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Wednesday, September 11, 2024

 

Urgent Request For Support – Media Lens In Financial Crisis

Media Lens is a UK-based media watchdog. It is our response to the increasingly centralised, corporate, state-subservient nature of the mislabelled ‘mainstream’ media system (‘MSM’). We argue that the ‘MSM’, in fact, acts as a de facto propaganda system for the state, corporations (notably, the ‘defence industry’), the security services and other establishment interests. The costs incurred as a result of this propaganda – in terms of human and animal suffering, climate catastrophe and environmental degradation – are incalculable.

When Media Lens started in July 2001, we were a miniscule operation with zero funding, no office, doing what we could in our spare time. Media Lens consisted of just two writers and editors: David Cromwell and David Edwards, assisted by a tech-savvy webmaster: initially Phil Chandler, then Olly Maw and, more recently, Keyvan Minoukadeh.

Our objective has been to raise public awareness of the deep, systemic bias in the major news media; very much including those outlets we are supposed to regard as the most fair, balanced and authoritative: notably BBC News, the Guardian, the Observer and the Independent. We have been happy to also dismantle the propaganda profusions of the right-wing press.

We have tried as far as possible to root our work in rationality, hard fact, and reliable sources, while maintaining a deeply-held commitment to the principles of non-violence and compassion. In 2007, we were honoured to receive the Gandhi Foundation International Peace Award.

In the days before Facebook and X (formerly Twitter), we relied solely on our mailing list to reach readers. Initially, media alerts were just sent to a handful of friends and a few contacts with an interest in the media and human rights. The mailing list grew steadily, and we unexpectedly started receiving donations from the public. On a couple of occasions, we successfully applied for small grants provided by progressive funding organisations.

By 2003, public donations were sufficient to enable David Edwards to work full-time on Media Lens. David Cromwell joined him in 2010.

We have published hundreds of media alerts, dozens of more philosophical and spiritual ‘cogitations’, and three jointly written books via Pluto Press: ‘Guardians of Power’ (2006), ‘Newspeak’ (2009) and ‘Propaganda Blitz’ (2018). We have also written two solo books during our time with Media Lens: ‘Why Are We The Good Guys?’ (Cromwell, Zero Books, 2012) and the forthcoming, ‘A Short Book About Ego… And The Remedy Of Meditation’ (Edwards, Mantra Books, 2025). After over 23 years, Media Lens remains solely the work of the same two writers.

In 2016, on our 15th anniversary, Noam Chomsky endorsed our work:

‘For 15 years, Media Lens has provided incisive critical analysis of media coverage of major events of current history while also offering a valuable corrective to distortion, misrepresentation, and crucial omissions.  A major contribution for those seeking a realistic understanding of what is happening in the world.’

John Pilger, who sadly died last December and whose invaluable website has just been relaunched, was a great friend and supporter of Media Lens from the very beginning. He praised our work thus:

‘At a time when journalism has become anti-journalism — the facade behind which powerful vested interests control much of our lives — Media Lens is a beacon, a whistleblower, unflagging in subverting lies, spin and hypocrisy, inspirational in its truth-telling.’

He added:

‘Not since Orwell and Chomsky has perceived reality been so skillfully revealed in the cause of truth.’

We are tremendously grateful to everyone who has supported us and anyone who continues to do so. Unfortunately, despite such valued contributions, Media Lens is now in the direst financial crisis of our existence. Funds are due to run out before the end of the year and the future looks highly uncertain.

A significant factor behind our predicament is the rise of social media. While we always had grave misgivings about using profit-maximising, global corporate platforms like Facebook and X, they did initially seem like a powerful way to reach a wider audience. Almost everybody else thought so, too, which is why almost all left-green progressives use them to send and receive information and views that challenge the ‘mainstream consensus’.

But it is no surprise that the social media ‘revolution’ has turned out to be a poisoned chalice. The reactionary corporate imposition of algorithms, shadow banning, downranking, untagging, debanking and other dissent-crushing mechanisms mean that most people who chose to follow us simply never see our posts, media alerts and cogitations. The situation has become so farcical, with posts reaching such a tiny handful of people, that it hardly seems worth our posting at all.

