Sunday, March 28, 2021

ETR USED IN A MSM HEADLINE
'Eat the rich': Backlash after Kylie Jenner asks fans to donate to injured makeup artist

Kylie Jenner has come under fire — not for her skincare products, or a shocking episode of Keeping Up With the Kardashians , but, for asking for donations.


The 23-year-old cosmetics entrepreneur drew backlash after posting an Instagram story asking fans to help cover makeup artist Samuel Rauda’s medical expenses. As many social media users pointed out, Jenner’s net worth was estimated by Forbes to be US$700 million in October.

Rauda has done work for Jenner, Chrissy Teigen, Bebe Rexha, Bella Thorne and Khloe Kardashian, among others.

“May God watch over you and protect you @makeupbysamuel,” Jenner wrote on her Instagram story, along with a black-and-white photo of Rauda. “Everyone take a moment to say a prayer for Sam who got into an accident this past weekend. And swipe up to visit his (family’s) go fund me.”


According to the GoFundMe page , Rauda underwent “major surgery” earlier this month after he was in an unspecified accident. His family is currently asking for $120,000 to help cover his medical expenses.

Their initial goal was $60,000, according to Newsweek , but “sources close to” Jenner told TMZ that the original target amount of the GoFundMe was only $10,000, and the star’s donation pushed it over the edge.

As of Monday morning, they’ve received just under $100,000.

“ Kylie Jenner, a billionaire whose toddler has purses from Hermès, Chanel and Vuitton, wants you to donate the $60k her makeup artist needs for brain surgery,” tweeted @goldengateblond in response to Jenner’s Instagram callout.

As Insider reported , between June 2017 to June 2018, Jenner made about US$19,000 an hour, or about half-a-million dollars a day.

“Kylie Jenner makes almost half a million dollars everyday and she is still asking her relatively poor fans to pay for her friends $60,000 medical bills? Eat the rich,” user @JohnPangarakis1 wrote.

The GoFundMe page shows Jenner contributed only $5,000 to Rauda’s expenses, while rival beauty entrepreneur Huda Kattan, of Huda Beauty, donated $10,000.

According to Forbes , Kylie earned US$540 million, pre-tax, for selling 51 per cent of her company Kylie Cosmetics to Coty, a multinational beauty brand whose “portfolio” includes brands like Calvin Klein, Gucci, Marc Jacobs and Tiffany & Co.

Originally, the publication claimed that Jenner was the youngest “self-made” billionaire in 2019. But, later corrected itself in 2020, and claimed that Jenner was not actually a billionaire. But, w hether she’s a billionaire or not, Jenner certainly has the funds to cover Rauda’s surgery — or at least donate more than $5,000 — say social media users.

“Her makeup artist apparently needs $60k. Kylie Jenner paying that would be like someone with $100k net worth sparing $6.72 to pay off a friend’s medical bills,” writer Charlotte Clymer said on Twitter . “In other words, paying off her friend’s medical bills would be like buying a premium latte for Jenner.”


Jenner also owns her own private jet, which was
estimated to cost between $50 million to $70 million, as well as a $36.5 million mansion.

“It’s not even about the fact that she won’t pay for the surgery herself. Every single last one of Kylie Jenner’s sisters is a millionaire. Her parents are millionaires. Her friends are millionaires. But she asked the MIDDLE CLASS for money,” tweeted @Princess_Mia_95



Amazon Illegally Interrogated Worker Who Led First COVID-19 Strikes, NLRB Says

The state of New York is also suing Amazon for alleged health and safety violations at the same Queens warehouse where workers led the first COVID-19-related walkouts.


By Lauren Kaori Gurley
22.3.21
On the Clock

On the Clock is Motherboard's reporting on the organized labor movement, gig work, automation, and the future of work.


In March 2020, the first COVID-19 cases at an Amazon warehouse in the United States were reported at a delivery depot in Queens, New York City. At the time, Amazon warehouse workers at the facility staged two walkouts in protest of Amazon's handling of the outbreak, kicking off a wave of COVID-19-related protests and strikes at Amazon facilities across the United States.

A National Labor Review Board (NLRB) investigation has now found that Amazon illegally interrogated and threatened Jonathan Bailey, a lead organizer of the Queens Amazon walkouts, and has issued a federal complaint against Amazon, according to official NLRB documents obtained by Motherboard.

The case was settled before it went to trial, but the issuing of the complaint means that an NLRB investigation found Amazon broke the law.

"Amazon did its best to keep everybody working while simultaneously crushing our effort to fight back," said Bailey, who was interrogated and written up by Amazon management after leading a walkout at the Queens facility on March 20, 2020, according to his NLRB testimony and the federal complaint.

On March 18, Amazon warehouse workers shut down the Queens facility after one of their coworkers tested positive for COVID-19, the first Amazon warehouse worker reporting a positive case in the United States. Two days later, on March 20, Bailey led a second walkout with 13 workers. It was planned during a lunch break after Amazon sent a second worker home sick but did not close the warehouse.

