
Alphabet Inc $9,450,000
AT&T Inc $8,780,000
Boeing Co $8,760,000
Dow Chemical $7,690,000
National Assn of Broadcasters $7,630,000
Comcast Corp $7,480,000
Lockheed Martin $7,432,900
National Retail Federation $7,310,000
Northrop Grumman $6,820,000
Verizon Communications $6,730,000
Amgen Inc $6,620,000
Southern Co $6,540,000
Amazon.com $6,230,000
Exxon Mobil $6,070,000

Big Phama for some reason still is charging the consumer here in the US unacceptable amounts of money for their products - I wonder why looking at the amount they donate.
Same goes for the hospitals and the health insurance companies.
And this is what is public..this doesn’t count vacations or other perks.
Until we get a handle on the out of control lobbying/legal bribery, profits will continue to come before people in the US.


It has certainly become a very large part of the process. In 1992 the European Commission surveyed the landscape and guessed that at least 10,000 people were involved in “interest representation” locally. The total now [1998] may be closer to 13,000.

http://www.economist.com/node/171503

Lobbying is a billion-euro industry in Brussels. According to Corporate Europe Observatory, a watchdog campaigning for greater transparency, there are at least 30,000 lobbyists in Brussels, nearly matching the 31,000 staff employed by the European commission and making it second only to Washington in the concentration of those seeking to affect legislation. Lobbyists sign a transparency register run by the parliament and the commission, though it is not mandatory.

By some estimates, they influence 75% of legislation. In principle, lobbyists give politicians information and arguments during the decision-making process. In practice, the corridors of the parliament often teem with individuals, who meet MEPs in their offices or in open spaces such as the "Mickey Mouse bar" (nicknamed so because of the shape of its seats) inside the parliament.

https://www.theguardian.com/world/2014/may/08/lobbyists-european-parliament-brussels-corporate

There is an army of lobbyists in Brussels. The staff (30,000) is as big as the EU Commission. They influence far too much of the legislation passing through Brussels.
 
It has certainly become a very large part of the process. In 1992 the European Commission surveyed the landscape and guessed that at least 10,000 people were involved in “interest representation” locally. The total now [1998] may be closer to 13,000.

http://www.economist.com/node/171503

Lobbying is a billion-euro industry in Brussels. According to Corporate Europe Observatory, a watchdog campaigning for greater transparency, there are at least 30,000 lobbyists in Brussels, nearly matching the 31,000 staff employed by the European commission and making it second only to Washington in the concentration of those seeking to affect legislation. Lobbyists sign a transparency register run by the parliament and the commission, though it is not mandatory.

By some estimates, they influence 75% of legislation. In principle, lobbyists give politicians information and arguments during the decision-making process. In practice, the corridors of the parliament often teem with individuals, who meet MEPs in their offices or in open spaces such as the "Mickey Mouse bar" (nicknamed so because of the shape of its seats) inside the parliament.

https://www.theguardian.com/world/2014/may/08/lobbyists-european-parliament-brussels-corporate

There is an army of lobbyists in Brussels. The staff (30,000) is as big as the EU Commission. They influence far too much of the legislation passing through Brussels.
Yeah, we have some laws that have been actually written by lobbyists.
That is not representing the people who elected you.
That is taking a “bribe” which is what it would be by any other name.
This is what people who voted Trump thought he meant my “draining the swamp”...turns out...”draining the swamp” is how he describes an orgasm.
 
Tuesday, October 03, 2017
Common Dreams
After Overwhelming Public Opposition, Scotland Announces Fracking Ban
"We have so much wind and wave power that it is retrograde in the extreme to lend any support to the fracking industry."
Julia Conley, staff writer

34185857644_5ed9f12b04_k.jpg

In a four-month public comment period, 99 percent of the 65,000 Scots who responded expressed opposition to fracking. (Photo: Friends of the Earth Scotland/Flickr/cc)

Environmental groups from around the world applauded Scotland on Tuesday for its decision to ban fracking, following an overwhelming public outcry against the practice—and called for the United States and the rest of the United Kingdom to follow suit.

The Scottish government held a public comment period in recent months on fracking, attracting about 65,000 responses—the majority of which came from people in communities where the natural gas extraction would take place. An overwhelming 99 percent of Scots who participated were opposed to the practice.

