Monday, April 22, 2024

EARTH DAY


Rejecting the Facade: Unveiling the Ecological Toll of War

On Earth Day, prepare for the annual spectacle of U.S. lawmakers donning their environmentalist hats, waxing poetic about their love for the planet while disregarding the devastation their actions wreak. The harsh reality is that alongside their hollow pledges lies a trail of destruction fueled by military aggression and imperial ambitions, all under the guise of national security.

Take Gaza, for instance. Its once-fertile farmland now lies barren, its water sources poisoned by conflict and neglect. The grim statistics speak volumes: 97% of Gaza’s water is unfit for human consumption, leading to a staggering 26% of illnesses, particularly among vulnerable children. Israel’s decades-long colonial settler project and ethnic cleansing of Palestine have caused irrefutable damage to the land, air, and water, consequently contributing to the climate crisis. In fact, in the first two months of the current genocide campaign in Gaza, Israel’s murderous bombardment, which has killed nearly 35,000 people, has also generated more planet-warming emissions than the annual carbon footprint of the world’s top 20 climate-vulnerable nations. Yet, despite these dire circumstances, U.S. lawmakers persist in funneling weapons to Israel, perpetuating a cycle of violence and environmental degradation.

The ripple effects of militarism extend far beyond Gaza’s borders. In Ukraine, the Russia-Ukraine War has left a staggering $56.4 billion environmental bill, with widespread contamination of air, water, and soil. Landmines and unexploded ordnance left litter 30% of the country, posing long-term risks to both the environment and human health. The United States’ answer to all this has been to reject diplomacy and fuel a long, protracted war with a seemingly endless supply of weapons and military support. A war that most experts will tell you is not a winnable war. The proxy war the United States is funding not only leaves Ukrainians at risk of never achieving peace but also significantly contributes to the ever-growing climate crisis.

Then, there is our government’s desire to go to war with China. The U.S. military’s heavy footprint already looms large in the Pacific, and with the war drums now beating harder for war than ever before , the footprint is growing. With over 200 bases dotting the region, the Pentagon’s voracious energy consumption fuels greenhouse gas emissions and environmental degradation, from polluted drinking water in Okinawa to severe contamination near military installations in Guam. Yet, our government insists that it is China that is our greatest enemy and not the looming threat of climate destruction. The U.S. military’s presence in the Pacific is destroying natural, indigenous ecosystems, favoring the idea of environmental destruction over attempting any form of diplomacy and cooperation with China.

All of this destruction to the environment and acceleration of the climate crisis happens silently under the veil of “national security,” while discussions on how the environmental toll of war is the most significant national security threat are absent in D.C. While the threat of nuclear annihilation and civilian casualties rightfully dominate headlines, the ecological fallout remains an under-reported tragedy. The Pentagon is the planet’s largest institutional emitter of fossil fuels; its insatiable appetite for conflict exacerbates climate change and threatens ecosystems worldwide. To make matters worse, the U.S. government wants to fund this destruction to the tune of nearly a trillion dollars a year while poor and low-wealth communities worldwide bear the brunt of climate catastrophes with little to no resources to protect themselves.

At the heart of this destructive cycle lies a perverse economic incentive, where war becomes a lucrative business at the expense of both people and the planet. The narrative of GDP growth masks the actual cost of conflict, prioritizing financial profit over genuine progress in education, healthcare, and biodiversity. However, instead of war-economy metrics such as the GDP, we could embrace alternative metrics such as the Genuine Progress Indicator (GPI) that reckon with the actual toll of war on our world. We can shift from endless growth towards genuine well-being by valuing air quality, food security, and environmental sustainability.

This Earth Day, let us reject the empty rhetoric of environmentalism without action. Let us demand accountability from our lawmakers and insist on an end to the cycle of violence and ecological devastation. By prioritizing peace and sustainability, we can protect our planet and safeguard future generations.

Melissa Garriga is the communications and media relations manager for CODEPINK. She writes about the intersection of militarism and the human cost of war.


There Is Only One Spaceship Earth

Originally appeared at TomDispatch.

I was born on July 20, 1944, barely a year before the world (potentially) ended. On August 6 and 9, 1945, the U.S., which had already been torching Japanese cities from the air, dropped the first atomic bombs on the cities of Hiroshima and Nagasaki. The explosions were unlike anything humanity had previously experienced. A single weapon from a single plane could devastate a city, wiping out tens of thousands of human beings (and leaving behind a nuclear residue or “fallout” that could cause horrific cancers in the years to follow). It was a grim, dark miracle of human invention and, within a decade, the weapons used on those two cities would seem all too modest compared to the new thermonuclear or hydrogen bombs the U.S. possessed that, within years, were capable of wiping out whole civilizations. (The estimate of Russian, Chinese, and other deaths from the carrying out of the Single Integrated Operational Plan for General Nuclear War developed by the U.S. military in 1960 was at least 600 million.)

Today, of course, nine countries (still led by the U.S.) have close to 13,000 nuclear weapons and, in the coming decades, my own country is planning to spend almost two trillion dollars (no, that is not a misprint!) on “modernizing” its nuclear arsenal while, at this very moment, two countries presently at war in a major fashion, Israel and Russia, are also nuclear powers and the leader of one of them has even threatened to use such weapons on the battlefield.

Consider it a miracle of sorts, given us humans and the kind of devastation we now know a nuclear war would bring to this world, that, for the last 78 years, while such ultimate weaponry spread and, one might even say, flourished on this planet, not one of them has ever been used again in war (though in those same years, there have certainly been countless wars). But will my great-grandson or great-granddaughter be able to say the same thing 78 years from now? Will they or anyone else even be here to say anything at all, or might we humans truly fulfill the prophecy of those two nuclear moments in 1945 and end our world, at least as we know it? With that in mind, let retired Air Force lieutenant colonel, historian, and TomDispatch regular William Astore take you onto a planet that couldn’t be more fragile or more worth saving. ~ Tom Engelhardt


There Is Only One Spaceship Earth

by William J. Astore

When I was in the U.S. military, I learned a saying (often wrongly attributed to the Greek philosopher Plato) that only the dead have seen the end of war. Its persistence through history to this very moment should indeed be sobering. What would it take for us humans to stop killing each other with such vigor and in such numbers?

