Wednesday, September 27, 2023

Why separating fact from fiction is critical in teaching US slavery

Richard Handler, Professor of Anthropology, University of Virginia
 Eric Gable, Professor of Anthropology, University of Mary Washington

Tue, September 26, 2023
THE CONVERSATION

A Black actor in 1974 impersonating an enslaved man in Colonial Williamsburg in Virginia.
George Bryant/Toronto Star via Getty Images


Of all the debate over teaching U.S. slavery, it is one sentence of Florida’s revised academic standards that has provoked particular ire: “Instruction includes how slaves developed skills which, in some instances, could be applied for their personal benefit.”

Does this sentence constitute “propaganda,” as Vice President Kamala Harris proclaimed, “an attempt to gaslight us?”

Or is it a reasonable claim in a discussion of a difficult topic?

Whatever it is, the sentence is of a sort not unique to the teaching of enslavement in Florida. It is, instead, an example of how some Americans transform the racist history of this country into an uplifting – and sanitized – moral lesson.
Truth or fiction?

In our view as cultural anthropologists, the disputed sentence is true as historians define facts – tiny nuggets of truth one can find in archives, artifacts and diaries.

It is a fact that small numbers of the enslaved acquired skills that allowed them to earn money, to save it and to buy their freedom and the freedom of family members.

It is also a fact that freed Black people in the antebellum era helped other Black people to also acquire skills and became part of a segregated Black middle class in many Southern cities.

One might argue that such a sentence, because it is true, should not give rise to protest. But as scholars who have studied how history is taught in America, we learned that this particular nugget is neither trivial nor insignificant.

Instead, the one sentence in Florida’s new standards allows Americans to transform a story about what we today call structural racism into an apocryphal story about Horatio Alger and America’s rags-to-riches melting pot.

As this line of thinking goes, enslaved ancestors of contemporary African Americans labored just as most contemporary Americans’ ancestors labored: at the bottom, but able to climb up the social ladder with hard work and discipline.

And this is the problem: To portray enslaved people as laborers like free laborers is exactly how not to teach about slavery.

But it is a commonly used method that is called a “switching mechanism.” In this example, the story about the horrors of the slave system is transformed into a story about opportunity, success and the American dream.

Switching the story at Colonial Williamsburg

Thirty years ago, when we conducted anthropological research at Colonial Williamsburg, we encountered the same narrative switching mechanism that is occurring now in Florida.

At that time, the world-famous Virginia outdoor history museum depicting a genteel, colonial America was trying to present the public with a truer picture of the past by incorporating the history of what they called “the Other Half” – the enslaved people who had been all but absent from the museum’s past portrayals.


In this 2001 photograph, Black ‘interpreters’ are acting as carpenters in Colonial Williamsburg. Education Images/Getty Images

But it was difficult, we found, for the museum to sustain a narrative about the evils of the slave system. That’s because much of its paying audience of white middle-class tourists did not want to dwell on such tales, and second, its “interpreters,” or guides, found ways to switch the narrative.

Starting from a story about the enslaved being someone else’s property, they would transition to one suggesting the enslaved were working for their own advancement.

We heard stories during our research like this:


• Don’t imagine that 18th century Williamsburg was like mid-19th century Mississippi cotton plantations, with families torn apart by avaricious masters, whippings, shackles and rape. Instead, in Williamsburg, slaves were valuable property.

• Consider that your average white yeoman farmer of the time had an annual income of about 20 pounds. Now consider that a highly trained slave cook was worth 500 pounds. Would your average owner be likely to abuse such a valuable piece of property? No! They’d treat that slave like an NFL quarterback!

Such stories conflated an enslaved laborer’s monetary value to his owner and the income of a white laborer. And that is how many visitors we listened to interpreted what they were hearing.

In other instances, we found conflicting messages.

In a skit that took us to the basement of an elite white Williamsburg household during Christmas, we witnessed Black interpreters portraying enslaved houseboys, maids and cooks complaining that they had to work harder than ever to create the festive atmosphere their owners desired. Meanwhile, upstairs, white interpreters portraying gentlemen conversing waxed philosophical about the evils of slavery coupled with the impossibility of getting rid of it.

A Black actor playing a slave walks past a farmhouse in Colonial Williamsburg in 1995.
Nik Wheeler/Corbis via Getty Images

At the conclusion of the story, we talked to two members of the audience who, it turns out, had learned different lessons.

One concluded that she had witnessed a universal story because workers everywhere grumble about their bosses. The other pointed out that if she disliked her boss, she could quit her job – something the enslaved couldn’t do.

Still, both were relieved to hear that slavery did not sit easy on the consciences of the white elite.

Structural inequality or Horatio Alger?

Switching mechanisms such as these are hard to dislodge. They remake the worst parts of the American story into a story consonant with the American Dream.

Today, not much has changed in Williamsburg. In Florida and many other states, switching allows designers of history curricula to avoid discussions on the lasting effects of racialized slave labor. They avoid discussing what that has meant to millions of people who did not, will not and cannot start on the same rung of the ladder of upward mobility that is available to other Americans who do not share a history of enslavement.

In our view, that is not a story that many Americans want to tell, teach or hear.

And so they switch to a different one, in which equal opportunity has been achieved, every one of us is capable of overcoming seemingly insurmountable odds, and failure to rise must be a result of individual weakness and vice.