"Fracking will lead to an increase in pollution and the decimation of parts of the Scottish landscape and environment," wrote one respondent. "People will feel even more devalued as a result of having been ignored, communities wll be damaged by fracking wells and health will suffer as a result of noise, ground water contamination and probably indirect air pollution. Scotland can't afford to damage the health of its residents any more."

In addition to environmental concerns, many Scots said they weren't convinced of the potential economic benefits of fracking; the auditing firm KPMG found that it was likely to only increase the GDP by 0.1 percent. Others said relying on the risky method of energy production would signify a lack of innovation in the country.

[...]

https://www.commondreams.org/news/2...ic-opposition-scotland-announces-fracking-ban


Go on, Scotland. There is no need to let the fracking industry pollute the underground water and your economy will not gain income from drilling small quantities of oil.
 
law.jpg


STAFF NEWS & ANALYSIS

How Trolls Use Patent Law to Make an Easy Buck
By The Daily Bell Staff - October 06, 2017

Patents seem like a good idea on paper. If you come up with something innovative, you should reap the rewards. That safeguards the hard work and money someone puts into an invention or technology.

But patents really amount to a legal monopoly, granted by government. And as is typical with government, this intervention into the economy creates some interesting side effects.

Patent trolls are businesses which own patents for the sole purpose of litigation. They don’t make their money from producing whatever the patent secures. They make their money suing companies for patent infringement.

This works best when the patent is something that probably should have never been patented in the first place.

For instance, a company called Personal Audio managed to successfully sue Apple in 2011 for $8 million. The patent they say Apple infringed on: downloadable playlists.

Personal Audio would be considered a patent troll because the patents they hold are pretty obvious and broad technologies. Luckily, courts recently struck down their attempts to sue based on their patent on podcasts.

You can get a patent for a complicated medical device which costs millions of dollars to invent. And you can get a patent for recording audio, and creating playlists.

Another part of the problem is that patent trolls don’t have to successfully defend their patents at trial in order to make money. Many depend on settlements reached out of the courtroom. For the troll, they just have to draw things out in court long enough so that the costs of defense would rival the cost of the settlement.

If you are being sued for $1 million, and defense will cost you $750,000 then from a business standpoint it makes sense to settle. After spending the $750,000 defending yourself, you may lose another million! Better to cut your losses, and just settle for $750,000 in the first place.

And one particular federal court is a favorite for patent trolls. In the Eastern District of Texas, they aren’t quick to issue a summary judgment. That means that patent cases are basically guaranteed to go to trial, which makes the cost of defense skyrocket.

And that means companies are even more likely to settle rather than spend time and money defending themselves against a patent troll.

But last May, the TC Heartland Supreme Court decision made it harder for patent trolls to use the East District Texas court to file their patent litigation. It ruled defendants must be established in a district in order to be sued there.

Previously, patent trolls would set up their business headquarters in the district so that anyone they sued would be dragged down to a court more favorable to the trolls.

But the trolls could not be so easily vanquished. The defense contractor Raytheon sued a company called Clay inc. for patent infringement. They filed in the Eastern District of Texas. According to the Supreme Court decision, Clay inc. would have to be established within the district in order to be sued there.

A judge ruled that because Clay inc. had just one lone sales representative who lived in the district, that the lawsuit could take place there.

Luckily, again the trolls were struck down. A court reversed that judgment, saying that one salesman who works from home and covers multiple states does not constitute a presence of the company in the district.

They are splitting legal hairs. All too often, it seems like courts come down to silly arguments. The lack of an Oxford comma in their contract once cost a company millions of dollars.

It’s great this loophole is being closed, but this highlights the issues with government statute. Too many cases are a flip of the coin. They depend on the costs of litigation rather than right or wrong. And that makes the government enforced monopoly of patent law questionable, to say the least.

http://www.thedailybell.com/news-analysis/how-trolls-use-patent-law-to-make-an-easy-buck/


More open-source patents are needed and less commercial piracy of patents.
 
Flint Water Summit Participants Vow to End Nestlé’s Water Takings

WASHINGTON - Sixteen water protector groups along with local residents, Indigenous representatives and activists attended the Water Is Life: Strengthening the Great Lakes Commons in Flint this past weekend. Attendees pledged to challenge Nestlé’s water takings and end the water crises in Flint, Detroit and Indigenous nations.

Maude Barlow of the Council of Canadians presented the keynote speech on Friday evening to a crowd of more than 200 people at Woodside Church in Flint.