Song lyrics tell me to be proud to be an American, yet war and profligate preparations for more of the same are omnipresent here. My government spends more on its military than the next 10 countries combined (and most of them are allies). In this century, our leaders have twice warned of an “axis of evil” intent on harming us, whether the fantasy troika of Iraq, Iran, and North Korea cited by President George W. Bush early in 2002 or a new one – China, Russia, and North Korea – in the Indo-Pacific today. Predictably given that sort of threat inflation, this country is now closing in on a trillion dollars a year in “defense spending,” or close to two-thirds of federal discretionary spending, in the name of having a military machine capable of defeating “evil” troikas (as well as combatting global terrorism). A significant part of that huge sum is reserved for producing a new generation of nuclear weapons that will be quite capable of destroying this planet with missiles and warheads to spare.

My country, to be blunt, has long been addicted to war, killing, violence, and massive preparations for more of the same. We need an intervention. We need to confront our addiction. Yet when it comes to war and preparations for future conflicts, our leaders aren’t even close to hitting rock bottom. They remain in remarkable denial and see no reason to change their ways.

To cite two recent examples: Just before Easter weekend this year, President Biden swore he was personally devastated by Palestinian suffering in Gaza. At the same time, his administration insisted that a United Nations Security Council resolution for a ceasefire in Gaza that it allowed to pass was “non-binding” and, perhaps to make that very point, reportedly shipped 1,800 MK84 2,000-pound bombs and 500 MK82 500-pound bombs off to Israel, assumedly to be used in – yes! – Gaza.

The Biden administration refuses to see the slightest contradiction in such a stance. Men like Joe Biden and his chief diplomat Antony Blinken confess to being disturbed, even shocked, by the devastation our bombs deliver. Who knew Israel would use them to kill or wound more than 100,000 Palestinians? Who knew that they’d reduce significant parts of Gaza to rubble? Who knew that a blank check of support for Israel would enable that country to – it’s hard not to use the phrase – offer a final solution to the Gaza question?

Not to be outdone by the Democrats, Republican Congressman Tim Walberg of Michigan recently cited the examples of Hiroshima and Nagasaki in seeking a “quick” end to the conflict in Gaza (before walking his comments back somewhat). For him, Israel remains America’s greatest ally, whatever its actions, even as he argues that Palestinians in Gaza merit no humanitarian aid from the United States whatsoever.

With that horrifying spectacle – and given the TV news and social media, it truly has been a spectacle! – of genocide in Gaza, America’s leaders have embraced the very worst of Machiavelli, preferring to be feared rather than loved, while putting power first and principle last. Former National Security Adviser and Secretary of State Henry Kissinger, recently deceased, rightly vilified for pursuing a Bismarckian Realpolitik, and deeply involved in the devastation of Vietnam, Cambodia, and Laos, might even have blanched at the full-throttled support for war (and weapons sales) now being pursued by this country’s leaders. Dividing the world into armed camps based on fear seems basic to our foreign policy, a reality now echoed in domestic politics as well, as the Democratic blue team and the MAGA Republican red team attack each other as “fascistic” or worse. In this all-American world of ours, all is conflict, all is war.

When asked about such an addiction to war, your average government official will likely claim it’s not our fault. “Freedom isn’t free,” so the bumper sticker says, meaning in practice that this country stands prepared to kill others without mercy to ensure its “way of life,” which also in practice means unbridled consumption by an ever-shrinking portion of Americans and unapologetic profiteering by the richest and greediest of us. Call it the “moderate” bipartisan consensus within the Washington Beltway. Only an “extremist” would dare call for restraint, tolerance, diplomacy, and peace.

A Common Cause to Unify Humanity

Short of an attack on Earth by aliens, it’s hard to imagine the U.S. today making common cause with “enemies” like China, Iran, North Korea, or Russia. What gives? Isn’t there a better way and, if so, how would we get there?

In fact, there is a common foe – or perhaps a common cause – that should unite us all as humans. That cause is Earth, the health of our planet and all the life forms on it. And that foe, to state the obvious (even if it regularly goes unsaid), is war, which is unhealthy in the extreme not just for us but for our planet, too.

War turns people into killers – of our fellow humans, of course, but also of all forms of life within our (often very large) blast radii. In addition, war is a mass distraction from what should truly matter to us: the sacredness of life and the continued viability of our planet and its ecology. Call it a cliché but there’s no way to deny it: there is indeed only one Spaceship Earth. As far as we know now, our planet is the sole body in the universe teeming with life. Of course, the universe is incomprehensibly vast and there could well be other forms of life out there, but we don’t know that, not with certainty anyway.

Imagine, in a dystopic future, America’s “best and brightest” (or the “best and brightest” of another country) acting in a nuclear fury, employing the very weaponry that continues to proliferate but hasn’t been used since the destruction of two Japanese cities on August 6 and 9, 1945, and so crippling Spaceship Earth. Imagine also that our planet is truly the universe’s one magnificent and magical spot of life. Wouldn’t it be hard then to imagine a worse crime, not just against humanity, but life itself cosmically? There would be no recompense, no forgiveness, no redemption – and possibly no recovery either.

Of course, I don’t know if God (or gods) exists. Though I was raised a Catholic, I find myself essentially an agnostic today. Yet I do believe in the sacredness of life in all its diversity. And as tenacious as life may be, given our constant pursuit of war, I fear the worst.

If you’re of a certain age, you may recall when the astronauts on Apollo 8 witnessed earthrise as their spaceship orbited the moon in 1968. The crew read from Genesis, though in truth it could have been from any creation story we humans have ever imagined to account for how we and our world came to be. Specific religions or creeds didn’t truly matter at that moment, nor should they now. What mattered was the sense of awe we felt as we first viewed the Earth from space in its full glory but also all its fragility.

For make no mistake, this planet is fragile. Its ecosystems can be destroyed. Not for nothing did the inventor of the atomic bomb, J. Robert Oppenheimer, turn to the Hindu scriptures to intone, “Now I am become death, the destroyer of worlds,” when he saw the first atomic device explode and expand into a mushroom cloud during the Trinity test in New Mexico in July 1945.

