Tuesday, August 09, 2022

85-year-old message in a bottle found inside New Zealand monument


A message in a bottle was found inside the concrete poured in 1937 for the Citizens' War Memorial in Christchurch, New Zealand. The message listed the names of the stonemasons who originally constructed the monument. Photo courtesy of the Christchurch City Council


Aug. 8 (UPI) -- Officials in Christchurch, New Zealand, said a crew demolishing an old monument made an unusual discovery: a message in a bottle from the original stonemason team.

The Christchurch City Council said the crew working to dismantle the Citizens' War Memorial found the glass bottle when they cracked the concrete in exactly the right spot to reveal the hidden object.

"It was a fluke discovery," Brent Smith, the council's head of vertical capital delivery, said in a news release. "The contractor was working on dismantling the concrete core of the memorial when a big chunk of concrete broke off, revealing the glass bottle. If the concrete had not broken in that exact spot, we would never have found it."

The damaged note inside the bottle was dated February 1937 and contained a list of names of the stonemasons who originally constructed the monument.

"The note is a bit worse for wear but it is an amazing link to the past that could easily have laid undiscovered," Smith said.

The mason team that deconstructed the memorial to transport it to its new home in Cathedral Square said the discovery was meaningful to them.

"This discovery is a reminder of the rich history and tradition we're helping to preserve. It is humbling to be working on such an important memorial," said Goldfield Stone stonemason Regan Shanks.

Smith said officials are planning to include a photo of the original note in a time capsule to be buried at the memorial's new site.


After FBI raid, former staffer says Trump mishandled classified documents

Jack Birle - Yesterday - Washington Examiner


Former White House press secretary Stephanie Grisham reacted to the FBI raid at Mar-a-Lago on Monday by saying that former President Donald Trump mishandled classified documents while in office.




TRUMP SAYS FBI 'RAIDED' MAR-A-LAGO

"The former president of the United States did not handle classified documents properly. I watched him do it. I sat in an airplane with him, watched him go through documents — throw some away, rip some up, and put some in his pocket," Grisham said in an appearance on CNN Monday evening. "Because I remember specifically thinking, 'I wonder why those go in his pocket.' So I think this is going to be really interesting."

The former White House press secretary also said she believes the documents the FBI is searching for will be substantial because of the nature of document preservation in the Trump administration.

"I think that something big is there. I don’t think it’s going to be just letters. I think it could be about military operations. This is me speculating — I want to be clear. But I can see the former president thinking those were cool or fun, and we were not a White House that followed the rules. And I will tell you that handling classified information was not something that was really pressed upon us on a daily basis or weekly or monthly," Grisham said.

The Monday evening FBI raid at Mar-a-Lago, which was announced by Trump, is reportedly related to presidential materials requested by the National Archives, including the handling of classified documents.

Grisham was the White House press secretary from 2019 to 2020 and then became the chief of staff to first lady Melania Trump. She resigned in the wake of the Jan. 6 riot at the Capitol. Later, she published a tell-all book about her time in the White House, I'll Take Your Questions Now: What I Saw at the Trump White House.

The Mar-A-Lago Raid Proves the U.S. Isn’t a Banana Republic

David A. Graham - Yesterday -The Atlantic

Donald Trump would have you believe that Monday’s surprise FBI raid on his Florida estate was, like so many things he disdains, un-American.



© John Roca / NY Daily News Archive / Getty

Not much is known about the operation as of this writing. The FBI has not commented, and much of what is public comes from a statement by Trump, a notoriously unreliable source of information. Trump wrote, “My beautiful home, Mar-A-Lago in Palm Beach, Florida, is currently under siege, raided, and occupied by a large group of FBI agents,” who he said arrived unannounced and broke into a safe.

Reporting from The Washington Post and The New York Times indicate that the raid appears to be connected to Trump’s removal of records from the White House at the end of his administration, in what critics have said was a clear violation of federal public-records law.

“Nothing like this has ever happened to a President of the United States before,” Trump wrote. “Such an assault could only take place in broken, Third-World Countries. Sadly, America has now become one of those Countries, corrupt at a level not seen before.”

Trump is right that nothing like this has ever happened to a former president of the United States before—he always omits the former, a way of refusing to acknowledge that he lost the 2020 election—but he’s wrong about what it means about the rule of law in the United States.

