Monday, January 16, 2023

‘People realise what we’re doing is right’: how nurses won PR battle over NHS strikes

Toby Helm Political editor
THE GUARDIAN
Sat, 14 January 2023 

Photograph: Sophia Evans/The Observer

Sara Gorton thought the Covid pandemic was as bad as things could get for the NHS. But now, as nurses, ambulance staff and other health workers plan more strikes in a service already on its knees, the woman leading pay negotiations for the health unions believes she was wrong. “This is worse – because it is a situation we are in because of political choice,” she says.

Prime minister Rishi Sunak and his ministers like to portray union leaders as leftwing militants, modern-day Arthur Scargills. By doing so they believe they can turn the public against the strikers as the disputes drag on and sympathy wears thin.

But Gorton, the head of health at Unison, the country’s biggest union, and chair of the NHS Staff Council representing staff in pay talks with ministers and employers, does not fit that stereotype at all.

Mild-mannered by nature but prepared to speak some brutal truths, she is a lethal weapon for those fighting for better pay. Armed with 20 years of experience of NHS pay rounds, Gorton is furious at the political games being played with the health service.

Covid was global and beyond our control, she says. But the current disaster is made by Tory politicians in Westminster. “With the pandemic, it felt like we were responding to something that was nobody’s fault. Whereas this feels like the people who are making decisions, particularly about funding, don’t care.”

It is a strong accusation to make against those she is negotiating with but she seems confident of when to lay things on the line, and when to be businesslike around a table. She describes meetings with ministers and officials, including one last Monday which yielded the first tentative signs of progress, as “always civil”. “They are cordial. We don’t sit in rooms and shout at people. But the steely side of me does come out. I am not a pushover.”

That is clear as she criticises ministers again and says unions are in tune with the public. “If you really cared about the population, you would see all of the opinion polls, the social attitudes surveys, that demonstrate that people in the UK prize having a good and efficient health service almost above everything, and you would reflect that in the way you run the country.”

In the battle for public opinion – the contest for hearts and minds – it is the unions who, if anything, seem to be winning in the early weeks of 2023.

The Sunak tactic of trashing the unions in the Commons, and claiming Labour is in their pockets week in, week out at prime minister’s questions, seems to be in serious danger of backfiring – and the likes of Gorton can sense it.


Ambulance workers in Newham, east London, during the second round of strikes last week.
Photograph: Guy Smallman/Getty Images

Our Opinium poll on Sunday shows the nurses and their leaders are far more popular than the government. While 34% of the public approve of the nurses’ handling of the dispute, 21% disapprove. Just 14% approve of the government’s stance, while 48% disapprove. Figures on the ambulance dispute are also tilted heavily in favour of the strikers. Labour’s lead is up two points since the last poll three weeks ago, after a period in which the news has been dominated by the crisis in the NHS and strikes.

There is other evidence that the unions are drawing strength from the current crisis. Health unions at the heart of the dispute, such as the Royal College of Nursing (RCN), have seen their memberships soar over recent weeks. The RCN’s is understood to have leapt by around 10% since last summer and has hit an all-time record of more than 500,000. Unison too reports strong growth.

One union source said: “People realise what we are doing is right. They identify with the cause.”

Last week, in a stilted party political broadcast, Sunak made no mention of the NHS strikes, and instead talked about how the government had pumped in record resources to pay for more more nurses and more doctors. But there are signs that others at the top of government, including the health secretary, Steve Barclay, are growing increasingly concerned at the escalating crisis.

New figures showing the worst ambulance response times on record in England caused serious alarm among Tory MPs and inside the government. The number of people waiting 12 hours or more to be admitted to A&E reached an all-time high. Average response times for people with a stroke, severe burns or chest pain was 93 minutes, five times the target of 18 minutes.

One senior Tory MP said toughing out the pay dispute and insisting there was no more money than the sums already offered was leading his party to certain disaster. “If this goes on into the spring and close to the May local elections, we will be murdered,” he said.

Gorton says that, at last Monday’s, talks Barclay hinted for the first time that there needed to be a change of approach and that more money than had been previously offered had to be put on the table. “I think he now wants to work with us to do this,” she said. “Whether he can or not, I think, depends on the chancellor [Jeremy Hunt] – which is ironic given his previous role [as health secretary] – and the prime minister.”

She added: “What is needed immediately is to settle the dispute, and what is required to do that is for the chancellor to commit funding over and above what has been invested this year so far.”

Intriguingly, Gorton told the Observer that Barclay actually asked that the unions help him persuade the Treasury that more investment in the NHS would yield greater efficiency. Paying more in wages and salaries would help retain staff, whereas leaving the recruitment crisis to worsen would add to problems and increase costs.

Asked if she could see some light ahead, Gorton said: “I can. Whether the light is extinguished quickly or not depends on the chancellor and the prime minister. The pressure has now moved upwards, and it feels like the secretary of state now understands the need not only for a swift resolution to the dispute but the need to invest in pay in order to deliver on promises for service renewal.”