“The summit this past weekend was a powerful moment for water justice organizations, Great Lakes residents and Indigenous representatives. We came together to challenge the issues that our governments are failing to address,” said Barlow. “We renewed our commitment and outlined concrete steps to secure the human right to water and bring about water and social justice for all communities around the Great Lakes.”

People shared stories of violations of the human right to water – that echoed a similar message – water in communities around the Great Lakes is being put at risk by privatization and commodification.

Sylvia Plain, from Aamjiwnaang First Nation, near Sarnia, expressed that Indigenous nations have always kept their treaty promises but are still waiting for American and Canadian governments to reciprocate.

In her Saturday keynote, Claire McClinton of Flint Democracy Defense League told the crowd, “In Flint, Michigan, you can buy a gallon of lead free gas, or a gallon of lead free paint, but you can’t get a gallon of lead free water from your own tap.”

Nestlé Waters is the common face of water privatization in Ontario and Michigan. Summit participants expressed outrage that Nestlé to take water (cheaply) for private gain while Flint, Detroit, and Indigenous communities cannot rely on public systems or the government for clean water. The Ontario government is allowing the bottled water company to pump up to 4.7 million litres of water per day on two expired permits in Wellington County. Bottled water is used as short-term band-aid solutions to water crises in Flint, Detroit and Indigenous nations.

At the Summit conclusion, representatives of the sixteen water protection organization pledged to work together to protect water in their communities. Leading up to the Ontario provincial election next year, the Council of Canadians is calling on party leaders to commit to phasing out bottled water permits over the next ten years.

###
Founded in 1985, the Council of Canadians is Canada’s leading social action organization, mobilizing a network of 60 chapters across the country.

https://www.commondreams.org/newswi...it-participants-vow-end-nestles-water-takings


I sort of agree with this. I feel too bored to write an interesting comment. :expressionless:
 
How Computers Turned Gerrymandering Into a Science

By JORDAN ELLENBERG OCT. 6, 2017


08gray-master768.jpg

Credit Liam Cobb
MADISON, Wis. — About as many Democrats live in Wisconsin as Republicans do. But you wouldn’t know it from the Wisconsin State Assembly, where Republicans hold 65 percent of the seats, a bigger majority than Republican legislators enjoy in conservative states like Texas and Kentucky.

The United States Supreme Court is trying to understand how that happened. On Tuesday, the justices heard oral arguments in Gill v. Whitford, reviewing a three-judge panel’s determination that Wisconsin’s Republican-drawn district map is so flagrantly gerrymandered that it denies Wisconsinites their full right to vote. A long list of elected officials, representing both parties, have filed briefs asking the justices to uphold the panel’s ruling.

Other people don’t see a problem. Politics, they say, is a game where whoever’s ahead gets to change the rules on the fly. It’s about winning, not being fair.

But this isn’t just a politics story; it’s also a technology story. Gerrymandering used to be an art, but advanced computation has made it a science. Wisconsin’s Republican legislators, after their victory in the census year of 2010, tried out map after map, tweak after tweak. They ran each potential map through computer algorithms that tested its performance in a wide range of political climates. The map they adopted is precisely engineered to assure Republican control in all but the most extreme circumstances.

In a gerrymandered map, you concentrate opposing voters in a few districts where you lose big, and win the rest by modest margins. But it’s risky to count on a lot of close wins, which can easily flip to close losses. Justice Sandra Day O’Connor thought this risk meant the Supreme Court didn’t need to step in. In a 1986 case, she wrote that “there is good reason to think political gerrymandering is a self-limiting enterprise” since “an overambitious gerrymander can lead to disaster for the legislative majority.”

[...]

https://www.nytimes.com/2017/10/06/opinion/sunday/computers-gerrymandering-wisconsin.html


Common Core is reducing the IQ of Rep politicians. They cannot count anymore.
 
How Swedes and Norwegians Broke the Power of the ‘1 Percent’

22a13ebf-3898-4ca8-b89b-9776450f03e5.jpg


A march in Ådalen, Sweden, in 1931.
By George Lakey / wagingnonviolence.org / Jul 12, 2017

While many of us work to create a better world, it’s worthwhile to consider other countries where masses of people succeeded in nonviolently bringing about a high degree of democracy and economic justice. Sweden and Norway, for example, both experienced a major power shift in the 1930s after prolonged nonviolent struggle. They “fired” the top 1 percent of people who set the direction for society and created the basis for something different.