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

It was written by: Eric Gable, University of Mary Washington and Richard Handler, University of Vir

Read more:

Florida’s academic standards distort the contributions that enslaved Africans made to American society

3 ways to improve education about slavery in the US

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18,325 workers at 41 facilities in 21 states: UAW strike of the Detroit 3 by the numbers


Detroit Free Press
Updated Tue, September 26, 2023



After the UAW strike against the Detroit Three automakers expanded by 38 parts distribution facilities and about 5,600 workers, here's a state-by-state breakdown of the sites and total workers.

Michigan — 6,850 workers

Not surprisingly, Michigan has the most workers and the most facilities affected, with 14. The state was hit almost equally in the first and second waves, with 3,300 workers in the first list and 3,550 in the second. Here are the plants and approximate numbers for how many workers at each:

Ford

Michigan Assembly in Wayne: 3,300 (final assembly and paint workers only)

General Motors

Davis Road Processing Center in Davison: 1,150


Flint Processing Center in Swartz Creek: 400


Pontiac Redistribution: 300


Lansing Redistribution: 200


Willow Run Redistribution in Belleville: 175


Ypsilanti Processing Center in Ypsilanti: 175

Stellantis

Marysville Parts Distribution Center: 300


Other plants: 850 (per facility numbers were not available but the second round included Centerline Packaging, Centerline Warehouse, Warren Parts Distribution Center, Sherwood Parts Distribution Center in Warren, QEC in Auburn Hills and Romulus Parts Distribution Center)

Ohio – 6,000 workers


Ohio was the biggest state for the first targets, with 5,800 workers at the Stellantis’ Toledo Assembly Complex going out. The second wave of walkouts included 100 workers each at Stellantis’ Cleveland Parts Distribution Center in Streetsboro and Cincinnati Parts Distribution in West Chester.

Missouri – 3,600 workers

Spared in the second round of targets, Missouri took a hit with 3,600 workers going on strike at GM’s Wentzville Assembly Plant in the first round.

The remaining states were only affected by the second round of strike targets.

California – 200

Stellantis’ Los Angeles Parts Distribution Center in Ontario: 125


GM’s Rancho Cucamonga Parts Distribution: 75
Illinois – 200

Stellantis’ Chicago Parts Distribution Center in Naperville: 100

GM’s Chicago Parts Distribution in Bolingbrook: 100

More: Experts: Shawn Fain's biting style is creating a moment, just like another UAW labor icon

Texas – 200 workers

GM’s Fort Worth Parts Distribution in Roanoke: 100


Stellantis’ Dallas Parts Distribution Center in Carrollton: 100
Tennessee – 175

All at the Memphis AC Delco Parts Distribution center (GM)
Wisconsin – 150

Stellantis’ Milwaukee Parts Distribution Center: 75


GM’s Hudson Parts Distribution: 75
Colorado – 100

Stellantis’ Denver Parts Distribution Center in Commerce City: 50


GM’s Denver Parts Distribution: 50
Georgia – 100

All at Stellantis’ Atlanta Parts Distribution Center in Morrow
North Carolina – 100

All at GM’s Charlotte Parts Distribution
West Virginia – 100

All at GM’s Martinsburg Parts Distribution
Florida – 75

All at Orlando Parts Distribution Center
Mississippi – 75

All at GM’s Jackson Parts Distribution in Brandon
New York – 75

All at Stellantis’ New York Parts Distribution Center in Tappan
Pennsylvania – 75

All at GM’s Philadelphia Parts Distribution
Massachusetts – 50

All at Stellantis’ Boston Parts Distribution Center
Minnesota – 50

All at Stellantis’ Minneapolis Parts Distribution Center in Plymouth
Nevada – 50

All at GM’s Reno Parts Distribution Center
Oregon – 50

All at Stellantis’ Portland Parts Distribution Center in Beaverton
Virginia – 50

All at Stellantis’ Winchester Parts Distribution Center
By company

Stellantis — 7,950: 5,800 at Toledo Assembly Complex in the first round of targets and 2,150 across 20 facilities in the second round

General Motors — 7,075: 3,600 at the Wentzville Assembly Plant in Missouri in the first round of targets and 2,150 across 18 facilities in the second round

Ford — 3,300: All were among the first round of targets, final assembly and paint workers striking from Michigan Assembly in Wayne.
Map: UAW strike locations
Strikes this year

This is likely the fourth largest strike by number of workers affected in the U.S. this year. The Bureau of Labor Statistics says that, as of Aug. 31, there had been three larger in 2023: Screen Actors Guild-American Federation of Television and Radio Artists has approximately 160,000 workers on strike since July 13; the Service Employees International Union's strike against the Los Angeles Unified School District from March 21-23 affected 65,000 employees, and 20,000 UNITE HERE members are on strike against Los Angeles and Orange County hotels.

This article originally appeared on Detroit Free Press: UAW strike of General Motors, Ford, Stellantis by the numbers
SCAB VIOLENCE
5 workers picketing in UAW strike hit by vehicle outside Flint-area plant

AP Finance
Updated Tue, September 26, 2023 

United Auto Workers picket outside the Flint Processing Center where multiple people were hit on Tuesday, Sept. 26, 2023, in Swartz Creek, Mich. About five people picketing in the United Auto Workers strike outside the Flint-area General Motors plant suffered minor injuries Tuesday when a vehicle leaving the plant struck them, police said. (Roberto Acosta/The Flint Journal via AP) (ASSOCIATED PRESS)More


SWARTZ CREEK, Mich. (AP) — About five people picketing in the United Auto Workers strike outside a Flint-area General Motors plant suffered minor injuries Tuesday when a vehicle leaving the plant struck them, police said.

