Saturday, June 29, 2024

Fascism is on my agenda

Posted on June 29 2024

Richard Murphy





I am not going to offer an apology for the fact that my videos over the next few days are going to be about fascism, in the main.

Nor, in that context, do I apologise for the first one, which is out today, being longer than is normal. I like to make videos that are less than five minutes in length, in the main. This one is almost double that. The issue is, however, one of such importance that I did not try to curtail my flow.

I am raising this issue now for what I think are obvious reasons.

Both the USA and France face the risk of having fascist governments before this year is out.

We will not, but unless the Labour Party takes serious action the rise of fascism in this country will continue and what will happen in 2029 is unknown. That is most especially true given that Reform are likely to have a parliamentary presence after 4 July, whilst whatever rump of the Conservative party might remain will, almost certainly, move even further in a far-right direction. Unsurprisingly, I am worried as a result.

That being said, fascism is not beaten by talking about it. Fascism might be created by political rhetoric around the myth of the strong man, the enemy who is the “other”, and an appeal to supposedly traditional values that conflict with what the “strong man” wishes to claim are our current abnormal values. It is, however, defeated by something quite different, which is by removing the causes for alienation within society that so many, not unreasonably, feel at present.

Forty years of neoliberalism have left large numbers of people, and large parts of the UK, alienated from the political mainstream. That was not by accident; that was by design. Neoliberalism was meant to redistribute wealth in a way that would always leave large numbers of people feeling left behind. The existence of inequality that is fuelling the demand for fascism is not an accident: it is a design feature of neoliberal politics.

Labour can address this issue. It could use the power that the government has to deliver growth in the economy. It could tackle the failures in public services. It could redistribute income and wealth. It could as a result tackle inequality. It could promote well-being.

Or, alternatively, it can maintain the status quo, and leave millions in despair, wondering what the whole political process can do for them without resort to a far-right agenda.

One of the reasons why I will be spending so much time over the next five years (all being well) talking about what Labour and other parties should be delivering for the benefit of the people of this country is precisely because I do not want to see us falling into the political mayhem that the far-right agenda will deliver.

I will do that because I care about people, and that is the last thing that the fascist does.

I will also do that because I care about democracy, and our right to choose, and there is no doubt that the far-right wishes to take that choice away. Just look at Trump.

Finally, I will do this because I believe that without change there is a significant threat to our way of life here on earth, and ultimately maybe to life itself in the form that we as humans know it unless we are to change our priorities. Fascists deny climate change, because the only thing that ultimately matters to them in their deeply-warped thinking is the accumulation of wealth for a few, invariably at cost to those within the countries that they seek to govern, but also beyond it. For that reason, we quite literally cannot afford fascism.

So,  fascism is going to be quite explicitly on my agenda during the years to come. But much more importantly, so too will be the ways to defeat it.

UK
Revealed: how Sunak dropped smoking ban amid lobbying from tobacco firms


Rob Davies and Matthew Chapman
THE GUARDIAN
Fri, 28 June 2024

Rishi Sunak at Haughton academy in Darlington, England, in January, where he outlined plans to ban single-use vapes.Photograph: Ian Forsyth/AP

Rishi Sunak abandoned his “legacy” policy to ban smoking for future generations amid a backlash from the tobacco industry in the form of legal threats, lobbying and a charm offensive aimed at Conservative MPs, an investigation reveals.

The UK had been on course to become the first country to ban smoking for future generations, via the tobacco and vaping bill, which Downing Street hoped would help define Sunak’s place in British political history.

An investigation by the Guardian and the Examination, a non-profit newsroom that investigates global health threats, has uncovered how the UK’s largest cigarette companies fought against the policy, which would have raised the smoking age by one year every year.


After months of fierce opposition from the industry – and intervention from MPs and thinktanks with ties to tobacco firms – the proposal was excluded from the “wash-up” process, when outgoing governments choose which policies to fast-track and which to drop.

The policy, which in effect banned smoking for anyone born after 2009, was left out despite MPs having voted in favour of it.

Documents and freedom of information requests reveal how four of the world’s largest tobacco firms – the UK’s Imperial Brands and British American Tobacco (BAT), Japan Tobacco International (JTI) and US-headquartered Philip Morris International (PMI) – put ministers on notice of a legal backlash.

Imperial and BAT wrote to the health secretary, Victoria Atkins, in February, to claim the consultation process preceding legislation was “unlawful” because industry views had not been considered.

The Department of Health and Social Care has said it did not need to consider industry views, pointing to guidance included in a World Health Organization global treaty, signed by the UK, that says governments should form smoking policy without influence from cigarette companies.

The Marlboro-owner PMI and JTI, which makes Camel and Benson & Hedges, said the treaty permitted interactions with cigarette firms if they were “necessary”.

Imperial, which owns Lambert & Butler and Gauloises, followed up its warning with a legal letter threatening a “judicial review” challenging the consultation process.

Government lawyers responded by saying legal action might “derail” a bill that ministers believed could save tens of thousands of lives and billions of pounds in NHS costs.

