Thursday, February 17, 2022


Showtime Donates $100,000 to Seneca-Iroquois National Museum

Sasha Urban - Variety


Showtime announced today that it is donating $100,000 to the Seneca-Iroquois National Museum, which is located on the Allegany Territory of the Seneca Nation, where the network’s series “Dexter: New Blood” is set.

The donation will fund the museum’s efforts to digitize its archives and record the history of the Seneca Nation, including footage, music, oral histories, print news and other media passed down from elders in the community. The contribution will also help fund the museum’s Onöhsagwë:de’ Cultural Center, which educates visitors on the tribal history of Western New York state.

“I’m excited to receive this gift from Showtime, which demonstrates its commitment to the preservation of heritage,” said Dr. Joe Stahlman, director of the Seneca-Iroquois National Museum. “We can’t wait to begin the digitization of media – some of which has not been viewed in decades.”

The Seneca Nation of New York is one of three federally recognized Seneca entities, with more than 8,000 citizens globally. “Dexter: New Blood” is filmed in Massachusetts, but the series is set in the fictional town of Iron Lake, N.Y. in the Seneca Nation.

“We’re honored to support the legacy of the Seneca Nation of Indians, whose people and rich culture are ingrained within the narrative of ‘Dexter: New Blood,’” said Puja Vohra, executive vice president of marketing and strategy at Showtime. “The team at Showtime is dedicated to helping make a meaningful difference that both commemorates the Seneca Nation’s history and strengthens its future.”

“Dexter: New Blood,” is the most-watched series in Showtime history. The drama stars Michael C. Hall as the infamous serial killer Dexter Morgan. The series picks up 10 years after the finale of “Dexter” which premiered in 2006 and quickly became one of the most acclaimed series on television. “Dexter: New Blood” is executive produced by Clyde Phillips, Hall, Scott Reynolds, Marcos Siega, Bill Carraro, John Goldwyn and Sara Colleton.
JUST A TEENY WEENY BIT
Yellen acknowledges 'some global fallout' from any Russia sanctions

Agence France-Presse
February 17, 2022

US Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen (AFP)

US Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen says "some global fallout" would result if the West moves ahead with the punishing, coordinated sanctions threatened against Russia, should it attack Ukraine.

If the penalties are imposed, "of course, we want the largest cost to fall on Russia," Yellen said in an interview.

"But we recognize that there will be some global fallout from sanctions," she told AFP.

Her comments echoed President Joe Biden's warning on Tuesday that an escalation of the conflict would not be "painless" for Americans.

With Russian troops massed on the border with Ukraine, Biden continues to work with US allies on a diplomatic solution to the crisis, but has repeatedly warned Moscow of the dire consequences it will face if it moves against its neighbor.

Biden and German Chancellor Olaf Scholz on Wednesday urged Moscow to take real steps to defuse tensions.

The president "has made clear that we intend to impose very significant costs on Russia, if they invade Ukraine," Yellen said.

Treasury is crafting a set of financial sanctions together with European allies that could target Russian "individuals or companies" and "certainly could involve export controls," she said.

Yellen described them as a "very substantial package of sanctions that will have severe consequences for the Russian economy."

But she acknowledged worries about the "potential impacts on energy markets, given the importance of Russia's role as a supplier of oil to the world market and of natural gas to Europe."

Washington is "working with our European allies to try to, as best as possible, shield them from undue impact," by ensuring that "supplies that are available, that come from other parts of the world" and to "try to make sure that oil and natural gas continue to flow to Europe."

European Union officials said Wednesday they have secured alternate sources of natural gas and could survive a supply squeeze by Russia.

Amid the prospects of armed conflict, and threats Russia could cut off energy supplies, oil prices have risen sharply in recent weeks, hitting $96 a barrel on Wednesday, the highest level since 2014.

Natural gas prices have been more volatile, but also increased in the past week after dipping earlier in the month.
Ukraine passes law criminalizing antisemitism
100 YEARS TOO LATE

By LAHAV HARKOV - The Jerusalem Post
© (photo credit: GLEB GARANICH/REUTERS)

Ukraine’s parliament passed a law on Wednesday criminalizing antisemitism.

As defined by the International Holocaust Remembrance Alliance, antisemitism when committed by an individual is punishable by a fine or a prison sentence of up to five years.

