Wednesday, April 24, 2024

Something to Know - 24 April

Growing up in the late 1940s (yeah, old), I remember our elementary school class assembling out on the playground to honor and celebrate Israel and the United Nations.   Of course, we kids did not know much about what it was, but the school district apparently was trying to have us understand those things beyond our immediate school and homelife.   As the years passed on, we did acquire a knowledge of foreign affairs and a sense of values.  Flash forward to today, and we see our sense of values and the results of people not getting along with others has produced a fractured image of who we are as a nation.   These differences are expressed in a corruption of the desired values we once had.   What we once held high, is not the same.   Changes are inevitable, and a sense of values is challenged.    What went wrong?   We know about the death and destruction - the rubble of cities and homes, indiscriminate slaughter, and children who never got a chance to grow up.  Those who survive will forever be haunted as those who survived the Holocaust did; ironic isn't it?    Yes, when did things change from being right to being wrong?   Is it possible to find a solution that recognizes the past when things went right to wrong....or was it wrong in the first place?    Is it possible to find a solution that makes it right for all the first time, or are we doomed to repeat what happened again, and again?  


MARA GAY

How 'The Squad' and Like-Minded Progressives Have Changed Their Party

April 23, 2024

When the far-left politicians Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez and Ayanna Pressley were first elected to Congress roughly half a decade ago, many moderate Democrats saw their unapologetically progressive vision for America as an albatross around the neck of the Democratic Party.
That certainly seemed to be the view of Democratic leaders, who seemed intent on making "the squad," as the progressive caucus is known, a group of permanent outsiders.
"All these people have their public whatever and their Twitter world," Nancy Pelosi, then speaker of the House, told Maureen Dowd in 2019. "But they didn't have any following," Ms. Pelosi said of the squad. "They're four people and that's how many votes they got." At the time, Ms. Pelosi was bristling from criticism the progressive members had levied against her over her support for a funding bill the progressives said failed to protect migrant children, a major issue during the Trump presidency.
Five years later, Ms. Pelosi has stepped down from the leadership position she long held. The House progressive caucus has grown to nearly 100 members and has become a significant force within the party. The progressives have outlasted not only Ms. Pelosi, but also moderate Democrats who once led the party, like Representative Steny Hoyer, who has also bowed out of his role leading House Democrats. Representative Hakeem Jeffries of New York, the new minority leader, isn't a member of the progressive caucus. (He left the caucus when he became leader of the House Democrats.) But he has been far friendlier to the group's members and their agenda than his predecessor, Ms. Pelosi, a nod to the blossoming role of progressive politics within the Democratic Party and its voter base.

And in recent months, the insurgent group of unapologetic leftists has gained even more sway within the Democratic Party. Some of this is clearly a reaction to the extremism of Trumpism and far-right House Republicans. But the progressives have gained power in Washington amid rising anger over the U.S. role in Gaza.
For the first time in decades, possibly since the anti-Vietnam War and environmental movements, the left wing has led the center of the Democratic Party in a new political direction on a major issue — one sharply critical of the Israeli government, impatient with the leadership of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and increasingly willing to use American leverage to curb Israel's military plans.
In recent weeks, Democratic leaders have begun inching closer to the progressive view that it is against U.S. interests to continue sending unconditional U.S. military aid to Mr. Netanyahu's government in an asymmetrical war that has killed thousands of innocent civilians in Gaza. And they have recognized that anger among Democratic voters — especially young voters — over the U.S. role in Gaza is a serious threat to Mr. Biden's re-election that cannot be ignored.
In March, Senator Charles Schumer of New York, a staunch supporter of Israel, signaled an increasingly unified view of the conflict within the Democratic Party when he called for Israeli elections to replace Mr. Netanyahu. "The Netanyahu coalition no longer fits the needs of Israel after Oct. 7," Mr. Schumer said in a March 14 speech that stunned the political world.
Progressives have cheered the shift.
"We stood our ground on this issue since day one," Representative Ayanna Pressley of Massachusetts told me. "Today our vision is a part of that mainstream political discourse, and the party is responding." Ms. Pressley said it was not only Gaza but other issues, including student debt relief, that have contributed to the rising influence of progressives on Capitol Hill. "People want a Democratic Party that fights," she said.

Shortly after the Oct. 7 attacks on Israel by Hamas, such a transformation within the Democratic Party looked extremely unlikely. In the first days after Israel invaded Gaza last fall, progressives like Ms. Ocasio-Cortez were calling for a cease-fire, a position that, in the wake of the horrific attacks on Israelis, seemed far out of step with much of the Democratic Party.