Both countries had a history of horrendous poverty. When the 1 percent was in charge, hundreds of thousands of people emigrated to avoid starvation. Under the leadership of the working class, however, both countries built robust and successful economies that nearly eliminated poverty, expanded free university education, abolished slums, provided excellent health care available to all as a matter of right and created a system of full employment. Unlike the Norwegians, the Swedes didn’t find oil, but that didn’t stop them from building what the latest CIA World Factbook calls “an enviable standard of living.”

Neither country is a utopia, as readers of the crime novels by Stieg Larsson, Henning Mankell and Jo Nesbø will know. Critical left-wing authors such as these try to push Sweden and Norway to continue on the path toward more fully just societies. However, as an American activist who first encountered Norway as a student in 1959 and learned some of its language and culture, the achievements I found amazed me. I remember, for example, bicycling for hours through a small industrial city, looking in vain for substandard housing. Sometimes resisting the evidence of my eyes, I made up stories that “accounted for” the differences I saw: “small country,” “homogeneous,” “a value consensus.” I finally gave up imposing my frameworks on these countries and learned the real reason: their own histories.

Then I began to learn that the Swedes and Norwegians paid a price for their standards of living through nonviolent struggle. There was a time when Scandinavian workers didn’t expect that the electoral arena could deliver the change they believed in. They realized that, with the 1 percent in charge, electoral “democracy” was stacked against them, so nonviolent direct action was needed to exert the power for change.

In both countries, the troops were called out to defend the 1 percent; people died. Award-winning Swedish filmmaker Bo Widerberg told the Swedish story vividly in Ådalen 31, which depicts the strikers killed in 1931 and the sparking of a nationwide general strike. (You can read more about this case in an entry by Max Rennebohm in the Global Nonviolent Action Database.)

The Norwegians had a harder time organizing a cohesive people’s movement because Norway’s small population—about three million—was spread out over a territory the size of Britain. People were divided by mountains and fjords, and they spoke regional dialects in isolated valleys. In the nineteenth century, Norway was ruled by Denmark and then by Sweden; in the context of Europe Norwegians were the “country rubes,” of little consequence. Not until 1905 did Norway finally become independent.

When workers formed unions in the early 1900s, they generally turned to Marxism, organizing for revolution as well as immediate gains. They were overjoyed by the overthrow of the czar in Russia, and the Norwegian Labor Party joined the Communist International organized by Lenin. Labor didn’t stay long, however. One way in which most Norwegians parted ways with Leninist strategy was on the role of violence: Norwegians wanted to win their revolution through collective nonviolent struggle, along with establishing co-ops and using the electoral arena.

In the 1920s strikes increased in intensity. The town of Hammerfest formed a commune in 1921, led by workers councils; the army intervened to crush it. The workers’ response verged toward a national general strike. The employers, backed by the state, beat back that strike, but workers erupted again in the ironworkers’ strike of 1923–24.

The Norwegian 1 percent decided not to rely simply on the army; in 1926 they formed a social movement called the Patriotic League, recruiting mainly from the middle class. By the 1930s, the League included as many as 100,000 people for armed protection of strike breakers—this in a country of only 3 million!

The Labor Party, in the meantime, opened its membership to anyone, whether or not in a unionized workplace. Middle-class Marxists and some reformers joined the party. Many rural farm workers joined the Labor Party, as well as some small landholders. Labor leadership understood that in a protracted struggle, constant outreach and organizing was needed to a nonviolent campaign. In the midst of the growing polarization, Norway’s workers launched another wave of strikes and boycotts in 1928.

The Depression hit bottom in 1931. More people were jobless there than in any other Nordic country. Unlike in the U.S., the Norwegian union movement kept the people thrown out of work as members, even though they couldn’t pay dues. This decision paid off in mass mobilizations. When the employers’ federation locked employees out of the factories to try to force a reduction of wages, the workers fought back with massive demonstrations.

Many people then found that their mortgages were in jeopardy. (Sound familiar?) The Depression continued, and farmers were unable to keep up payment on their debts. As turbulence hit the rural sector, crowds gathered nonviolently to prevent the eviction of families from their farms. The Agrarian Party, which included larger farmers and had previously been allied with the Conservative Party, began to distance itself from the 1 percent; some could see that the ability of the few to rule the many was in doubt.