Public officials would also be fined or imprisoned for up to five years, and banned from holding certain offices for up to three years.

Organized groups committing acts of antisemitism, or acts with severe consequences, are punishable with prison sentences of up to eight years.

The new legislation amended an existing law passed in 2021, “On Preventing and Countering Antisemitism in Ukraine,” to add criminal liability.


© Provided by The Jerusalem PostUkraine's biggest national flag on the country's highest flagpole and the giant 'Motherland' monument (credit: REUTERS/VALENTYN OGIRENKO)

The IHRA definition states that “antisemitism is a certain perception of Jews, which may be expressed as hatred toward Jews. Rhetorical and physical manifestations of antisemitism are directed toward Jewish or non-Jewish individuals and/or their property, toward Jewish community institutions and religious facilities.”

Jewish Confederation of Ukraine President Boris Lozhkin wrote in September, when the first law passed, that it “brought Ukraine closer to Europe and the civilized world. Together with the Ministry of Internal Affairs, JCU has been conducting joint monitoring of manifestations of antisemitism for a long time, and the Ministry of Internal Affairs promptly responds to all cases of physical or online antisemitism.

“However, for an effective fight against these manifestations, the legal component was missing... A real tool has appeared now for combating a phenomenon that has a much broader meaning than hatred toward Jews.”


Ukraine asks U.N. Security Council to discuss Russian bid to recognize separatists

By Michelle Nichols - 

UNITED NATIONS/KYIV (Reuters) - Ukraine has asked the United Nations Security Council to discuss on Thursday a bid by Russia's parliament to recognize self-proclaimed separatists in eastern Ukraine.

The 15-member council was already due to meet on Ukraine's crisis and discuss the Minsk agreements, which it endorsed in 2015, that are designed to end the separatist war. The meeting comes amid high tensions after Russia massed more than 100,000 troops near Ukraine's borders in recent weeks, though Russia denies planning an attack.

In a letter to Security Council members seen by Reuters, Ukraine's Ambassador Sergiy Kyslytsya said the move by the Russian parliament on Tuesday "further aggravated the threats to both Ukraine's territorial integrity and global security architecture following the ongoing military build-up by the Russian Federation in the vicinity of the borders with Ukraine."

Russian-backed separatists in the Donetsk and Luhansk regions - collectively known as the Donbass - broke away from Ukrainian government control in 2014 and proclaimed themselves independent, sparking a conflict with the Ukrainian army.

Russia's lower house of parliament voted on Tuesday to ask President Vladimir Putin to recognise Donetsk and Luhansk as independent. Putin declined to be drawn out on how he plans to respond.

Kyslytsya said the decision undermines the Minsk agreements and asked the U.N. Security Council to consider the development during Thursday's meeting in New York.

The U.N. Security Council has met dozens of times to discuss the Ukraine crisis since Russia annexed Ukraine's Crimea region in 2014. It cannot take any action because Russia is a veto-power along with France, Britain, China and the United States.

(Reporting by Michelle Nichols and Matthias Williams; Editing by Chris Reese and Cynthia Osterman)

Russia 'likely' to launch 'limited' military attack against Ukraine, says Estonian intelligence


By Andrius Sytas

(Reuters) -Russia is continuing to move troops to the Ukrainian border and will likely launch a "limited" military attack against the country, the head of the Estonian Foreign Intelligence Service said on Wednesday.

The attack would include missile bombardment and the occupation of "key terrain" in Ukraine, said Mikk Marran, director general of the Estonian Foreign Intelligence Service.

"Right now, our assessment is that they would avoid cities with large populations, as it takes a lot of troops to control those areas. But there is no clear understanding of what avenue the Russian troops might exploit," he told a media briefing held to introduce the service's annual report.

Another possibility could be intensified fighting out of the two Russian-backed breakaway regions in eastern Ukraine, according to Estonian intelligence. Such escalation is "highly likely," and this way “Russia likely gets plausible deniability and avoids sanctions,” said Marran.

“If Russia is successful in Ukraine, it would encourage it to increase pressure on the Baltics in the coming years," he said. “The threat of war has become main policy tool for Putin.”

Estonian intelligence is aware of approximately 10 battle groups of Russian troops moving toward the Ukrainian border, where 100 Russian military battle groups, or about 170,000 soldiers, are already deployed, the intelligence chief said.