The public’s attention has been largely captured by corporate social media. While it might look for all the world that lively debate is taking place, progressives like us have been increasingly pushed out of the conversation. It is naturally difficult for readers to muster enthusiasm for supporting voices that are being drowned out by corporate-approved messages and who hardly appear to exist. 

Many people donate, or have donated, to us via regular PayPal subscriptions. However, currently a whole slew of these subscriptions has been ‘suspended’. This normally happens when your registered credit or debit card expires. You may not even be aware that you are no longer financially supporting us.

Please check if your PayPal subscription is still active. If not, and you wish to continue supporting us, please activate a new subscription with a new card. It is not possible to ‘reactivate’ an old subscription. Please visit our donate page to support us by credit/debit card or PayPal.

You can also support us via a standing order from a UK bank. Please contact us directly at editor@medialens.org for our bank details (which the bank has advised us we should not share online for security reasons).

We have never been comfortable issuing appeals for donations. This is especially true now, when there is an ongoing Israeli genocide of Palestinians, and a vital need to support the victims of that genocide. There are, of course, many deserving causes in the UK and abroad that also need support.

We are simply asking, if you are in a sufficiently comfortable financial position, to consider supporting our work into the future. Thank you.

DC & DE

Monday, September 09, 2024

 

Spurring more biofilm growth for efficient wastewater treatment



Foaming plastic carriers creates uneven surfaces, more area for necessary microorganisms



Osaka Metropolitan University

Image of MBBR 

image: 

How foamed polypropylene carriers are used in moving bed biofilm reactors.

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Credit: Osaka Metropolitan University





For the sake of the environment and our quality of life, effective treatment of wastewater plays a vital role. A biological method to treat sewage using moving, biofilm-covered plastic items known as carriers has been gaining prominence, and an Osaka Metropolitan University-led team has found ways to make the process more efficient.

The moving bed biofilm reactor (MBBR) process purifies wastewater by putting these carriers in motion to get the biofilm’s microorganisms into greater contact with organic matter and other impurities. The more biofilm that can be attached to the plastic carriers, the more microorganisms that are available to clean the wastewater.

OMU Professor Masayuki Azuma and Associate Professor Yoshihiro Ojima of the Graduate School of Engineering worked with a team from Kansaikako Co., an Osaka-based company specializing in water treatment-related products, and found that polypropylene carriers foamed to create uneven surfaces and more surface area allowed 44 times more biofilm formation than smooth plastic carriers.

Moreover, adding waste biomass such as composted seaweed when foaming further enhanced the performance of the foamed plastic carriers, especially in terms of nitrate removal during the MBBR process.

“Since there is a wide variety of wastewater, it will be necessary to prove that these foamed carriers also have superior suitability to various wastewater,” stated Professor Azuma. “It is clear that the addition of waste biomass improves the performance of the carriers, so we expect that further performance enhancement can be achieved depending on the additive.”

The findings were published in Environmental Technology & Innovation.

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About OMU 

Established in Osaka as one of the largest public universities in Japan, Osaka Metropolitan University is committed to shaping the future of society through “Convergence of Knowledge” and the promotion of world-class research. For more research news, visit https://www.omu.ac.jp/en/ and follow us on social media: XFacebookInstagramLinkedIn.

Friday, August 30, 2024

Photos show Greece tourist port flooded with more than 100 tons of dead fish

Authorities in Volos say the rotting fish have shuttered businesses and angered locals.

Yahoo News Photo Staff and Chanelle Chandler
Fri, August 30, 2024 
Tons of dead fish fill a river near Volos, Greece, Aug. 29. (Vaggelis Kousioras/AP)

Amass cleanup effort is underway in Greece after more than 100 tons of dead freshwater fish were discovered following a mass die-off that authorities have linked to extreme climate fluctuations.

The rotting fish have brought a “stench” that is “repulsive” to the port of Volos in central Greece, the local chamber of commerce said, according to the Associated Press. Officials said the dead fish have caused a “severe blow” to tourism.