BAT, JTI and PMI were named as interested parties in Imperial’s letter, giving them the right to join as co-claimants if a judicial review went ahead.

Imperial, which sells half of all of the cigarettes smoked in the UK, has not filed court proceedings but a spokesperson said the company was “keeping the situation under review as we monitor legislative developments”.

The legal threats came after the industry opposed the legislation in its submissions to the consultation, despite claiming publicly that they wanted to phase out cigarettes.

PMI’s chief executive, Jacek Olczak, indicated in 2021 interviews that it could stop selling cigarettes in the UK within 10 years.

However, the company’s UK subsidiary told the consultation it “did not support the age of sale ban as outlined”, arguing instead for “further restrictions” on “combustible tobacco” – ie cigarettes – instead of an outright ban.

PMI told the Guardian the bill risked “confusing” consumers because it included restrictions on some smoke-free products such as vapes, adding that it “firmly believes in phasing out cigarettes, to the benefit of the 6.4 million adult smokers in the UK”.

BAT, which has previously advocated for a “smokeless” future, proposed raising the age of sale to 21 instead.

As the government pressed ahead with its plans despite opposition, tobacco firms courted rightwing and libertarian Tory MPs. In January, three months after Sunak announced his policy on smoking, the then Clacton MP, Giles Watling, attended a “business lunch” with officials from JTI. Two months later, he went to the company’s annual party at the British Museum in London.

In May, he proposed an amendment that would have replaced Sunak’s proposals with a new minimum age of 21.

“We are strongly of the opinion that engagement results in better and more informed policy and is therefore in the best interests of all relevant parties,” JTI said. Watling did not return requests for comment.

Other MPs targeted by the tobacco industry included the business secretary, Kemi Badenoch. The Imported Tobacco Products Advisory Council wrote to her in March complaining about the “open dismissal of industry views in the decision making process”.

Its secretary general, Tatiana Camacho, accused the health department of “taking a position that seems to go against the spirit of collaboration and inclusiveness”.

A month later Badenoch voted against the smoking ban at its second reading in the Commons, posting on X at the time: “The principle of equality under the law is a fundamental one … We should not treat legally competent adults differently in this way, where people born a day apart will have permanently different rights.”

Two Conservative MPs, including Badenoch’s closest political aide, also attended a lunch and drinks reception hosted by the smoking lobby group Forest, days before the tobacco bill was in effect shelved.

The Beat the Ban event, at Boisdale restaurant in Belgravia, London, featured beermats depicting Sunak as a nanny, an allusion to the ban being a “nanny state” measure.

Badenoch’s parliamentary private secretary, Alexander Stafford, attended alongside fellow Conservative MP Andrew Rosindell. Tobacco lobbyists present included Camacho and Richard Cleary, who left Badenoch’s department to join Imperial in January.

Stafford has said he does not smoke but opposed the ban as a “lover of freedom, a lover of choice and a lover of information”.

He and Rosindell did not return a request for comment.

The Forest director Simon Clark said the organisation did not seek to persuade MPs who attended to oppose the bill becoming law but did outline the group’s position in a speech.

The government also came under pressure from rightwing thinktanks funded by the tobacco industry during the consultation process.

In total, there were 307 responses in which the respondent disclosed ties to the tobacco industry, including from the Institute of Economic Affairs (IEA) and Adam Smith Institute. Both have received funding from JTI, while the IEA has also received money from Imperial and BAT.

BAT, the owner of Lucky Strike and Rothmans, said: “We are clear that combustible cigarettes pose serious health risks, and the only way to avoid these risks is not to start smoking or to quit.

“However, we do not believe that a generational sales ban will have the desired impact given the serious unintended consequences that are likely to follow, such as age verification being difficult to manage, and an increase in illicit trading.”

The Conservative party did not return requests for comment.
ICC allows UK to submit arguments on jurisdiction over Israelis in Gaza case


June 27, 2024 at 8:08 pm


Children and their families holding Palestinian flags and banners, attend a demonstration in support of Palestinians as they march to International Criminal Court (ICC) building demanding investigation for the Israeli actions on Gaza, in the Hague, Netherlands on December 27, 2023. [Selman Aksünger – Anadolu Agency]


Judges at the International Criminal Court (ICC) ruled, on Thursday, that the United Kingdom can submit legal arguments to judges mulling the prosecution’s request for arrest warrants for Israeli Prime Minister, Benjamin Netanyahu, and Defence Minister, Yoav Gallant, Reuters reports.

Court documents made public on Thursday showed that the UK, an ICC member state, filed a request with the Court earlier this month to provide written observations on whether “the Court can exercise jurisdiction over Israeli nationals, in circumstances where Palestine cannot exercise criminal jurisdiction over Israeli nationals (under) the Oslo Accords”.

The judges said the Court would also accept submissions from other interested parties on the legal issue, but set a 12 July deadline for filings.