In the febrile postwar climate of anti-communism that would all too soon follow, America’s leaders would decide that atomic bombs weren’t faintly destructive enough. What they needed were thermonuclear bombs, 1,000 times more destructive, to fight World War III against the “big fat commie rat.” Now nine (9!) nations have nuclear weapons, with more undoubtedly hankering to join the club. So how long before mushroom clouds soar toward the stratosphere again? How long before we experience some version of planetary ecocide via a nuclear exchange and the nuclear winter that could follow it?

Genocide and Ecocide on a Planetary Scale

The genocide happening in Gaza today may foreshadow one possible future for this planet. The world’s lone superpower, its self-styled beacon of freedom, now dismisses U.N. Security Council resolutions to stop the killing as “non-binding.” Meanwhile, Israel, whose founding was a response to a Holocaust inflicted during World War II and whose people collectively said Never Again, is now killing, starving, and displacing hundreds of thousands of Palestinians in the name of righteous vengeance for Hamas’s October 7th attack.

If the U.S. and Israel can spin mass murder in Palestine as not just defensible, but even positive (“defeating Hamas terrorists”), what hope do we have as a species? Is this the future we have to look forward to, an endless echoing of our murderous past?

I refuse to believe it. It truly should be possible to imagine and work toward something better. Yet, in all honesty, it’s hard to imagine new paths being blazed by such fossilized thinkers as Joe Biden and Donald Trump.

“Don’t trust anyone over thirty” was a telling catchphrase of the 1960s. Now, we’re being told as Americans that we’ll have to place our trust in one of two men almost at or exceeding 80 years of age. Entrusting and empowering political dinosaurs, however, represents an almost surefire path toward future extinction-level events.

Let me turn instead to a 25-year-old who did imagine a better future, even as he protested in the most extreme way imaginable the genocide in Gaza. This February, fellow airman Aaron Bushnell lit himself on fire outside the Israeli embassy in Washington, D.C. He sacrificed his life in a most public way to challenge us to do something, anything, to stop genocide. America’s “leaders” answered him by ignoring his sacrifice and sending more bombs, thousands of them, to Israel.

Aaron Bushnell did, however, imagine a better world. As he explained last year in a private post:

“I’ve realized that a lot of the difference between me and my less radical friends is that they are less capable of imagining a better world than I am. I follow YouTubers like Andrewism that fill my head with concrete images of free, post-scarcity communities and it makes me so much more prepared to reject things about the current world, because I’ve imagined how things could be and that helps me see how extremely bullshit things are right now.

“What I’m trying to say is, it’s so important to imagine a better world. Let your thoughts run wild with idealistic dreams of what the world should look like and let the pain and anger at how it’s not that way flow through you. Let it free your mind and fuel your rage against the machine.

“It’s not too late for you or anyone. We can have the world of our dreams tomorrow, but we have to be willing to fight today.”

His all-too-public suicide was a fiery cry of despair, but also a plea for a better future, one free of mass murder.

Earlier this week, millions of people across America witnessed a total eclipse of the sun. It’s awe-inspiring, even a bit alarming, to see the sun disappear in the middle of the day. Those watching took comfort in knowing that it would reappear from behind the moon in a matter of seconds or minutes and so gloried in that fleeting moment of preternatural darkness.

But imagine if the moon and sun were somehow to become permanently stuck in place. Imagine that darkness was our future – our only future. Sadly enough, however, it’s not the moon but we humans who can potentially cast the Earth into lasting darkness. Via the nuclear winter that could result from a nuclear conflict on this planet, we could indeed cast a shadow between the sun and life itself, a power of destruction that, tragically, may far exceed our current level of wisdom.

We know from history that it’s far easier to destroy than to create, far easier to kill than to preserve. Yet when countries make genocide or ecocide (from nuclear winter) possible and defensible (as a sign of uncompromising “toughness” and perhaps the defense of “freedom”), you know that their leaders are, in some sense, morally obtuse monsters. And who or what are we if we choose to follow such monsters?

As human populations rise, as vital resources like water, food, and fuel shrink, as this planet grows ever hotter thanks to our intervention and our excesses, we’ll need to cooperate more than ever to ensure our mutual survival. Far too often, however, America’s strategic thinkers dismiss cooperation through diplomacy or otherwise as naïve, unreliable, and impractical. “Competition” through zero-sum games, war, or other hyperviolent urges seems so much more “reasonable,” so much more “human.”

To the victor goes the spoils, so it’s said. But a planet despoiled by thermonuclear war, cast into darkness, ravaged by radiation, disease, and death, would, of course, offer no victory to anyone. Unless we put our efforts into ending war, rather than continuing to war on one another, such conflicts will, sooner or later, undoubtedly put an end to us.

In reality, our worst enemy isn’t some “axis” or other combination of imagined foes from without, it’s within. We remain the world’s most dangerous species, the one capable of wiping out most or all of the rest, not to speak of ourselves, with our folly. So, as Aaron Bushnell wrote, free your mind. Collectively, there must be a better way for all creatures, great and small, on this fragile spaceship of ours.

Follow TomDispatch on Twitter and join us on Facebook. Check out the newest Dispatch Books, John Feffer’s new dystopian novel, Songlands (the final one in his Splinterlands series), Beverly Gologorsky’s novel Every Body Has a Story, and Tom Engelhardt’s A Nation Unmade by War, as well as Alfred McCoy’s In the Shadows of the American Century: The Rise and Decline of U.S. Global Power, John Dower’s The Violent American Century: War and Terror Since World War IIand Ann Jones’s They Were Soldiers: How the Wounded Return from America’s Wars: The Untold Story.

William J. Astore, a retired lieutenant colonel (USAF) and professor of history, is a TomDispatch regular and a senior fellow at the Eisenhower Media Network (EMN), an organization of critical veteran military and national security professionals. His personal substack is Bracing Views. His video testimony for the Merchants of Death Tribunal is available at this link.

Copyright 2024 William J. Astore


ANTIWAR.COM

Historic Gaza Protests at Columbia U. Enter Day 6; Campus Protests Spread Across Country

Source: Democracy Now

Columbia University canceled in-person classes Monday as campus protests over the war in Gaza enter a sixth day. The protests have swelled after the school administration called in the police to clear a student encampment last week, resulting in over 100 arrests. Solidarity protests and encampments have now sprouted up on campuses across the country, including at Yale, MIT, Tufts, NYU, The New School and University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.