Related video: Watch: Donald Trump's Mar-a-Lago Surrounded As FBI Raid Property

Trump was always more banana republican than Reagan or Lincoln Republican. Unlike his presidential predecessors, and despite his open disdain for Latin America and Latin Americans, he often styled himself as a sort of caudillo, trying to rule with an iron fist, circumvent the Constitution and legislature, enlist the military into his schemes, and use the power of the state to further his own electoral and personal fortunes. Just today, Susan Glasser and Peter Baker reported on how Trump pushed the military to conduct the sort of garish parades that, as one general put it, characterize foreign dictatorships, and complained that U.S. generals were not as loyal to him as Hitler's top brass was to the führer. And at the end of his term, Trump retired to a palatial estate fringed by palm trees to plot his next moves.

In a real banana republic, he might have hoped to live with impunity—as long as he could outwit his political opponents’ schemes. Instead, Trump has found himself beset on many sides. He was impeached, a second time, after leaving office; a district attorney in Fulton County, Georgia, continues to investigate his meddling in vote-counting after the election; the New York attorney general is investigating his company, and will soon depose him; and a House committee is probing his attempt to overturn the election and pressuring the Justice Department to bring charges against him related to that. (DOJ has refused to comment on any related investigations.)

Trump is not the victim of political persecution. A bedrock principle of American law is that no one—not even the president, much less the former president—is above the law, and if they commit crimes they must answer for them. “What is the difference between this and Watergate, where operatives broke into the Democrat National Committee?” Trump asked in his statement. But this question is simple enough that any AP U.S. History student could easily manage it: Watergate was an illegal break-in conducted by a team of political operatives, not law-enforcement agents with judicially approved warrants, working for an FBI director appointed by Trump.

For all Trump’s bluster, he hasn’t been charged with any crimes. If he is, he will have every opportunity to defend himself in court. (Contrast that with his own disdain for due process for other people accused of crimes.) Some legal scholars are nervous about the precedent set by potentially prosecuting a former president. But the precedent set by giving him a free pass by virtue of his electoral history would be even more troubling.

The raid seemed to come out of nowhere, a sign that the federal government is handling this investigation—whatever it is—with great secrecy and delicacy. In the coming days, the public is likely to learn more, including whether White House documents are really the sole or main factor behind the “siege” of Mar-a-Lago.

Even though Trump’s rise to the White House in 2016 owed much to “her emails”—Hillary Clinton’s sloppy handling of classified records—his administration was particularly brazen about not maintaining records from the start. Trump ripped up documents at will, leaving teams to comb through the scraps and literally tape them together. On Monday, Axios published photos that appeared to show notes in a toilet. In recent weeks, news reports have brought attention to the destruction of records by the Secret Service, Pentagon, and Department of Homeland Security relating to the January 6 insurrection.

Over four years in office, Trump’s behavior was often egregious. He courted Russia in 2016, was impeached for extorting Ukraine, and topped things off by trying to steal the election. But he largely escaped consequences for these offenses, other than losing in 2020. Could his downfall really be about something as mundane as proper handling of sensitive documents? Justice in the U.S. is still blind, despite his protestation, but that doesn’t mean it lacks a sense of humor.

Trump House Raid Rocks MAGA World: 'Smash the FBl Into a Million Pieces'

Jake Thomas - Yesterday 

Allies of Donald Trump are likening the U.S. to a "third-world country" and calling for the FBI and Justice Department to be dismantled in response to a raid on the former president's home.


© Eva Marie Uzcategui/Getty Images
Allies of former President Donald Trump denounced the FBI and Justice Department after his home was searched. Supporters of former President Donald Trump hold flags in front of his home at Mar-A-Lago on August 8, 2022 in Palm Beach, Florida. The FBI raided the home to retrieve classified White House documents.

Trump on Monday evening confirmed that FBI agents had searched his residence on his Mar-a-Lago estate in Palm Beach, Florida. While the reason for the raid remains unclear, Trump denounced it as politically motivated in a lengthy statement. Trump's defenders swiftly took to social media to echo the former his claims while attacking Attorney General Merrick Garland and federal law enforcement agencies.

Video Shows Law Enforcement Vehicles Outside Trump's Mar-a-Lago Club

"The FBI and the DOJ have ruthlessly violated the Constitution and law in America," conservative political commentator Lou Dobbs said in a tweet. "Joe Biden and Merrick Garland are no more than Marxist thugs, not public servants. They're an outrage against decency, judgment, a former President, and the American people."

In a statement posted to his Truth Social network, Trump said the raid was part of a long history of being politically targeted by federal law enforcement. Trump described his home as "under siege, raided, and occupied" despite what he said was his cooperation with "Government agencies." Trump said FBI agents even "broke into my safe!"

A judge would need to sign off on a search warrant for Trump's home after the FBI presented evidence that a crime had been committed. The DOJ has not issued a public statement on the raid and the FBI declined comment to Newsweek.