Related: Most UK voters still back strikes by nurses and ambulance crews

She added: “Last Monday, he talked about asking us to help make the case to the Treasury for the investment needed. All of the agreements I have been involved with in the past have involved a certain amount of showing the benefits of investing.”

This weekend, Gorton is writing to Sunak and Hunt to ask them to host a meeting with the unions. The unions, it seems, may be succeeding in making sure that the crisis from now on is focused on Downing Street.
UK
Nurses to join picket lines at Colchester Hospital entrance - here is when


Liam Maynard
Sat, 14 January 2023

The Royal College of Nursing confirms picket lines will be held at Colchester Hospital's entrance (Image: PA)

NURSING staff at Colchester Hospital will take to the picket line next week.

Scheduled strikes are due to take place on January 18 and 19, from 7.30am, till 7.30pm, with picket lines set to ensure the nurses have their voices heard.

The Royal College of Nursing says picket lines will take place at the main entrances of both the Colchester Hospital and Ipswich Hospital on both days.

In a statement released on their website, the RCN said: “If you’re an RCN member scheduled to work on 18 or 19 January at this employer, you can participate in strike action by withdrawing your labour and not working on one or both of these dates.

“As a member of the RCN employed at East Suffolk and North Essex NHS Foundation Trust, you have the right to be part of lawful strike action at any of the picket lines above."

They further advised anyone not working on the days of the scheduled strikes can attend the picket lines, as well as members of the public, to show solidarity with striking nurses.

Responding to the strikes, hospital bosses confirmed earlier this week some patients may be informed that their non-urgent operations and appointments will have to be moved.

Alongside thousands of other members of the Royal College of Nursing, strike action will take place across the country on the same days, in response to staff shortages and low wages.

Nick Hulme, chief executive of ESNEFT had previously advised that the hospital had been preparing for the strikes, planning around what the impact of ESNEFT patients could be.

He said: "We are planning for all eventualities to keep patients safe – that is our top priority. We encourage all patients to come for their appointments unless they hear otherwise.

“We want to see a resolution as soon as possible to make sure we can continue to focus on delivering high-quality and compassionate patient care.”
DOCTORS AS PROLETARIANS
Sir Keir Starmer: I will slash ‘nonsense’ bureaucracy in the NHS


Camilla Turner
Sat, 14 January 2023

Writing for The Telegraph, Sir Keir Starmer says the situation for NHS patients is now 'intolerable and dangerous'
- Brian Lawless/PA

Sir Keir Starmer has vowed to slash “mind-boggling” NHS bureaucracy, as he said the service must either “reform or die”.

The Labour leader cautioned that “well-meaning reverence” for the health service has “supplanted reality”, adding that it must not be seen as “off limits” for criticism.

He outlined a series of reforms that a Labour government would bring in, which include allowing patients to bypass GPs to make self-referrals to specialists, as well as gradually turning family doctors into direct NHS employees.

It is the first time Sir Keir has publicly backed the proposals, previously mooted by Wes Streeting, the shadow health secretary.

Writing in The Telegraph, Sir Keir said the situation for NHS patients is now “intolerable and dangerous”, adding: “The idea the service is still ‘the envy of the world’ is plainly wrong.”

His remarks - which will be seen as a break from Labour’s traditional veneration of the NHS - come as nurses prepare for a fresh round of strikes on Wednesday and Thursday of this week.

Sir Keir also outlined Labour’s plans to crack down on the “bureaucratic nonsense” that patients encounter every day in the health service.

“Why can’t people with persistent back problems self-refer to physio?” he said. “Why if you notice bleeding do you have to get a GP appointment, simply to get the tests that you then do yourself at home?

“Every patient will have their own experience of these mundane inconveniences and inefficiencies. Across the system and across the country each one adds up, resulting in a mind-boggling waste of time, energy and money, all of which could be better spent.”

The NHS is facing one of its worst winter crises, with medics warning that hospitals are running out of oxygen because of the number of patients being treated in corridors and ambulances.

Heart attack victims were left waiting an average of 90 minutes for an ambulance last month – the worst waiting times on record.


Sir Keir said the situation for NHS patients is now 'intolerable and dangerous'
- PA

Sir Keir warned that “investment alone won’t be enough” to rescue the NHS and said he will tackle “ingrained thinking” among hospital managers to force change and modernisation of the service.

His message is a direct challenge to Rishi Sunak, who has made cutting down NHS waiting list times one of his key priorities as Prime Minister.

On Saturday night, Downing Street announced plans for a major expansion of his "virtual wards" initiative, whereby patients are treated at home as part of efforts to free up hospital beds.

Sir Keir said Mr Sunak’s promise to get waiting lists down is merely the “path of least resistance” and the “stale route to further decline” of the health service.

He described how the model of using doctors as the only “front door” of the NHS is no longer viable, as younger doctors are increasingly put off from taking on the “burdens and liabilities” of running GP practices.

Currently, GPs are self-employed and run their own practices under contracts awarded by the NHS. Sir Keir wants to gradually wind this down and make GPs direct employees of the NHS.


“It’s time for us to think about a new, sustainable system, one that allows GPs to focus on caring for patients rather than the admin that comes with effectively running a small business,” said Sir Keir.