The striking workers were blocking a driveway, and an employee was trying to leave the Flint Processing Center in Swartz Creek when the collision occurred just before 4 p.m., Chief Matthew Bade of the Metro Police Authority of Genesee County said.

The employee drove through the picket line to leave the plant, Bade said. The employee has not been located.

GM spokesperson Jack Crawley issued a statement saying the company “is committed to the health and safety of all employees.”
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"Plant leadership is working closely with local authorities to investigate and understand what happened,” the statement said.

UAW Region 1-D President Steve Dawes told The Flint Journal that two of the five people struck were taken to a local hospital.

“It was uncalled for,” Dawes said. “These people are out here, you know these are my membership, and they’re out here doing a peaceful, legal demonstration."

“This is very serious and we’re going to be pushing this issue," he said.

The Flint Processing Center is one of 38 locations where workers walked off the job last week in the widening strike by the UAW against GM, Ford and Stellantis.

Despite concerns that a prolonged strike could undermine the economy, particularly in the crucial battleground state of Michigan, President Biden encouraged workers to keep fighting for better wages at a time when car companies have seen rising profits.

Five UAW workers injured in hit-and-run at Michigan picket line outside GM factory

Josh Marcus
Tue, September 26, 2023 

Five people were injured when a vehicle drove through a crowd of United Auto Workers members protesting outside of a GM facility in Swartz Creek, Michigan.

The incident occurred at around 4pm on Tuesday, sending two to the hospital, according to the Metro Police Authority of Genesee County.

“It was uncalled for,” UAW Region 1-D President Steve Dawes told MLive-The Flint Journal. “These people are out here, you know these are my membership, and they’re out here doing a peaceful, legal demonstration.

“This is very serious and we’re going to be pushing this issue,” he added.

Officials are still searching for the individual responsible, described as driving a dark vehicle that may be a PT Cruiser.

The workers outside the GM’s Flint Processing Center are part of the 38 different shops which have walked off the production line since the UAW went on strike earlier this month.

“Plant leadership is working closely with local authorities to investigate and understand what happened,” Jack Crawley, a spokesman for General Motors, told ABC News.

Joe Biden visited strikers in Michigan on Tuesday to show support, appearing at a picket line in a UAW hat.

“The fact of the matter is is that you guys – the UAW – saved the automobile industry back in 2008 ... you gave up a lot and the companies were in trouble, but now they’re doing incredibly well,” he said. “And guess what? You should be doing incredibly well, too”.

Mr Biden said the workers should “stick with it” because they “deserve a significant raise and other benefits,” and to “get back what [they] lost” during the crisis.

“You saved them, now it’s time that they step up for us,” he added.

As The Independent has reported, protesters across the country have faced a spate of vehicle attacks, particularly those advocating for racial justice after the murder of George Floyd.

In the summer of 2020, between May and July alone, there were 104 vehicular attacks at Black Lives Matter protests all across the country, according to a USA Today analysis, from Albuquerque to Visalia, California, to Minneapolis, where a man drove a semi-truck through a crowd of demonstrators on Interstate 35.

In some cases, as with a June 2020 attack in a Richmond, Virginia, suburb, or the 2017 killing of Heather Heyer, who was protesting against a neo-Nazi rally in Charlottesville, the drivers had explicit ties to white supremacist groups. In others, as with a May 2020 Black Lives Matter protest in Brooklyn, it’s the police themselves ramming demonstrators.




Ford to immediately pause work on massive, controversial Marshall project

Dave Boucher, Phoebe Wall Howard and Clara Hendrickson, Detroit Free Press
Updated Tue, September 26, 2023 


Ford Motor Co. is "pausing work" on a multibillion dollar electric vehicle battery plant that garnered substantial praise from Gov. Gretchen Whitmer and others but prompted outcries from local residents.

“We’re pausing work and limiting spending on construction on the Marshall site, effective today, until we’re confident about our ability to competitively operate the plant," Ford spokesman T.R. Reid told the Detroit Free Press on Monday.

"We haven’t made any final decision about the planned investment there."



Earlier this year, Whitmer and Ford CEO Jim Farley announced a plan to invest $3.5 billion and create 2,500 jobs at the site, located just outside Marshall, a town a few miles east of Battle Creek. As part of the deal, Whitmer, state lawmakers and local officials agreed to provide the automaker a combined $1.7 billion in public subsidies.
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Whitmer spokesperson Bobby Leddy said the governor remains focused on maintaining Michigan's edge in the auto sector and defended spending on large economic development deals like the one with Ford as a way to secure auto jobs in the state.

"Ford has been clear that this is a pause, and we hope negotiations between the Big Three and UAW will be successful so that Michiganders can get back to work doing what they do best," he said.

This latest development from Ford, involving the Marshall project, comes during the second week of a UAW strike on the Detroit Three automakers. Ford was the only company that did not get hit with expanded strike targets Friday because, UAW President Shawn Fain said, the Dearborn automaker was making significant progress during negotiations.

Ford may be closer than General Motors or Stellantis to getting a tentative agreement with the UAW. The timing of the shift on the Marshall project may be related to battery plant and joint venture deal points being debated among negotiators behind closed doors.

Ford declined to discuss details related to the Marshall project decision, including why the decision was made this week.

Several hours after Ford publicly shared its decision to pause construction, Fain bashed the automaker Monday evening.

"This is a shameful, barely-veiled threat by Ford to cut jobs," he said in a statement. "Closing 65 plants over the last 20 years wasn’t enough for the Big Three, now they want to threaten us with closing plants that aren’t even open yet. We are simply asking for a just transition to electric vehicles and Ford is instead doubling down on their race to the bottom."