The numbers include soldiers usually deployed in regions around Ukraine, but also troops in Belarus which Russia sent for a military exercise near Ukrainian border.

Some of the soldiers are likely to stay in Belarus beyond the Feb. 20 end of the exercise, a significant worry for the NATO alliance which the Baltics belong to, said Marran. "That would reduce preparation time for an attack against the Baltics.”

(Reporting by Andrius Sytas in RigaEditing by Chizu Nomiyama and Leslie Adler)



The International Olympic Committee and China are using politics to obscure human rights abuses

MacIntosh Ross, Assistant Professor, Kinesiology, Western University
Biao Teng, Pozen Visiting Professor, Human Rights Scholar, University of Chicago 

China is using yet another Olympic Games as a political tool to reinforce its position as a global power and sportwash its dismal human rights record.

This was first seen in 2008, when China and the International Olympic Committee (IOC) made opaque promises about the Olympic Games improving human rights in the authoritarian regime. But since then, the situation has worsened and continues to deteriorate.

The IOC continues to claim it is an apolitical organization, while allowing China to host and use the Olympics as a distraction from its industrial scale human rights abuses. Few nations know how to politicize the Olympics quite like China.
A new sort of Cold War

In the United States, critiques of China have started to feel more like hypocritical warmongering, leveraged for domestic political pandering, rather than a sincere desire to improve human rights in China, or the United States for that matter.

What is needed, as sportswriter Dave Zirin and political scientist Jules Boykoff aptly observed in The Nation, is:


“a mass independent current that can stand with the oppressed in the United States and in China, and that refuses to paper over structural inequalities on either side in order to win political points.”

Those familiar with Teng Biao (one of the authors of this piece) know that he has experienced both the politics and physical brutality of the Chinese state first hand.

As a vocal human rights lawyer, Teng resisted the authoritarian regime’s crackdowns on the freedoms of speech and expression, resulting in three forced disappearances and a physical beating by authorities prior to the 2008 Olympic Games. He knows the stakes, and the costs, of standing up for human rights in China.
Boycott, boycott, boycott

For much of its existence, Communist China has boycotted the Olympic Games. After the Chinese Civil War, the People’s Republic of China (PRC) made its debut at the 1952 Helsinki Olympics, leading the Republic of China (ROC) to withdraw in protest, furious that the Communist mainland was permitted to enter under the name of “China.”

Read more: Why is Taiwan competing in the Olympics under 'Chinese Taipei'?

This two-China debate was a recurring theme at the Olympics until the 1980s. At the 1956 Melbourne Olympics, the the ROC competed while the PRC stayed home. And in 1958, the PRC formally withdrew from the Olympic Movement, rejoining in 1979. They only participated in the 1980 Winter Olympics however, joining the U.S.-led boycott of the 1980 Moscow Summer Olympics.

The PRC’s politicization of the Games worked. The IOC has made the ROC — now more commonly known as Taiwan — compete as Chinese Taipei since the 1984 Los Angeles Olympics, under an Olympic flag rather than the flag of Taiwan.

This has remained the Olympic status quo for over thirty years, despite the obvious fact that Taiwan functions as an independent, democratic nation.


© (AP Photo/File)The Taiwan delegation parades during the opening ceremonies for the Olympic Games in Los Angeles.

Beijing 2008 as a boon to high-tech totalitarianism

The 2008 Beijing Olympics has a grim legacy. In Public Seminar, Teng Biao convincingly argued that China governs through “high-tech totalitarianism,” using artificial intelligence and other technologies to maintain “total control of Chinese society.”

Although Italian philosopher Giorgio Agamben’s “states of exception” theory has typically been applied to disasters and other emergencies, political scientist Jules Boykoff has made a strong case for the extension of Agamben’s work to moments of jubilation and euphoria, particularly the Olympic Games.

A “state of exception” is similar to a state of emergency, except instead of the state’s ability to transcend the rule of law being invoked in an emergency, it is done in the name of public good.

It can open the door to a legally sanctioned eradication of not just political opponents, but anyone living on the margins of society. For Tibetans and Uyghurs, this rings all too true. In Tibet in particular, the Chinese government used the Olympic Games as an excuse to dramatically escalate its suppression of language, religion, speech and peaceful protest.

As international relations scholar Sean R. Roberts has shown, the Chinese government leveraged both the 9/11 attacks in the U.S. and the 2008 Olympics to re-frame peaceful Uyghur cultural protests — typically labelled as separatism — as a terrorist threat to justify their mass incarceration.