“This would be a big change and it won’t happen overnight. But I am a pragmatist, focused on what works for patients.

“As GPs retire and those contracts are handed back, I want to phase in a new system that sees GPs fairly rewarded within the NHS, working much more closely with other parts of the system.”


ICYMI💩
Human Waste is Safe for Growing Vegetables, Researchers Say




Low De Wei
Sun, January 15, 2023 

(Bloomberg) -- As farmers in Europe and across the world grapple with increases in the cost of fertilizers, researchers suggest a solution may be closer to home in what people flush down the toilet.

A peer-reviewed paper by scientists in Europe published Monday in the journal Frontiers in Environmental Science found that fertilizer made from human feces and urine is safe to use, and that only extremely tiny quantities of chemicals from medicines or drugs, for example, would get into the food.

Governments worldwide are struggling to keep fertilizer costs manageable and increase self-sufficiency after Russia’s invasion of Ukraine drove up prices of natural gas, a key feedstock for crop nutrients. European Union authorities are considering ways to speed up development of manure-based fertilizers after the surge in costs spurred anger among the bloc’s farmers.

In terms of safety, the researchers screened human waste for 310 chemicals, from pharmaceuticals to insect repellents, and found that only 6.5% of these were above the limit for detection and at low concentrations. “In general, the risk for human health of pharmaceutical compounds entering the food system by means of fecal compost use, seems low,” the authors concluded.

While they detected two pharmaceutical products in edible parts of cabbages, the painkiller ibuprofen and the anticonvulsant drug carbamazepine, the concentrations were markedly low. This means that more than half a million cabbage heads would need to be eaten to accumulate a dose equivalent to one carbamazepine pill, they said.

The surge in fertilizer costs after the Russian invasion already spurred some farmers to turn to animal dung, and even human sewage, to replace synthetic crop nutrients, but these alternatives had not proved so effective. This study, however, suggests that some products processed from human waste can come close to matching the efficiency of artificial alternatives.

“If correctly prepared and quality-controlled, up to 25% of conventional synthetic mineral fertilizers in Germany could be replaced by recycling fertilizers from human urine and feces,” lead author Ariane Krause said.
Is climate change the same thing as global warming? Definitions explained.

Joel Shannon, USA TODAY

Sat, January 14, 2023 
Two terms – climate change and global warming – point to the same existential threat: Global temperatures have risen dramatically in about the past 150 years and scientists say they're on pace to radically alter life on Earth in coming decades.

Temperatures on our planet have fluctuated based on natural processes many times in the past, but experts say this extraordinary run of warming is different.

Global temperatures already have risen about 1.8 degrees Fahrenheit since about 1850, NASA says.

In the past, it took roughly thousands of years for global temperatures to change that much.

Such rapid change is alarming and is already disrupting the delicate balance of life on Earth.

Even so, lies about climate change stubbornly persist.


The global warming trend comes as the human population exploded in recent centuries and technological advances spewed enormous amounts of chemicals and gases into the atmosphere. Some of them, called greenhouse gases, are excellent at trapping heat.

Here's what to know about climate change:

Is climate change the same thing as global warming?


Yes and no.

The terms have different meanings, although they're often used interchangeably, according to NASA.

While the term "global warming" was used frequently in the past, the term "climate change" is used more often today because it includes the cascading consequences of rising temperatures occurring around the world – melting glaciers, rising seas, drought and more. "Global warming" refers more narrowly to the trend of rising temperatures.

What is causing climate change?

The Earth's climate changes through a variety of natural processes, but federal scientists say the rapid warming experienced recently is primarily caused by human activities that emit heat-trapping greenhouse gases.

That's why global efforts to fight climate change are so focused on eliminating the burning of fossil fuels, the most notable source of harmful greenhouse gases.

CLIMATE CHANGE CAUSES: Why scientists say humans are to blame.

LATEST NEWS: What happened to California's drought?

What are 5 effects of climate change?

Rising seas: Warming temperatures heat up oceans, causing water to expand, and melt huge amounts of ice. The higher sea levels aren't just felt at the coast but also far inland along rivers.


Drought: A "megadrought" in the West has been supercharged by warmer temperatures and a lack of rain.


Wildfires: Drought provides ideal conditions for wildfires. What's worse: Fires release massive amounts of greenhouse gases, which fuels more climate change.


Rain: A USA TODAY analysis of a century of precipitation data shows how, east of the Rockies, more rain is falling – and in more intense bursts.


Hurricanes: Evidence shows climate change is causing wetter hurricanes, but scientists say more data is needed before settling questions over future frequency.

EFFECTS OF CLIMATE CHANGE: How they disrupt our daily life, fuel disasters

What's the latest climate change news?

In January, a grim accounting emerged of the world's extreme weather and climate disasters in 2022.

The nation's two federal agencies charged with weather and climate observations said in 2022:

Ocean heat reached a new high

Arctic sea ice was second lowest level ever recorded

Europe saw its second warmest year on record, but much of western Europe was the warmest ever

Contributing: Dinah Voyles Pulver

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: What is climate change and global warming? Definitions explained.