But Trump's defenders were already deeply skeptical of any evidence the FBI might have used to justify the search.

Republican Representative Don Bishop of North Carolina said in a tweet that the FBI and DOJ are "acting as the political enforcers of the Democrat Party." Bishop demanded that the FBI hand over the information used to obtain the search warrant to the House Judiciary Committee, of which he is a member, and that Garland and FBI Director Christopher Wray testify.

"Republicans must smash the FBl into a million pieces," he said.

Republican Senator Marco Rubio of Florida said in a tweet that "using government power to persecute political opponents is something we have seen many times from 3rd world Marxist dictatorships. But never before in America."

Related video: FBI search warrant executed at Trump's Mar-a-Lago home
Duration 2:36  View on Watch


"The FBI raid on President Trump's home is an unprecedented political weaponization of the Justice Department," South Dakota Governor Kristi Noem said in a tweet. "They've been after President Trump as a candidate, as President, and now as a former President. Using the criminal justice system in this manner is un-American."

The raid comes after months of pressure on Garland to prosecute Trump for his actions regarding the attempt to overturn the results of the 2020 presidential election. But the reason for the raid may be for a lower-profile issue.

The National Archives and Records Administration earlier this year requested assistance from the FBI in recovering boxes of classified documents that Trump allegedly took to his resort in violation of the Presidential Records Act, according to a report from The Washington Post.

Fox News personality Brian Kilmeade said in a tweet that Eric Trump, son of the former president, said FBI agents were acting on behalf of the National Archives.

House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy issued an ominous warning to Garland in a tweet, repeating Trump's accusations that the DOJ had become politicized.

"When Republicans take back the House, we will conduct immediate oversight of this department, follow the facts, and leave no stone unturned," he said. "Attorney General Garland, preserve your documents and clear your calendar."

Other allies of Trump, such as Florida Representative Matt Gaetzsuggested the raid was intended distract from an investigation concerning Hunter Biden, son of President Joe Biden. Specifically, the probe is looking into alleged foreign influence peddling, tax evasion and other charges.

Florida Governor Ron DeSantis said in a tweet that the raid is "another escalation in the weaponization of federal agencies against the Regime's political opponents, while people like Hunter Biden get treated with kid gloves."

Newsweek has reached out to Trump for comment.

Mexico considers banning beer production in the north of the country due to water shortage

Daniel Stewart - Yesterday 

Mexican President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador has raised the possibility that breweries in the north of the country may stop production due to the water shortage emergency in the area.

© Provided by News 360Archive - Beer Bottles - EUROPA PRESS

The Mexican leader has thus announced that concessions will be reviewed and incentives will be given for them to set up in the south of the country, where there is sufficient water to allow them to maintain production levels, mostly destined for export.

López Obrador has thus highlighted the agreement reached at the time with the Constellation Brands brewery in Mexicali, where the permit was revoked because it even endangered the water for domestic use. Based on a consultation with the population, an agreement was promoted and the company accepted to relocate to the south of the country.

"We have to do something similar and try not to leave the breweries without a permit. Mexico is the country that produces the most beer in the world. Investment, foreign currency, because beer is being exported," said López Obrador, according to the Mexican press.

The Mexican president explained that "it is not to say that we are no longer going to produce beer, (but) that beer will not be produced in the north".

The president said that it is not possible to reach the extreme that was reached in La Laguna, with milk production, where due to the scarcity of water, deeper wells were drilled, where there is water with arsenic and now plants are needed to eliminate this mineral from the water.
People In BC Can Now Claim Up To $9K For Buying An Electric Vehicle & Here's How

Morgan Leet - 

The B.C. government just boosted the maximum rebate amount that someone can get when they buy an electric vehicle (EV) to make them more accessible options.


© Provided by Narcity


With the increase and existing federal incentives, people in B.C. could take home up to $9,000 when they buy an EV, so if you were on the fence, this might just be your sign to do it.

In a press release on August 2, the Ministry of Energy, Mines and Low Carbon Innovation said the maximum provincial rebate for buying or leasing battery-electric vehicles, fuel-cell electric vehicles and long-range plug-in hybrid electric vehicles has now increased from $3,000 to $4,000.

For lower-range plug-in hybrid electric vehicles, the maximum rebate increased from $1,500 to $2,000.

The release said in order "to ensure that EV rebates are available for people and families who need them most, eligibility for a rebate will be based on individual or household income levels."

Someone who earns up to $80,000, or has a household income of $125,000, is eligible for the maximum rebate amounts.

People with annual incomes between $80,001 and $100,000 and those with household incomes between $125,001 and $165,000, are eligible for rebates ranging from $500 to $2,000. The amount of the rebate will vary based on the income level and what kind of EV is bought.