Since 2008, Tibet has been closed off to foreigners, but details of boarding schools, arbitrary detentions, restrictions on religion and a general assault on Tibetan culture are well-documented. For some, the situation has become too untenable to bear.


© (AP Photo/Altaf Qadri)Exiled Tibetans burn a Chinese flag during a protest against Beijing Winter Olympic Games in New Delhi, India on Feb. 4.

A total of 157 Tibetan monks and nuns have self-immolated in protest since 2009.
The IOC, politics and human rights

Despite China’s history of using the Olympics for political gain, the IOC has refused to intervene, going so far as to cut off talks with human rights groups concerned with the possibility that official merchandise for the Beijing Olympics was being made with forced labour in the Uyghur Region.

Both the IOC and China have started framing all criticism as political matters, unfit for discussion at a so-called apolitical event like the Olympic Games.

Criticism of the disappearance, silencing and carefully choreographed re-emergence of Peng Shuai is “just politics.” Criticism of policies aimed at the cultural eradication of Uyghurs and Tibetans, as well as China’s decision to have a Uyghur light the Olympic cauldron, are more “politics.”

But there must be a line drawn between politics and human rights. While the definition of politics depends on the context, the United Nations is quite clear when it comes to what is, and what is not, a human right. Violations of these rights are not merely political wranglings of foreign diplomacy, but rather real, tangible assaults on people and their cultures.

But the two — politics and human rights violations — are obviously intertwined. The former can be used to hide the latter. Unfortunately, that’s precisely what the IOC and China have done with Beijing 2022.

This article is republished from The Conversation, a nonprofit news site dedicated to sharing ideas from academic experts.

Read more:


Trudeau should have withdrawn Canada from the 2022 Beijing Olympics after reports of Chinese residential schools

Slovak youth hockey team erupts as country defeats U.S. to advance in Beijing Games

Olivier Neven - Yahoo Sports Canada


A youth hockey team in Slovakia provided one of the most wholesome moments of the Beijing Winter Games.

Few things are as thrilling as an underdog story on the Olympic stage, as we were once again reminded on Wednesday.

Slovakia’s men’s hockey team defeated the United States 3-2 in a tense shootout to upset one of the tournament's favourites and advance to the semifinals.

As his countrymen celebrated the big win, former NHLer Miroslav Satan shared a video of a young Slovak hockey team on the ice for practice back home, watching goaltender Patrik Rybar make the decisive final save before absolutely erupting in euphoric cheer along with their heroes in China.

The adorable clip made the rounds on Twitter, warming hearts and even comforting disappointed American hockey fans, who had high expectations for a team that entered Wednesday's contest undefeated and with a win over Canada already in the records.

Slovakia forced overtime in dramatic fashion on Wednesday, with Marek Hrivik scoring the equalizer with under a minute of play left and their net empty after his team trailed for most of the game. Peter Cehlarik scored the sole goal of the shootout and Rybar sealed the win with a save heard 'round the world.

This is the first time that the Slovaks has reached the semifinals in men’s Olympic hockey since the 2010 Vancouver games, when the late Pavol Demitra led the tournament in points on the way to Slovakia’s fourth place finish.

This is the second-straight time Team USA's men have failed to make it past the quarterfinals in the Winter Games. Four years ago in Pyeongchang, the Americans lost their quarterfinal game to the Czech Republic. The U.S. hasn't medalled in the men's event since their runner-up finish in the 2010 Vancouver Winter Games.

Slovakia will take on the Russian Olympic Committee in the semifinals on Thursday.




Growing number of Alberta businesses commit to living wage for employees

Tomasia DaSilva - Tuesday


A push to get more Alberta employers to pay their employees higher wages — or at least a living wage — appears to be paying off.

A living wage is a regional calculation that looks at the amount of money that a family of four (two adults working full-time) needs to earn to meet their expenses and support the successful development of their children.

The Alberta Living Wage Network, which launched the Alberta Living Wage Employer program last November, told Global News 34 employers have already signed up.


"We’re very buoyed by the (initial) response of employers in our province, and we’re very hopeful that the numbers will greatly increase in the months and years to come,” group chair Franco Savoia said.