Granting the UK’s request might delay the judges’ pending decision on arrest warrants for Netanyahu and Gallant over Israel’s war in Gaza, as ICC Prosecutor, Karim Khan, had requested in May.

The ICC has had an ongoing investigation into any alleged crimes within its jurisdiction committed on Palestinian Territory and by Palestinians on the territory of Israel since 2021.

In that year, ICC judges ruled that the Court has jurisdiction after the Palestinian authorities signed up to the Court in 2015, after being granted United Nations observer state status.

The decision, however, left a ruling on the interpretation of the 1993 Oslo Accords regarding Palestinian jurisdiction over Israeli nationals for a later stage in the proceedings.

The UK’s argument is that the Palestinian authorities cannot have jurisdiction over Israeli nationals under the Oslo Accords, and so it cannot transfer that jurisdiction over to the ICC to prosecute Israelis.
RIP
Arrested Development and Roseanne star Martin Mull dead at 80

The sitcom veteran enjoyed a decades-long career that began in the 1970s.



FILE – MARTIN MULL, WHOSE DROLL, ESOTERIC COMEDY AND ACTING MADE HIM A SITCOM SENSATION HAS DIED (WILLY SANJUAN/INVISION/AP)
AP
RACHEL VICKERS-PRICE

Television star Martin Mull, best known for his roles in hit comedy series’ Arrested Development, Roseanne and Sabrina the Teenage Witch, has died after an unknown illness, his family said.

Mull, whose career spanned decades and encompassed hundreds of credits in television, film, comedy, and music, died on Thursday at the age of 80, his daughter said.

It is understood he had been battling the mystery illness for an extended period.

His daughter, TV producer and writer Maggie Mull, confirmed the news on Saturday, describing her father as someone she loved “tremendously”.

“I am heartbroken to share that my father passed away at home on June 27th, after a valiant fight against a long illness,” the former Family Guy producer posted on Instagram.

“He was known for excelling at every creative discipline imaginable … He would find that joke funny. He was never not funny.”

She added that her father will be “deeply missed” by all, including “by many, many dogs”.

He landed the role of Colonel Mustard in the 1985 black-comedy movie Clue, inspired by the board game that shares the same name.

1990s television fans will recognise him from Roseanne, where he played the lead character’s boss and best friend, Leon Carp.

He also appeaed on the critically acclaimed Fox sitcom Arrested Development, playing private detective Gene Parmesan alongside Jessica Walter, Jason Bateman, Portia de Rossi, and Michael Cera.

His expansive career saw him rack up swathes of guest credits on many well-known television programmes, including The Simpsons, Family Guy, Two and a Half Men, and more.

He was nominated for an Emmy Award in 2016 for his four-episode appearance on HBO political satire Veep.

Tributes have begun pouring in for the seasoned actor and entertainer, with Melissa Joan Hart leading the social media tributes.

Hart, who played teen witch Sabrina Spellman in the late-1990s sitcom Sabrina the Teenage Witch, shared a heartfelt tribute on social media.

The now 48-year-old actor posted an Instagram tribute to her blundering high school principal, Willard Kraft, and the man who played him for 73 episodes.

“Rest in Peace, my friend. The incredible #MartinMull (Principal Kraft) has left us for his eternal rest,” she wrote.

“I have such fond memories of working with him and being in awe of his huge body of work, which before #SabrinaTheTeemageWitch included #Roseanne and #MrMom as the projects I knew him from.”

The former child star added that even after their time on Sabrina The Teenage Witch, the two actors kept running into each other on numerous TV sets throughout the years.

She sympathised with his family at losing a “wonderful man”.

“He was an artist who liked to paint and build things with his hands, a musician, and a wonderful man who I am better for knowing. He will be missed, but this world has benefited from his being here,” she wrote.

“My deepest sympathies to his family and friends.”

Actor and Jennifer Tilly, who starred alongside Mull in the 1988 movie Rented Lips, also paid tribute to a man she remembered as “wonderful”.

“So sad to hear of the passing of Martin Mull. I worked with him a long time ago on a film called Rented Lips that he wrote and also starred in,” Tilly shared on X.


“He was such a witty, charismatic and kind person. As an actress just starting out, it really meant a lot to me to be able to work with such a wonderful actor.”



Mull is survived by his daughter, Maggie, and wife, Wendy Haas.

Assange Is Finally Free As America, Britain, Sweden And Australia Are Shamed – OpEd


By 

This was quite a week in the annals of freedom of the press.


Julian Assange, the founder of the whistleblower organization Wikileaks, after being hounded by the US with the help of its sycophantic allies in the governments of the UK, Sweden, Ecuador and, most shamefully, his native Australia, for 14 years since his Wikileaks organization obtained and released  documents proving systemic war crimes by the US in Iraq and Afghanistan, has been freed. He spent the last 14 years fighting efforts by the US to lock him up oar execute 9or even to assassinate him ,spending 12 of those years in the hell of confinement in a British maximum security prison and earlier seven years as an asylum seeker trapped in the Ecuadoran Embassy in London.