The following day, a regional manager who introduced himself as a former FBI agent pulled Bailey aside into management's offices and interrogated Bailey about his role in the walkout, told him his behavior might be harassment, and demanded Bailey contact him before any future walkouts, according to Bailey's NLRB testimony.

"He interrogated me for an hour and a half," Bailey told Motherboard. "A week later I was called into the office again and they wrote me up for harassment, saying people felt hurt by what I did." Motherboard obtained an audio recording of that meeting.

Motherboard also obtained a copy of an NLRB settlement agreement, dated March 3, 2021, that requires Amazon to post information about workers rights to organize at the entrances to break rooms, including, "WE WILL NOT ask you whether or not you support employee walk-outs, or about any other protected concerted activities." Motherboard reached out to the regional NLRB attorney on the case for comment and they directed us to public information about the case on the NLRB’s website.

“While we disagree with allegations made in the case, we are pleased to put this matter behind us," Leah Seay, a spokesperson for Amazon told Motherboard. "The health and safety of our employees is our top priority and we are proud to provide inclusive environments, where employees can excel without fear of retaliation, intimidation or harassment.”

“Amazon fabricated false and unjust disciplinary measures to build bogus cases against workers leading the fight to be treated as more than grist in Amazon’s profit mill,” Amazonians United New York City told Motherboard in a statement. “We thank the NLRB for putting in countless hours and validating what we already knew to be true. Ultimately, it is our solidarity that protects us and will win us a better world.”

The news coincides with heightened scrutiny on Amazon's anti-union practices, as the company campaigns to defeat a historic union election at its Bessemer, Alabama warehouse, where workers could form the first Amazon union in the United States when votes are counted on March 30.

It comes in the midst of a high profile lawsuit in New York focused on the Queens Amazon warehouse. In February, New York's attorney general sued Amazon, arguing that the company "failed to comply with requirements for cleaning and disinfection" and retaliated against workers who raised concerns about health and safety conditions at the Queens warehouse and another Amazon facility in Staten Island.

Documents obtained by Motherboard show the NLRB found that management at Amazon's Queens delivery depot violated workers right to engage in labor organizing activity on four accounts in March 2020. Amazon's management told employees not to organize in collective activity "without first notifying [them]," threatened discipline to workers who spoke to employees about a walk-out, and "interrogated employees about their participation" in the walkout, according to the federal complaint.

Under the 1935 National Labor Relations Act, it is illegal for employers to retaliate against workers who organize to form unions or who engage in collective action to improve their working conditions.

The board dismissed three other allegations related to labor organizing.

Last year, Motherboard published leaked handouts and communications from the Queens warehouse that showed that the company was ill-prepared to respond to early COVID-19 cases and implement safety protocols despite having a comprehensive global security team that identifies threats to the company. Documents show that Amazon failed to comply with New York City paid sick leave laws resulting in what Amazonians United NYC, the group of workers who led the walkouts, said were wrongful terminations. Managers also used grainy video surveillance footage to conduct contact tracing, often struggling to identify workers.

The warehouse was so short on supplies that managers went to 7-Eleven and Costco to buy out entire stocks of hand sanitizer, Clorox wipes, disinfectant, and water for workers experiencing "heat stress." Amazon also passed out talking points to managers that explained how to discuss organizing at their facility, which noted that the company would protect workers from "retaliation" from Amazonians United NYC.

In late 2019, Bailey, a sortation associate, began meeting with his Amazon coworkers at a Lutheran church and his apartment in Queens to discuss concerns related to Amazon's failure to comply with New York City paid sick leave laws, according to Bailey's testimony provided to the NLRB. But in March 2020, those concerns escalated into demands related to COVID-19 protections.

Using the name Amazonians United NYC, the group wrote a petition eventually signed by more than 5,000 Amazon warehouse workers worldwide in which they demanded that Amazon stop shipment on all non-essential items and provide paid sick leave to all its employees at a time when COVID-19 tests were still scarce.

"As the pandemic unfolds, the demand for home-delivery is increasing, leading to near peak-level volume across the network," they wrote. "We must ensure that we are adequately protected."

Do you have a tip to share with us about organizing at Amazon? We’d love to hear from you. Please get in touch with the reporter Lauren by emailing Lauren.gurley@vice.com or on Signal 201-897-2109.

This isn't the first time the NLRB has found evidence of Amazon violating workers' right to organize free from retaliation. Last week, the Intercept reported that NLRB notified Amazon workers in Chicago, who organize under the name Amazonians United Chicagoland, and led four COVID-19-related strikes in April 2020, that Amazon had illegally retaliated against them for protesting. In December, Motherboard reported that the NLRB found that Amazon had illegally fired a Staten Island Amazon warehouse worker who led a protest outside the warehouse on his day off in March 2020.

Since 2019, Amazonians United groups have also formed Sacramento and Chicago. Though they haven't received formal recognition from the NLRB, they consider themselves a union, along with the workers at the Queens facility.


Scientists shocked to discover plants under mile-deep ​Greenland ice


Isabella O'Malley 

Cold War discoveries and climate change don’t always intersect, but when they do, scientists improve their ability to predict how much sea levels will rise as global temperatures warm.