What are the effects of climate change? How they disrupt our daily life, fuel disasters.

Dinah Voyles Pulver, USA TODAY
Sat, January 14, 2023

Climate change makes splashy headlines when protesters hurl soup at priceless paintings or devastating floods wash through communities, but the impacts of warmer temperatures are also increasingly disrupting daily life.

Take a walk or ride a bike. Book a ski trip or attend an outdoor sporting event. Visit a big city or a cottage in the country. Chances are increasing that no matter what choice you make, you'll feel the effects of the warming climate.

Fall leaf peeping happens earlier. High school football teams take special precautions to keep kids cool. Inner cities set up chill zones to help protect citizens from heat waves.

How does climate change affect you?: Subscribe to the weekly Climate Point newsletter

READ MORE: Latest climate change news from USA TODAY

Heat waves are becoming more intense and flooding rains occur more often. Even so, lies about climate change stubbornly persist.

Here's what to know about the effects of climate change:
Climate change is real

No matter what your relatives or friends say or post on social media, experts say the mountain of scientific evidence continues to build.

What to know about climate change: What is global warming? Definitions explained.

What are the causes of climate change?: Why scientists say humans are to blame.

“It is virtually certain that human activities have increased atmospheric levels of carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases,” a national panel of experts concluded in a draft of the 5th National Climate Assessment released in November. They see high confidence in forecasts for longer droughts, higher temperatures and increased flooding.


JULY 28, 2022: Aerial view of homes submerged under flood waters from the North Fork of the Kentucky River in Jackson, Kentucky. Flash flooding caused by torrential rains has killed at least eight people in eastern Kentucky and left some residents stranded on rooftops and in trees, the governor of the south-central US state said.

While global average temperatures continue rising around the world, the U.S. has experienced more warming than many other countries.

EXTREME HEAT: Is the globe prepared?

WILDFIRES: Another above-average wildfire season for 2022. How climate change is making fires harder to predict and fight.

Warming sea surface temperatures around the globe provide more fuel for tropical storms and exacerbate the melting of glaciers and ice sheets.
Why is climate change important?

“Every part of the U.S. is feeling the effects of climate change in some way,” said Allison Crimmins, director of that 5th National Climate Assessment. Representing the latest in climate research by a broad array of scientists, the final version of the assessment is expected in late 2023.

The U.S. East Coast is feeling the combined impacts of more intense storms and rising sea levels. Sunny day flooding is reaching record levels.

Sea levels are forecast to rise as much as 10-12 inches by 2050. Federal agencies say it's a "clear and present risk."

Homes at the beach face an increased threat of erosion and a rising number of homes are giving way to the sea, but it's not just a coastal problem.

Disaster costs are rising, and scientists warn the window to further curtail fossil fuel emissions and put a lid on rising temperatures is closing rapidly.
Is there a climate crisis?

Many scientists and officials worldwide agree: Yes. By the end of this century, projections show global average surface temperatures compared to pre-industrial times could increase by as much as 5.4 degrees.

Merriam-Webster defines "crisis" as a time of intense difficulty, trouble, or danger. A mix of warmer temperatures, extreme rainfall and rising sea levels often make naturally occurring disasters worse, while droughts become more intense and heat waves occur more often.

“The climate crisis is not a future threat, but something we must address today,” Richard Spinrad, administrator of National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, said in August 2022.

Earth sets new emissions record: Dire global warming milestone could come within a decade, report says

Warmer waters: Rising seas could swamp $34B in US real estate in just 30 years, analysis finds

The term “climate crisis” has been used to describe these worsening impacts since at least 1986. Since the United Nations’ Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change was organized in 1988, its reports steadily have grown more dire.

In April, U.N. Secretary-General António Guterres said broken climate promises "put us firmly on track toward an unlivable world."

The Fourth National Climate Assessment, released during the Trump administration, warned natural, built and social systems were “increasingly vulnerable to cascading impacts that are often difficult to predict, threatening essential services.”

Climate extremes show: Global warming has 'no sign of slowing'
Is climate change getting better?

Experts say the warming climate will have increasingly severe impacts on daily life, making it more difficult to access water and food, putting a strain on physical and mental health and challenging transportation and infrastructure.

“Every increased amount of warming will increase the risk of severe impacts, and so the more (rapidly) we can take strong action to reduce greenhouse gas emissions, the less severe the impacts will be,” Cornell University professor Rachel Bezner Kerr said after the release of one recent IPCC report.

Heat kills more humans each year than floods or hurricanes.

Studies warn the growth in wildfires in the West could mean an increase in dangerous air quality levels.

Warmer climates put animals on the move and increases the risk they’ll spread pathogens to other animals and to humans. A group of University of Hawaii researchers looked at how 376 human diseases and allergens such as malaria and asthma are affected by climate-related weather hazards and found nearly 60% have been aggravated by hazards, such as heat and floods.

Climate change also is displacing people in the U.S. and across the globe.
How does climate change affect us?

Agriculture, sports events and community festivals are feeling the heat.

Farmers are seeing more weather extremes and wilder swings between extreme drought and flooding.