His asylum ended and his imprisonment in Belmarsh began when the leftist president who had granted him asylum from British authorities who wanted to hand him over to the US for prosecution as a spy, lost an election and was replaced by a right-wing president who cancelled his asylum and called in the London Metropolitan Police, who dragged him out of the embassy and into solitary confinement in Belmarsh Prison pending extradition to the US.

Over the seven years he was trapped in the little embassy, or left alone in a tiny cell in hellish Belmarsh, his supporters — initially a handful of journalists and his family — a father, a half-brother and father and attorneys in Britain and the US, and one attorney, Sara Gonzalez Devant, who later bore  him two sons who have never met him except in captivity worked to build a movement to defend and free him.

It was a tough struggle. The US and UK media organizations that benefitted from his Wikileaks organization’s documentation of US war crimes, including the gun-sight video of a US helicopter gunship slaughtering, amidst audible mocking laughter,  11 unarmed Iraqis including two local Reuters journalists, and from other scoops Wikileaks  received from whistleblowers, largely turned on him when he was being pursued by US prosecutors.

Typically these same news organizations, when covering his case, would repeat in their articles about him (almost as if pasting in pre-set macro paragraphs”),  the false accusation that he was wanted by Swedish prosecutors for allegedly “raping” two women in Sweden. They also would routinely include in such stories gratuitous quotes from politicians smearing his character and even from fellow journalists questioning his claim to be one of them, along with grudging acknowledgement that the US charge of espionage against him was a threat to press freedom,


But truth gradually prevailed and pressure kept building: in Britain against his being extradited and against the US obsession with pursuing the case against him, and in Australia for the government in Canberra to end its years of submissive and callous acceptance of the abuse of an Aussie citizen by a US government out for revenge. This international movement to free Assange grew larger and more vocal when a new Labour government replaced the prior conservative one in Australia and Labor PM Anthony Albanese openly called on President Biden to end the case against his countryman Assange.

In the end it was this slowly and painstakingly developed international movement to free Assange that compelled the Biden administration to offer Assange a deal. He and his attorneys were reportedly told that the US would agree to his  freedom if he would plead guilty to one felony count of theft of US military secrets (the evidence of war crimes), and a sentence of five years, which would be satisfied by crediting the over five years he had spent being held in Belmarsh Prison without conviction of anything but denied bail while fighting the US’s extradition effort.

Much is being made now, of course, by US officials of that guilty plea, but it is important that what Assange was facing if he were extradited to a court in Washington DC. With an indictment on 17 felony counts under the 1917 Espionage Act an one felony count of  encouraging hackers and of helping NSA whistleblower Edward Snowden to escape to Russia, the total prison term if convicted on all those counts would have run to 175 years’ jail time served consecutively.

The urgency of the US plea deal offer, which apparently came as a something of a surprise to Assange and his defense team, had to do with the reality that the US was facing of his possible escape from their trap:  That became at least a possibility when, after many rejections, two UK High Court Judges last year overruled a 2022 British Supreme Court decision denying Assange the right to challenge his extradition. Unconvinced by US promises that he would receive a fair trial in a US court (promises that were hedged by the US DOJ’s acknowledgement that the US Supreme Court would in fact be the final arbiter of whether, for example, Assange could avail himself of the Constitution’s First Amendment right of Free Speech and a Free Press — a Supreme Court packed with originalist justices who support the national security state. The two High Court judges were preparing to review his arguments against extradition later this month.

There’s no telling how they would have ruled of course, but the Washington nightmare of his walking free in Britain was more than Biden, AG Merrick Garland and the US national security agencies pressing for a lengthy jail sentence in the US, could tolerate. They needed at least the fig leaf of a guilty plea.

To understand why Assange, who is about to turn 53, after being effectively incarcerated for nearly a quarter of his life, simply for doing what investigative journalists do, revealing the truth about government crimes, it’s important to know what he was facing if he didn’t accept the Biden deal and then lost his last appeal of the extradition order that had already been approved in a UK court.

Let me explain.

In the self-appointed “Land of the Free and Home of the Brave” United States, those of us who as journalists cover legal issues know that American justice is not blind like the statue in many courts of the woman “Justice” blindfolded and holding up a scale in one hand and a sword in the other.. Neither is it fair. Worse yet, it routinely punishes those who demand  their Constitutional right to a jury trial for doing so applying the stiffest of penalties should they end up being convicted.

The safest bet in an American court under such circumstances is to “cop a plea,”  meaning to take the advice of one’s lawyer or  public defender: typically to plead guilty to a lesser charge and accept a lesser penalty. or if that proves unacceptable to the judge and prosecution, agree to plead guilty as charged in return for a lesser penalty. This harsh reality has led to a large number of people in prison for crimes they did not commit, but that they pleaded guilty to out of necessity and lack of funds to hire a lawyer or to appeal a wrongful conviction.