Someone who makes more than $100,000, or with a household income over $165,000, is not eligible for the provincial electric vehicle rebates.

In addition to the increased rebates, the province has expanded what vehicles are eligible for them.

For full-size and compact cars, the price cap for rebate eligibility is still at a maximum of $55,000 but for larger electric vehicles like minivans, sport utility vehicles and pickup trucks, the release said the cap has been set at a maximum retail price of $70,000.

On top of being able to get up to $4,000 from the provincial government rebates, British Columbians can also take home up to $5,000 from the federal government through the iZEV rebate.

Battery electric, hydrogen fuel cell and longer-range plug-in hybrid vehicles are eligible for the $5,000 incentive from the federal government. Shorter-range plug-in hybrid electric vehicles are eligible for $2,500.

To qualify for the federal incentives, passenger cars must cost less than $55,000, but higher-priced versions of some vehicles are also eligible.

According to the Canadian government, "the incentive will be applied at the point-of-sale by the dealership."

For the B.C. government rebate, you can apply online, and then the rebate can be applied at the dealership when you purchase a vehicle.
Opinion: Two steps to get us toward carbon neutral economy in Sask.

Jim Elliott - 

© Provided by Leader Post

Saskatchewan needs to take better advantage of our renewable energy resources, writes Jim Elliott.

Minister Bronwyn Eyre and, by extension, Premier Scott Moe need to stop using conservative political and marketing spin , sleight of hand or smoke and mirrors to try to convince us that somehow the federal government is interfering in the economy of this province.

Here is some simple education for the minister and premier to explain the situation they find themselves in today: “Energy is the capacity for doing work. It may exist in potential, kinetic, thermal, electrical, chemical, nuclear, or other forms.” It is not exclusively fossil fuels and energy does not simply equate to the production of non-renewable fossil fuels and the burning of such . And if we leave it in the ground, it will still be there for decades.

If we need to have a warm home or business, we have two steps. One reduces the need for any energy inputs into the home or business to make it liveable and secondly provide that additional source of heat. That heat can be provided by burning biomass or biofuels, using geothermal energy, using photovoltaics to generate electricity and using passive solar energy. All of these are renewable energy supplies. The burning of fossil fuels is not sustainable, nor should it be the first or only choice. There are homes in Saskatchewan today that use one-ninth the energy of current housing in the province, not even using photovoltaics which could be added on later. There are 50,000-square-foot Saskatchewan warehouses that use almost no fossil fuel energy to keep them warm in the wintertime. So, converting homes to this standard could reduce heating bills in Saskatchewan by 85 per cent.

We can do the same for transportation and agriculture.

Secondly, we know that polluting this planet with greenhouse gases is threatening our very existence and we don’t have to pollute to have a sustainable economy in this province. Our economy over the past 100 years has been allowed to pollute the planet’s atmosphere without penalty and as a result, we are experiencing more forest fires, more floods, more heat domes, more famines and less available water. We cannot continue to pollute with impunity. We must stop and allow the planet to reduce the GHG levels in our atmosphere.

The southern part of this province has the best solar gain of any province in Canada. With the use of photovoltaics, we could be that solar energy powerhouse called SaskPower that Premier Moe so desperately wants. We could be exporting solar and wind energy for the next millennium. We have one of the greatest wind regimes in Canada and could easily be exporting that electricity to our northern communities. And we don’t need to build more pipelines or small modular nuclear reactors. The electrical grid ties are already there or are being built.

We need to get down to carbon net zero or below by 2050 and it can easily be done. It will create thousands more jobs, especially in small towns and for those in the fossil fuel industry that will disappear in time. Wouldn’t it be better not to be hostage to the fossil fuel corporations and yet be able to turn on the switch and get heat, light or travel easily?

Jim Elliott is the chairperson of the Regina chapter of the Council of Canadians.
"Alarming": GOP quietly funnels millions into Democratic primaries to wipe out progressives

Igor Derysh - Yesterday - SALON

Former Maryland Rep. Donna Edwards, Michigan Rep. Andy Levin and Pennsylvania Rep. Summer Lee Photo illustration by Salon/Getty Images

The American Israel Public Affairs Committee (AIPAC) has spent more than $24 million to defeat progressive candidates in this year's Democratic primaries.

The United Democracy Project (UDP), an AIPAC-affiliated super PAC, has already spent $24.2 million on Democratic primaries this cycle, including millions that it raised from top Republican megadonors like Paul Singer and Bernard Marcus. The money has helped AIPAC-backed candidates wipe out progressives in primaries in Michigan, Maryland, North Carolina, Pennsylvania, Texas, California and Ohio.