By 1935, Norway was on the brink. The Conservative-led government was losing legitimacy daily; the 1 percent became increasingly desperate as militancy grew among workers and farmers. A complete overthrow might be just a couple years away, radical workers thought. However, the misery of the poor became more urgent daily, and the Labor Party felt increasing pressure from its members to alleviate their suffering, which it could do only if it took charge of the government in a compromise agreement with the other side.

This it did. In a compromise that allowed owners to retain the right to own and manage their firms, Labor in 1935 took the reins of government in coalition with the Agrarian Party. They expanded the economy and started public works projects to head toward a policy of full employment that became the keystone of Norwegian economic policy. Labor’s success and the continued militancy of workers enabled steady inroads against the privileges of the 1 percent, to the point that majority ownership of all large firms was taken by the public interest. (There is an entry on this case as well at the Global Nonviolent Action Database.)

The 1 percent thereby lost its historic power to dominate the economy and society. Not until three decades later could the Conservatives return to a governing coalition, having by then accepted the new rules of the game, including a high degree of public ownership of the means of production, extremely progressive taxation, strong business regulation for the public good and the virtual abolition of poverty. When Conservatives eventually tried a fling with neoliberal policies, the economy generated a bubble and headed for disaster. (Sound familiar?)

Labor stepped in, seized the three largest banks, fired the top management, left the stockholders without a dime and refused to bail out any of the smaller banks. The well-purged Norwegian financial sector was not one of those countries that lurched into crisis in 2008; carefully regulated and much of it publicly owned, the sector was solid.

Although Norwegians may not tell you about this the first time you meet them, the fact remains that their society’s high level of freedom and broadly-shared prosperity began when workers and farmers, along with middle-class allies, waged a nonviolent struggle that empowered the people to govern for the common good.

This article was originally published in 2012. The first sentence has been edited slightly for posterity.

http://www.filmsforaction.org/articles/how-swedes-and-norwegians-broke-the-power-of-the-1-percent/


Interesting history of the Scandinavian countries Sweden and Norway. :)
 
How Swedes and Norwegians Broke the Power of the ‘1 Percent’

22a13ebf-3898-4ca8-b89b-9776450f03e5.jpg


A march in Ådalen, Sweden, in 1931.
By George Lakey / wagingnonviolence.org / Jul 12, 2017

While many of us work to create a better world, it’s worthwhile to consider other countries where masses of people succeeded in nonviolently bringing about a high degree of democracy and economic justice. Sweden and Norway, for example, both experienced a major power shift in the 1930s after prolonged nonviolent struggle. They “fired” the top 1 percent of people who set the direction for society and created the basis for something different.

Both countries had a history of horrendous poverty. When the 1 percent was in charge, hundreds of thousands of people emigrated to avoid starvation. Under the leadership of the working class, however, both countries built robust and successful economies that nearly eliminated poverty, expanded free university education, abolished slums, provided excellent health care available to all as a matter of right and created a system of full employment. Unlike the Norwegians, the Swedes didn’t find oil, but that didn’t stop them from building what the latest CIA World Factbook calls “an enviable standard of living.”

Neither country is a utopia, as readers of the crime novels by Stieg Larsson, Henning Mankell and Jo Nesbø will know. Critical left-wing authors such as these try to push Sweden and Norway to continue on the path toward more fully just societies. However, as an American activist who first encountered Norway as a student in 1959 and learned some of its language and culture, the achievements I found amazed me. I remember, for example, bicycling for hours through a small industrial city, looking in vain for substandard housing. Sometimes resisting the evidence of my eyes, I made up stories that “accounted for” the differences I saw: “small country,” “homogeneous,” “a value consensus.” I finally gave up imposing my frameworks on these countries and learned the real reason: their own histories.

Then I began to learn that the Swedes and Norwegians paid a price for their standards of living through nonviolent struggle. There was a time when Scandinavian workers didn’t expect that the electoral arena could deliver the change they believed in. They realized that, with the 1 percent in charge, electoral “democracy” was stacked against them, so nonviolent direct action was needed to exert the power for change.

In both countries, the troops were called out to defend the 1 percent; people died. Award-winning Swedish filmmaker Bo Widerberg told the Swedish story vividly in Ådalen 31, which depicts the strikers killed in 1931 and the sparking of a nationwide general strike. (You can read more about this case in an entry by Max Rennebohm in the Global Nonviolent Action Database.)