The employers who have already joined come from a variety of industries including retail, grocery, industrial and professional organizations. The bulk of them are in Calgary (14) and Edmonton (14) with a few others spread out across the province.

Watch:
Cost of living climbs in Calgary prompting renewed calls for a ‘living wage’

Calgary-based cleaning company Home Spritz is one of the employers to officially sign on. It has offices in Calgary and Edmonton as well as the Vancouver area and employs about 22 people. It said paying its cleaning contractors a living wage is a win-win.

"It supports the quality of life for everybody," COO Yeonsil Kang said, "without anyone left behind."

Kang co-founded the company three years ago, making it more of a marketplace platform. The cleaners are vetted and screened but not considered employees per se, rather contractors.

She said she has found that partnership, along with paying them a living wage, has resulted in respect and success.

"It's really helpful for us to hire higher-quality cleaners," Kang added. "The retention rate is very good. They end up staying with our clients longer, and it makes our clients happy.

"We just try to pay sufficient amount for them to support their family on their own."

Kang said as an immigrant, she knows how hard it can be to build a life in Canada and she wanted to make it easier for others to get ahead.

Cleaning contractor Dione Livingstone said it has certainly made her life easier, adding before working for Home Spritz, it was a challenge.

"You're just making it. You're just making it," she said. "You can make ends meet, but it's hard."

Now Livingstone said depending on the job, she can clear up to $40 an hour. Home Spritz takes 18 per cent of the total cost of any job, but she gets the rest.

"Now I make the same amount of money that I would independently cleaning, so it makes it more feasible for me to live."

She added because she is a contractor and not an employee, she can also choose her own hours making it ideal for single moms or people who choose to work part time.

"It's made a huge difference. I can do what I love. I can make what I deserve."

Read more:

Calgary business owner shows support for living wage with decal campaign for store windows

According to the Alberta Living Wage Network, the living wage varies across the province.

In Calgary and Edmonton, it came in at $18.60 and $18.10 in 2021. But in places like Cochrane and Canmore, those numbers rose to $22.60 and $37.40, respectively, while the living wage rang in at $27.35 in Fort McMurray.


Home Spritz said it adjusts the wages for its contractors depending on the region. Kang added that has cost the company but also allowed it to grow.

"While we are taking smaller margins, we can still expand in a bigger region to make this happen."

The company has now set its sights on expanding across Canada and North America in the next five years.
Arbitrator upholds NAIT's decision to fire instructor over sexual harassment of 3 workers

The Northern Alberta Institute of Technology (NAIT) was right to fire an employee who repeatedly sexually harassed three co-workers, an arbitrator has ruled.



© Codie McLachlan/CBC
NAIT dismissed employee Dwayne Rurka in 2019 for sexually harassing colleagues. In January an arbitrator dismissed his union's grievance, upholding NAIT's decision.

Madeleine Cummings - Yesterday 

NAIT fired Dwayne Rurka, a co-ordinator of evening and weekend programs in the School of Applied Sciences and Technology, on Aug. 19, 2019.

In Rurka's termination letter, NAIT said it had investigated and concluded that he had "repeatedly, and without consent, made unwanted comments and/or jokes to three employees that were sexual in nature, or had sexual connotations or undertones, while in the workplace."

The letter also said Rurka subjected two employees to "unwanted touching while in the workplace."

The NAIT Academic Staff Association (NASA), the union representing the school's more than 850 academic workers, filed a grievance on Rurka's behalf.

Following a hearing last year, arbitrator Greg Francis dismissed the grievance, saying NAIT's decision to dismiss Rurka was the just and reasonable response to his harassment of his colleagues.

"The evidence against the grievor is simply overwhelming," Francis wrote in a Jan. 19 decision.
Sexual comments

Rurka, who is 54 and lives in St. Albert, started working as an instructor at NAIT in September of 1998.

In May 2017, he became an evening and weekend delivery co-ordinator, which involved scheduling instructors, finding new instructors, purchasing and other duties.

NAIT argued at the hearing that Rurka, who was in a leadership position, had a pattern of sexual harassment for which he failed to accept responsibility.

One of NAIT's witnesses, a temporary employee who worked with Rurka, said he made inappropriate sexual comments to her at work, including remarks about her appearance.

She recalled him ogling her body, growling and saying, "God, I love you in that dress." She testified that she felt increasingly anxious each morning as she chose what to wear to work.