Fain has been vocal about the importance of including the UAW in battery plant conversations with the expectation of not preventing the union from organizing and seeking competitive wages.

Whitmer has touted large electric vehicle projects like the battery plant Ford announced as a key component of her administration's approach to revitalizing the state’s economy.

After Ford passed over Michigan to build plants in Kentucky and Tennessee two years ago, Whitmer secured bipartisan support to create a new economic development fund that has since committed hundreds of millions to companies promising to create new jobs in the state. But she has encountered a growing bipartisan chorus casting doubt on her economic development approach.

House Minority Leader Matt Hall, R-Richland Township, blasted Whitmer for Ford's construction pause at its Marshall site. "After failing to land other high-profile Ford deals, Gov. Whitmer gave away the store to bring Ford to Marshall. But with Democrats pushing policies that make Michigan less competitive, the $1.7 billion in subsidies and tax incentives still fell short," he said in a statement Monday. He predicted Michigan would lose out on jobs in the future and laid blame on Democratic policies.

Whitmer has celebrated Ford's planned investment. Earlier this month, Whitmer said Michigan was on the cusp of securing a dominant place in the transition to electric vehicles and said she was proud of her administration's work to secure battery investments like the one Ford planned near Marshall. "We're poised to be one of the leaders in the world when it comes to batteries," she told reporters at the Detroit auto show before walking around the floor to check out the latest electric vehicle models, including Ford's.

Economic development officials at the state and local level echoed Whitmer's optimism the project might restart after the end of the strike.

"We hope current negotiations between Ford and the UAW conclude in a mutually beneficial manner and we remain confident this project will continue as planned once these negotiations are complete," said Jim Durian, CEO of Marshall Area Economic Development Alliance, in a statement.

Otie McKinley, a spokesman for the Michigan Economic Development Corporation, said the agency is "staying the course" at the Marshall site.

"We continue working closely with our partners in the community as Team Michigan moves forward on developing a world-class site that creates good paying jobs, brings supply chains home to Michigan and enables us to compete to make more in Michigan," McKinley said in a statement.

The project in Marshall prompted pushback from many in the community. Some offered unfounded fears about Chinese influence — Ford planned to partner with a Chinese battery company at the site — but others questioned the transparency of the process and substantial change it would bring to the community.


Glenn Kowalske and his wife are helping the Committee for Marshall – Not the Megasite, which is working to prevent the Ford factory from locating in the Marshall area. Reached Monday afternoon, Glenn said his wife was en route to the site and if work had actually stopped, it'd be fantastic news.

"I think, naive or not, I think we thought that if we worked hard enough and convinced people of the concerns that it could happen. We wouldn't have been going through this since December if we didn't believe there was a chance," Glenn Kowalske said.

Regis Klingler, a retired engineer who lives in Marshall and helps lead the committee, told the Free Press on Monday, “Any pause in the construction is good news to us. We hope it’s going to be permanent but time will tell what the real reason is. I suspect it might be the UAW strike, but I’m not sure.”

Chris Bowman, his wife and three children live in a house that backs up to the Kalamazoo River, directly across from the planned Ford site. For months, they say construction dust blew incessantly through their windows and the work woke them early in the morning.

“Everybody living next to it is going to see it as a huge positive, no doubt,” Bowman said Monday afternoon, reacting to Ford's decision to pause at the site.

Even if Ford ultimately abandons the project — still far from a certainty — he said he’s concerned a different large industrial project will swoop in instead. If there is a pause for any amount of time, Bowman said he hopes local leaders do more to actively engage their neighbors about the usage for the site.

“The people should deserve a voice in this process … no one considered whether it’s right, ethically. Maybe they’ll look at the situation, listen to the community and rethink the whole thing," Bowman said.

Janet Kreger, of Ann Arbor, co-founder and president of the Michigan Historic Preservation Network, told the Free Press that concerned members of the Marshall community reached out for support in January.

Preservationists concerned about the Ford project in Marshall see issues of land use, zoning and potential environmental damage to a nearby river. “Industrial development, when carefully planned, can have a positive impact on a community. This was an infusion of size, scope, people and infrastructure that was going to overwhelm a highly historic community in Michigan. Marshall is a small town," Kreger said.

Marshall Mayor Jim Schwartz, City Manager Derek Perry and City Clerk Michelle Eubank couldn’t be immediately reached for comment.

This is a developing story. Check freep.com for updates as they become available.

Contact Dave Boucher: dboucher@freepress.com and on X, previously called Twitter, @Dave_Boucher1.

This article originally appeared on Detroit Free Press: Ford pausing work on massive Marshall project, spokesman says
Why Canada continues to fund Ukraine in 'long slog' war: 'The stakes are very high'

The announcement brings Canada's total financial pledge to Ukraine to more than $9.5 billion since the beginning of 2022


Elianna Lev
Tue, September 26, 2023 at 2:11 PM MDT·3 min read

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s latest pledge to Ukraine — which includes $650 million over three years for 50 armoured vehicles — has been met with some public pushback from Canadians and raised questions about what's expected from Canada when it comes to international obligations.

The announcement brings Canada's total financial pledge to Ukraine to more than $9.5 billion since the beginning of 2022, according to the Canadian Press.

In 2022, Canadians donated $201.9 million to the Red Cross's efforts in support of people impacted by the crisis in Ukraine, including $30 million from the government of Canada.

An Angus Reid poll conducted in February 2023 found declining support, compared to one year prior or since the early days of the conflict, among Canadians for the government's ongoing funding of Ukraine's battle against Russian forces.