Palestinian reporter Jude Taha, a journalism student at Columbia University, describes events on campus as “an unprecedented act of solidarity” that student organizers are modeling on antiwar protests in 1968. She says Columbia University President Minouche Shafik’s claims of an unsafe environment on campus are contradicted by the generally calm and productive atmosphere among the protesters, adding that the school’s heavy-handed response, including suspensions and evictions, is being seen as “an intimidation tactic” by organizers.

Honda expected to announce multi-billion dollar deal to assemble EVs in Ontario: sources


Story by CBC/Radio-Canada •


Honda Motor Co. is expected to announce plans to build EVs in Ontario, according to sources.© David Zalubowski/The Associated Press

Japanese car marker Honda is expected to announce a multi-billion dollar deal to build electric vehicles and their parts in the province of Ontario, government sources confirmed to CBC News.

The news was first reported by Bloomberg.

Senior government sources, who spoke to CBC News on condition of confidentiality because they weren't authorized to speak publicly, said the anticipated deal would involve new facilities to process cathode active materials, build batteries, and assemble battery-powered vehicles.

The sources said the announcement is expected to be made in Alliston, Ont., Thursday, when questions around the extent of government subsides could become public.

Last week's budget has yet to pass parliament, but previewed a EV supply chain investment tax credit that likely acted as a sweetener for Honda. The government is proposing a 10 per cent tax credit on the cost of buildings used in three keys area of the EV supply chain: assembly, battery production and cathode active material production.

"Honda does not make speculative term bets," said Automotive Parts Manufacturers' Association president Flavio Volpe, reacting to the news.

"In almost 40 years of making cars in Canada without failure or retreat, a Honda supply contract is extremely bankable."

Honda nears deal with Canada to boost electric vehicle capacity

Canada is on the verge of an agreement with Honda Motor Co. that would see the Japanese firm build electric vehicles and their components in the province of Ontario, according to people familiar with the matter.

The deal, expected to be announced within a week, involves a multibillion-dollar commitment by Honda for new facilities to process cathode active materials, build batteries, and assemble battery-powered vehicles — making southern Ontario a key hub of company’s EV manufacturing plans in North America. The Canadian government would subsidize a portion of the capital cost. 

Honda has a manufacturing plant in Alliston, Ontario, about an hour’s drive north of Toronto, where it puts together Honda CR-V and Civic models. The company makes hybrid vehicles at factories in Ohio and Indiana, according to its website, and it plans to start manufacturing its first U.S.-made fully electric vehicles in Marysville, Ohio next year. 

The Honda investment comes at an anxious moment for the auto sector, with consumer adoption of electric vehicles playing out slowly in some regions because of high prices and a shortage of charging stations. Tesla Inc. is cutting more than 10 per cent of its global workforce, Chinese producer BYD Co. reported a sharp drop in deliveries of electric vehicles in the first quarter, and other automakers have delayed EV investments. 

Still, manufacturers are making long-term bets. Last month, Honda and Nissan Motor Co. announced a plan to collaborate on technology for battery-based electric vehicles, including software, as they seek to keep up with Chinese rivals. 

The negotiations between Honda and Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s government have taken many months and centered on investment tax credits, or ITCs, as the means by which the government will help pay for the capital costs of the factories. It will differ from the agreements Canada struck last year with Volkswagen AG, Chrysler parent Stellantis NV and Sweden’s Northvolt AB, the people said; those companies were offered billions of dollars over a period of years to subsidize battery production. 

Trudeau’s government will tout the Honda deal as a success story directly related to those contracts, one government official said. Those agreements created an ecosystem around Canada’s EV supply chain, attracting other auto firms and allowing the government to transition to its own system of tax incentives, officials within the Trudeau administration will say.

In this case, the primary incentive, called the clean technology manufacturing ITC, provides a refundable tax credit for 30 per cent of equipment costs. Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland’s budget last week also introduced a new tax credit that would apply to 10 per cent of the cost of buildings used for electric vehicle manufacturing — if a company has significant portions of its EV supply chain within Canada.

Freeland was closely involved in the Honda negotiations and the new EV tax credit was specifically geared to landing the Japanese firm, according to people familiar with the discussions, though other EV companies will also qualify if they build enough of their supply chain in Canada.

The Honda deal doesn’t include ongoing production subsidies of the type received by Volkswagen and Stellantis, according to people who spoke with Bloomberg about it. They declined to divulge the total estimated cost of government support.

Earlier this year, the Japanese news outlet Nikkei reported that Honda was considering a US$14 billion investment in Canada, but hadn’t made a decision yet. A spokesperson for Honda in Canada did not reply to a request for comment Sunday.  

Trudeau’s government has argued that large taxpayer support for automakers is necessary to ensure that Canada maintains its share of the North American auto business after U.S. President Joe Biden signed the Inflation Reduction Act into law in 2022, providing financial help for firms building EVs in the U.S. 

The auto sector is particularly important to Ontario, Canada’s largest province by population and home to assembly plants owned by Ford Motor Co., General Motors Co., Toyota Motor Corp., and Stellantis, as well as scores of parts suppliers. 

“The windows of opportunity for this kind of thing are short,” Industry Minister Francois-Philippe Champagne told Bloomberg in a recent interview discussing last year’s subsidy deals. He said the government had to act after the U.S. enacted the Inflation Reduction Act, or risk losing the plants south of the border. “That window was there and we seized it.”

Stellantis and partner LG Energy Solution are in the middle of building a battery plant in Windsor, Ontario, across the border from Detroit. Volkswagen’s proposed site is southwest of Toronto and Northvolt’s is near Montreal. Canada’s subsidy packages for those companies are being partially paid by provincial governments in Ontario and Quebec.

What Bloomberg Intelligence says 


Japanese automakers’ new-vehicle sales in the U.S. could increase eight per cent to 6 million units in 2024, we calculate, driven by improving vehicle supply, order backlogs and their aggressive new product offensive. It follows a 16 per cent year-over-year jump to 5.54 million units in 2023 from 4.76 million units in 2022.