Play Video
Soil found in ice cores extracted from Greenland in 1966

During the late 1950s, the U.S. Army built a nuclear-powered Arctic research centre called Camp Century in northwestern Greenland. This military base became the headquarters for a top-secret mission called Project Iceworm, which appeared as a polar science station but actually hid 600 nuclear missiles under the ice. The mission was eventually cancelled, but a scientific team at Camp Century was able to carry out Arctic research and collect ice samples when it was operating.

© Provided by The Weather Network
Extracting ice cores at Camp Century during the 1960s. Credit: Army Corps of Engineers

A 1,600 metre-long ice core was extracted at the base in 1966 and nearly four metres of soil was found at the bottom. Scientists weren’t able to do much with the ice core, as the technology at the time couldn’t determine how old the soil was, so it was left in a Danish freezer and was forgotten for several decades.

The soil samples were accidentally found in 2017 when the contents of the freezer were being transferred to a different location. Given the samples’ unique history, they were shipped to the United States so they could be studied by an international team gathered at the University of Vermont in 2019.

State-of-the-art technologies, such as atom counting, were used to analyze the soil and scientists were surprised to discover twigs, leaves, and mosses, indicating that an entire ecosystem was once flourishing where the Greenland Ice Sheet now resides, which is over 3,200 metres thick at its highest point.

© Provided by The Weather NetworkCredit: Dorothy Peteet, Columbia University

The researchers’ findings were published in a study in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, which says their discovery reveals the Greenland Ice Sheet has completely melted at least once in the last million years.

The ice sheet melted when carbon dioxide concentrations in the atmosphere were significantly lower than present-day, which the researchers say is an indication that there is the potential for human influence to melt the ice again.

© Provided by The Weather Network
A winding river in Greenland. Credit: Joshua Brown

“Ice sheets typically pulverize and destroy everything in their path, but what we discovered was delicate plant structures — perfectly preserved. They’re fossils, but they look like they died yesterday. It’s a time capsule of what used to live on Greenland that we wouldn’t be able to find anywhere else,” says Andrew Christ, University of Vermont scientist and lead author of the study, in the university’s press release.

© Provided by The Weather Network
A pool of melting ice in Greenland. 
Credit: Joshua Brown

The researchers say that Greenland’s ice sheet holds enough water to raise global sea levels by six metres, which would flood some of the most populated coastal cities in the world, including Boston, Miami, and London. Several island nations, such as the Marshall Islands and the Maldives, and Kiribati are all less than two metres above sea level and face total submergence by the end of this century if the predicted climate impacts occur.

“This is not a twenty-generation problem,” says Paul Bierman, a geoscientist at the University of Vermont, in the press release. “This is an urgent problem for the next 50 years.”

Thumbnail credit: Joshua Brown






NEITHER STR8 NOR GAY WE ARE ALL BISEXUAL

Bisexual Erasure: What It Is, Why It’s a Threat to Health, and How to Put an End to It
Duration: 00:59
 



The number of people in the US who identify as bisexual is increasing. But bisexuality continues to be overlooked and ignored, and that has consequences.

Saturday, March 27, 2021

DID  APACHE ORIGINATE IN NUNAVUT

Moccasin mystery: How did centuries-old footwear from Canada end up in the American Southwest?

When archeologist Julian Steward first found what are known as the Promontory Caves on the north shore of Great Salt Lake in Utah in the 1930s, he couldn’t have known that he would be excavating an area that not only contained an incredible amount of organic remains – rare finds in archeology – but also raised a question that would not be answered until 2021.

The world of archaeology now has a better understanding of these caves and the people who used them, and it all came down to a moccasin.

The people who inhabited the Promontory Caves did so approximately 800 years ago.

They left behind them an abundance of materials available for research, but it was their moccasins (among other things) that provided a key clue that they were actually Dene ancestors. The moccasins were in a Subarctic style, consistent with those used by Dene people farther north.

“Steward noticed that the moccasins that were found were in a style that was really different than anything local groups in Northern Utah used for their footwear,” said Dr. Jessica Metcalfe, assistant professor in the Department of Anthropology at Lakehead University.


They were found in another place though, the Subarctic. In case you’re unfamiliar, Metcalfe specifies that subarctic is “the Yukon and Northern Alberta, all the way over to Northern Ontario.”

The question is, why are these moccasins 1,500 kilometres from where they should be?

It took a little while for technology to catch up of course, so it was almost 100 years later that a re-excavation of the area took place, but when it did, Metcalfe was a part of a research team that offered a chemical answer to that question.

It’s the first time that human migrations have been reconstructed using chemical traces in footwear.

If you have any interest in science, or really, ever watched science-ish fiction on television, you have likely heard the term ‘carbon dating,’ a shortening of the actual term, radiocarbon dating. It is a method that establishes age estimates for carbon-based materials that originated from living organisms.

“It’s used if you are looking to get an idea of ‘when’,” said Metcalfe, “Radiocarbon dating looks at carbon-14, which acts like a clock.”

Carbon-14 degrades over time. If you measure how much is left compared to how much should be there, you get an answer. Not so simple, of course, but that’s the gist.