In March 2022, 61 per cent of respondents supported Canada providing Ukraine with defensive weapons and gear. By February 2023, that number had dipped to 52 per cent.

Add in housing and cost of living crises, and last week's multi-million dollar pledge has Canadians feeling Ottawa should be doing more to address issues at home.


Ukraine's President Volodymyr Zelensky (L) speaks during a news conference on Parliament Hill on September 22, 2023 in Ottawa as Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau looks on
(Photo by Dave Chan / AFP)

But Lucan Way, a professor of political science at the University of Toronto, notes that the estimated $9.5 billion Ottawa has given to Ukraine since 2022 is around 1 per cent of the government's overall expenditures. To many Canadians, that is worth it, especially given the threat posed by Russia through its invasion of Ukraine and threat to other NATO members, an alliance of 30 countries in North America and Europe that includes Canada.

“This is clearly a very aggressive anti-democratic, anti-liberal regime in Russia that will basically do anything to destroy rule-based order, so this is an important investment for Canada right now, ” Way tells Yahoo News Canada.

He adds that Canada is a rich country that can afford to help other countries in crisis, as well as support its own.

“I don’t think there’s any evidence that somehow expenditures to Ukraine are taking a single coin away from Canadian expenditures,” he says.

Aside from the broader implications of allowing Vladimir Putin to violate international norms, Canada has a vested interest in Ukraine given the number of Ukrainians living in the country who still have relatives back home, Way adds.

“This has direct effects on people’s lives,” Way says. “The stakes are very high.”

Jack Cunningham is the program coordinator for the Bill Graham Centre for Contemporary International History. He says Canada's financial contribution to Ukraine is an open-ended commitment and will remain that way until leadership in the region changes.

"The Ukrainians are not clearly winning but they're not clearly losing either," he says. "It's going to be a long slog and we shouldn't delude ourselves on that front. The whole situation probably is not going to be rectified until we have regime change in the Kremlin."

According to the Kiel Institute for the World Economy, of 42 international donors, Canada ranks seventh in worldwide military, humanitarian and financial commitment to Ukraine.

Between Jan. 24, 2022 and July 31, 2023, the top three countries that financially support Ukraine are EU institutions with €84 billion ($119 billion CAD), the Unite States with €69 billion ($98 billion CAD), and Germany, which has pledged €20 billion ($28 billion CAD).


Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau (R) and Ukraine's President Volodymyr Zelensky arrive for a news conference on Parliament Hill on September 22, 2023 in Ottawa.
 (Photo by Dave Chan / AFP)


TORTURE THEN DEATH
Alabama inmate opposes being 'test subject' for new nitrogen execution method

Associated Press
Updated Mon, September 25, 2023 



This undated photo provided by the Alabama Department of Corrections shows inmate Kenneth Eugene Smith, who was convicted in a 1988 murder-for-hire slaying of a preacher's wife. Attorneys for Smith are asking the Alabama Supreme Court to reject the state's request to set an execution date for him using the new execution method of nitrogen hypoxia, saying Friday, Sept. 22, 2023, that Alabama is trying to make him the “test subject” for the new method. 
(Alabama Department of Corrections via AP, File) 

MONTGOMERY, Ala. (AP) — An Alabama inmate would be the test subject for the “experimental” execution method of nitrogen hypoxia, his lawyers argued, as they asked judges to deny the state’s request to carry out his death sentence using the new method.

In a Friday court filing, attorneys for Kenneth Eugene Smith asked the Alabama Supreme Court to reject the state attorney general’s request to set an execution date for Smith using the proposed new execution method. Nitrogen gas is authorized as an execution method in three states but it has never been used to put an inmate to death.

Smith's attorneys argued the state has disclosed little information about how nitrogen executions would work, releasing only a redacted copy of the proposed protocol.

“The state seeks to make Mr. Smith the test subject for the first ever attempted execution by an untested and only recently released protocol for executing condemned people by the novel method of nitrogen hypoxia,” Smith’s attorneys wrote.

Under the proposed method, hypoxia would be caused by forcing the inmate to breathe only nitrogen, depriving them of oxygen needed to maintain bodily functions and causing them to die. Nitrogen makes up 78% of the air inhaled by humans and is harmless when inhaled with oxygen. While proponents of the new method have theorized it would be painless, opponents have likened it to human experimentation.

The lawyers said Smith “already has been put through one failed execution attempt” in November when the state tried to put him to death via lethal injection. The Alabama Department of Corrections called off the execution when the execution team could not get the required two intravenous lines connected to Smith.

His attorneys said Smith has ongoing appeals and accused the state of trying to move Smith to “the front of the line" ahead of other inmates in order to moot Smith’s lawsuit challenging lethal injection procedures.

Alabama authorized nitrogen hypoxia in 2018, but the state has not attempted to use it until now to carry out a death sentence. Oklahoma and Mississippi have also authorized nitrogen hypoxia, but have not used it.

Trip Pittman, the former Alabama state senator who proposed the new execution method, has disputed criticism that the method is experimental. He said that while no state has carried out a death sentence with nitrogen, people have died by breathing nitrogen during industrial accidents and suicide attempts, so the effects are known.

Smith was convicted in the 1988 murder-for-hire slaying of Elizabeth Sennett in Alabama’s Colbert County.

Prosecutors said Smith was one of two men who were each paid $1,000 to kill Sennett on behalf of her husband who was deeply in debt and wanted to collect on insurance. The other man convicted in the killing was executed in 2010. Charles Sennett, the victim’s husband and a Church of Christ pastor, killed himself when the investigation began to focus on him as a possible suspect, according to court documents.