Representative Ilhan Omar of Minnesota, another progressive Democrat, accused Israel of threatening actions that amounted to war crimes. Representative Rashida Tlaib of Michigan, a progressive Democrat and the only Palestinian-American member of Congress, has described Israel's longstanding approach to the conflict as apartheid. For months, President Biden and the mainstream of the Democratic Party treated these views as unwelcome and extreme. Outside Biden campaign events, protests against the war were also largely ignored.
Six months later, though, the political landscape looks drastically different. When Ms. Ocasio-Cortez, speaking on the House floor on March 22, described the war in Gaza as an "unfolding genocide" against the Palestinian people, the Democratic House leadership barely blinked.
"A lot of what I was trying to do was legitimize this position," Ms. Ocasio-Cortez told me in a recent interview. "That it's not just like some fringe-activist thing."

The Democrats who are now openly talking about putting conditions on aid to Israel are hardly on the fringe. They include mainstream senators like Chris Van Hollen of Maryland, Chris Coons of Delaware, Peter Welch of Vermont, Tina Smith of Minnesota and Chris Murphy of Connecticut. Representative Gregory Meeks of New York, the ranking Democrat on the House Foreign Affairs Committee and a longtime supporter of Israel, said he would not support the sale of F-15 fighter jets and munitions to Israel until he received assurances Israel would do more to reduce civilian deaths and increase the flow of humanitarian aid into Gaza.

Even at the White House, it's clear the rhetoric surrounding the conflict has shifted. In a phone call with Mr. Netanyahu on April 4, the day after the killing of seven World Central Kitchen workers in Gaza by Israeli forces, Mr. Biden told the Israeli leader he would attach conditions to U.S. military support if more were not done to protect civilians and allow humanitarian aid into Gaza.
Partly, the drift away from decades-old American foreign policy is a reflection of the enormous death toll and suffering in Gaza, where tens of thousands of Palestinian civilians have been killed, as well as the intransigence of the right-wing Israeli government. But it is also a mark of the growing influence of American progressives on the Democratic Party.
Ms. Ocasio-Cortez, for example, wasn't taking on only the role of organizer in recent months, but also of fund-raiser: She gave $260,000 to the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee this year; a spokesman said her PAC, Courage to Change, has more than $500,000 on-hand it plans to put toward the campaigns of progressive House Democrats facing serious challenges this cycle. It was her first contribution to a central core of the party, moving her from an outsider to an important influencer. This kind of fund-raising, if it continues, could put progressives in a position to play a growing role within the Democratic Party, displacing the aging centrists.
On Israel, the pressure from the left has been clear: protests by young Americans and many others against the American role in the conflict; an "uncommitted" movement that led thousands of Democrats to cast protest ballots instead of voting for Mr. Biden, especially in Michigan, a key swing state; and an intense, behind-the-scenes lobbying effort at the White House and in Congress by progressive Democrats.
One reason this had seemed improbable was divisive rhetoric on the left, including phrases like "from the river to the sea," which some view as a call for Palestinian rights but others see as an antisemitic call for the erasure of the state of Israel.


This language was at best unhelpful. In the shadow of the deadliest attack on Jews since the Holocaust, and amid rising antisemitism on and off campuses, it often felt deeply offensive. If American progressives are serious about driving foreign policy on Israel, they will have to find a way to strongly confront any antisemitism within their coalition.
Ms. Ocasio-Cortez acknowledged that antisemitism was on the rise, but said the progressive movement is operating in a "tinderbox situation" in which groups like AIPAC, a pro-Israel lobby, have used unfair accusations of antisemitism to silence any criticism of the Israeli government.
"Two things can be true at the same time," she said. "You have a lot of cynical weaponization of false accusations and conflating of criticism of Israel with antisemitism, alongside the fact that antisemitism is very real and on the rise."
The long-term political strategy behind the uncommitted movement remains unclear. If it continues into the November election, it could help put Donald Trump in the White House, imperiling American democracy, never mind the progressive agenda.
Allies of the movement, though, say the U.S. role in Gaza has become too personal to ignore. "I have constituents who've lost dozens of their family members," Ms. Omar said. "They've been killed with weapons provided by their own tax dollars."