UDP and other pro-Israel groups tied to AIPAC – Democratic Majority for Israel (DMFI), Urban Empowerment Action PAC and Pro-Israel America PAC — spent more than $10 million combined in three Michigan primaries, The Intercept reported, to defeat progressive candidates, including last week's loss for Rep. Andy Levin, D-Mich., who has been called the most progressive Jewish member of the House.

"I'm really Jewish," Levin, a former synagogue president, told MSNBC last week. "But AIPAC can't stand the idea that I am the clearest, strongest Jewish voice in Congress standing for a simple proposition: that there is no way to have a secure, democratic homeland for the Jewish people unless we achieve the political and human rights of the Palestinian people."

UDP spent more than $4 million on ads opposing Levin and backing his opponent, Rep. Haley Stevens, D-Mich., after they both opted to run in the state's 11th District following redistricting. Stevens on Tuesday defeated Levin, 60-40.

It's unclear how much impact spending by the Israel lobby, or other groups like Emily's List, which also backed Stevens, had on the actual race. The Atlantic's Yair Rosenberg argued that UDP was merely backing the more electable candidate in Michigan and other races. But critics denounced the group for funneling Republican money into Democratic contests.

Levin after his defeat lamented that he was the "target of a largely Republican-funded campaign set on defeating the movement I represent."

Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., during a campaign rally with Levin last week, argued that AIPAC's involvement in the race had "nothing to do, in my view, with Israel."

"It is simply trying to defeat candidates and members of Congress who stand for working families and are prepared to demand that the wealthy and large corporations pay their fair share of taxes," he said, calling on Democratic leaders to ban super PAC money from its primaries.


An AIPAC-affiliated super PAC has already spent $24.2 million on Democratic primaries this cycle, including millions that it raised from top Republican megadonors like Paul Singer and Bernard Marcus.

UDP fired back at Sanders over his criticism.

"Bernie and his allies are struggling with the fact that the majority of progressive Democrats in the country are pro-Israel," Patrick Dorton, a spokesperson for UDP, told Salon. "They come up with attack after attack because they don't like the pro-Israel nature of the Democratic Party."

Dorton was quick to note that UDP has also received donations from Democrats, including megadonor Haim Saban.

"UDP is funded by Democratic and Republican donors who have set aside their partisan preferences in a hyperpolarized political environment to support a better U.S-Israel relationship," Dorton said.

He argued that it was "hypocritical" for Sanders to complain about pro-Israel spending because "all kinds of Bernie-allied groups are spending in these primaries," criticizing the "nasty attacks" from groups like J Street targeting Stevens in the primary.

J Street, a liberal Jewish group, called out AIPAC for endorsing and funding 109 Republicans who voted to overturn the election on January 6 while attacking candidates like Levin as "extremists."

"It is alarming that this race, like many other Democratic primaries this cycle, was heavily impacted by the aggressive outside spending of AIPAC and its super PAC, the United Democracy Project," the group said in a statement, calling on other Democratic candidates to "disavow and decline the support of AIPAC and its super PAC—which have come as a surprise to at least some of them."

AIPAC's official PAC pushed back on the criticism.

"We are proud to engage in the democratic process to help elect leaders who will strengthen the US-Israel relationship – including scores of progressive candidates," Marshall Wittmann, a spokesperson for AIPAC-PAC, said in a statement to Salon. "In fact, we have supported over half of the Congressional Black Caucus and Hispanic Caucus and nearly half of the Progressive Caucus. It is completely consistent with progressive values to stand with the Jewish state. We will continue to support progressive candidates who will stand with our democratic ally, Israel – and oppose detractors of the Jewish state."

AIPAC was less successful in campaigning to elect Michigan state Sen. Adam Hollier in the 13th District despite funneling more than $4 million into the race. State Rep. Shri Thanedar, who spent $5 million of his own money, ultimately prevailed in the race with just 28% of the vote, benefiting from a nine-candidate field. But the group has seen a strong return on its investment in other states.

UDP and DMFI spent about $1.5 million to help Rep. Shontel Brown, D-Ohio, take down progressive Sanders ally Nina Turner. UDP spent $2.3 million to help attorney Steve Irwin, a former Republican Senate staffer, defeat progressive state Rep. Summer Lee in Pennsylvania after she led by 25 points. UDP dropped nearly $2 million to help Rep. Henry Cuellar, D-Texas, beat back progressive challenger Jessica Cisneros in a tight matchup. And it's not just Sanders-allied progressives: UDP spent a whopping $6 million to help former prosecutor Glenn Ivey beat former Rep. Donna Edwards, D-Md., who was backed by House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., and other top Democrats, because she was seen as not pro-Israel enough.