Maple syrup producer Adam Parke has seen a 10-day shift forward in the maple sugar season on his Vermont farm over three decades.

Beef, citrus and cotton: Agriculture sees effects of 'weirding weather' from climate change

NASA reported in 2021 that decreases in global food supplies related to climate change could be apparent by 2030.

But agriculture also may be part of the solution to countering the increases in carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases.

Billions set aside by the Inflation Reduction Act is earmarked to help support agriculture and reduce its emissions.

Changing climate: Uncertain future for Northeast maple trees, syrup season

Warmer spring temperatures have forced organizers to move historic flower festivals forward.

To see further impacts, take a look at the time-honored Olympic tradition.

Two months after the 2022 winter games concluded in Beijing, a group of Olympians visited Washington to ask members of Congress to act on climate change, which they see as a threat to their sports.

Athletes flag dangers of manmade snow.


Nordic skiing future uncertain.


Olympians worry as winter disappears.

The Summer 2024 Olympics are scheduled to kick off in July in France, where the country's meteorological officials expect 2022 to be its hottest year since records began in 1900. Meanwhile, the International Olympic Committee has delayed choosing the location for the 2030 winter games, in part over climate concerns.

Olympic host city selection on hold: Why? It may not be cold enough.

Even fly fisherman see changes all around them. “Everyone knows if this keeps up, the places we can fish for trout are going to be limited,” said Tom Rosenbauer of Vermont, whose job title at sporting goods retailer Orvis is chief enthusiast.

How does climate change affect animals?

Warmer temperatures are forcing some animal species to move beyond their typical home ranges, increasing the risk that infectious viruses they carry could be transmitted to other species they haven’t encountered before. That poses a threat to human and animal health around the world.

Heat's impact: Climate change could cause mass extinction of marine life in Earth's oceans, study says


A roseate spoonbill stands bright against the green of a southeast Arkansas swamp. Jami Linder, an Arkansas photographer, documented the first spoonbill nest in the state in 2020.


“Climate change and pandemics are not separate things,” epidemiologist Colin Carlson, told USA TODAY. “We have to take that seriously as a real-time threat.”

Invasive species are expanding their ranges and even native animals are changing their habits. In South America and Africa, some primate species are leaving the treetops more often.

In the U.S., roseate spoonbills, a brilliant pink wading bird, are moving north as temperatures warm and they're pushed out of native coastal habitats by rising sea levels.

“Climate change and pandemics are not separate things,” . “We have to take that seriously as a real-time threat.” and even native animals are changing their habits. In South America and Africa, some more often. In the U.S., roseate spoonbills, a brilliant pink wading bird, and they're pushed out of native coastal habitats by rising sea levels. Go deeper on climate change Climate change fact check: Trouble on the farm: Rogue waves?: It's not that funny:

Help from government: This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:
Martin Luther King Jr. embraced Jewish people. Remember that as antisemitism rises. | Hill

LeBron Hill
Sun, January 15, 2023

A few weeks ago, I celebrated my one-year anniversary with my partner LilyFish, who works in Jewish education.

I am Black and LilyFish is white. Though I grew up in a Christian household, I have enjoyed learning about Judaism.

Our anniversary also means I have celebrated every Jewish holiday in the Hebrew calendar, finishing with Hanukkah.

For eight nights, just as the sun would set, LilyFish would set the candles on the menorah and begin saying the Hanukkah blessings in Hebrew.

I did not understand everything that was going, but what I did understand was the smile LilyFish gave me as we watched the candles burn on the menorah, guessing which one would be the last to go out. My candle lasted the longest.


Tennessean Columnist LeBron Hill with his partner LilyFish Gomberg

I like to think that my first year experience of Jewish culture and Judaism has been lucky because it's based in love, but it hasn't all been easy.
Kanye West's antisemitic tirade sparks concerns

When Kanye West began his antisemitic Twitter tirade in 2022, I saw it as another desperate attention grab. So, I gave it no time, until LilyFish's and my dynamic hit me the face.

One day, during Sukkot — a Jewish harvest festival — and in the midst of rising antisemitism thanks to Kanye's remarks, I took LilyFish out to lunch.

As we sat down and began to eat our food, I heard someone say "Blacks and Jews, it's pretty crazy right!?"

I turned around and to see it was the white woman who had been looking at us in the line as we ordered our ramen. She continued to talk and explained how she's been watching the news and grew concerned about antisemitism in the Black community.

The lady then complimented LilyFish's rainbow kippah a traditional skullcap. Not most none-Jews know to call it that, which led me to ask her: "Are you Jewish?" "Yes!" she said with excitement.

LilyFish and the woman ended up having a lovely conversation about Jewish community.

I felt like a dodged a bullet when it turned out the woman was pleasant because I thought: "I'm totally unprepared to face antisemitism."

I realized I needed to educate myself on antisemitism and learn how to prevent it. I began learning from one of my heroes, Martin Luther King Jr.

MLK stood united with the Jewish community


While reading the book "Shared Dreams: Martin Luther King Jr. and the Jewish Community" by Mark Schneier, I learned the civil rights icon found commonality between the two groups of people.