In classified briefings, at the White House and in scores of private conversations with other Democrats, Ms. Ocasio-Cortez pushed hard for a permanent cease-fire and conditions for military aid.
"There was no lack of outside organizing, but I don't feel like there were enough inside voices that were able to get through these halls of power, particularly to people who disagreed with us," Ms. Ocasio-Cortez said. "And so I decided to dedicate a lot of time and energy to really spending a lot of time in those spaces."
She also said she sat with families of the Israeli hostages and was alarmed by the rise antisemitic attacks, especially in New York City, part of which she represents.
On the campaign trail and at the White House over the past six months, decades of fixed American foreign policy on Israel were suddenly tested like never before. In swing states across the country, large groups of antiwar protesters stalked campaign events. In Washington, Biden administration officials began receiving phone calls from members like Ms. Pressley, who for weeks pestered the White House with constant requests for aid on behalf of a single Palestinian-American family, the Okals, that was trapped in Gaza.
Representative Sara Jacobs of California, the youngest Jewish member of Congress and a Democratic member of the Foreign Affairs Committee, has also lobbied her colleagues. She said the administration should enforce the Foreign Assistance Act, which bars the United States from giving arms to any country that impedes humanitarian aid, as Ms. Jacobs said she believes Israel has done.

"A lot of people think that any criticism of Israel is antisemitic," Ms. Jacobs told me, adding that she has family in Israel. "I have been working very hard to try and carve out that space where there are legitimate criticisms."
Ms. Ocasio-Cortez said her decision to publicly call the war in Gaza a genocide was driven largely by reports of imminent famine among Palestinians in the enclave amid what she said she believes to be the intentional blocking of humanitarian aid by Mr. Netanyahu.
Before giving the speech on the House floor, she said, she carefully considered other factors as well, including rising antisemitic attacks and the history of genocide against Jewish communities. She also said she spoke with a close childhood friend who is a survivor of the 1994 Rwandan genocide.
"I said, you know, 'What do you think would have been helpful?'" the congresswoman recalled. "And my friend told me that people need to see these folks as human. That's why I chose to use the images and in my speech to discuss what famine means."
Much is at stake at home as well, where U.S. policy toward Israel could sap the Democratic Party of its moral force — among its greatest assets in the battle against Trumpism — ahead of an existential November election.

But if progressives and mainstream Democrats can continue to find common ground, that policy might really change. That may save lives, and heal a painful and politically dangerous fracture in the Democratic coalition.
More on the progressives and the Gaza war

Mara Gay is a member of the editorial board. @MaraGay
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Juan Matute
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Andy Borowitz

The Borowitz Report borowitzreport@substack.com 
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4:10 AM (3 hours ago)
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Andrew Lichtenstein/Corbis via Getty Images

NEW YORK (The Borowitz Report)—In a development that has rocked the news industry, The National Enquirer has lost millions of subscribers amid revelations that some of its stories might not be factual.

After Donald J. Trump's hush money trial exposed the Enquirer's inner workings, the newspaper's reputation for unimpeachable journalism suffered a severe blow, media insiders say.

Harland Dorrinson, an Enquirer subscriber for over thirty years, said discovering that the weekly periodical was not a dependable information source was "a gut punch."

"In a complex and confusing world, I always felt that there was one news outlet that could make sense of it all," he said. "That's been stolen from me."

If the Enquirer distorted its coverage to support Trump's election in 2016, Dorrinson wondered, "Does that mean Hillary Clinton wasn't really dying? Or that she didn't delete emails from her multiple lesbian lovers? Or that Bill Clinton didn't have a sex romp in a pickup truck that was caught on video? Now I don't know what to believe."

The longtime subscriber said that the Enquirer's sudden loss of credibility would force him to seek reliable reporting elsewhere, adding, "I guess I'll give Fox a shot."


What do you suppose he is thinking?



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Juan Matute
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Monday, April 22, 2024

Andy Borowitz

The Borowitz Report borowitzreport@substack.com 
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Wojciech Grzedzinski for The Washington Post via Getty Images

UKRAINE (The Borowitz Report)—After six months of what seemed at times an unwinnable battle, on Saturday the Ukrainian army scored a stunning victory over Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene.

Jubilant Ukrainian soldiers cheered as news spread that their despised foe from Georgia's 14th congressional district had been dealt a humiliating defeat.

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky, who greeted his front-line troops with a flurry of high fives, declared, "This is a war between freedom and Marjorie Taylor Greene. Ukraine chooses freedom."

Answering a reporter's question, Zelensky signaled that he might be open to direct talks with Greene, but added, "We would need an interpreter since only I speak English."

On Sunday, Greene was still fuming about Ukraine's win, telling Fox News, "I don't see why Zelensky needs more weapons when he already has space lasers."