The Norwegians had a harder time organizing a cohesive people’s movement because Norway’s small population—about three million—was spread out over a territory the size of Britain. People were divided by mountains and fjords, and they spoke regional dialects in isolated valleys. In the nineteenth century, Norway was ruled by Denmark and then by Sweden; in the context of Europe Norwegians were the “country rubes,” of little consequence. Not until 1905 did Norway finally become independent.

When workers formed unions in the early 1900s, they generally turned to Marxism, organizing for revolution as well as immediate gains. They were overjoyed by the overthrow of the czar in Russia, and the Norwegian Labor Party joined the Communist International organized by Lenin. Labor didn’t stay long, however. One way in which most Norwegians parted ways with Leninist strategy was on the role of violence: Norwegians wanted to win their revolution through collective nonviolent struggle, along with establishing co-ops and using the electoral arena.

In the 1920s strikes increased in intensity. The town of Hammerfest formed a commune in 1921, led by workers councils; the army intervened to crush it. The workers’ response verged toward a national general strike. The employers, backed by the state, beat back that strike, but workers erupted again in the ironworkers’ strike of 1923–24.

The Norwegian 1 percent decided not to rely simply on the army; in 1926 they formed a social movement called the Patriotic League, recruiting mainly from the middle class. By the 1930s, the League included as many as 100,000 people for armed protection of strike breakers—this in a country of only 3 million!

The Labor Party, in the meantime, opened its membership to anyone, whether or not in a unionized workplace. Middle-class Marxists and some reformers joined the party. Many rural farm workers joined the Labor Party, as well as some small landholders. Labor leadership understood that in a protracted struggle, constant outreach and organizing was needed to a nonviolent campaign. In the midst of the growing polarization, Norway’s workers launched another wave of strikes and boycotts in 1928.

The Depression hit bottom in 1931. More people were jobless there than in any other Nordic country. Unlike in the U.S., the Norwegian union movement kept the people thrown out of work as members, even though they couldn’t pay dues. This decision paid off in mass mobilizations. When the employers’ federation locked employees out of the factories to try to force a reduction of wages, the workers fought back with massive demonstrations.

Many people then found that their mortgages were in jeopardy. (Sound familiar?) The Depression continued, and farmers were unable to keep up payment on their debts. As turbulence hit the rural sector, crowds gathered nonviolently to prevent the eviction of families from their farms. The Agrarian Party, which included larger farmers and had previously been allied with the Conservative Party, began to distance itself from the 1 percent; some could see that the ability of the few to rule the many was in doubt.

By 1935, Norway was on the brink. The Conservative-led government was losing legitimacy daily; the 1 percent became increasingly desperate as militancy grew among workers and farmers. A complete overthrow might be just a couple years away, radical workers thought. However, the misery of the poor became more urgent daily, and the Labor Party felt increasing pressure from its members to alleviate their suffering, which it could do only if it took charge of the government in a compromise agreement with the other side.

This it did. In a compromise that allowed owners to retain the right to own and manage their firms, Labor in 1935 took the reins of government in coalition with the Agrarian Party. They expanded the economy and started public works projects to head toward a policy of full employment that became the keystone of Norwegian economic policy. Labor’s success and the continued militancy of workers enabled steady inroads against the privileges of the 1 percent, to the point that majority ownership of all large firms was taken by the public interest. (There is an entry on this case as well at the Global Nonviolent Action Database.)

The 1 percent thereby lost its historic power to dominate the economy and society. Not until three decades later could the Conservatives return to a governing coalition, having by then accepted the new rules of the game, including a high degree of public ownership of the means of production, extremely progressive taxation, strong business regulation for the public good and the virtual abolition of poverty. When Conservatives eventually tried a fling with neoliberal policies, the economy generated a bubble and headed for disaster. (Sound familiar?)

Labor stepped in, seized the three largest banks, fired the top management, left the stockholders without a dime and refused to bail out any of the smaller banks. The well-purged Norwegian financial sector was not one of those countries that lurched into crisis in 2008; carefully regulated and much of it publicly owned, the sector was solid.

Although Norwegians may not tell you about this the first time you meet them, the fact remains that their society’s high level of freedom and broadly-shared prosperity began when workers and farmers, along with middle-class allies, waged a nonviolent struggle that empowered the people to govern for the common good.