That’s why for instance, of the 71,954 defendants facing criminal federal charges in the US fiscal year 2022, only 1669 opted to go to trial, according to a Pew Research report.  That is  just 2.3% of all those facing felony or serious misdemeanor charges that year. Of those few who boldly requested a trial before a jury or a district court judge, only a handful — 290 or 0.4% of those charged, were acquitted. The other 1379 who had their cases tried were convicted, and because they insisted on a trial they had a right to, likely were slapped with lengthy or maximum sentences. Of the rest of those who didn’t have their cases adjudicated, 89.5% or 64.434 just pleaded guilty hoping for a lighter sentence. Another 8.2%, or 5900 defendants, had their cases tossed out, usually for lack of sufficient evidence.

Given this sorry record, which is depressingly typical of how the federal courts operate year in and year out in the US, it’s understandable why Wikileaks founder Julian Assange, who finally escaped over 12 years of terrible torture at the hands of the US government and a supine British government, agreed to cop a plea.

Assange and his British counsellors also probably knew also about an investigative report published last year in the Italian newspaper La Repubblica, summarized later in a British publication called The Pen, which located copies of at least some of the long-missing or destroyed emails between Swedish prosecutors and Britain’s Crown Prosecution Service concerning the effort by a politically connected and CIA-linked prosecutor in Stockholm and the CPS, which at the time in 2013 was headed by none other than Barrister Keir Starmer. He’s the man widely expected to become Britain’s new Prime Minister if, as polls suggest, his Labour Party wins an outright majority and a six-year term as Prime Minister in the July 4 Parliamentary elections.

Starmer’s correspondence suggests it was his office that was pressing reluctant Swedish officials to  keep insisting on trying to extradite Assange to Sweden to face questioning there about allegations of sexual abuse accusations by two Swedish women, and who advised them to reject offers by Assange and his attorneys to respond to their questions if they came to London and met with him. There had long been a question of why, Swedish prosecutor Marianne Ny, from  2010 to 2016, unable to question Assange in Sweden, refused a standing  offer from his lawyers to travel to the UK and question him where he was holed up in the Ecuadoran embassy.

As the Italian newspaper Il Facto Quotidiano  explains, “No one understood why Swedish prosecutor Marianne Ny did not want to travel to London to question Julian Assange and determine whether to charge him or not. It was our FOIA investigation that allowed unearthing the reason: It was the British authorities at the Crown Prosecution Service…who advised the Swedish prosecutors not to question Assange in London.”  The magazine learned that all of the email correspondence by CPS officer Paul Close’s, who did most of the communicating with Ny was mysteriously wiped when he left the agency in 2014.

Starmer, who has been strangely silent about Assange’s plea deal with the US and his escape from British detention, was in charge of the CPS from 2008 through 2013 and during those years when the office was handling communications regarding Assange with the Swedish prosecutor and was Close’s boss, appears to have been a key agent in Assange’s unconscionable torment. That would clearly have made Assange and his defense team keen to get him out of Britain and out of the news cycle before Keir “our national security always comes first” Starmer were to enter 10 Downing Street as the UK’s Prime Minister.

The deal offered by the Biden Administration’s “Justice Department” was tough one. It required that in return for agreeing to plead guilty to one of the 17 felony charges of violating the US Espionage Act and being sentenced to five years in prison, a punishment which would be met by counting the over five years he has spent in solitary confinement in Britain’s dank and oppressive Belmarsh Prison fighting a US extradition petition, Assange would be able to fly home to his native Australia a free man.

Behind the scenes, one can see that the Biden administration, like the Trump and Obama administrations before it, has been vigorously doing the bidding of the US National Security State —the CIA,, the FBI, NSA  and the Pentagon — in pursuing a major espionage case against Assange, the founder of Wikileaks, He and his organization had hugely embarrassed those agencies and the US government agencies over the years with the release of documents proving that the US was guilty of  systemic and massive war crimes in Iraq and Afghanistan, was spying on the leaders of allies in NATO, and and Assange had also also helped NSA leaker Edward Snowden, another arch enemy of the national security state, to escape to Russia.

The US media happily ran page-one banner-headlined stories and videos of the US war crimes exposed by Assange and his Wikileaks organization. But then, when he was being indicted and hounded by the US government and was fighting his extradition to the US from a jail cell in Britain, those same media organizations just as happily stabbed him in the back, quoting slimy US politicians like former Trump VP Mike Pence claiming that his releases “put US personnel at risk.”  (In fact the US, in its arguments in British courts seeking an extradition order, never could present a single case of a US soldier or CIA agent being put at risk, injured or killed because of a Wikileaks story or purloined document.   Like the Swedish “rape charges,”  all the smearing of Assange was and remains lies.

Establishment journalists too, in Britain and the US, have been guilty of shamelessly piling on in the tarring of Assange even as others of their colleagues, most of them outside of the mainstream news organizations, have heroically worked to debunk the lies.