However, Metcalfe works with something that is also revealed when examining carbon-based material. She examines stable isotope composition; she’s not looking at carbon-14, she’s looking at 12 and 13.

“They don’t decay,” says Metcalfe, “It’s a record that exists in the tissue and doesn’t degrade.”

The archeologists who were engaged in the excavation of the Promontory Cave site, as well as the other members of the research team began radiocarbon dating when they found a very different stable carbon isotope on a piece of moccasin, specifically on the ankle wrap. (The ankle wrap is often reused, while the moccasin bottoms would need to be replaced more often.)

Because Metcalfe is a geochemical archaeologist, she was brought in to help understand this unusual result. Again, stable isotopes are different specifically because they do not decay, they paint a clear picture.

“It’s kind of like a fingerprint,” said Metcalfe, “It’s a record that remains in an animal’s tissue and skin and hair, so we can measure isotopes and get an idea of what the animal is eating, where they’re living.”

Metcalfe was enlisted to use her work measuring stable isotopes in animals and plants, to this piece of moccasin. After a larger study of the vast amount of organic material available, there needed to be a “solid baseline of the local bison, in order to determine how much of a variation of carbon isotope values is expected in this place.” They even did testing to ensure that this wasn’t an anomaly of some kind.

In the end though, and that’s literal as Metcalfe examined bone, skin, hair and feces for the research, the research proved that not only were these people extraordinarily talented large animal hunters, but their understanding of the land was exceptional.

For so much of colonial periods (after the arrival of settlers), the people who speak the Dene language in the American Southwest and those in Canadian Subarctic were seen as ‘geographically separate,’ and thought to have no connections with each other, but Metcalfe’s research suggests that Dene groups travelled great distances to gain and utilize landscape knowledge.

“The carbon isotope value suggests the Promontory people not only had origins in the Subarctic, but they had also travelled to a place hundreds of kilometres to the south or east of the caves in Utah, much further south than Great Salt Lake,” said Metcalfe. “Potentially into the territory occupied by the southwestern Dene (Navajo, Apache). Julian Steward suggested that the Promontory people might be Apachean ancestors, and our results are consistent with that interpretation.”

The research of Dr. Metcalfe and her colleagues, along with genetic, linguistic, and oral history evidence, demonstrates that Dene connections are not a recent phenomenon – long-distance migrations and meetings of Dene peoples have been occurring for many hundreds of years.

Metcalfe also notes that of late, Dene people from northern, southern, and coastal nations have gathered at workshops and conferences held in Tsuut’ina territory (southern Alberta) to share their interconnected languages and cultures.

Metcalfe’s research was recently published in North American archaeology journal, American Antiquity. 

Jenny Lamothe, Local Journalism Initiative Reporter, Sudbury.com
3/23/2021

They wanted democracy for Belarus. Instead they say they were beaten and raped by police

Kiev, Ukraine (CNN) -- Sergei stood on a small sheet of ice in the Dnieper River and breathed in the icy air hard. He had escaped, but that relief was overwhelmed by both the pain of leaving his homeland and the fear he might not survive the rest of his perilous journey.

© ByPol In this screengrab taken from video that was provided by defected police officers, alleged Belarusian protestors are handcuffed and arrested on September 13, 2020.

He was wanted, again, by Belarusian police. He had already been detained last summer and was beaten in custody, all for protesting against the election victory declared by President Alexander Lukashenko. Fellow protesters he'd spent time in detention with had just been arrested, and it was clear the police would soon come for him again. Reluctantly, he knew he had to flee.


His was a particularly remarkable run to freedom. He crossed the border into Ukraine illegally, and was not able to walk through the forest and across sheet ice, like many before him had done. In a hurry, and surrounded by melting ice, Sergei put on a wetsuit and flippers he had bought -- and swam.

In a video he filmed on his phone half-way through his two-hour journey, on New Year's Eve, he recorded part of his escape, which involved not only swimming in freezing temperatures and through dense reed, but stumbling over sheet ice and crawling through thick sludge. Such was his desperation to leave.

"My socks are freezing right to the ice. I will try to crawl there and hope that I will not freeze," he said at one point in his video.

"I'm navigating by the stars," he said, audibly cold. "The feeling is indescribable, and I am all alone here."

Hundreds of thousands of Belarusians attended mass protests across the country last year following Lukashenko's declaration of victory in the August vote. The US and EU declared the vote fraudulent and imposed sanctions on Belarusian officials over the fraud and the brutal crackdown that followed.

Sergei -- who asked CNN not to reveal some details of his story and his real identity -- has now claimed asylum in another country, and he wanted to share his story with CNN so that the relatives he left behind might one day read what had happened to him.

"I left my country, my friends and family, with the bitterness of defeat," he said. "I simply became a refugee and had to start again, as if all I had achieved for years was suddenly nothing. To this day, I am mentally exhausted, and sleepless worrying about those left behind."

CNN has spoken to several other Belarusians who have fled the repression of Lukashenko's regime, illegally across the border into Ukraine, as part of a two-month investigation into the crackdown inside the country. In dozens of interviews, protesters and opposition activists have spoken of torture -- from systematic beatings, to rape with a police baton.