This article was originally published in 2012. The first sentence has been edited slightly for posterity.

http://www.filmsforaction.org/articles/how-swedes-and-norwegians-broke-the-power-of-the-1-percent/


Interesting history of the Scandinavian countries Sweden and Norway. :)


The US has greater inequality now than there was in France before they started to build guillotines...just saying.
 
Last edited:
Sunday, October 08, 2017
Common Dreams
Filling Gaps Left By Trump, Nurses and Labor Unions Join Puerto Rico Relief Efforts
"We are united in lifting up our fellow Americans."
Jake Johnson, staff writer

screenshot_2017-10-08_at_6.21.44_am_0.jpg

"I put out the call for help, and who listened? The unions," said Carmen Yulín Cruz, the mayor of San Juan. (Photo: AFL-CIO/Twitter)

As President Donald Trump continues to come under fire for failing to deliver sufficient help to Puerto Rico in the aftermath of Hurricane Maria—which killed dozens and left millions without power and running water—nurses, doctors, engineers, and other workers affiliated with various unions including National Nurses United (NNU) and the AFL-CIO have teamed up to assist with relief and recovery efforts.

"I put out the call for help, and who listened? The unions," said Carmen Yulín Cruz, the mayor of San Juan, the Puerto Rican capital.

Workers representing more than 20 unions boarded a flight to San Juan late last week "in response to the urgent need to get highly skilled workers to Puerto Rico to help people seeking medical and humanitarian assistance, as well as to help with the rebuilding effort," according to the AFL-CIO's Kenneth Quinnell.

[...]

https://www.commondreams.org/news/2...-labor-unions-join-puerto-rico-relief-efforts


Are labor unions now replacing the public sector and privatized industries?
 
Thursday, October 05, 2017
Common Dreams
Huge 'People Over Pipeline' Victory as TransCanada Forced to Kill Energy East
"This is an important day in the fight against climate change in Canada. Energy East was a disaster waiting to happen."
Jake Johnson, staff writer

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"We witnessed a People's Intervention that forced the climate costs of Energy East to the forefront of the pipeline review," said Aurore Fauret, Tar Sands Campaign coordinator at 350.org. (Photo: Pax Ahimsa Gethen/Flickr/cc)

In what environmentalists are calling a major victory for pipeline opponents and the planet, TransCanada announced Thursday that it is abandoning its Energy East pipeline project, which would have carried over a million barrels of crude oil across Canada per day.

Oil Change International (OCI) estimated in an analysis earlier this year that Energy East would produce an additional 236 million tons of carbon pollution each year. For this reason and many others, OCI applauded TransCanada's decision to nix the project, which was first proposed in 2013.

[...]

https://www.commondreams.org/news/2...e-victory-transcanada-forced-kill-energy-east


Now we are getting clean water. Just waiting to get clean food and cleaner politics in general.
 
Sunday, October 08, 2017
Common Dreams
At Bannon's Behest, Blackwater Founder and War Profiteer Erik Prince Mulling Senate Run
"I guess Erik Prince figures he can get elected in Wyoming because they elected torture architect Dick Cheney and his spawn."
Jake Johnson, staff writer

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Prince, who is the brother of Education Secretary Betsy DeVos, is just one of many noxious figures Bannon is currently backing for political office. (Photo: Mark Wilson/Getty Images)

Encouraged by former White House chief strategist and current executive chairman of Breitbart Steve Bannon, Blackwater founder and "notorious mercenary" Erik Prince is reportedly considering a 2018 Senate run in Wyoming against incumbent Sen. John Barrasso (R-Wyo.).

Prince's plan was first reported by the New York Times on Sunday. Though Prince has few personal or political ties to Wyoming, the Times notes that the state is "attractive" to him "because it has none of the personal political entanglements he would face in his home state of Michigan."

[...]

https://www.commondreams.org/news/2...-war-profiteer-erik-prince-mulling-senate-run


This guy, Erik Prince, is using the Reaganomics argument that the public sector is inefficient and private companies more effective. But what about quality control and the pilfering outright theft of public expenditure ending up in private hands?
 
Tuesday, October 10, 2017
Common Dreams
To Oust "Hawkish, Centrist" Feinstein, Progressives Push for Primary Challenge
"After 47 years in elected office and 25 years in the Senate," Rep. Ro Khanna (D-Calif.) says, "she continues to cling to office as a voice for the status quo."
Jessica Corbett, staff writer

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Sen. Dianne Feinstein (D-Calif.) held a townhall style meeting at the San Francisco Scottish Rite Masonic Center on April 17, 2017 in San Francisco, California. (Photo: Justin Sullivan/Getty Images)

Progressives are gearing up to challenge Sen. Dianne Feinstein (D-Calif.) after the long-time senator announced Monday that she will run for re-election next year.