She would change three or four times while trying to select which outfit to wear, not wanting more ogling or comments.

The same witness said she was standing behind a desk counter when Rurka came up behind her and, without warning, wrapped his arms around her upper abdomen.

She testified that she felt shocked. A colleague mentioned that she looked uncomfortable with the hug. She testified that Rurka replied: "Why, because I'm the only man with big enough balls to hug her beside[s] her husband?"

After that incident, she confronted Rurka by email, privately copying the message to her superiors. NAIT soon launched an investigation into his conduct.

Other witnesses said Rurka often made sexual comments at work.

One woman, another temporary employee, said he put his hands on both sides of his crotch and said, "You couldn't handle this."

On several occasions, Rurka told her he wanted to date her daughter, the woman testified. She said he also said he wanted to have sex with her daughter.

Another colleague testified that Rurka had dry-humped her cubicle and once told her, "I would like to see you in nothing else but your boots."

She stopped wearing boots to work.

Francis wrote that there was a "compelling and consistent" harmony among the witnesses' stories.

He said they had all been friendly to Rurka and had acknowledged that he had redeeming qualities.

All were reluctant to challenge his behaviour because of his power and their own precarious employment.
'They're all wrong'

Rurka testified that the investigation process was unfair. He said there were no opportunities for restorative justice or an alternative form of dispute resolution.

He said he didn't want to offend anybody or make anyone feel uncomfortable and that he would have changed had he been confronted.

Emails presented in NAIT's evidence showed that when Rurka received his colleague's email about the unwanted hug, he apologized immediately, telling her he was deeply saddened to have caused her to feel uncomfortable.

He testified that he emailed her to try to fix things and wanted to maintain good relationships with his colleagues.

One of Rurka's colleagues testified that their department was "huggy," that multiple instructors had made off-colour comments without anyone objecting, and that she had not heard Rurka say anything inappropriate.

Rurka denied saying much of what the NAIT witnesses had alleged, including humping a colleague's desk and saying he wanted to have sex with a colleague's daughter.

He said he shook the desk because his colleagues had continued to talk, despite his asking them to be quiet. He said he couldn't recall commenting on anybody's boots.

Francis wrote that after a series of his denials during cross-examination, Rurka was asked, "So they're all wrong?"

Rurka responded: "I can't speak to how they interpret my remarks." When pressed, he said: "Yes, they're all wrong."

In his decision, Francis wrote: "I can appreciate [Rurka's] need to minimize, parse, and explain his words and actions, for to accept the version of the complainants would be to admit some truly despicable treatment of others in the workplace. But I cannot believe him when he does so."

Francis wrote that Rurka had been dishonest and he could only consider reinstating his employment had he accepted full or near-full responsibility for his actions.
Rurka 'devastated': lawyer

Rurka is devastated, angry and disappointed by the arbitrator's decision and NAIT's investigation process, Jim Fyshe, an Edmonton lawyer retained by NASA, told CBC News.

Key to NASA's argument was that the school did not follow its respectful workplace policy but instead conducted its own investigation. In his decision, Francis wrote that NAIT's failure to comply with the policy did not seriously detract from the fairness of its process.

Fyshe said that from Rurka's perspective, the process was unjust, in part because an investigator told him the policy would apply, and because the nature of the allegations did not justify his firing without a chance to change his behaviour.

"Mr. Rurka doesn't agree that he didn't take responsibility for the things that he acknowledged that he did, but it's challenging for him to apologize and take responsibility for things that he truly believes he didn't do," Fyshe said.

Fyshe said NASA has a duty to represent its members, but at the same time, the association understands and supports the need for respect in the workplace.

There is no appeal process for arbitration decisions, but unions may pursue a judicial review. Fyshe said NASA will not be doing so.

CBC News contacted four of Rurka's former colleagues this week about this story. Two declined to speak; the others have not responded.

A NAIT spokesperson said the school cannot comment on personnel matters but is committed to fostering a safe, respectful and inclusive work and learning environment free from harassment, bullying and violence.
Immigration supported by most Canadians: poll


In the wake of the government’s plan to attract more than 1.3 million newcomers to Canada over the next three years, a new poll shows that the majority of Canadians think immigration is having a mostly positive effect in the country.

Three-in-four Canadians, or nearly 75 per cent, “believe the hard work and talent of immigrants makes Canada better,” and nearly 65 per cent “believe immigrants should only be allowed in Canada if they adopt Canadian values,” the final report from the online poll of 1,000 adults conducted by Research Co. found.