Water-sharing protests disrupt India's tech hub of Bengaluru

Updated Tue, September 26, 2023

Police officers intervene as a man attempts to hang himself during a protest in Bengaluru

By VarunVyas Hebbalalu and Dhanya Skariachan

BENGALURU, India (Reuters) - Police detained protesters on Tuesday in India's tech hub of Bengaluru after one tried to commit suicide and another was injured while demonstrating against the sharing of water from a river that flows through two states, media and officials said.

Farmers' groups called the protest, which forced employees of multinationals such as Walmart and Alphabet's Google to work from home.

At one protest site called Freedom Park, a demonstrator tried to commit suicide while another farmer was injured, a domestic news channel said, with police detaining others.

Earlier, a senior police officer, K. Santosh Babu, said emergency orders had been imposed.

Schools and colleges were shut in the capital of the southern state of Karnataka, home to more than 3,500 tech companies.

Some farmers vowed to keep up the protests and widen them across the state this week, however.

"I can shed my blood but I don't want to give water to Tamil Nadu," said one protester, Ravi Mallikarjuna.

Farmers and politicians from Karnataka and the adjoining state of Tamil Nadu have been locked for decades in a legal dispute over sharing the waters of the Cauvery river.

The Supreme Court recently ordered the release of water by Karnataka to Tamil Nadu for 15 days from Sept. 13, but state officials said they could not comply as they had to first fill the needs of households and farmers in the state.

The deputy chief minister, D.K. Shivakumar, said Karnataka would struggle to release anywhere near the volume of water sought by Tamil Nadu, or 12,500 cusecs (354,000 litres).

"We are in a situation where we cannot even release 5,000 cusecs daily (142,000 litres)," he added.

The delay provoked small demonstrations near a railway station in Tamil Nadu.

The Cauvery river originates in the Karnataka region of Talakaveri, flowing through Tamil Nadu into the Bay of Bengal.

Some environmentalists have called for an audit of the river to help end the dispute, amid water scarcity in both states brought by changing patterns of rainfall.

"The judiciary should have asked for a fresh audit of the river instead of dictating terms to the Karnataka government," said T. V. Ramachandra, of the Centre for Ecological Sciences at the Indian Institute of Science.

(Writing by Rupam Jain; Editing by Miral Fahmy and Clarence Fernandez)

INDENTURED SERVITUDE IS SLAVERY
Medical license suspended for NJ doctor who illegally harbored unpaid Indian workers

Suzanne Russell, MyCentralJersey.com
Mon, September 25, 2023 



A Colonia-based doctor's medical license has been temporarily suspended for illegally recruiting, concealing and harboring two women from India to work as her household servants and allegedly preventing one of them from receiving life-saving treatment for a brain aneurysm, according to Attorney General Matthew J. Platkin.

As part of a consent order filed with the State Board of Medical Examiners last week, Dr. Harsha Sahni, 66, who has a rheumatology practice in the Colonia section of Woodbridge, consented to the temporary suspension of her medical license pending the outcome of an administrative action seeking to permanently revoke her license in the wake of her criminal conviction.

The administrative action, part of verified complaint filed with the medical examiners board on Aug. 31, 2023, alleges Sahni’s crimes, and her actions in perpetrating them, violate professional standards, demonstrate an appalling lack of judgment and moral character, and are of a nature such that her continued licensure would be inconsistent with the public’s health, safety, and welfare, according to the Attorney General's Office.

In February Sahni pleaded guilty to federal criminal charges of conspiracy to conceal and harbor aliens and filing a false tax return in connection with her conduct while harboring two Indian nationals from 2013 through 2021. Sentencing is scheduled for Oct. 5 before U.S. District Judge Georgette Castner in Trenton federal court. As part of the plea agreement, the doctor faces up to 30 months in federal prison as well as paying the victims a combined $642,212 and up to $200,000 toward the treatment of one worker's brain aneurysm and restitution to the IRS.


According to court documents, from 2013 through August 2021 Sahni conspired with others to conceal and harbor two foreign nationals from India, who Sahni recruited to work for her and her family in their homes in New Jersey. Sahni harbored the victims for her and her conspirators’ financial gain and paid the victims’ families in India in exchange for their labor.

Sahni forced the women, who lived in her Tinton Falls home, to work 15-hour days, seven days a week, and led them to believe they would be arrested and deported if they spoke with law enforcement. In addition, the doctor would not allow one woman to receive treatment for a brain aneurysm until she first found someone to take over her duties at the doctor's home.

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“The criminal exploitation and utter disregard for the well-being of the victims in this case shocks the conscience and violates the most basic principles of medical practice,” Platkin said in a statement. “To protect the public and the integrity of the medical profession, we are securing the temporary suspension of Dr. Sahni’s medical license pending the outcome of these very serious allegations against her.”

In pleading guilty to the criminal charges, Sahni admitted she knew the women were in the country illegally and that she harbored them for financial gain and caused them both to believe that they would be arrested and deported if they interacted with law enforcement. The doctor provided the victims with food, clothing, and housing and harbored them to work as housekeepers for low pay and instructed the women to tell immigration officials they were family members, visiting as tourists.

The doctor also admitted to not paying taxes related to the women's work and did not disclose their labor on her personal income tax return, according to the Attorney General's Office. One worker who lived in the doctor's home worked from about 7 a.m. to 10 p.m. for about $240 to $600 a month, money the doctor paid to the woman's family in India.