Anna Maria Papadimitriou, the deputy regional governor of the central Thessaly area where Volos is located, told a local media outlet: “We are cooperating with whoever wants to help this phenomenon end as quickly as possible.”

But Volos Mayor Achilleas Beos accused the regional authority of acting too slowly and warned that the mass fish die-off, which scientists have linked to climate change, could be an environmental disaster.

The millions of freshwater fish came from central Greece’s Lake Karla, which abruptly swelled from a storm in September 2023 and caused mass flooding after months of extreme heat waves and severe drought.


But when the waters receded from a lack of rainfall, experts say, the fish were swept away with the floodwater and died when they encountered seawater. The carcasses spewed into nearby rivers, bays and the Pagasetic Gulf, where vacation homes line the shore.

Now, the regional governor has declared a state of emergency and deployed fishing trawlers, which are commercial vessels that use nets to collect fish. The fish have been dumped on trucks and sent to an incinerator. More than 40 tons of fish were collected in over 24 hours this week, local authorities said.

The city’s chamber of commerce claimed that most businesses along the seafront have closed and commercial activity has been reduced by 80% in the past three days. The chamber said it was taking legal action against any responsible parties, seeking damages for the decline in business.

Local prosecutors are investigating the phenomenon.

Workers collect dead fish from a river near Volos, central Greece, Aug. 29.
(Vaggelis Kousioras/AP)



Vaggelis Kousioras/AP

Tuesday, August 27, 2024

Workers, Unchecked: The Case for Card Check This Labor Day


 
 August 27, 2024
Facebook

LABORERS INTERNATIONAL UNION OF NORTH AMERICA

Photograph Source: Jeffrey Phelps

The process of union certification is a critical area of labor rights, acting as a precursor to collective bargaining. One method, card check, simplifies this process by allowing workers to express their desire for union representation through majority sign-up. Because it reduces opportunities for employer interference and expedites union certification, card check has come under significant fire from those who oppose unions.

Card check is a quick and efficient way for workers to indicate whether they want to be represented by a union. Workers who desire a union simply sign authorization cards indicating their support. If a majority (typically 50 percent plus one) sign cards, the union is recognized as the employees’ representative, and the newly authorized union and its members begin negotiating a collective bargaining agreement. Card check certification allows workers to move quickly from establishing majority support for their union to meeting their employer at the bargaining table.

Card Check vs. Secret Ballot

Card check is an option for union certification in the US, but there is a catch. While private sector employers can voluntarily recognize their employees’ union based on card check, they are not obligated to do so; employers have the option to petition the National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) even if the majority of workers have signed cards in support of the union. The NLRB adjudicates the matter by running a secret ballot election to determine whether the majority of those eligible for the bargaining unit support the union.The secret ballot election typically involves a prolonged campaign period, which gives employers ample time to interfere.

The National Labor Relations Act (NLRA) gives the NLRB jurisdiction over union certification in most of the private sector. Though some state and local card check laws are written to apply to all employers in that state or locality, those laws are preempted by the NLRA for the vast majority of private-sector workers. Since the NLRA does not apply to government workers, however, public sector certification requirements can and do vary by state and locality.

The distinction between card check and secret ballot elections may seem inconsequential, but it makes a significant difference in union certification success rates. Evidence from Canada highlights the difference in outcomes. Canada shares a similar legal framework with the United States regarding firm-level union elections, but allows provinces more flexibility with respect to certification rules, even in the private sector. This makes the Canadian experience a helpful case study for understanding how variations in the certification process can influence unionization outcomes. Johnson (20002002) estimated that mandating secret ballot elections for union certification in parts of Canada corresponded with a reduction in successful certifications, and that by 1995, 17 to 26 percent of the Canada-US union density gap could be attributed to union election rules in the US. Other researchers — Bentham in 1999Godard in 2000, and Slinn in 2004 — found similar relationships between card check and increased certification success rates for unions in Canada. Canadian union certification elections typically take place between five and ten days after being filed, while in the US there is often a gap of several months between the petition filing and the election. This reduces the likelihood of employer interference in Canada relative to the US, and suggests that a switch to default card check may have an even bigger effect on union certification success in the US than in Canada.