Want a daily wrap-up of all the news and commentary Salon has to offer? Subscribe to our morning newsletter, Crash Course.

All of the candidates targeted by the PACs have expressed support for Palestinian rights or have criticized the billions in aid the U.S. provides to the Israeli military. They have also supported prominent progressive proposals like Medicare for All, climate action and more left-wing economic policies. Despite spending heavily to influence Democratic primaries, UDP "has not been similarly active in Republican primaries, even in races where Republican candidates have been widely criticized for antisemitic comments," The American Prospect reported. But AIPAC has endorsed numerous controversial Republicans, including Rep. Jim Jordan, R-Ohio, and Rep. Scott Perry, R-Pa., who last year compared Democrats to Nazis.

AIPAC has funded ads lashing out at some far-right Republicans like Sen. Rand Paul, R-Ky., and Rep. Thomas Massie, R-Ky., pressuring them to support funding for Israel's Iron Dome defense system. AIPAC-PAC backed Rep. Young Kim, R-Calif., in her primary, though UDP has not been involved in any Republican primaries.

All of the candidates targeted by the PACs have expressed support for Palestinian rights or have criticized the billions in aid the U.S. provides to the Israeli military.

"We're looking at Republican races, we're looking at Democratic races," Dorton insisted. "Our goal is to build the largest bipartisan coalition in Congress. Unlike other groups, we don't feel like the way to do that is to support candidates that align themselves with the most persistent critics of Israel in the U.S."

Dorton said that UDP focuses on races "where there is a contrast between a pro-Israel candidate and a candidate who is an active detractor of Israel."

"We also take into account viability, demographics of the district and other factors that would impact an election, number of candidates, that kind of thing," he said. "So we are looking to help pro-Israel candidates win races."

This election cycle has marked a drastic change for AIPAC, which did not have a PAC or even endorse candidates until earlier this year. Former Clinton labor secretary Robert Reich cited the group's heavy expenditures to label them "the single most influential big money group in Democratic electoral politics."

Though UDP has argued that its funding is aimed at helping candidates who will be more friendly to Israel, some observers argue that it is just a pretense to defeat more progressive Democrats.

"Very often when these establishment pro-Israel organizations target a progressive candidate, those candidates are also targeted by groups that are not focused on Israel-Palestine but simply want to defeat that person because that person may be to progressive on questions of healthcare, or they may support the Green New Deal," Peter Beinart, a professor at the Newmark Graduate School of Journalism and editor-at-large at the conservative Jewish Currents, told Democracy Now. In some cases, he added, groups like the Democratic Majority for Israel "work out of the same offices with the same staff" as seemingly unrelated groups that target progressives on issues that have nothing to do with Israel.

Dorton argued that UDP is merely "exercising our First Amendment right to bring voters publicly available information," dismissing criticism that the ads aren't focused on Israel because, he said, "there was a clear contrast" that voters were already aware of.

J Street, which has far less money to spend than its deep-pocketed rivals at AIPAC, has sought to counter the group's influence by funding ads backing progressives in these races, including spots attacking Stevens in Michigan, though the group's PAC has only spent about one-tenth as much as UDP alone this cycle. J Street warned after the latest defeat that AIPAC's intervention, funded in part by Republican megadonors, threatens to harm the Democratic Party, foreign policy and "ultimately the state of Israel."

Dorton disputed the argument.

"There is increasing danger to the historical, bipartisan support for Israel in Congress because of politicians mostly on the left, but some on the far-right, but mostly on the far-left, who claim to be pro-Israel but aren't," he told Salon.

Though AIPAC's focus has been fairly limited on a couple of handfuls of races, the big money pouring into the races could have a chilling effect on other Democrats, J Street warned.

"With their overwhelming spending, AIPAC hopes to send an intimidating message to others: Cross our red lines, and you could be next," the group said in a statement. "While political space for open and healthy debate over US foreign policy has opened up considerably in recent years, they appear determined to close it down. Instead of building sustainable bipartisan support for Israel, AIPAC has harmfully turned Israel into one of the sharpest wedge issues in American politics."
U$A
200,000 student-loan borrowers get a 'grand slam' after a federal judge moves them closer to $6 billion in debt cancellation
asheffey@businessinsider.com (Ayelet Sheffey) - 

College graduation Getty Images

A federal judge granted preliminary approval of a settlement that will give relief to 200,000 defrauded borrowers.

This follows Biden's Education Department agreeing to the debt relief in June.