"There are Hitlers loose in America today, both in high and low places," Dr. King said according to the book. "As the tensions and bewilderment of economic problems become more severe, history's scapegoats -- the Jews -- will be joined by new scapegoats, the Negroes. The Hitlers will seek to divert people's minds and turn their frustrations and anger to the helpless and the outnumbered. Then whether the Negro and Jew shall live in peace will depend upon how firmly they resist, how effectively they reach the minds of the decent Americans to halt this deadly diversion."

King's solidarity with Jewish people went beyond just marching alongside them. He appreciated their faith.

"I strongly disagree with the statement ... that more than 5.5 million Jews in America are 'lost without hope'," Dr. King said in response to when Southern Baptist ministers tried to invalidate the Jewish faith. "This type of narrow sectarianism can only lead to irrational religious bigotry and serve to create a dangerous climate of separation between people of different religious persuasion."

But it's not to say that all Black and Jewish communities completely aligned.

In November 1956 when the Supreme Court ruled segregation on buses were unconstitutional, the Jewish community in Montgomery, where the boycott took place, stayed neutral on the subject. Local Rabbi Eugene Blachshleger "made no public pronouncements on (desegregation) either from my pulpit or in the columns of our daily press."

Even still, Dr. King kept his relationship with the Jewish community.

Let us be inspired by MLK to have a conversation.


I imagine while marching on the Selma bridge and before giving his "I Have a Dream" speech in 1963, Dr. King looked around and saw his Black and Jewish brothers and sisters and witnessed unity.

Ultimately, I learned that the first step in combating antisemitism is education. After the conversation LilyFish and I had with the woman at the ramen restaurant, I could have just moved on and not given it another thought. Instead, I chose to learn about Judaism. I attend events at Moishe House Nashville, a Jewish community building space, and immerse myself in Jewish community.

Dr. King knew that understanding folks who are different than you is the first step to building community with them, and thus making meaningful change in the world.

Let Dr. King’s words and actions not just inspire us, but push us to learn about the Jewish community through personal relationships and education.

Let's unite by what we have in common, not what makes us different.

LeBron Hill is an opinion columnist for the USA TODAY Network Tennessee and the curator of the Black Tennessee Voices Instagram account. Feel free to contact him at LHill@gannett.com 

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Antisemitism: Remember, Martin Luther King Jr. embraced Jewish people
Vulcan Energy, Stellantis to develop renewable energy assets in Germany


The logo of Stellantis is seen on a company's building in Velizy-Villacoublay near Paris


Mon, January 16, 2023 

(Reuters) - Automaker Stellantis is set to invest in a geothermal energy project in Germany with lithium developer Vulcan Energy Resources to help power a manufacturing facility for electric vehicles, Vulcan said on Tuesday.

The phased project is aimed at providing renewable heat to Stellantis' Rüsselsheim manufacturing facility, which produces the DS 4 and Opel Astra models, Australia-based Vulcan said in a statement.

Vulcan will initially carry out a pre-feasibility study for the development of geothermal renewable energy projects in Rüsselsheim.

The parties will seek public funding opportunities together to advance the project, Vulcan said.

Stellantis, which holds an 8% stake in Vulcan, will aim to source funding for 50% of the project development after the first phase of the project.

Stellantis wants battery electric vehicles to make up 100% of its European passenger car sales by 2030. It recently signed a deal with Australian miner Element 25 for the supply of manganese sulphite for batteries for its electric vehicles.

Vulcan already has a deal with Stellantis to supply lithium from its project in the Upper Rhine Valley.

(Reporting by Himanshi Akhand in Bengaluru; editing by Deepa Babington and Leslie Adler)
OLD FASHIONED CRIMINAL CAPITALI$M
General Motors takes its racketeering case against Stellantis to Supreme Court

Eric D. Lawrence, Detroit Free Press
Sat, January 14, 2023 

General Motors wasn’t content with an appeals court decision dismissing its racketeering case against Fiat Chrysler Automobiles, now known as Stellantis, so it’s asking the U.S. Supreme Court to weigh in.

GM’s case, which dates to a filing in federal court in Detroit in November 2019, is tied to the long-running corruption scandal that sent former top UAW leaders and former auto executives to prison and led to a conviction for FCA US, Stellantis’ U.S. operating arm, and an independent monitor for the union. The UAW was not named as a defendant in the GM case. The scandal involved the embezzlement and misuse of millions of dollars for lavish goodies, including travel, dining and even a Ferrari.


Sergio Marchionne, left, and Dennis Williams, who was then UAW president but later convicted in the corruption scandal, shake hands during a ceremony to mark the opening of contract negotiations between the UAW and Fiat Chrysler Automobiles in Detroit in 2015. General Motors claims that Marchionne, the late, former CEO of FCA, corrupted the bargaining process to hurt GM and has taken its case against FCA US, the U.S. operating arm of Stellantis, to the U.S. Supreme Court.