The bottom line is that Assange in his struggle for freedom, has been heroically defending the freedom of all journalists and publishers around the world to speak truth to power.  The indictment of Assange, a foreigner working outside the US, was nonetheless pursued by three presidents including Obama (whose Justice Department drew up a sealed indictment, but never acted on it),  Trump, whose Justice picked it up and activated it in 2019, and Biden, who pressed forward with the effort to extradite Assange and have him face the Trump Justice Department’s indictment. All three presidents have sought to expand the reach of the already controversial Espionage Act  to include  journalists of any nationality operating anywhere in the world.

From its first use in the days of WWI, when the Espionage Act was passed to enable the government to arrest immigrants (usually anti-war leftists) on supposed spying charges, the act has morphed fairly recently under those three feckless presidents into a tool to go after not just alleged spies, but whistleblowers and the journalists who rely on them.  Going after Assange just expanded its reach globally.

Some desk-bound pundits to whom the notion of challenging state abuse of power would never occur, are claiming that Assange, by copping a guilty plea, sold out his media colleagues.  Nothing could be further from the truth.  First of all, Constitutional scholars say that a plea bargain creates no new legal precedent in the federal or state courts of the US. Only an appellate court ruling of a Supreme Court ruling has such significance on future cases.  (That’s not to say that just seeing what the US government and its willing puppet states in Europe are willing to do to those who do expose its crimes isn’t going to deter many from following in Assange’s footsteps.)

But in any case, no one who has not spent more than twelve years in enforced confinement has any right to criticize Assange for availing himself of the chance to get out of jail, to avoid the horror of a prosecution in the US legal system, and to join his family, including his two children, whom he has never met except in captivity.

As a fellow journalist, I can only congratulate him for his courage, to wish him well as he gets used to freedom again, and to salute all those who have worked for his freedom.

As my friend, colleague and fellow journalist Ron Ridenour, a US journalist/activist who has long ago abandoned his native US to live in Denmark, and who years ago cashed in his retirement savings and sent it all to Assange’s defense fund (he also reports giving $1000 to a Crowdfunder campaign to fund to repay the cost of the private jet Assange had to charter at a cost of hundreds of thousands of dollars to safely fly to his court hearing in Saipan in the Northern Marianas and on to the safety of Australia), says, “ I think Assange’s freedom is a huge victory. We the people all came together — not so much in the US, but in Europe and England and around the world. It shows that when a good number of people are willing to get together in the early morning in a cold rain we can make good things happen!” (In less than a week the fund had collected £441,793, close to the target goal of £520,000, a powerful demonstration of the support for Assange.)

Ridenour adds, “It’s a disappointment that the great journalist John Pilger, who tirelessly fought for Julian’s freedom, and Dan Ellsberg, and Center for Constitutional Rights President Michael Ratner, didn’t live to see this day.”

I think a headline on the BBC the day Assange walked out of a US district court in Saipan with the judge telling him he was “a free man” was on target,  Referring to the years before PM Albanese called for his release, when Australian leader after Australian leader ignored Assange’s plight at the hands of the US, including even Labour PM Julia Gillard, who pointedly refused to lift a finger to help her persecuted countryman it read

Australia turned its back on Assange, Time made him a martyr.

The only thing wrong with the story topper is it ought to have said:

Australia turned its back on him, Britain tortured him at the request of US prosecutors, and America betrayed its own First and Fifth Amendments. Time made Assange a martyr.


Dave Lindorff  is a Philadelphia-based journalist and columnist. He is a founding member of ThisCantBeHappening!, an online newspaper collective. Lindorff is a contributor to "Hopeless: Barack Obama and the Politics of Illusion" (AK Press) and the author the author of “The Case for Impeachment” (St. Martin’s Press). He can be reached at dlindorff@mindspring.com
An old man stumbles over his words, and the whole world holds its breath

By Scotsman Comment
Published 29th Jun 2024
Joe Biden is facing calls from fellow Democrats to step aside as the party's candidate for US President (Picture: Mandel Ngan/AFP via Getty Images)

A significant lapse by Joe Biden during the US presidential debate with Donald Trump could have serious consequences for the world

An elderly politician losing his train of thought for a brief moment on the other side of the Atlantic Ocean may not seem that important to a British politician seemingly powering towards a landslide election victory. However, Joe Biden’s bizarre remarks during the US presidential election debate appear to have sealed the growing impression that he is no longer mentally sharp enough to be US President, virtually handing the White House keys to Donald Trump, a seismic geopolitical event that will shake the whole world.

Some Democrats appear to be trying to brazen out the situation, insisting that Biden can still do the job, still win the election, while others are scrambling around in the hope that another candidate can be found. It seems too late for someone else to mount a credible challenge, while the Democrats openly calling, in desperation, for Biden to drop out of the race are handing an obvious gift to the Trump campaign.

The main problem happened when Biden tried to explain what his government had been doing on healthcare. The President said he wanted to make “every single, solitary person eligible for what I’ve been able to do with the Covid, excuse me, with, um, dealing with everything we had to do with, eh, look… if... we finally beat Medicare.” Medicare is a government-run healthcare programme for elderly people.