Confirming her bid on Twitter, Feinstein vowed to keep working on "ending gun violence, combating climate change," and addressing "access to healthcare."

However, during her five terms in the U.S. Senate, the 84-year-old has also riled many progressives with her opposition to a single-payer healthcare system and her support for laws such as the Patriot Act and the FISA Act.

[...]

https://www.commondreams.org/news/2...feinstein-progressives-push-primary-challenge


Let us hope that she will face a candidate representing the Sanders Dems in the Democratic nomination process.
 
Thursday, October 05, 2017
The Intercept
The FBI’s Hunt for Two Missing Piglets Reveals the Federal Cover-Up of Barbaric Factory Farms
Abuse and torture is all a factory-farmed pig knows.
Glenn Greenwald

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DxE photograph depicting piglets huddled up against their mothers at Smithfield-owned Circle Four Farm in Utah. DxE says the piglets were sick or starving. (Photo: Wayne Hsiung/DxE/intercept)

FBI agents are devoting substantial resources to a multistate hunt for two baby piglets that the bureau believes are named Lucy and Ethel. The two piglets were removed over the summer from the Circle Four Farm in Utah by animal rights activists who had entered the Smithfield Foods-owned factory farm to film the brutal, torturous conditions in which the pigs are bred in order to be slaughtered.

While filming the conditions at the Smithfield facility, activists saw the two ailing baby piglets laying on the ground, visibly ill and near death, surrounded by the rotting corpses of dead piglets. “One was swollen and barely able to stand; the other had been trampled and was covered in blood,” said Wayne Hsiung of Direct Action Everywhere (DxE), which filmed the facility and performed the rescue. Due to various illnesses, he said, the piglets were unable to eat or digest food and were thus a fraction of the normal weight for piglets their age.

Rather than leave the two piglets at Circle Four Farm to wait for an imminent and painful death, the DxE activists decided to rescue them. They carried them out of the pens where they had been suffering and took them to an animal sanctuary to be treated and nursed back to health.

This single Smithfield Foods farm breeds and then slaughters more than one million pigs each year. One of the odd aspects of animal mistreatment in the U.S. is that species regarded as more intelligent and emotionally complex — dogs, dolphins, cats, primates — generally receive more public concern and more legal protection. Yet pigs – among the planet’s most intelligent, social, and emotionally complicated species, capable of great joy, play, love, connection, suffering and pain, at least on a par with dogs — receive almost no protections, and are subject to savage systematic abuse by U.S. factory farms.

At Smithfield, like most industrial pig farms, the abuse and torture primarily comes not from rogue employees violating company procedures. Instead, the cruelty is inherent in the procedures themselves. One of the most heinous industry-wide practices is one that DxE activists encountered in abundance at Circle Four: gestational crating.

Read the full article, with possible updates, at The Intercept.

https://www.commondreams.org/views/...-reveals-federal-cover-barbaric-factory-farms


I do not know much about agriculture. It is a shame that animals are treated that way.
 
On BBC News at Six, business representatives outnumbered trade union spokespersons by more than five to one (11 vs 2) in 2007 and by 19 to one in 2012. On the issues of immigration and the EU in 2012, out of 806 source appearances, not one was allocated to a representative of organised labour. Considering the impact of the issues on the UK workforce, and the fact that trade unions represent the largest mass democratic organisations in civil society, such invisibility raises troubling questions for a public service broadcaster committed to impartial and balanced coverage.

https://www.newstatesman.com/broadcast/2013/08/hard-evidence-how-biased-bbc


The BBC (and other MSM?) is weirdly biased against labor unions and their views.
 

'It's about building a new society for all' | I am Catalan


'Families are broken, people have fallen out' | I am Catalan


'Independence is not a final destination' | I am Catalan

While the north-eastern Spanish region prepares for the potential declaration of independence, we went to Catalonia to hear from people worried that the mainstream media are not representing their voices.​

https://www.theguardian.com/world/series/i-am-catalan


Some voices in the current debate about independence of Catalonia from Spain after the referendum on the first of October.
 


 
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