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Juan Matute
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― The Lincoln Project


Something to Know - 22 April

There are a couple of things happening today.   One is the beginning of the Trump Trial in New York.   It is commonly known as "the hush money trial", but in reality it is truly an election interfering trial in that Trump pulled some stunts to ensure that his encounter with a porn star was hidden from voters prior to the 2016 election (which is a felony).   Okay, there is that one, but the larger and more enduring issue that affects the long-term viability of our way of life is - Climate Change.   To that end, HCR does well in emphasizing that the Department of the Interior is no longer a fixer for actions by corporate interests in pillaging our land and fouling the air.  Trump has done a lot to try and destroy democracy and foul the air, but that will soon be over (my opinion), but we have to focus our attention on our natural environment and pay attention to Earth Week, and all it means to us.   HCR is good for that today, and she does not say one word about the rotting stench with the fake skin and hair coloring, fouling the air in a New York courtroom.


Heather Cox Richardson from Letters from an American heathercoxrichardson@substack.com 

Sun, Apr 21, 9:21 PM (10 hours ago)
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During her confirmation hearings in 2021, Interior Department secretary Deb Haaland promised "to responsibly manage our natural resources to protect them for future generations—so that we can continue to work, live, hunt, fish, and pray among them." Noting her Indigenous heritage, Haaland tweeted, "A voice like mine has never been a Cabinet secretary or at the head of the Department of Interior…. I'll be fierce for all of us, our planet, and all of our protected land."

Her approach was a shift from the practice the Interior Department had established at the beginning of the twentieth century when it began to prioritize mineral, oil, and gas development, as well as livestock grazing, on U.S. public lands. But the devastating effects of climate change have brought those old priorities into question. 

Republicans, especially those from states like Wyoming, which collects more than a billion dollars a year in royalties and taxes from the oil, gas, and coal produced on federal lands in the state, opposed Haaland's focus on responsible management of natural resources for the future  and warned that the Biden administration is "taking a sledgehammer to Western states' economies."

On Thursday, April 18, the Interior Department finalized a new rule for a balanced management of America's public lands. Put together after a public hearing period that saw more than 200,000 comments from states, individuals, Tribal and local governments, industry groups, and advocacy organizations, the new rule prioritizes the health of the lands and waters the Interior Department's Bureau of Land Management oversees. Those consist of about 245 million acres, primarily in 12 western states.

The new rule calls for protection of the land, restoration of the places that have been harmed in the past, and a promise to make informed decisions about future use based on "science, data, and Indigenous knowledge." It "recognizes conservation as an essential component of public lands management, on equal footing with other multiple uses of these lands." The Bureau of Land Management will now auction off leases not only for drilling, but also for conservation and restoration. 

Western state leaders oppose the Biden administration's efforts to change the Interior Department's past practices, calling them "colonial forces of national environmental groups who are pushing an agenda" onto states like Wyoming. 

The timing of the Interior Department's new rule can't help but call attention to Earth Day, celebrated tomorrow, on April 22. Earth Day is no novel proposition. Americans celebrated it for the first time in 1970. Nor was it a partisan idea in that year: Republican president Richard M. Nixon established it as Americans recognized a crisis that transcended partisanship and came together to fix it.

The spark for the first Earth Day was the 1962 publication of marine biologist Rachel Carson's Silent Spring, which showed the devastating effects of people on nature by documenting the effect of modern pesticides on the natural world. Her exposé of how the popular pesticide DDT was poisoning the food chain in American waters illuminated the dangerous overuse of chemicals and their effect on living organisms, and it caught readers' attention. Carson's book sold more than half a million copies in 24 countries. 

Democratic president John F. Kennedy asked the President's Science Advisory Committee to look into Carson's argument, and the committee vindicated her. Before she died of breast cancer in 1964, Carson noted: "Man's attitude toward nature is today critically important simply because we have now acquired a fateful power to alter and destroy nature. But man is a part of nature, and his war against nature is inevitably a war against himself? [We are] challenged as mankind has never been challenged before to prove our maturity and our mastery, not of nature, but of ourselves."  

As scientists organized the Environmental Defense Fund, Americans began to pay closer attention to human effects on the environment, especially after three crucial events. First, on December 24, 1968, astronaut William Anders took a color photograph of the Earth rising over the horizon of the moon from outer space during the Apollo 8 mission, powerfully illustrating the beauty and isolation of the globe on which we all live. 

Then, over 10 days in January and February 1969, a massive oil spill off the coast of Santa Barbara, California, poured between 80,000 and 100,000 barrels of oil into the Pacific, fouling 35 miles of California beaches and killing seabirds, dolphins, sea lions, and elephant seals. Public outrage ran so high that President Nixon went to Santa Barbara in March to see the cleanup efforts, telling the American public that "the Santa Barbara incident has frankly touched the conscience of the American people." 