Defectors from the police force have also supplied CNN with videos from the police's own archives -- bodycam, dashcam and surveillance footage -- that display the extraordinary ferocity of riot police against protesters who are unarmed and peaceful, many of them teenagers.

The Lukashenko regime has, activists say, slightly softened its tactics in the past weeks, as fear has gripped the opposition movement. Yet there are concerns among activists the crackdown will intensify again ahead of a nationwide call to the streets on March 25.


© CNN Andrey says an officer raped him with a baton after he refused to unlock his phone.

The fate of the Belarusian protest movement has gained greater significance in the past months as anti-government protests spread inside neighboring Russia against the attempted murder and imprisonment of Alexey Navalny.

Russian President Vladimir Putin swiftly moved to support Lukashenko in August with a $1.5 billion loan and other unspecified assistance. The Belarusian protests, however, have continued. Analysts say the Kremlin is concerned both by a persistent protest movement for democracy on its doorstep, and the impact of unprecedented levels of police violence on how a younger generation of Belarusians view Moscow.

After being presented with a summary of CNN's findings, a State Department spokesperson said the US "strongly condemns the ​months-long post-election brutality carried out by the Lukashenka regime against peaceful protesters." The statement added there were over 500 documented cases of severe abuse, 290 political prisoners and "a number of individuals still reported missing."
© ByPol A teen lies unconscious on the floor after apparently having an epileptic fit.

"These violent actions have destroyed the Belarusian authorities' legitimacy among their own people and the international community," they said, demanding the "immediate release of political prisoners and all those unjustly detained, and ... for those responsible for severe abuses to be held to account."

'He cut my  using this knife'


The police dashcam footage begins with a police car following a white SUV full of protesters. It is September 13, 2020, and the vehicle is carrying activists away from a demonstration in central Minsk. The car pulls over, and then the devastating police onslaught begins.

The footage shows batons hitting the car's windows. A police officer fires a live round into the vehicle. The protesters are yanked out violently, and forced to lie face down on the ground. Two men in the group are bleeding, one heavily, and another from his cheek after the side of his face is ground into the asphalt. The detainees lie motionless. Sometimes their heads are pulled back and they state their names.

A police body cam shows an officer busy treating a small cut on his hand from the glass. The heavily bleeding protester is eventually given a bandage for his head.

The scene -- in video given exclusively to CNN by BYPOL, an opposition activist group of former Belarusian police officers who have defected -- is one of dozens they have released that detail police ferocity. In some, detainees are seen on camera, visibly beaten, and marked with red paint, a grim sign of the police's "traffic lights" system of grading protesters in detention. Those painted red should receive the worst treatment.

Sexual assault allegations have also been made by men and women against the police. Andrey, a protester from Minsk, told CNN he was raped with a police baton in a bid by officers to make him unlock his phone. They wanted the identity of his fellow protesters, he said, asking that some details of his experience and real name not be disclosed for his safety.

Andrey says he refused to give the password, and was beaten. "They just hit me again. At this time, I probably had brain trauma, as I started to feel really dizzy. It was hard to move at all," he said.

The police officer then threatened to assault him with his baton, asked his colleagues for a condom to sheath the weapon, and took a knife from a colleague. "He cut my underwear using this knife. He asked me again to give him the password. I refused again, and then he did what he did."

Andrey felt pain, but also shock that a person could do this to another. "It's not just police anger -- they train to do this," he said. "We are just seeing it now at a huge scale for the first time. It's touched nearly every family in Belarus now."


The Belarusian Ministry of Internal Affairs, Ministry of Foreign Affairs and the Prime Minister's Office did not immediately respond to CNN's request for response to what the footage of police tactics and violence shows and the allegations of abuse made.

Mass arrests at protests in Belarus are also often met with such brutalities. Another leaked police video from BYPOL shows the aftermath of an October protest, in which dozens of demonstrators are forced to stand in a packed police station corridor, facing the wall, their heads bowed, some bleeding on the walls, others suffering from beatings or tear gas they appear to have been exposed to in the earlier protest.

In the video, the police officer passes between detainees asking for their details, and why they were at the protest. One man has had seven teeth smashed out. They are all visibly shaken, and the majority would go on to face criminal charges for protesting, activists said.

The footage also chillingly shows police walking over the unconscious body of a teenage boy on the floor. CNN has learned the detainee likely suffered from an epileptic fit, and was left on the floor by police, who pass over him. Witnesses said the boy was occasionally kicked by police to see if he was responsive. "Are you a boy or girl?" one witness recalled the police shouting. The minor was later released from police custody, according to witnesses, who did not want to be named.


Police in that central station that night were also busy locating those who had escaped riot police, CNN has learned. One was Anya, a teenager, who also did not want to reveal her real name for her safety.

She fled an advancing line of riot police, who were throwing stun grenades at protesters. The explosion that caught her was captured on video.