— Bloomberg Intelligence auto analyst Tatsuo Yoshida

Cassidy to retire as president of Unifor Local 444

Story by Brian MacLeod •

Dave Cassidy, president of Local 444, is pictured with his Chrysler Pacifica outside his home in Essex on Thursday, April 22, 2021.© Provided by Windsor Star

Dave Cassidy, who has led workers in unionized workplaces ranging from Stellantis’s Windsor Assembly plant to Caesars Windsor, is retiring after six years as president of Unifor Local 444.

On the eve of submitting nominations on Tuesday for a new Local 444 executive board, Cassidy announced his retirement Sunday on a Facebook post.

“ Reflecting on our journey — from where we started to where we stand today — fills me with confidence and peace as I announce my retirement as your president and an employee of Stellantis,” Cassidy wrote.

“Together, we have weathered numerous challenges. From bidding farewell to our built-right Dodge Caravan to navigating the hardships brought on by the cancellation of shifts amidst the COVID-19 pandemic, these were tough times for our hardworking members and their families.”

As president of Local 444, Cassidy represents 20,000 active and retired members from 31 workplaces. Earlier this month, he was recognized with a distinguished alumni award from St. Clair College.

Cassidy, who has been a tenacious voice of labour in Windsor during his time as president, has been a member of the national executive board of Unifor, the largest private-sector union in Canada, since Unifor was founded in 2013. Before that, he had been a member of the Canadian Auto Workers national executive board from 2008 to 2013

“T hrough our collective efforts, every member has been called back to work, significant investments — both from the company and the government — have been secured, new vehicle models are in production, a new battery plant is near completion, and the promise of a third shift looms on the horizon, ensuring a brighter future for all our members,” Cassidy wrote.

“I’ve always acted with the best interests of our Local in mind. I have followed my conscience and done what I thought was right. You may not always agree with some of the tough decisions I have made. But I hope you agree that I was willing to make the tough decisions.”
 
Related

Windsor gets strong voice on new Ontario industrial advisory council

His Unifor biography says Cassidy started his apprenticeship as an electrician after high school when he began working at Chrysler Canada in 1993. His elected positions include shop floor steward, skilled trades chairperson at the Chrysler Windsor Assembly Plant, and president of the Windsor/Essex County Skilled Trades Council.

In 2021, he launched a bid to become the national president of Unifor, ultimately losing to current president Lana Payne.

Those wishing to stand for election for one of the 14 Local 444 executive board positions have until 5 p.m. Tuesday (April 23) to turn in their acceptance to the election committee chairperson.

Cassidy’s retirement announcement automatically triggers an election, with advance poll on May 3 and election dates on May 8 and 9.

HOMOPHOBIC XENOPHOBIC ZIONISTS

Jewish groups call for end to funding for Edmonton Pride centre over its response to Hamas attack

Story by Tyler Dawson • POSTMEDIA

The Pride flag flies with the Canadian and Alberta flags after a flag raising to celebrate Pride Week outside the McDougall Centre in Calgary on Monday Aug. 27, 2013.© Provided by National Post

Jewish organizations are calling for funding to be stripped from the Pride Centre of Edmonton, arguing that its “egregious” conduct since the October 7 Hamas attack on Israel ought to disqualify it from government support.

The demand — and flurry of behind the scenes emails — hint at how tensions over Israel’s war on Hamas is affecting civil society relationships in Canada


Stacey Leavitt-Wright, the CEO of the Jewish Federation of Edmonton, said in an interview that the Jewish community had attempted to schedule a meeting with the Pride centre to discuss the centre’s social media postings and the sense that it was no longer a safe space for the city’s Jews.

“Our biggest concern with this … is of course, seeing to the needs and the inclusion of the Jewish intersectional queer community in Edmonton,” said Leavitt-Wright.

The Centre for Israel and Jewish Affairs argues that the Pride centre, which received $138,000 from the federal government in January, should have its funding revoked. It argues that the non-profit has violated the federal anti-racism strategy, praised attacks by listed terrorist entities and “issued written support for the sexual violence waged against Jews.”

On Oct. 21, three weeks after 1,200 people were killed in a surprise raid carried out by Hamas and other terror organizations, the Edmonton Pride centre’s volunteer-run Instagram page posted, “We at PCE stand against apartheid, genocide, colonization and state violence.”


Related video: Growing number of 2SLGBTQ+ refugees find sanctuary in Edmonton (cbc.ca) Duration 3:12 View on Watch

Several days after the Oct. 21 social media post, the Jewish Federation of Edmonton told the Pride centre that it would not be participating in a casino fundraiser, arguing that its post about the fighting “was unbalanced and did not mention that the conflict started due to the genocidal terrorist attack against Jews.”

Ashley Kravetzky, the chair of the Edmonton Jewish Federation’s Pride committee, said she had been attending meetings hosted at the Pride centre for another non-profit she volunteered with. She stopped going.

“It was becoming very abundantly clear that they weren’t interested in being supportive of us, as a community, it made me not want to inhabit their space, to share their space,” Kravetsky said. “The biggest problem was Pride centre — just there was no space to have a conversation.”

Kravetsky found that her views on Israel had ruptured some of her relationships within the broader LGBTQ community.

“I was accused of hate speech, perpetuating hate speech, because I said, like, don’t use genocide as a word to describe what is happening because it’s harming people in our community,” Kravetsky said.

Hamas, in its founding charter in 1988, calls for the destruction of Israel and is nakedly antisemitic.

In response to the concerns raised by the Jewish federation, Esjay Lafayette, the director of the Pride Centre of Edmonton, wrote an email on Nov. 4 offering condolences for the dead in the October 7 attack and acknowledging the rise of antisemitism in Canada.

“I can’t imagine how profoundly challenging that must be,” he wrote.

In the email, Lafayette said, “It’s unfortunate that speaking out against the oppression of the Palestinian people has become synonymous with antisemitism,” and that “supporting Palestinian rights and opposing antisemitism are interconnected.”

Lafayette also argued that Palestinians “did not initiate the current situation.”

“This is not a conventional war, as Gaza is a colonized territory without an army and has endured a prolonged siege by a nuclear power for decades,” Lafayette wrote. “Speaking this truth aloud is by no means antisemitic.”

The centre, along with dozens of researchers, academics and other organizations, was a signatory to the controversial Nov. 30 open letter that urged “Canadian political leaders to end their complicity in the ongoing massacres and genocide in Gaza.” The letter, which alluded to “the unverified accusation that Palestinians were guilty of sexual violence” during the October 7 attack created a firestorm of controversy in Edmonton and led to the firing of the University of Alberta’s Sexual Assault Centre director, who was a signatory to the letter.