More:Prosecutor: Corruption case involving FCA might be unmatched in U.S. history

GM claims FCA and its legendary late boss Sergio Marchionne corrupted the contract bargaining process to hurt GM by saddling it with unnecessary extra labor costs in an attempt to force a merger between the automakers. That merger never happened, but GM said the damage was done.

“As the sordid details of the scheme unfolded, it became increasingly clear that FCA’s corruption had not only benefitted FCA but directly harmed GM, both by ensuring that GM would consistently be denied concessions the UAW gave to FCA, and by corrupting the pattern-bargaining process to force GM to shoulder more than $1 billion in labor costs above what it would have expended absent FCA’s racketeering,” according to a GM filing this month with the Supreme Court.

Stellantis has repeatedly pushed back against GM’s claims, as it did again Friday.

"As we have said from the date this lawsuit was filed, it is meritless and we will continue to defend ourselves vigorously and pursue all available remedies in response to this groundless lawsuit," according to a statement from spokeswoman Shawn Morgan.

More:Joe Ashton, ex-GM board member, sentenced to 30 months in UAW scandal

The federal lawsuit, which had been dismissed with prejudice at the District Court level, captured headlines, not just because it pitted two Detroit automakers against each other, but also because U.S. District Judge Paul Borman tried unsuccessfully to have GM CEO Mary Barra and FCA's then-CEO Mike Manley meet to hash out a resolution. Borman indicated the case would be a waste of resources if allowed to proceed, and that the country, in the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic lockdowns and the anger over George Floyd’s death at the hands of police, needed to heal.

GM appealed the lower court's decision, but a three-judge panel of the 6th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals affirmed the District Court’s dismissal in August.

That set the stage for GM's current actions.

"We are seeking Supreme Court review of the Sixth Circuit’s decision that would allow FCA to escape liability under the federal racketeering statute for the harm it inflicted on GM through its admitted corruption," according to a statement from spokeswoman Maria Raynal.

More:UAW presidential hopefuls offer competing visions for union's future

GM, in a filing this month referenced earlier by the website law360.com, noted that the appeals court held that GM can’t recover damages for its injuries “even though it was the direct and intended victim of this quintessential racketeering scheme. That conclusion defies statutory text, precedent, and common sense.”

It’s not clear how quickly any new decisions might come in the case. A filing deadline related to the legal process is in March, according to the Supreme Court website.

This article originally appeared on Detroit Free Press: GM takes case against rival Stellantis to Supreme Court
Israel's Cognyte won tender to sell intercept spyware to Myanmar before coup -documents

The headquarters of the Israeli company Cognyte in Herzliya near Tel Aviv


Sat, January 14, 2023 
By Fanny Potkin and Poppy McPherson

SINGAPORE (Reuters) -Israel's Cognyte Software Ltd won a tender to sell intercept spyware to a Myanmar state-backed telecommunications firm a month before the Asian nation's February 2021 military coup, according to documents reviewed by Reuters.

The deal was made even though Israel has claimed it stopped defence technology transfers to Myanmar following a 2017 ruling by Israel's Supreme Court, according to a legal complaint recently filed with Israel's attorney general and disclosed on Sunday.

While the ruling was subjected to a rare gag order at the request of the state and media cannot cite the verdict, Israel's government has publicly stated on numerous occasions that defence exports to Myanmar are banned.

The complaint, led by high-profile Israeli human rights lawyer Eitay Mack who spearheaded the campaign for the Supreme Court ruling, calls for a criminal investigation into the deal. It accuses Cognyte and unnamed defence and foreign ministry officials who supervise such deals of "aiding and abetting crimes against humanity in Myanmar."

The complaint was filed on behalf of more than 60 Israelis, including a former speaker of the house as well as prominent activists, academics and writers.

The documents about the deal, provided to Reuters and Mack by activist group Justice for Myanmar, are a January 2021 letter with attachments from Myanmar Posts and Telecommunications (MPT) to local regulators that list Cognyte as the winning vendor for intercept technology and note the purchase order was issued "by 30th Dec 2020".

Intercept spyware can give authorities the power to listen in on calls, view text messages and web traffic including emails, and track the locations of users without the assistance of telecom and internet firms.

Representatives for Cognyte, Myanmar’s military government and MPT did not respond to multiple Reuters requests for comment. Japan's KDDI Corp and Sumitomo Corp, which have stakes in MPT, declined to comment, saying they were not privy to details on communication interception.

Israel's attorney general did not respond to requests for comment about the complaint. The foreign affairs ministry did not respond to requests for comment about the deal, while the defence ministry declined to comment.

Two people with knowledge of Myanmar’s intercept plans separately told Reuters the Cognyte system was tested by MPT. They declined to be identified for fear of retribution by Myanmar's junta.

MPT uses intercept spyware, a source with direct knowledge of the matter and three people briefed on the issue told Reuters although they did not identify the vendor. Reuters was unable to determine whether the sale of Cognyte intercept technology to MPT was finalised.

Even before the coup, public concern had mounted in Israel about the country's defence exports to Myanmar after a brutal 2017 crackdown by the military on the country's Rohingya population while Aung San Suu Kyi's government was in power. The crackdown prompted the petition led by Mack that asked the Supreme Court to ban arms exports to Myanmar.