Former Belgian Prime Minister Guy Verhofstadt, a liberal politician, summed up the consequences of these mangled words in bleak terms on social media: “American democracy killed before our eyes by gerontocracy!”

Whether or not Trump is able to become the dictator he has ‘joked’ about being, he has given multiple signs that he will withdraw the US from Nato. Former members of his own Cabinet have suggested it is a real prospect. And during the debate, when Biden claimed Trump would do this, the response was a facial shrug.

Nato without the US is a much less daunting deterrent to Vladimir Putin, who has already issued threats over Western supplies of weapons to Ukraine. If America stops providing military support to Kyiv, Europe will need to fill the gaps or it is likely that Putin will win. However, the rise of the far right in countries like France means that traditional allies may not be quite as staunch in the defence of democracy as they once were.

All this should push the issue of national security to the very top of Keir Starmer’s inbox if he does become Prime Minister next week as almost everyone expects. He needs to quickly develop a coherent plan to bolster the strength of the Armed Forces, prepare the economy for a potential conflict with Russia, and ensure Europe remains united in opposition to Putin.

An early priority must be to make sure that the Trident missiles designed to carry the UK’s nuclear deterrent actually work, following two failed test firings. If the US leaves Nato, that would leave only the UK and France as nuclear powers.

Making preparations for war may sound alarming, but the aim is to project strength that Putin will respect, thereby preserving peace. With Putin clearly hoping to rebuild the Soviet empire, victory in Ukraine could well be followed by the invasion of the Baltic states and even countries like Poland, as Biden suggested. A bloodthirsty dictator buoyed up by victories in war will be hard to stop.

Our next Prime Minister would be irresponsible not to prepare for a Trump presidency and the dangerous world it will bring. Many lives may depend upon the right choices being made in the next few months. Never let anyone tell you that elections don’t matter.
As rod catches fall to the lowest on record and experts warn salmon could face extinction, is Scotland's king of fish REALLY in peril like gorillas, blue whales and Komodo dragons?

By JOHN MACLEOD FOR THE SCOTTISH DAILY MAIL
PUBLISHED:28 June 2024 


They were hardened men, but as Roman soldiers two millennia ago tramped through the likes of Gaul, Flanders and England, they were struck by extraordinary, silvery fish surging up the foaming rivers.

Challenging waterfalls, bouncing through rapids, jumping repeatedly into the air and against daunting odds... And the warriors fumbled for a name in their demotic Latin, and called him salmo: the leaper.

A fish once so abundant that – as at least one newspaper in 1811 documented – indentured apprentices, from Govan to Worcester, often demanded a clause forbidding their masters from feeding them salmon more than once a week.

And one summer day a Mr Naylor, holidaying on the west side of Lewis, decided to go fishing in the Grimersta river.

He landed 54 salmon, and might well have beaten what remains the British rod-caught record the following day, for that morning he caught another 45.


An angler tries his luck on the Tay but sun may be setting on salmon fishing in our rivers

But he casually put his rod aside that lunchtime, and went out for a bit of rough shooting instead.

Even 30 years ago, you could have stood outside Amhuinnsuidhe Castle in North Harris and marvelled at all the salmon marshalled at the mouth of the river – dorsals cutting the foam – awaiting the spate, when they could finally run upstream and fulfil their instincts.

For, however far she wanders, however long he roams the Arctic salmon cannot spawn in salt water – and spawn, eventually, they must.

But last year, only 33,023 wild salmon were caught in Scotland. Twenty five per cent down on the 2022 haul – and the lowest since records began, back in 1952.

And, last December, the International Union for Conservation of Nature added Scotland’s Atlantic salmon to its red list.

The King of Fish is now up there with mountain gorillas, the blue whale and the Komodo dragon as an officially endangered species – perhaps, some say, within 20 years of extinction. And no one seems to have a coherent explanation as to why.

Alarm first began in the early 1990s and, by 1994, fisheries began increasingly to urge – then command – a ‘catch and release’ policy from anglers, with such success that if you search YouTube for recent salmon-hunting adventures you will struggle to find any fisherman actually killing one.

Commercial poaching remained a serious problem – local Claude Greengrasses touting salmon of mysterious provenance at the back door of some cynical hotel – until, in 2002, the Scottish Government desperately changed the law.

It became a criminal offence to buy or sell rod-caught salmon, all wild salmon ensnared at licensed netting stations now had to be tagged before sale and with much documentation and utter traceability, and more recently the law has been changed again, forbidding the killing of any wild salmon before May 1.

All coastal netting fisheries have since been closed and the handful of licensed estuarial ones that survive are, surely, on borrowed time.

Unless you live near one, or are in a big Scottish city with a high-end fishmonger, it is all but impossible to buy wild salmon.

And, still, the numbers of wild fish continue to crash – to the point where appalled Americans might shell out big money for fishing in Scotland, and spend a week without even seeing a salmon. With fraught economic impact.

For anglers in pursuit of the silver tourists spend around £135million in Scotland every year, support some 4,300 jobs and add an additional Gross Value Added (GVA) of £79.9million annually.