A United Nations report released last month found there was “reasonable grounds” to believe that sexual violence, including rape and gang rape, were committed during the October 7 attacks.

The Jewish federation wrote to the board of the Pride centre on Dec. 15, saying that Lafayette’s response was “defensive and hurtful.”

“You are failing to support Jewish Queer and Transgender people,” the letter said. “(We) have lost faith in your organization.

Four months later, the Pride centre and Jewish federation have not yet met.

Emails exchanged between the organizations show the Pride centre demurring about a meeting, citing a change in board membership, for example, and responding to Alberta Premier Danielle Smith’s late January announcement about restrictions on medical treatments for transgender youth.

Eventually, there was a response.

In an email dated March 8, Lafayette wrote that the Pride centre had consulted with Jewish LGBTQ people, asking whether they felt “hurt, marginalized, unsafe or unwelcome in PCE.”

“The people who we spoke with … expressed surprise to hear that the Jewish Federation of Edmonton is hearing the feedback you describe from its Jewish 2SLBTQIA+ members as it does not match their experience with PCE.”

Lafayette said those people were willing to meet with the Jewish Federation of Edmonton’s Pride committee to “better understand your concerns about how Jews are treated at PCE.”

“Their sense is that this is a conversation that is most appropriate to happen between 2SLGBTQIA+ Jews, and we respect their request for this.”

In February — prior to the response from Lafayette about the meeting — the Centre for Israel and Jewish Affairs, a Jewish advocacy organization headquartered in Toronto, initiated its campaign to have the PCE stripped of its funding.




MP Randy Boissonnault, left, Minister of Employment, Workforce Development and Official Languages of Canada speaks during a press conference in Windsor on Wednesday, Jan. 24, 2024.© Dan Janisse

CIJA first wrote to Randy Boissonnault, a Liberal member of Parliament in Edmonton; Boissonnault is not responsible for the funding disbursed to the Pride Centre of Edmonton and noted that he forwarded the letter to Marci Ien, a Toronto Liberal and minister of women and gender equality and youth.

Richard Marceau, CIJA’s vice-president of external affairs and general counsel, along with Leavitt-Wright and Steve Shafir, a CIJA board member for Edmonton, also wrote to Ien.

They asked that the funding be reviewed and suspended “until the Edmonton Pride Centre demonstrates a concerted effort to combat antisemitism within their organization and in how they interact with the LGBTQ+ Jewish community.”

“The Edmonton Pride Centre has disenfranchised queer and transgender members of the Edmonton community, making them feel excluded, unwelcome, and unsafe,” the letter said.

“It certainly does not warrant the financial support of our national government.”

The letter argues that the Pride centre is in breach of the federal anti-racism strategy. In his response to CIJA’s letter, Boissonnault noted that agreements for funding the Pride centre had been inked prior to October 7.

In her response, Ien did not commit to reviewing or suspending funding for the Pride centre, noting that its work is aligned with the government’s objectives of combating discrimination against LGBTQ Canadians. Ien also said that the government has spent $1.2 million to support the Special Envoy on Preserving Holocaust Remembrance and Combatting Antisemitism.

“We commend you for engaging and creating a dialogue with organizations that may not align with your beliefs,” Ien wrote.




Mayor Amarjeet Sohi speaks to the media from inside a city hall doorway about the recent shooting at City Hall, in Edmonton Tuesday Jan. 30, 2024.© David

CIJA also wrote to Edmonton Mayor Amarjeet Sohi. The Pride centre received $174,000 from the city in 2021 and $103,000 in 2022. Sohi, in his emailed response said, “On behalf of colleagues on City Council, let me confirm that we are concerned about the information shared.” Sohi said he would speak with city staff to “determine appropriate next steps.”

In response to National Post’s inquiries, Lafayette sent an emailed statement from the Pride Centre of Edmonton’s board of directors.

“We are deeply saddened and troubled to learn that some members of the Jewish 2SLGBTQIA+ community have expressed feeling unsafe at the Pride Centre of Edmonton,” it says. “We strive to prioritize the safety of the most marginalized an vulnerable communities who access our services.”

The statement says that the Pride centre works with “a significant number of displaced peoples, including refugees seeking asylum.”

“We feel it is vital to express solidarity with Palestinians experiencing ongoing displacement and genocide,” the statement says.

The statement also reiterated that some of the Pride centre’s Jewish members offered to meet with the Jewish Federation of Edmonton and CIJA on March 8.

“We have not yet received a response ,” the statement says.

“We remain open to alternative methods of engaging with members of the Edmonton Jewish 2SLGBTQIA+ community who feel harmed or unwelcome at PCE.”

However, Leavitt-Wright said that’s not what the Jewish federation wanted.

“If I wanted to engage with Jewish community members, I could speak to them myself,” Leavitt-Wright said. “Our request was to meet with leadership of the Pride centre based on the interaction we’d had with them earlier on.”

For Kravetsky, who says she’s Edmonton’s only Jewish drag performer, it’s tough to say if the relationships within the LGBTQ community can be healed.

“I removed myself from all of the drag community here in the city to protect myself…. I’m a social pariah at this point,” she said. “If there’s going to be reparation, I think it’s going to be a long process…. I don’t know if I’ll ever be able to feel safe in a queer space again.”
This teen was poisoned by carbon monoxide on the job. His parents say the employer got off easy

Story by Rosa Marchitelli 

When Wil Krotenko got his first part time job in the meat department of the local Co-op grocery store last summer, the then 14-year-old couldn't wait to start making his own money — never imagining the job could kill him a few months later.

The teen, who lives in Canora, Sask., about 235 kilometres northeast of Regina,
says he started feeling sick soon after starting his shift on Oct. 23 when his manager tasked him with cleaning enclosed areas of the meat department with a gas-powered pressure washer.

"I started feeling lightheaded and dizzy," Wil told Go Public. He says he staggered to the front of the store. "And I guess that's when I collapsed."

His condition was so serious that Wil had to be airlifted to Misericordia Community Hospital in Edmonton with severe carbon monoxide poisoning.