Since the coup, the junta has killed thousands of people including many political opponents, according to the United Nations.














COGNYTE UNDER FIRE


Many governments around the world allow for what are commonly called ‘lawful intercepts’ to be used by law enforcement agencies to catch criminals but the technology is not ordinarily employed without any kind of legal process, cybersecurity experts have said.

According to industry executives and activists previously interviewed by Reuters, Myanmar's junta is using invasive telecoms spyware without legal safeguards to protect human rights.

Mack said Cognyte's participation in the tender contradicts statements made by Israeli officials after the Supreme court ruling that no security exports had been made to Myanmar.

While intercept spyware is typically described as "dual-use" technology for civilian and defence purposes, Israeli law states that "dual-use" technology is classified as defence equipment.

Israeli law also requires companies exporting defence-related products to seek licenses for export and marketing when doing deals. The legal complaint said any officials who granted Cognyte licenses for Myanmar deals should be investigated. Reuters was unable to determine whether Cognyte obtained such licenses.

Around the time of the 2020 deal, the political situation in Myanmar was tense with the military disputing the results of an election won by Suu Kyi.

Norway's Telenor, previously one of the biggest telecoms firms in Myanmar before withdrawing from the country last year, also said in a Dec. 3, 2020 briefing and statement that it was concerned about Myanmar authorities’ plans for a lawful intercept due to insufficient legal safeguards.

Nasdaq-listed Cognyte was spun off in February 2021 from Verint Systems Inc, a pioneering giant in Israel's cybersecurity industry.

Cognyte, which had $474 million in annual revenue for its last financial year, was also banned from Facebook in 2021. Facebook owner Meta Platforms Inc said in a report Cognyte "enables managing fake accounts across social media platforms".

Meta said its investigation identified Cognyte customers in a range of countries such as Kenya, Mexico and Indonesia and their targets included journalists and politicians. It did not identify the customers or the targets.

Meta did not respond to a request for further comment.

Norway’s sovereign wealth fund last month dropped Cognyte from its portfolio, saying states said to be customers of its surveillance products and services "have been accused of extremely serious human rights violations". The fund did not name any states.

Cognyte has not responded publicly to the claims made by Meta or Norway's sovereign wealth fund.

(Reporting by Fanny Potkin in Singapore & Poppy McPherson in Bangkok; Additional reporting by Kiyoshi Takenaka in Tokyo and Dan Williams in Tel Aviv; Editing by Edwina Gibbs)
UN: Afghan bank’s cash remarks ‘misleading, unhelpful’


This is a locator map for Afghanistan with its capital, Kabul. 

Sun, January 15, 2023

KABUL, Afghanistan (AP) — The U.N. criticized Afghanistan’s Taliban-controlled central bank for making “misleading and unhelpful” remarks about cash destined for humanitarian work. It comes amid growing tension between the global body and the country's rulers over bans on female education and employment.

The U.N. uses the money mostly to provide millions of Afghans with critical humanitarian assistance, flying in cash because of banking disruptions since the Taliban seized power in August 2021.

Foreign aid stopped after the takeover. World governments imposed sanctions, halted bank transfers and froze billions more in Afghanistan’s currency reserves, unwilling to work with the Taliban, given their rule in the late 1990s and their refusal to educate girls and allow women to work.

The Taliban have, in the last 18 months, barred females from education beyond sixth grade, including university, from public spaces and from most employment.

Most recently, they barred women from working at national and international non-governmental organizations. That has drawn condemnation from the U.N., aid agencies and foreign governments and raised concerns that Afghans will suffer and even die if female workers continue to be excluded from humanitarian work. The Taliban show no signs of reversing these edicts, despite repeated calls to do so and visits from high-level U.N. and other foreign officials.

Their chief spokesman says authorities will not allow un-Islamic activities in Afghanistan and that politics should be kept out of humanitarian aid.

The U.N. in Afghanistan issued a statement late Saturday in response to a tweet from the Taliban-controlled central bank, which said a package of $40 million was deposited in a commercial bank in the Afghan capital, Kabul. It posted a photo of wads of cash.

“Da Afghanistan Bank (the Afghan central bank) appreciates any principled move that will bring currency to the country and help the needy in the society,” the tweet said.

But the U.N. said its cash is placed into designated accounts in a private bank and distributed directly to its agencies and a small number of “approved and vetted” humanitarian partners in Afghanistan.

“None of the cash brought is deposited in the Central Bank of Afghanistan nor provided to the Taliban de facto authorities by the UN," the world body said in a statement. "Announcements by non-UN entities about UN. fund shipments are misleading & unhelpful.”

The United Nations has flown in around $1.8 billion in funds for the U.N. and its partners to carry out their work since December 2021.

It said the amount of cash brought in to Afghanistan is proportional to the U.N.’s program of humanitarian assistance in Afghanistan.

“If the volume of assistance that the UN is able to provide diminishes the amount of cash shipped will be reduced,” the U.N. said.

It said the cash transfer mechanism has proved to be essential in the provision of life-saving assistance to more than 25 million Afghans.