"I didn't fall," she said. "I froze like a deer. I just stood, thought, breathed, looked around." She said she did not believe she was deliberately targeted, and was swiftly put in a taxi by protesters as the ambulances nearby were overloaded.

In hospital, she was put next to a man who had been trampled by police until his hip broke, she said. "I started screaming that I need help," she said. "Seven people came in the room. Everyone looked at me and at my body. Like 'Wow. What happened to you?' They didn't help. They just looked at me."

Doctors gave her basic treatment and painkillers, but also prioritized a blood alcohol test and told the police of her whereabouts and injuries. She feared for her safety and left with her mother. But the police were not done with her, she said.

She shared with CNN images of the injuries to her legs as she lay on a couch at home. That evening, her phone rang.

"It was the police asking where I had been," Anya said. "I began making up stories. They said they would come and get me, a unit of them. And if they take me, I thought, then I can say goodbye to my limbs, because no one will look after me. I was worried they would torture me on my injuries."

She left Belarus shortly afterwards and shows CNN the fragments of grenade removed from her leg. One fragment is still lodged in her thigh.

Anya hopes for change in Belarus for her generation, and said that while the current peaceful protests haven't worked, it has led to an awakening. "There is a saying among Belarusians now that we didn't really know each other until the summer," she said, of the protests' beginning.

Her generation's desire for wholesale change is a thorn not only in Lukashenko's side, but also the Kremlin's. Some analysts suggest Putin is wary of siding too closely with Lukashenko's brutal crackdown, in case it turns younger Belarusians against Moscow permanently.

For that, it may be too late.

"Lukashenko wouldn't be so arrogant and cruel without the assurance of Russia always having his back," Anya said.

"We are not their people, we are strangers. Russia does not care what happens to us."


By Nick Paton Walsh, Sebastian Shukla, Christian Streib and Denis Lapin, CNN 
3/23/2021
Anti-racist motion stalled at the Alberta legislature



© Provided by Edmonton Journal Edmonton-South NDP MLA Thomas Dang speaks about his private member's bill denouncing racist symbols on Friday, March 19, 2021.

A motion condemning hateful and racist symbols in Alberta was heard at the legislature on Monday, but will have to wait for another day before it can be voted on.

NDP MLA Thomas Dang put forward the motion denouncing the display of “racist symbols and insignia” in public spaces as well as demonstrations “meant to terrorize and promote racism,” citing rallies last month in Edmonton and Calgary that saw some protesters carrying tiki torches, widely considered a white supremacist symbol.

Alberta’s UCP government expressed its support for the NDP motion, but Dang accused the them of running out the clock to avoid debate on his motion, which was heard at the end of a day of private members’ business. The allotted time for motions came after more than an hour of discussion about making rodeo Alberta’s official sport, as well as Bill 205, the Genocide Remembrance, Condemnation and Prevention Month Act.

“Jason Kenney and the UCP made it clear today that they don’t want to have the critically important debate about the rising use of symbols of hate at public events in Alberta,” Dang said in a Monday statement.

The government said they were following normal legislative procedure, with time set aside in the last hour for motions, after two hours for bills. A few minutes before 5 p.m., the allotted time for motions, a division bell, recorded vote on Bill 205 and a 15 minute break were called. Another 15 minute break was called at 5:19 p.m. after a separate NDP motion.

The legislature may have to wait weeks for the next opportunity to debate the anti-racism motion in time set aside for private member’s business, which can only happen on Mondays.

Blaise Boehmer, press secretary to Justice Minister Kaycee Madu, said in a statement the minister and the government would support the motion as tabled and have denounced hate-motivated crime, but added prosecuting such crime is a job for independent law enforcement and prosecutors, not politicians.

“Expressions of hatred towards other Albertans is completely unacceptable, and police must investigate when it does occur to determine if those expressions reach the level of criminality,” said Boehmer.

The NDP proposal comes after Edmonton police reported investigating six hate-motivated attacks against Black Muslim women since December and the National Council of Canadian Muslims called for the immediate creation of a bipartisan provincial-municipal committee in Alberta to deal with the challenge of racist and Islamophobic street harassment.

Dang called on the UCP government last Friday to commit to outlawing such symbols in public spaces.

Boehmer said the Criminal Code is under the jurisdiction of the federal government, and laws must be compliant with the Charter of Rights and Freedoms.

“We have not heard which mechanisms MLA Dang is proposing to use to ‘ban’ certain inanimate objects and/or emotions,” said Boehmer.

However, Dang said the difficulty police often face in laying charges related to harmful symbols demonstrated the need to create better legislative tools.
‘The action is what’s always lacking’

Irfan Chaudhry, director of the office of human rights, diversity, and equity at MacEwan University, said the province had ways to act without touching the Criminal Code and should not shy away from bold legislation.

“That’s a cop out in my opinion,” said Chaudhry. The government could create parameters for protest, banning hate symbols during protests on government property like the legislature grounds.

Chaudhry compared that option to existing legislation that gives the province the power to hand out stiff penalties to protesters who block rail lines and highways.

He added a declaration and a conversation isn’t enough.

“It’s intent versus action. I think most people have positive intent around addressing racism, but the action is what’s always lacking,” said Chaudhry.