Biden has taken steps to clear up the backlog of claims from defrauded borrowers under Trump.

Thousands of student-loan borrowers defrauded by for-profit schools just got one step closer to getting their debt wiped out.


Borrowers who believe they were defrauded by a school can file a "borrower defense to repayment" claim, which gives those borrowers debt relief if they can prove a school's wrongdoing. But under former President Trump's Education Secretary Betsy DeVos, those claims ran up a backlog and left many borrowers dealing with debt burdens that could have been eligible for discharge, prompting Harvard Law School's Project on Predatory Student Lending to file a lawsuit in 2019 against DeVos.

While the suit was not resolved under the former administration, President Joe Biden's Education Department announced in June that it agreed to a settlement that would give 200,000 defrauded borrowers around $6 billion in relief — and Federal Judge William Alsup granted that settlement preliminary approval last week, calling it a "grand slam" for borrowers.

"Preliminary approval is an important milestone for this settlement and for our clients, bringing us one step closer to finally delivering certainty to borrowers who have fought long and hard for a fair resolution of their borrower defense claims," President of the Project on Predatory Student Lending Eileen Connor said in a statement. "When our clients brought this case in 2019, it was based on the fact that many of them had already been waiting years with no answers, and that harm has only compounded over time. As always, our focus is our clients, and we look forward to helping them finally secure the justice they are owed."

Following the preliminary approval, the Education Department has started sending notices to borrowers allowing them to submit comments on the proposed settlement until September 8. Alsup is also tentatively granting a number of motions to intervene in the settlement filed by for-profit schools who argued they would not have the chance to respond to borrower defense claims, harming their reputations.

Jason Altmire, president and CEO of Career Education Colleges and Universities — which represents for-profit institutions — said in a statement that he is "pleased" Alsup is allowing schools to intervene.


"The parties' proposed settlement has unfairly impugned the reputations of more than 150 schools, all without the basic procedural fairness to which these schools are entitled under the Department's own regulations," Altmire said.

Since Biden took office, his Education Department has taken a number of actions to provide relief to students defrauded by for-profit schools. In the beginning of June, it wiped out $5.8 billion in student debt for all remaining borrowers defrauded by Corinthian College — the biggest group discharge the department has taken to date. That came after smaller discharges, like those for former students of ITT Technical Institutes and DeVry University.

If the settlement gets final approval, it will be significant for the 200,000 borrowers who have been long awaiting relief. But Biden is also in the process of deciding whether he will cancel student debt for millions of federal borrowers, reportedly considering $10,000 in relief for those making under $150,000 a year. He is expected to make that announcement before August 31, along with a decision on further extending the payment pause on student loans past September.
‘They refused to give me any details about why I was fired’: Starbucks worker of 13 years says he was let go for unionizing

Jacob Seitz - 
The Daily Dot.

A Starbucks barista and union organizer in Buffalo, New York, said they were fired after 13 years of working for the company, according to a viral TikTok.


© Provided by Daily Dot‘



In the TikTok, Sam Amato says he was pulled aside this week by two store managers and fired for closing the store's lobby without a manager's permission. According to the TikTok, workers were told by upper management that they could close the lobby at their discretion.

“It is a BS reason. It’s because I’m a union leader,” Amato said in the video. “They failed to provide any details or give me any information … after 13 years they refused to give me any details about why I was fired.”

At the Starbucks Amato worked at, workers promptly went on strike over the dismissal. Amato has a GoFundMe set up to help him transition out of his job, which has raised $3,825 at the time of writing

UNIONIZING. >> UNIONBUSTING HAS TO GO.
Unionized Starbucks employees say they're excluded from new benefits

Starbucks has been repeatedly accused of firing employees for organizing or being affiliated with the Starbuck Workers United Union, which has successfully unionized 183 stores. According to More Perfect Union, at least 70 pro-union Starbucks workers have been fired since February of this year. Amato is the ninth union organizer to be fired in the Buffalo area.

Starbucks has engaged in a massive union-busting effort as the traction for unionization increases. The company has been accused of faking tweets from the official Starbucks union, closing down pro-union stores, and sending out-of-state managers to spy on stores looking to unionize. Starbucks CEO Howard Schultz has said the country is being “assaulted” by the “threat of unionization”

“I can say I’m anti-union, and [that] I don’t want to see that at Starbucks. But I’m not an anti-union person,” he said in a town hall, insisting that he was instead "pro-Starbucks."

Reaction to Amato’s firing was swift on Twitter.

“I was abt to take the fam to #Starbucks, but we will not be returning anytime soon due to your firing Sam Amato in retaliation for his Union Leadership,” one user wrote. “You guys used to be a socially conscious company. What a shame.”