According to Mario Canseco, president of Research Co. and the author of the report, the poll conducted last week showed that some political and regional disparities persist across the country.

“Majorities of Canadians who reside in Ontario (58%), Quebec (56%), Alberta (also 56%), Atlantic Canada (54%) and British Columbia (also 51%) hold favourable views on immigration,” he writes.

“Conversely, 36% of residents of Saskatchewan and Manitoba call for a reduction in immigration levels.”

When it comes to political stripes, “almost seven-in-ten Canadians who voted for the Liberal Party in the 2021 federal election (69%) think immigration is having a mostly positive effect in Canada, compared to 60 per cent among those who supported the New Democratic Party (NDP) and 46% among those who cast ballots for Conservative Party candidates.”

The study continues: “Canadians who voted for the Conservatives in the 2021 federal election are more likely to call for newcomers to Canada to adopt Canadian values (80%) than those who cast ballots for the Liberals (65%) or the New Democrats (55%).”

Minister of Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada (IRCC) Sean Fraser announced yesterday that Canada aims to attract about 1.3 million new immigrants over the next three years to help fill critical labour shortages and fuel post-pandemic growth.

The 2022–2024 Immigration Levels Plan aims to continue welcoming immigrants at a rate of about one per cent of Canada’s population, including 431,645 permanent residents in 2022 (an increase of about 21,000 people from its original plan), 447,055 in 2023, and 451,000 in 2024.

“We think it is a good plan, albeit a very ambitious plan,” said Betsy Kane, a steering committee member of the Vancouver-based Canadian Immigration Lawyers Association (CILA).

Kane clarified that CILA did not call for the government to “pause” the intake of newcomers as was previously reported by NCM based on an article on the association’s website published prior to yesterday’s announcement.

More specifically, NCM’s report was grounded on CILA’s suggestion that the IRCC use this year as an opportunity to “catch its breath” to allow many of those who have been waiting in limbo during the pandemic to finally land as permanent residents.

“Canada needs to continue to welcome more immigrants but announcing more ambitious targets under the 2022-2024 levels plan may be ill-timed…While using this year as an opportunity for IRCC to catch its breath would be far from ideal, it would be beneficial for several reasons,” CILA said in the post.

Jasraj Singh Hallan, the opposition Conservative Party of Canada’s Shadow Minister for Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship, said “the historic nearly two million immigration cases in backlog are holding back families and hurting businesses.”

“This is just another example of how Justin Trudeau and his Liberal government will say one thing and do another. Canadians and new Canadians alike deserve better,” said the MP for Calgary Forest Lawn in an email to NCM.

East Vancouver MP Jenny Kwan, who’s also the NDP’s Immigration Critic, called on the Liberal government to provide temporary foreign workers landed status on arrival.

“There are over 500,000 people who are already here in Canada. I am calling on the Liberals to bring in special immigration levels to regularize these workers to meet Canada’s labour skill shortage and implement the principle that if you are good enough to work, you are good enough to stay and grant temporary foreign workers landed status on arrival now,” she said.

Andrew Griffith, a policy analyst and former director general of IRCC’s Citizenship and Multiculturalism Branch, said the new levels are a continuation of the government’s strategy of growing the economy through increased immigration.

“I strongly believe a royal commission or equivalent is needed for a more independent look at immigration, one with a broader and more critical focus than the immigration industry perspective,” he says.

Fabian Dawson, Local Journalism Initiative Reporter, New Canadian Media
MLB LOCK-OUT
Group praises big leaguers for refusing minor league cuts



NEW YORK (AP) — An advocacy group for minor league players has praised locked-out big leaguers for refusing to consider a proposal from Major League Baseball that would give teams the flexibility to cut hundreds of minor league jobs.

MLB proposed that the Major League Baseball Players Association agree that management has the flexibility to decrease the number of domestic players with minor league contracts to 150 if it chooses starting in 2023, down from 180. MLB also asked for the flexibility to increase the figure.

While the proposal would allow a reduction of up to 900 minor league contracts, MLB says teams currently have differing amounts under contract and two teams are under 150, so the potential drop under the proposal would be less.

The union said during ongoing bargaining it is not interested in that proposal, part of a larger package of 28 items, and that it has rejected it at least three times.