According to the Attorney General's Office, the doctor also defrauded others into providing free and reduced medical care to that woman by falsely claiming in 2016 that one worker had been abused by her husband and arranging for a domestic violence charity to provide the worker with $6,000 in dental treatment for free. Sahni filled out the charity's advocate form because the worker could not speak, read or write in English.

That same worker began developing headaches after a 2014 car accident, and Sahni told her that rest was not permitted and she should take Tylenol and finish working. As the worker's headaches got worse the doctor told her that seeing a physician would be too expensive and she could not be treated because of her illegal status and continued to have the worker take Tylenol and other pain medications, according to the Attorney General's Office.

In 2021 when the headaches kept the worker from performing her duties, she was taken to the emergency room where a head scan showed an unruptured brain aneurysm and was advised to undergo immediate surgery or she could die. Sahni who identified herself as the worker's sister and served as translator, urged the worker to leave the hospital and once home required the woman to work the rest of the day to complete her duties, according to the Attorney General's Office.

Sahni took the work for a follow-up examination at JFK University Medical Center’s Neuroscience Institute the next day where neurosurgeons concluded that because of the aneurysm's size there was a 1-in-5 chance that it would rupture and woman could die. Sahni, however, who represented herself as the worker's primary care physician, continued to advise the worker not to undergo surgery and continue to complete her household duties, according to the Attorney General’s Office.

The worker contacted family members in India who encouraged her to have the surgery, but Sahni told her she could not undergo surgery until she found a worker to replace her. There is no evidence in the worker's medical record that Sahni ever took her for follow-up treatment or scheduled the surgery prior to law enforcement removing the worker from the doctor's home, according to the Attorney General’s Office.

Email: srussell@gannettnj.com
Suzanne Russell is a breaking news reporter for MyCentralJersey.com covering crime, courts and other mayhem.
This article originally appeared on MyCentralJersey.com: NJ doctor illegally harbored unpaid Indian workers; license suspended


Worker forced to toil in doctor's Tinton Falls home with life-threatening aneurysm

Kathleen Hopkins, Asbury Park Press
Mon, September 25, 2023

TRENTON — State authorities have suspended the medical license of a Central Jersey physician who they say forced two undocumented workers to toil long hours for low pay as domestic servants in her Tinton Falls home, while prohibiting one of them from getting surgery for a potentially deadly brain aneurysm until the worker could find a replacement.

With a hearing pending before the state Board of Medical Examiners to permanently revoke her license to practice medicine and surgery, Dr. Harsha Sahni, 67, last week agreed to a temporary suspension of her license, Attorney General Matthew J. Platkin said.

The attorney general and the state Division of Consumer Affairs are seeking permanent revocation of the license for conduct related to federal criminal charges Sahni pleaded guilty to in February, for which she is awaiting sentencing.

Sahni, who has a rheumatology practice in the Colonia section of Woodbridge, pleaded guilty to conspiracy to conceal and harbor aliens and filing a false tax return in connection with her harboring two Indian nationals in her home from 2013 through 2021.

A complaint filed with the medical examiner's board seeking the license revocation alleges Sahni's actions in perpetrating the crimes "violate professional standards, demonstrate an appalling lack of judgment and moral character and are of a nature such that her continued licensure would be inconsistent with the public's health, safety and welfare.''

The complaint alleges that one of the victims lived in Sahni's home and was required to work from 7 a.m. to 10 p.m. for between $240 to $600 a month, which Sahni paid to the victim's family in India.

The complaint also alleges Sahni prevented that victim from receiving surgery for a life-threatening brain aneurysm.

The aneurysm was discovered as the victim was suffering headaches that grew progressively worse following a car accident in 2014, the complaint said. Sahni allegedly told the woman she was not permitted to rest and to take Tylenol for her headaches and complete her work, it said.

As the headaches worsened, Sahni allegedly told the woman she could not receive treatment because she was in the United States illegally and seeing a doctor would be too expensive, the complaint said.

When the woman's headaches became so debilitating that she couldn't work, Sahni brought her to the emergency room at Riverview Medical Center in Red Bank on April 28, 2021, the complaint said. Tests there revealed a large brain aneurysm for which doctors recommended immediate transfer to the neurology intensive care unit at Jersey Shore University Medical Center in Neptune, the complaint said. Doctors advised that without medical intervention, the woman faced possible rupture of the aneurysm and even death, it said.

Sahni, who falsely represented herself to the doctors as the woman's sister, translated the doctor's advice to the woman, who did not speak English, the complaint said. After Sahni had a lengthy conversation with the woman, Sahni advised the doctors that the woman wanted to go home against medical advice, the complaint said.

The victim then went to Sahni's home, where she was required to complete her normal workload, according to the complaint.

At a followup appointment the following day, doctors explained there was a one in five chance that without surgery, the aneurysm would rupture, and the patient would die, the complaint said.

When the woman expressed a desire to have the surgery, Sahni told her she "could not have surgery until she secured a replacement to work in the respondent's home,'' the complaint said. Sahni continued to force the woman to work knowing she had an aneurysm that could rupture, it said.

Authorities said there was no evidence in the victim's medical records that Sahni ever took the woman for treatment or scheduled the surgery before law enforcement removed the victim from the physician's home.

The complaint also alleges that Sahni defrauded various entities into providing free and reduced-cost dental and medical care to the woman. Sahni falsely claimed on certifications that she believed the woman's dental problems were the result of domestic violence, which resulted in treatment valued at $6,000 that was performed by a volunteer dentist, the complaint said. Similarly, Sahni misrepresented the woman's income, housing and employment status on an application to the Visiting Nurse Association of Central Jersey's Community Health Center, resulting in the woman receiving services for a reduced fee, according to the complaint.