Meanwhile, the government has not committed to making the Anti-Racism Advisory Council’s recommendations to government public, but has said it would review its report in the spring.

(Editor’s note: This story has been updated to correct the circumstances that led to the vote on the anti-racism motion being held over and to clarify legislature procedure around private members’ bills and motions.)

Lisa Johnson EDMONTON JOURNAL 3/23/2021
Pikangikum First Nation expel OPP from community over sexual assault allegations, SIU investigating



Ontario’s Special Investigations Unit is investigating after it received two complaints that allege women were sexually assaulted by members of the Ontario Provincial Police in Pikangikum First Nation

The remote First Nation located about 500 kilometres northwest of Thunder Bay with approximately 3,600 members removed 10 provincial police officers from the community late last Friday. Chief Dean Owen said they acted quickly when they were informed about allegations of misconduct involving officers that occurred over “many years,” including a recent incident that led to civilian staff coming forward.

Mr. Owen said Monday that four community members employed at the detachment came forward with allegations they witnessed serious misconduct from officers, including sexual and physical assault, involving mostly young women who were intoxicated when brought into custody.

A spokesperson for the SIU confirmed Monday that it was notified by the OPP on March 19 and has invoked its mandate. The SIU investigates encounters involving police in Ontario that result in serious injury, death or allegations of sexual assault.

A statement from the OPP on Sunday confirmed that its officers left the community on Friday after a Band Council Resolution (BCR) from Pikangikum Chief and Council, and deferred questions about the officers, including how many are involved in the allegations and the status of their employment, to the SIU. The SIU said it didn’t know how many officers were involved as it is in the very early stages of the investigation.

Mr. Owen said the allegations took place over many years and that the staff members who came forward were warned not to say anything by officers because they took an oath of confidentiality.

“Police would come right after them, very stern warnings to them, use of harsh words,” Mr. Owen said.

“They just couldn’t keep [quiet] any more, they were going to quit because that wasn’t a place where they wanted to work.”

Mr. Owen said there’s a history of unresolved issues with the OPP and that it’s not the first time they’ve been removed. He said the community was trying to work on the relationship but that the allegations brought forward have broken the trust once again.

Indigenous Services Canada (ISC) evacuated its primary care practitioners stationed in the community on Saturday, citing a significant reduction in police presence. The nursing station was to reopen for regular business hours on Monday.

Mr. Owen said the community has seven of its own First Nations police officers who are fully trained and officially recognized the same as the OPP and other First Nations police.

The OPP services Pikangikum under the Ontario First Nations Policing Agreement, which includes both local First Nations constables and non-Indigenous constables who fly into the community for scheduled rotations. All officers receive basic police training from the Ontario Police College.

Mr. Owen said it has been a long-time goal of the community to develop its own stand-alone police service, something the OPP was eager to help with. However, he says that was almost 15 years ago and that the community isn’t even a part of the screening process for officers deployed to the community, despite being told they could be.

In its statement on Sunday, the OPP said it has a history of “supportive, respectful and positive presence in Pikangikum” and that it supports and advocates for Indigenous communities to have their own stand-alone Indigenous policing services.

Mr. Owen said it’s the alleged misconduct of a few certain individuals that are a concern and that 80 per cent to 90 per cent of the officers deployed to Pikangikum are “good officers and have good intentions to work in First Nations communities.”

Mr. Owen said there’s no room for compromise when it comes to the safety of its community members, particularly the youth.

“We won’t be satisfied until a total investigation is done and justice is served and justice for the victims.”

Willow Fiddler, Local Journalism Initiative Reporter, The Globe and Mail


3/22/2021

Native Land Digital's app will show you what Indigenous land you're on

By Leah Asmelash, CNN 
3/22/2021

As the US grapples with history and becomes increasingly racially and culturally aware -- with ethnic studies curriculums in schools, recognition of the dangers of White supremacy, and growing social justice movements -- more people are acknowledging the keepers of the land now known as North America: Native Americans.

© from Native Land
 Native Land Digital, a Canadian nonprofit, runs a website where users can easily type in their addresses and see what nations their land belonged to.

Land acknowledgments are a way for non-Indigenous people to honor and pay respect to the Indigenous people who lived and took care of the land before the arrival of White Europeans, who often used violence to take control of the lands while forcing survivors onto reservations. The acknowledgments are becoming increasingly common, with even the Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade taking part.

And now, there are apps that will easily tell you whose land you're on.

One of the most popular ones is run by Native Land Digital, a Canadian non-profit. The organization has a website and app where users can enter an address and see which Indigenous nations lived on that land.


Though the map doesn't represent the official or legal boundaries of the nations, it's an interesting look into the history of the land the users may call home. And the map links out to multiple websites about Indigenous tribes and nations, their languages, or any relevant treaties -- essentially providing users with an education about their homes.

"Native Land Digital creates spaces where non-Indigenous people can be invited and challenged to learn more about the lands they inhabit, the history of those lands, and how to actively be part of a better future going forward together," the website states.