Meanwhile, there is some evidence from the public sector that card check supports union organizing in the US context. Illinois enacted a statutory amendment requiring employers to recognize unions based on card checks in 2003. Gely and Chandler (2010)compared public sector union certification activity in Illinois with neighboring Ohio before and after the Illinois law went into effect. They found that the Illinois legislation prompted card-check-oriented shifts in union organizing, with especially dramatic changes in organizing activity involving smaller bargaining units. This card-check effect is especially notable because ensuring that smaller units are able to form unions has been an ongoing challenge. Unions may be more reluctant to direct limited resources toward organizing drives at workplaces with fewer workers because it is harder for the union to recoup the organizing costs from the relatively limited dues base. By making it easier and more accessible for workers to translate their majority support into an actual union, card check certification could help employees from smaller bargaining units access the benefits of unionization at a rate more comparable to their peers in larger bargaining units.

Secret Ballots Are Not More Democratic

Some have asserted that secret ballot elections are an inherently more democratic method of certifying a union. They are not. Secret ballot and majority sign-on (of which card check is a form) are both ways for a group of individuals to determine and communicate majority support for some effort or idea. In this case, the group doing the deciding is supposed to be the workers and only the workers. Though US law allows management to be a non-voting party to union certification, management does not get to vote or sign a card because it is not their decision to make; only members of the potential bargaining unit are eligible to make that decision. This right is also recognized internationally. Article 23 of the United Nations’ Universal Declaration of Human Rightsaffirms workers’ right to form and join unions; it does not say, “Workers may form and join unions only if their employer also agrees.”

Of these two ways of determining and communicating the will of the majority in a bargaining unit, secret ballot elections provide more opportunity for management—a party that isn’t supposed to get a say in the decision—to put its thumb on the scale. If a majority of workers have already signed cards declaring their support for the union, asking them to also do so via secret ballot serves to second-guess their decision-making capacity. It is tantamount to asking, “But are you sure?” in response to the majority making a decision that management may not like, which is not a democratic practice. Employers who demand secret ballot elections even after most of their workers have signed union cards are behaving anti-democratically. The insistence on secret ballot elections has nothing to do with democracy and everything to do with employers trying to undermine unionization efforts.

Why Bosses Prefer Ballots

Those who oppose card check certification often express concern that workers will be pressured by other workers to sign cards. They maintain that the decision to sign a card is more likely to be made under duress compared with voting by secret ballot. This line of argument falls short in several ways.

First, both secret ballots and signed cards may reflect pressure exerted on the individuals casting their votes or signing. Not all sources of pressure are created equal, however. In a non-union workplace, the power dynamics favor the employer over the worker. Most workplaces have a hierarchical structure that gives bosses and managers wide-ranging discretionary authority to hire and fire, shape job roles, set work pace, alter company policy, and otherwise direct the working environment. It would therefore be a mistake to assume that pressure from co-workers and pressure from an employer are equally threatening to the decision-making process of workers. To do so ignores the considerable power imbalance between workers and their bosses; this imbalance makes pressure from an employer a far bigger threat.

Employers don’t prefer secret ballots because they want their employees to be able to make pressure-free decisions about the union. Employers prefer secret ballots because secret ballots give employers more opportunity to exert pressure — even though, while parties to the decision, they are not legally supposed to have a say in the decision. It’s important to be clear-eyed about which source of pressure poses a greater threat to a worker’s free and uncoerced decision-making. If we care about workers’ ability to make uncoerced decisions about unions, and secret ballot elections are more likely to introduce pressure from a more concerning source, it makes sense to favor card check certification.

Secret ballot certification also falls short in another, more fundamental way. In “What’s More Democratic Than a Secret Ballot? The Case for Majority Sign-up”, Gordon Lafer makes the case that deciding to form a union and voting to elect someone to public office are fundamentally different acts, and therefore deserve different considerations with respect to democratic procedure. Elections for public office are most people’s reference point for democracy, but Lafer argues that it’s the wrong analogy for union certification. He writes:

“The decision to form a union is not equivalent to the choice of which candidate should occupy a preexisting slot in the government. It is rather an attempt to change the form of government in the workplace, from one-party rule to something slightly more democratic.”