When she entered her guilty pleas in federal court, Sahni admitted she knew the two women whom she employed as domestic workers were in the country illegally and that she harbored them for financial gain and caused both of them to believe they would be arrested and deported if they interacted with law enforcement.

Sahni further admitted she provided the victims with food, clothing and housing and made them work as housekeepers at a price less than what she would have had to pay had she employed them legally.

Sahni also admitted telling the women to lie to immigration officials and say they were members of her family who were just visiting the United States. And, she admitted not paying taxes related to their labor or disclosing the work they performed for her on personal tax returns.

"The criminal exploitation and utter disregard for the well-being of the victims in this case shocks the conscience and violates the most basic principles of medical practice,'' Platkin said.

Sahni is scheduled to be sentenced in federal court in Trenton on Oct. 5.

Her plea bargain calls for up to 30 months in federal prison and requires that she pay a total of $642,212 to the victims and up to $200,000 toward treatment of the one victim's brain aneurysm. Sahni also will be required to pay restitution to the Internal Revenue Service.

Kathleen Hopkins, a reporter in New Jersey since 1985, covers crime, court cases, legal issues and just about every major murder trial to hit Monmouth and Ocean counties. Contact her at khopkins@app.com.



This article originally appeared on Asbury Park Press: 

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STOP AMLO'S TRAIN!
Ancient Maya grave found in Mexico as tourist rail project advances


Mon, September 25, 2023

By Carolina Pulice

MEXICO CITY (Reuters) - Mexican archaeologists unearthed a richly adorned human body in a grave that could be more than 1,000 years old, in an area where workers were finishing construction on a major tourist rail project, the country's national antiquities institute INAH said on Monday.

The discovery took place this month during archaeological salvage work carried out in tandem with building a multibillion-dollar tourist train in southern Mexico designed in large part to draw tourists to southern Mexico's many ancient Maya sites, as well as nearby top beach resorts like Cancun and Tulum.

The rail project, known as the Maya Train, is a top economic development priority of President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador. It employs teams of relatively well-funded archaeologists who have rushed to complete excavations so the construction work will not be delayed. Digs elsewhere in the country have suffered budget cuts.

The latest burial discovery took place during work on the construction of a hotel near the major Maya ruins of Palenque in Chiapas state, once home to one of the ancient civilization's largest and most sophisticated urban centers.

The skeletal remains were found some 2 kilometers (1.2 miles) from the city's center, home to towering temples and a sprawling palace compound, in a stone box. They likely pertain to an elite resident of the city, known by the ancient Maya as Lakamha'.

The box also held three ceramic vessels, ear flares and a pair of greenstone beads.

INAH also noted that the individual was buried face up, his head facing north, adding that further testes are needed to determine the individual's exact age and other characteristics.

Scholars credit the ancient Maya with major human achievements in art, architecture, astronomy and writing.

Palenque, like dozens of other ancient cities clustered around southern Mexico and parts of Central America, thrived from around 300-900 AD.

(Reporting by Carolina Pulice; Editing by David Alire Garcia and David Gregorio)

Richest oil states should pay climate tax, says Gordon Brown

BBC
Sun, September 24, 2023 

Gordon Brown accused world leaders of coming up "abysmally short" in their efforts to lower carbon emissions


The world's richest oil states should pay a global windfall tax to help poorer nations combat climate change, ex-PM Gordon Brown has said.

He said countries such as Saudi Arabia, the UAE, Qatar and Norway benefited from a "lottery style bonanza" last year, as the price of oil soared.

Mr Brown argues a $25bn (£20.4bn) levy would boost prospects of a deal on a climate fund for poorer countries.

His intervention comes ahead of the COP28 summit in Dubai in November.

Speaking at last week's Climate Ambition Summit at the United Nations in New York, Secretary General Antonio Guterres warned that world leaders were coming up "abysmally short" in their efforts to curb carbon emissions.

He called for the world's biggest emitters to agree a climate solidarity pact to reduce emissions and support emerging economies.

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Mr Brown said his plan would prevent a stalemate and potential breakdown at COP28 in the United Arab Emirates (UAE) - one of the richest oil producers identified.

He said "petro-states" had recorded "almost unimaginable profits" from the rise in oil price in recent years, with the five richest - which also include Kuwait - doubling their oil revenues in 2022.

Quoting figures from the International Energy Association (IEA), he said global oil and gas revenues had soared from $1.5tn (£1.2tn) before the Covid pandemic to an unprecedented $4tn (£3.3tn).

"To put these extraordinary figures into context, $4tn is 20 times the entire global aid budget. It is an income so big that it exceeds the entire GDP of the United Kingdom," he said.

"These producer states have done literally nothing to earn this unprecedented windfall. It represents one of the biggest ever transfers of wealth from poor to rich nations."

Mr Brown added the high price of oil and gas had been the main factor in potentially pushing an additional 141 million people around the world into extreme poverty, which is the high range of an estimate from a scientific study carried out earlier this year.

He called for the wealthiest oil states to contribute 3% of their export earnings - equivalent to a total of $25bn (£20.4bn) in 2022, saying "it is the very least they could do".

The former prime minister - a UN envoy for global education and World Health Organisation ambassador for global health financing - said "the consequences of such a grand gesture would be immense".

"We would be giving crisis-torn countries what has been absent in recent summits: hope," he said.