"What we are mapping is more than just a flat picture. The land itself is sacred, and it is not easy to draw lines that divide it up into chunks that delineate who 'owns' different parts of land. In reality, we know that the land is not something to be exploited and 'owned', but something to be honoured and treasured. However, because of the complexities of history, the kind of mapping we undertake is an important exercise, insofar as it brings an awareness of the real lived history of Indigenous peoples and nations in a long era of colonialism."

But if using the map is too cumbersome, one bot on Facebook will tell you what land you're on if you message it your city and state. The bot, called Land Acknowledgment and made by Code for Anchorage, uses data from Native Land Digital.

But land acknowledgements are just a starting point, says Native Governance Center, a Native-led non-profit.

The center lays out a few concrete ways to support Indigenous communities on its website:

Support Indigenous organizations by donating your time and/or money.
Support Indigenous-led grassroots change movements and campaigns.
Commit to returning land.
Bubbling under: Hydrogen-powered cars have been around, but now they’re making a mainstream move

Andy Holloway
 POSTMEDIA
2/22/2021
© Provided by Financial Post oyota Motor Inc.’s Mirai was initially available in Japan and was brought to Canada, specifically Quebec, in 2018. It’s now also available in lower British Columbia.

With or without Joe Biden’s presidential demand to green America’s fleet of automobiles, electric vehicles are here to stay and, eventually, most gas-powered cars will hit the road for one last stop at the junkyard.

That doesn’t mean we’ll all be driving a Tesla or even a hybrid Prius tomorrow. It doesn’t even necessarily mean we’ll be driving electric cars. For one thing, you can only go 400 kilometres or so before needing a charge of 30 to 60 minutes to continue on your way. Good luck getting around outside the city, since the charging infrastructure has been slow in arriving. Gas still tops electric in almost every way, save the environment.

But the idea of a hydrogen car has been making the rounds again and it’s worth another look. Hydrogen cars weigh less, can travel for up to 500 kilometres before refuelling, which only takes a few minutes, and the Canadian Hydrogen and Fuel Cell Association notes their environmental footprint of 2.7 grams of carbon dioxide per kilometre tops the 20.9 grams for electric cars.

Hydrogen cars aren’t exactly new, since they date back to 1807 when Swiss inventor Francois Isaac de Rivaz created a four-wheel vehicle powered by hydrogen and oxygen. And Canadian companies such as Ballard Power Systems Inc. and Hydrogenics, now a division of American giant Cummins Inc., began developing and commercializing hydrogen fuel cell technology years ago. But it wasn’t until 2014 that the first dedicated mass-produced fuel cell vehicle (FCV) was launched. Toyota Motor Inc.’s Mirai was initially available in Japan and was brought to Canada, specifically Quebec, in 2018. It’s now also available in lower British Columbia, but hasn’t made its way elsewhere yet because of the need for hydrogen refuelling stations. Other hydrogen cars available in Canada include the Hyundai Nexo and Honda Clarity.

“We are headed toward an energy revolution that will electrify the powertrain in vehicles,” says Stephen Beatty, vice-president of corporate at Toyota Canada Inc. “What I think is not really well understood at the moment is that it’s not going to take a single form. It’s going to be several different types of technologies that are best suited for a particular duty cycle and a particular customer.”

For example, electric cars are fine for tooling around close to home, provided you have some place to plug it in on your property, but less useful if you’re going, say, camping, since the cars also tend to be small. Hybrids are obviously one step better in terms of convenience, because good old-fashioned gas kicks in when the battery dies. Hydrogen, meanwhile, is a better way to greenify long-distance travel, such as that done by heavy-duty transport trucks and rental cars; the vehicles can be much bigger than electric and refuelling doesn’t take as long.

The key, of course, is building out the infrastructure so that there are refuelling stations along the major transportation corridors. If that happens, Research and Markets estimates that 6.5 million hydrogen cars could be sold by 2032, compared to just 18,000 in 2019. Various Canadian governments are certainly interested in doing their part to make that happen. The federal government in December released its Hydrogen Strategy: Seizing the Opportunities report, which predicted that a homegrown hydrogen industry could employ 350,000 Canadians and generate $50 billion in revenue. That would help reduce the pain of the declining oil and gas industry, which in 2016 directly and indirectly employed about 550,000 Canadians and generated $41.6 billion in revenue.

First all-Canadian zero-emissions concept vehicle a response to PM’s innovation call

“There’s a growing tide across the country with the provinces and the federal government being interested in developing the hydrogen economy,” Beatty says, adding Alberta, Ontario and Quebec are also moving forward and B.C. is already well-entrenched. “I think the infrastructure issues will be taken care of in due course.

That leaves just questions about the cars themselves. Initially, there were issues about the reliability of hydrogen cars in cold weather, but those have been addressed. Toyota has even cold-tested the Mirai in the Northwest Territories. Aside from running on hydrogen, the Mirai looks and handles like pretty much any other car. “We think we’ve got something that replicates the experience of what people are used to in the conventional automobile,” Beatty says. “The difference is it’s pretty quiet, it’s got good power, and all that comes out of the tailpipe is water.” FPM