His mom says he spent hours in a hyperbaric chamber, used in the most serious poisoning cases, so the high levels of carbon monoxide in his blood could be replaced with oxygen.

"He was basically at death's door," said Wil's father, Kurt Krotenko. "If he would have passed out in that meat department alone with the pressure washer on … He could have been dead right there."


Wil, centre, sits with his mom, Kelly, left, and his father, Kurt. Wil’s parents are worried the carbon monoxide poisoning he suffered at his job could result in long-term health problems. (Adam Bent/CBC)© Provided by cbc.ca
Lack of severe consequences

According to the Occupational Health and Safety report, carbon monoxide levels in the confined space where Wil was working were up to 60 times higher than what's considered safe over an eight hour period under Saskatchewan's occupational health regulations.

Despite all of that, the employer faced no consequences, aside from being told to fix the problems.

Related video: A teen was poisoned at work and his employer received no penalty | Go Public (cbc.ca)  Duration 2:21  View on Watch

 


The lack of severe consequences for employers who put workers like Wil in danger is a longstanding problem in Canada, according to a workplace safety expert.

Sean Tucker, a professor of occupational health and safety at the University of Regina says that's because many provinces don't have the ability to issue hefty fines directly to workplaces that put employees in harm's way.

Instead, they can only order employers to fix violations — with no fines — or they can try to pursue large fines in court, which is costly and can take years, he said.


"We need other tools. We need administrative penalties. So for serious incidents like this where for whatever reason, there isn't going to be a prosecution, there can be a significant financial penalty," Tucker said.

There are minor fines that can be issued in some provinces without court action, called summary offence ticketing, but those don't apply in Wil's case, according to Tucker.



The workplace inspection report found that Gateway Co-op in Canora had violated several Occupational Health and Safety regulations. (Adam Bent/CBC)© Provided by cbc.ca

Co-op is a big player in the grocery store market with more than 240 locations mostly all over Western Canada, according to the organization's website.


The Gateway location did not answer Go Public's specific questions.

In an email statement to Go Public, Gateway Co-op said, "the incident was caused by an unauthorized piece of equipment being brought into one of our facilities by a then Gateway Co-op employee."

The statement went on to say that what happened was "a terrible incident that had the potential to be worse," and that the store resolves to make sure it doesn't happen again.
Texts show supervisor knew equipment was unsafe

Just the day before Wil was poisoned, another teen employee went home sick after using the gas pressure washer.

A supervisor was aware of that, according to text messages between that supervisor and the employee that were provided to Go Public.

Gateway Co-op didn't answer Go Public's questions about what the supervisor knew.

Both teens were unsupervised and received no training on how to use the equipment, according to their families and the workplace safety report.


The day before Wil was poisoned by carbon monoxide, another teen worker at the Canora Co-op was tasked with using the same gas-powered pressure washer and reported feeling sick to a supervisor, as shown in this text exchange. (Name withheld)© Provided by cbc.ca

That report said Co-op broke four Occupational Health and Safety Regulations: failing to provide worker health and safety training, failure to provide adequate supervision, allowing employees under the age of 16 to work in a hazardous space, and exposing young workers to dangerous chemicals or substances.

Co-op was ordered to get into compliance with the rules it had broken within 11 weeks but faced no fines or other repercussions.

"My son was almost killed on the job, and [Occupational Health and Safety] only gave four contraventions to the Co-op and no fines. I find that ridiculous," said Kurt Krotenko.
Young workers more vulnerable

Tucker, the workplace safety expert, says young workers are more vulnerable to workplace injury because they're eager to please and reluctant to speak up about concerns.

"This one is certainly egregious," Tucker said. "No training, no supervision. You've got a 14 year old doing work that, legally, they're not supposed to be doing… so many problems here."


What's needed, says Tucker, are Administrative Monetary Penalties (AMPs) — severe fines that fill the gap between written orders to fix problems and court prosecution.

AMPs provide significant fines without going to court. Some provinces have them, but many don't — including Saskatchewan, Ontario, Quebec, New Brunswick and several other jurisdictions.

The labour ministry told Go Public it has no plans to implement AMPs.


Wil Krotenko was asked by his supervisor to clean this enclosed area of the meat department with a gas pressure washer. (Submitted by Kelly Krotenko)© Provided by cbc.ca

Tucker says charges under Saskatchewan's occupational health and safety law should be considered in Wil's case, especially since another young employee got sick after using the gas pressure washer a day earlier.

But that would require Saskatchewan's Ministry of Labour Relations and Workplace Safety to pursue charges through the Ministry of Justice.

The Ministry tells Go Public it's not doing that, at least for now.

"However, charges can be filed any time within two years from the date of the incident if new or additional evidence warrants it," a spokesperson for the ministry told Go Public in an email.

Gateway Co-op says it has co-operated and complied with all of the health and safety requirements made after the incident.
Teen could suffer long term health problems

Wil and his parents say he hasn't been the same since he was poisoned at work. They say he gets cluster headaches, which are severely painful, especially around the eyes.

"It's really hard to focus when I have headaches," Wil said. "I think that's why my grades, like, have declined."




Dr. Louis Hugo Francescutti, a professor in the School of Public Health at the University of Alberta and an emergency physician, warns Wil Krotenko could face serious long term health problems as a result of being poisoned at work. (Kory Siegers/CBC)© Provided by cbc.ca

Carbon monoxide poisoning can lead to long term neurological, cognitive, physical and emotional problems according to Dr. Louis Hugo Francescutti, a professor in the School of Public Health at the University of Alberta and an emergency physician.

Go Public provided Francescutti with Wil's medical records so he could review the case.

"He's going to need support," the doctor told Go Public.

"He's going to need to be monitored very carefully, especially his heart function and his pulmonary function and his neurobehavioral function as well. So he's not out of the woods yet."

The Krotenko family says they contacted Go Public so they could warn other families about safety risks young people could face at work and advocate for more severe consequences for companies that fail to keep workers safe.

Now, they want to focus on Wil's medical appointments and monitoring his health.

Gateway Co-op says it has offered the Krotenko family support and access to employee programs.
Investigation underway after CP Rail cars catch fire, roll through downtown London, Ont.

Story by CBC/Radio-Canada •

London Fire says no one is hurt after five train cars caught fire travelling eastbound through downtown London, Ont. late Sunday night.