“We were glad to learn that the MLBPA has repeatedly rejected MLB’s short-sighted proposal to cut yet more minor league jobs,” Advocates for Minor Leaguers said in a statement Tuesday. “The proposal itself again highlights that minor leaguers need and deserve a say over their wages and working conditions.”

Players with major league contracts are unionized, covering those on 40-man big league rosters. Players with minor league contracts are not covered by collective bargaining.

The proposal was first reported by ESPN.

Players proposed in July to cut the amateur draft from 40 to 20 rounds, a plan MLB agreed to.

MLB cut guaranteed minor league affiliates from 160 to 120 ahead of the 2021 season as part of its takeover of minor league operations. MLB said it would guarantee the 120 figure through 2030.

After successfully lobbying Congress to exempt minor leaguers from federal minimum wage laws, MLB raised wages between 38% and 72% when the minor leagues returned last year from a one-season absence caused by the COVID-19 pandemic.

___

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The Associated Press
The World's Largest Tokamak Just Crushed the Record for Nuclear Fusion Energy


Caroline Delbert - Yesterday 
Popular Mechanics
© EUROfusion


England's Joint European Torus (JET) tokamak has produced 59 megajoules of energy for five seconds, breaking the previous nuclear fusion record from 1997.
JET is a training ground for the much larger, more ambitious ITER reactor.
The 59-megajoule record has a power ratio of Q=.33, with an industry goal of Q=1.

The Joint European Torus (JET) experiment housed in England has set a new record for the power generated by a burst of unfathomably hot plasma. The circular tokamak reactor, which looks like a donut, reached 59 megajoules of energy—a new high for a family of reactors that require an enormous amount of energy to get up to operational speed.

JET is part of the Culham Centre for Fusion Energy just outside Oxford, England. The Centre is the national laboratory for nuclear fusion research in the United Kingdom, previously known as "UKAEA Culham" after the U.K. Atomic Energy Authority. It's awkward that the Joint "European" Torus is no longer a part of Europe, but that's partly because the project dates back 40 years to the early 1980s.

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For about ten years, the original JET tokamak operated with the same goal that fusion projects have today: to generate enough energy to be productive against the fusion reactor's enormous energy cost for operation. For decades, the reactor iterated, meaning it was adjusted and refined over time to continue trying to reach its goals. Then, in 2009, it shut down completely for more of an overhaul. Today's JET is almost unrecognizable when you compare it to what the 1980s researchers built.

JET is a tokamak, which is basically a donut- or spherical-shaped tunnel where hydrogen isotopes are contained by a powerful magnetic field and then superheated until they're far hotter than the sun. It's at these high temperatures that the atoms' nuclei smash together, literally nuclear fusion. The reaction generates enormous energy relative to the amount of fuel required.

Over time, JET has learned lessons from the International Thermonuclear Experimental Reactor (ITER), a project that started later, but had massive funding and truly global participation. Results from ITER experiments helped JET to further tailor its goals, proving especially helpful while revamping JET between 2009 and 2011. Now, the two are working together to design experiments at JET that will help researchers at ITER make better decisions.

One way JET has led the way globally is by using fuel made of deuterium and tritium, names for two isotopes of hydrogen. Protium is the most common form of hydrogen, consisting of just one proton. Stable deuterium has a proton as well as a neutron (its name meaning two, like "deuce"), while radioactive tritium has one proton and two neutrons. The fuel sources are far better than protium, but the extra neutrons are sprayed around and can cause problems. To counter this, JET now has a special tungsten and beryllium shielding that will also be part of ITER.

All this background leads us to the exciting new record. In December, JET created an astonishing 59 megajoules of energy and sustained that for five full seconds—the longest possible amount of time before the reactor overheats. With nuclear fusion, the goal is to reach an advantageous power ratio of Q=1, where Q is the amount of energy generated divided by the amount of energy the reactor requires to operate. That means each facility's Q value is made from different parts: 59 megajoules might mean a Q of 20 at some tiny fusion reactor.

At JET, 59 megajoules is.33Q, which is still a step in the right direction, scientists say. They insist that at the massive ITER, which will be the largest fusion reactor in the world by far, the same processes that led to the record at JET will mean ITER is reaching productive fusion, or a Q greater than 1. Time will tell, because ITER isn't set to power up its first plasma run for years to come.