And then, in June 1969, the chemical contaminants that had been dumped into Cleveland's Cuyahoga River caught fire. A dumping ground for local heavy industry, the river had actually burned more than ten times in the previous century, but with increased focus on environmental damage, this time the burning river garnered national attention.

In February 1970, President Nixon sent to Congress a special message "on environmental quality." "[W]e…have too casually and too long abused our natural environment," he wrote. "The time has come when we can wait no longer to repair the damage already done, and to establish new criteria to guide us in the future."

"The tasks that need doing require money, resolve and ingenuity," Nixon said, "and they are too big to be done by government alone. They call for fundamentally new philosophies of land, air and water use, for stricter regulation, for expanded government action, for greater citizen involvement, and for new programs to ensure that government, industry and individuals all are called on to do their share of the job and to pay their share of the cost."

Meanwhile, Gaylord Nelson, a Democratic senator from Wisconsin, visited the Santa Barbara oil spill and hoped to turn the same sort of enthusiasm people were bringing to protests against the Vietnam War toward efforts to protect the environment. He announced a teach-in on college campuses, which soon grew into a wider movement across the country. Their "Earth Day," held on April 22, 1970, brought more than 20 million Americans—10% of the total population of the country at the time—to call for the nation to address the damage caused by 150 years of unregulated industrial development. The movement included members of all political parties, rich Americans and their poorer neighbors, people who lived in the city and those in the country, labor leaders and their employers. It is still one of the largest protests in American history.

In July 1970, at the advice of a council convened to figure out how to consolidate government programs to combat pollution, Nixon proposed to Congress a new agency, the Environmental Protection Agency, which Congress created that December. 

In honor of Earth Day 2024, Democratic president Joe Biden has called for carrying on the legacy of our predecessors "by building a greener, more sustainable planet and, with it, a healthier, more prosperous nation." 

In a statement, Biden noted that no one can any longer deny the impacts and staggering costs of climate change as the nation confronts historic floods, droughts, and hurricanes. 

"Deforestation, nature loss, toxic chemicals, and plastic pollution also continue to threaten our air, lands, and waters, endangering our health, other species, and ecosystems," he said. He noted the administration's efforts to build a clean energy economy, providing well-paid union jobs as workers install solar panels, service wind turbines, cap old oil wells, manufacture electric vehicles, and so on, while also curbing air pollution from power plants and lead poisoning from old pipes, the burden of which historically has fallen on marginalized communities.

Biden noted that he brought the U.S. back into the Paris Climate Accord Trump pulled out of, is on track to conserve more lands and waters than any president before him, and has worked with the international community to slash methane emissions and restore lost forests.

And yet there is much more to be done, he said. He encouraged "all Americans to reflect on the need to protect our precious planet; to heed the call to combat our climate and biodiversity crises while growing the economy; and to keep working for a healthier, safer, more equitable future for all."

Happy Earth Day 2024.

Notes:

https://www.washingtonpost.com/climate-environment/2021/02/23/deb-haaland-interior-secretary-hearing/

https://www.nytimes.com/2021/03/02/climate/biden-interior-department-haaland.html

https://www.nytimes.com/2021/02/22/climate/deb-haaland-interior.html

https://www.blm.gov/public-lands-rule

https://www.washingtonpost.com/climate-environment/2023/11/28/public-lands-wyoming-biden-oil-mining/

https://www.blm.gov/press-release/biden-harris-administration-finalizes-strategy-guide-balanced-management-conservation

https://www.blm.gov/press-release/interior-department-releases-proposed-plan-guide-balanced-management-public-lands

https://www.nrdc.org/stories/story-silent-spring

https://www.presidency.ucsb.edu/documents/special-message-the-congress-environmental-quality

https://www.presidency.ucsb.edu/documents/remarks-following-inspection-oil-damage-santa-barbara-beach

https://www.epa.gov/history/origins-epa

https://www.earthday.org/history/

https://www.epa.gov/archive/epa/aboutepa/ddt-regulatory-history-brief-survey-1975.html

https://www.nps.gov/articles/story-of-the-fire.htm.

https://www.epa.gov/laws-regulations/discover-history-clean-water-act

https://nelsonearthday.net/gaylord-nelson-earth-day-origins/

https://www.whitehouse.gov/briefing-room/presidential-actions/2023/04/21/executive-order-on-revitalizing-our-nations-commitment-to-environmental-justice-for-all/

https://www.whitehouse.gov/briefing-room/presidential-actions/2024/04/19/a-proclamation-on-earth-day-2024/

Twitter (X):

DebHaalandNM/status/1339722046373130241



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Juan Matute
     (New link as of 17 April )
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― The Lincoln Project