Multiple crews were called to the area of Richmond Street and Pall Mall Street, a residential section of the downtown, at around 10:49 p.m. after numerous witnesses called 911.
The train was travelling on the tracks owned by the Canadian Pacific Rail line and was eventually brought to a halt in front of an office building and an apartment complex. Crews were able to disconnect the locomotives so firefighters could put out the fire.

"There was exposure to a building closeby, but we were able to contain the fire away from the building," said London Fire platoon chief Colin Shewell. "Additional crews arrived on scene, and within an hour, we were able to put a good knock down on the fire and really put it under control in about an hour and 20 minutes."

CP Rail moved the cars to its rail yard on Quebec Street after fire crews cleared the scene. From there, firefighters continued to work to put out smoldering material.

CBC News has requested comment from CP Rail and will update this story when someone is made available.

The cars were carrying old railway wooden ties,
with no dangerous goods involved, fire fighters said. The ties had been picked up from outside of London in the Strathroy area, said Shewell. Somewhere between Strathroy and London, they ignited, although it's not yet known how.

"We will treat everything as arson until proven otherwise," said Shewell. "These were scrap railway ties, so there's really no dollar value on them. They were actually destined to be destroyed."

The investigation is now in the hands of CP Rail's own police oversight body, he said.


There were no dangerous goods on board the freight train when it caught fire, London Fire says. (Sean Davidson/CBC)© Provided by cbc.ca

UK

The beach where people keep finding human bones

Maria Cassidy - BBC News
Sun, April 21, 2024 

The Glamorgan Heritage Coast is rich in archaeological treasures [Getty Images]

A relaxing stroll along the beach is something many of us enjoy.

But what happens if you stumble across ancient human remains?

That's what happened to Christopher Rees, from Bridgend, while walking his dog at Dunraven Bay, in the Vale of Glamorgan, last October.

The 39-year-old was with his seven-year-old son, Dylan, when he saw part of a bone sticking out of the sand.

"Dylan loves learning about history and going to the museums, so he was excited to see what it was," Christopher said.

Dylan initially thought the bones were "a dinosaur", and they carried some of what they found back to the car to take home.

But when Dylan got home and proudly showed off his discoveries, his mum - Sophie - became suspicious.

"She said, 'that looks like human bones', and at first, I didn't think much of it as I thought it may have been an animal bone, but then I started to question myself," said Christopher.

"My sister has a few friends that are doctors and vets. So the group chat was in full swing and it was only a few days later during Sunday dinner that I was speaking her and she said 'yeah it looks like a human bone'."

It was then that Christopher called the police and explained everything to them.

"I was panicking. I thought 'what have I got myself into?'

"I explained everything to the police and where I found it."

Hundreds of remains found under department store


Mysterious medieval cemetery unearthed


How Wales' forgotten hillforts were seats of power

South Wales Police cordoned off the area for a few days while they looked into the discovery.

A few weeks later, officers confirmed that what Christopher and Dylan had discovered was ancient remains.

"I told Dylan and he thought it was really cool," said Christopher.

It's not the first time ancient remains have been found along this stretch of coastline.

Earlier this month, suspected centuries-old human remains were found at the same beach after an ancient wall collapsed.

The bones were sent for analysis, but experts have suggested that they could be from shipwreck victims in the 16th, 17th and possibly 18th Centuries.

Historian Graham Loveluck-Edwards said there were two other possibilities.

"We know that in the prehistoric period, people in the area would often inter their dead in caves. We've got an example of that in Paviland over on the Gower," he said.

"We also have archaeological evidence of a pitched battle that took place near here in the 1st Century."

But Mr Loveluck-Edwards said the shipwreck theory was the most likely explanation.

Claudine Gerrard, from Heneb, The Trust for Welsh Archaeology, agreed.

“Human remains were often washed ashore following shipwrecks, and were buried in the nearest available place,” she said, adding that the dates could vary from prehistoric to modern.

Numerous archaeological discoveries have been made along the Vale of Glamorgan coast, including prehistoric and Iron Age structures, as well as the remains of shipwrecks.

In 2019, the skeletal remains of at least six people, believed to have been shipwreck victims, were found at Cwm Nash beach, which is just a few miles from Dunraven Bay.

In 2014, archaeologists discovered two human leg bones on a cliff, also at Cwm Nash.
'Love at first sight': Toronto Zoo's white leopard Jita pregnant for first time

Toronto Zoo announces pregnancy of snow leopard saying "there might be a little snow in the spring forecast this year"

Corné van Hoepen
Fri, April 19, 2024


The Toronto Zoo says Jita the "friendly and determined" two-year-old snow leopard, shown in a handout photo, is pregnant. THE CANADIAN PRESS/HO-Toronto Zoo **MANDATORY CREDIT**

The Toronto Zoo announced Friday "there might be a little snow in the spring forecast this year," sharing that three-year-old snow leopard Jita is pregnant for the first time.

In a press release shared to the zoo's website, the pregnancy was confirmed by ultrasound, though her thick belly fur "makes it challenging to confirm litter size." Nine-year-old Pemba is the expectant father.

Jita and Pemba were introduced in early February 2024, with the zoo writing "it was a case of love at first sight."

According to the Toronto Zoo, typical snow leopard gestation lasts 90 to 110 days placing the arrival of her babies in early May.

While the news is exciting, the zoo warns there is some reason to caution.

"First-time pregnancies inherently present challenges (especially with large carnivores) since inexperienced mothers don’t always know what to do," the zoo writes in a statement.

Additional cause for caution comes from the fact that Pemba has previously sired prior litters, but none of his cubs survived due to medical complications.

Armed with this knowledge, the snow leopard care team is making preparations to ensure the best possible outcome, with ongoing ultrasounds monitoring Jita's progress.

'We remain hopeful this pregnancy continues to go smoothly," the zoo writes.

The elusive snow leopard, also known as the "ghost cat," is rarely spotted in the wild and is listed as Vulnerable on the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) list.

Fewer than 7,000 of the wildcats remain in the wild, according to research conducted by the Snow Leopard Trust.

The Toronto Zoo participates in the snow leopard Species Survival Plan® (SSP), a cooperative breeding program amongst AZA accredited North American facilities.