“Almost went to Starbucks this morning, but then didn’t because they fired [Amato] after 13 years of hard work and dedication because he was a union leader,” another said. “And we don’t support companies like that. Do better Starbucks.”

Starbucks did not respond to a request for comment from the Daily Dot.
Ocean warmth, seaweed scarcity threaten Fiji's fisherwomen's livelihoods

SUVA, Fiji (Reuters) - Karen Vusisa has been struggling to find a decent catch of a favourite Fijian edible seaweed, amid concerns that ocean temperatures have hit harvests and are threatening livelihoods of fisherwomen like her.


© Reuters/LOREN ELLIOTTFILE PHOTO: 
Rising sea levels are forcing Fiji's villagers to relocate.

Like many others, Vusisa, 52, is managing to collect only about half as much of the seaweed, nama, as she once did. She must hunt for it over wider areas, spending more time at sea.

"We are struggling to find some spot for a lot of nama," Sera Baleisasa, another Fijian fisherwoman, told Reuters.

Nama, found mostly in the waters off Fiji, resembles small green grapes. It is part of the Pacific island nation's daily diet and usually served soaked in coconut milk and added to salads.

It is also crucial for the livelihoods of hundreds of fisherwomen, who earn about $10 to $20 for a bag weighing 10 kg (22 lb.).


Related video: Is This One of the World’s Rarest Sharks? (Buzz60)
Duration 1:11

When harvesting, they leave the seaweed's roots intact to help with regrowth, then move on to collect at a regenerated patch. But for the past several years, they say, nama has been taking longer to grow back.

Marine biologist Alani Tuivucilevu blames warmer oceans for impairing growth of nama, which she says is "very sensitive to heat."


"It's saddening, really; it's saddening, because this has been their way of life," said Tuivucilevu, who works with research group Women in Fisheries Network Fiji. "Depletion of nama supply means eroding of a way of life and, to a certain degree, of culture and traditions."

Reports by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency showed that 2021 was the warmest year for the world's oceans since records began in the late 1800s.

Climate scientists have been warning that Pacific island countries are more vulnerable to climate change due to their reliance on the ocean for resources.

(Reporting by Jill Gralow; Writing by Renju Jose; Editing by Bradley Perrett)
Two miners trapped in Dominican Republic rescued with help from Canada


OTTAWA — Defence Minister Anita Anand says two miners who were trapped in an underground mine for 10 days in the Dominican Republic have been rescued with the help of Canada.



In a tweet on Tuesday, Anand said the Royal Canadian Air Force transported mining equipment to Santo Domingo following a request for assistance from the Dominican government.

Two miners with the Dominican Mining Corporation, known as Cormidom, had been trapped since July 31 in an underground mine.


According to a news release from the Dominican Republic Embassy on Saturday, Canada was expected to send over a mining excavation system made up of machines, tools and various rescue technologies.

The statement says the equipment was provided by Machines Roger International, a mining company based in Val-d'Or, Que.


Anand thanked the Royal Canadian Air Force personnel involved in the mission who arrived in the Dominican Republic on Sunday.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Aug. 9, 2022.

Two miners rescued in Dominican Republic after 10 days underground


Issued on: 09/08/2022 -
















Canada sent a military plane loaded with excavation equipment and other technology to help the rescue effort 
Erika SANTELICES afp/AFP


Santo Domingo (AFP) – Two miners were rescued in the Dominican Republic Tuesday, seemingly unharmed, after 10 days trapped underground and a massive operation, with support from Canada, to free them.

The miners were finally reached on Tuesday morning through a newly-dug rescue tunnel, a whole 10 days after they got caught underground after a rockslide, the Dominican Mining Corporation (CORMIDOM) said in a statement.

The pair, Dominican Gregores Mendez and Colombian Carlos Yepez had been trapped since July 31 at the Cerro de Maimon copper and zinc mine some 80 kilometers (50 miles) north of Santa Domingo.

More than 110 mining and other experts participated in the rescue effort, and a Canadian military plane arrived on Sunday with 26 tons of excavation equipment and other technology to help.

In a video distributed by the Dominican presidency on Tuesday, Mendez and Yepez are shown lying on stretchers, smiling as they greet President Luis Abinader even as medical personnel are checking their vital signs.

Yepez tells the camera that conditions underground were "good," with adequate ventilation, water and food.

"We slept comfortably, so to speak, so that made our stay not so bad," he said.

Abinader told the men he was "very happy" they were back safe.

The rescue came as efforts continued in Mexico to reach 10 workers trapped in a flooded mine nearly a week ago.

© 2022 AFP