Deciding to form a union is a choice to create a representative structure independent of the firm’s managing authority – and that is potentially at cross purposes with it. Organizing a union is usually a delicate matter because employers are fiercely committed to preserving the current default system, under which the employer exercises unilateral rule. Workers also know that even if they succeed in changing the system, they will remain largely subject to the authority of the employer who opposed their efforts.

Forming a union is a more fundamentally collective enterprise than voting for a representative to public office; workers do not form unions as atomized individuals independent of their co-workers. Instead, employees who back a unionization effort are signaling sufficient confidence in their co-workers to want to come together with them and wield more power as a group vis-a-vis their boss. Signing a union card can be understood as workers’ pledging to each other their commitment to work together to secure a fair contract. As Lafer notes, acknowledgment of this commitment is reflected in the fact that one of the questions workers tend to ask themselves when deciding whether to support the union is, “Are enough of us on board to make this a worthwhile endeavor?” Secret ballot elections, then, may serve to individualize a fundamentally collective action.

The Future for Card Check

There have been pushes to codify unions’ right to use card check certification in the US. As noted earlier, some states have already done so, and though their efforts are preempted by the NLRA in most of the private sector, state and local laws can make card check the default for some or all public sector employees in those jurisdictions. At the federal level, the doomed Employee Free Choice Act of 2007 would have amended the NLRA to require immediate union certification if the majority of workers signed cards indicating their support for the union.

There have also been some encouraging certification-related rulings by the NLRB in the last few years. The NLRB’s 2023 ruling in Cemex Construction Materials Pacific, LLC shortened the available window for management’s anti-union campaigning by requiring employers to either voluntarily recognize the union based on card check or file for an election within two weeks. Prior to the Cemex decision, employers could simply reject authorization cards as valid proof of a worker majority and put the onus on the union to file an election petition with the NLRB. The resulting delays gave employers that much more opportunity to bust the union.

The NLRB also published its Fair Choice–Employee Voice Final Rule this year. Among other things, the rule restores the “voluntary recognition bar,” which ensures that unions certified via card check and voluntarily recognized by the employer aren’t challenged in short order, allowing them to move on to negotiating a collective bargaining agreement. The rule reverses a 2020 NLRB decisionthat required a 45-day challenge period following voluntary recognition, during which any employee could demand that the NLRB relitigate the union’s recognition and impose an election instead.

While the recent NLRB edicts have helped, the union certification process remains onerous for workers. Even the Protecting the Right to Organize Act of 2021 (commonly known as the PRO Act), often held up as the gold standard in labor law reform with many important pro-worker changes, leaves the flawed elections process mostly in place. Though the PRO Act does tackle some of the worst employer delay and obstruction tactics, the closest it comes to enshrining card check certification is by imposing it as a penalty on employers who fail to abide by tightened election rules.

This Labor Day, workers deserve to see lawmakers tackle one of the key areas of policy hindering their right to organize unions. Federal lawmakers should move to not only codify card check as a valid means of union certification, but also change the laws that give employers undue standing and ability to interfere in union organizing. Lawmakers should also ensure that public sector employees – who are not covered by the NLRA – have the same rights to join and form unions as their peers in the private sector. State and local governments that have not already done so should also move to validate union certification based on card check. Such provisions would immediately benefit workers in the public sector. They would also act as an additional potential legal backstop in case federal protections are weakened in a way that gives state and local governments more jurisdiction over private sector union certification.

As discussions around labor rights continue, ensuring that card check certification is recognized and supported remains crucial to empowering workers and strengthening their ability to advocate for fair treatment in the workplace. Given the evidence of its effectiveness, policymakers at every level of government should resist flawed and bad-faith arguments and instead prioritize this crucial pro-worker policy.

This first appeared on CEPR.

Hayley Brown is a Research Associate at the Center for Economic and Policy Research.  Sylvia Allegretto is a senior economist at the Center for Economic and Policy Research.