In 2015, a study calculated that angling brought £24million into the Tweed region’s economy, supporting the equivalent of 520 jobs.

That spending has fallen by between 50 and 60 per cent since then, lamented Fay Hieatt in 2019 – clerk to the River Tweed Commission, an august body set up by act of Parliament in 1807 to police and conserve local salmon stocks.

People are now struggling. In the early 1990s, when Kevin Patterson took up his trade as a Tweed ghillie – on the Tweedswood beat, near Melrose – about 40 fish would be caught on that stretch alone in the spring season.

In 1995, three rods landed 19 salmon in just one outing. As of April 22, 2019, so far that season, his guests had caught two.

Salmon numbers had ‘gone off a cliff,’ Patterson lamented. And he felt sorry for his clients.

‘They just want to come and enjoy their fishing. Anglers aren’t expecting ten fish. They just want one; two would be mega. But it’s just not happening...’

In recent history the Tweed enjoyed its best season in 2010, when 23,000 salmon were caught.

Mr Patterson thought that a freak but, on average, 10,000 to 15,000 were caught every year. Since 2014, those numbers have halved. In 2018, just 5,510 were taken.

The collapse in numbers means fewer anglers. So the prices for a day’s fishing have been slashed up and down the Tweed – which must soon impact on wages and jobs.

By April 2019, Mr Patterson was charging as little as £40 for a day’s fishing; he once levied £140.

The most sought-after sites have cut prices by 50 per cent, down to a few hundred pounds a day. Local hotels are struggling; many beats are losing money.

These statistics increasingly vindicate those who, back in the 1990s, questioned the wisdom – and even the morality – of the ‘catch and release’ policy, which the Scottish Government has in recent years threatened to impose with the full force of law. (It has been illegal to kill a wild salmon in Wales, in any circumstances, since 2020.)

Yet catch and release has not worked. It debases what should be a sport – that hunting instinct, deep in us all, to win food for the table – into a game. Instead, the policy involves the repeated hooking, torment and release of living creatures.

Canadian studies suggest that at least 5 per cent of caught-and-released salmon do not survive.

Others say the mortality rate is even higher. And the managers of stocked, stew-pond rainbow trout fisheries almost all forbid it, insisting that – within a decreed bag limit – you kill everything you catch.

They know that ‘pricked’ fish soon become most reluctant to bite, that dead, decomposing fish do their water no good – and that catch and release is bad for business.

Last year, only 33,023 wild salmon were caught in Scotland - 25pc down on 2022, and the lowest since records began, back in 1952


By contrast the sensible Highlander, after one for the pot, would eventually catch his salmon, bang it on the head, thank the Lord for His mercies new every morning, head home to pop his prize into the freezer and not trouble the river for another year.

But the big problem with catch and release is political. By embracing it, back around 1994, Scotland’s estates unwittingly endorsed a cherished myth – that the main threat to wild salmon is the angler.

Most convenient for Edinburgh politicians, who know most voters think the pursuit of wild salmon the indulgence of woofly-voiced toffs.

And Mr Patterson and Ms Hieatt point out a most inconvenient truth: their extensive monitoring of salmon breeding – by electronic hi-tech means in the estuary, and so on – suggests there has been no fall in the number of juvenile salmon leaving the Tweed.

Which suggests there is little wrong with the management of the Tweed – no careless coniferous plantations acidifiying the water; no paddling cattle muddying the spawning redds, and no significant pollution.

It is just that very few make it back, perhaps only 1 per cent. This is not, in fact, a crisis in Scotland’s lochs and rivers. The emergency, whatever it is, is in the sea.

There are – and have long been – three chief suspects. One is rapacious, industrial fishing for salmon in the ocean itself.

The Faroese were fingered for it in the 1990s. And, until very recent decades, salmon netting off the west coast of Ireland was wholesale and unregulated.

Another, of course, is climate change. The Tweed Commissioners – whose excellent records go back over 200 years – argue that there is a 60-year cycle in salmon stocks rising and falling, linked to a meteorological phenomenon known as the North Atlantic oscillation, which affects the climate across the region.

‘That affects food supplies for salmon out at sea,’ argued one journalist five years ago, ‘increasing competition for food with species such as mackerel, and altering water temperatures.

‘Climate change, which is warming the sea and harming marine life, is making those pressures much more significant.’

And the third is commercial salmon farming in the West Highlands, first trialled in the Sixties and which, by the 1990s, had become big business. It is now Scotland’s biggest food export.

The Chinese are crazy for it and, in 2022, our farmed salmon hit a record value of some £1.2billion.

A government-commissioned report in 2018 examined aquaculture’s wider economic impacts and showed the sector supported 11,700 jobs and generated £885million GVA.

But its foes insist salmon cages are a source of serious if localised pollution, that they are crawling with sea lice – which the wild fish quickly shed in fresh water; that they in turn infest passing migrant fish with sea lice, and that salmon cage escapees could be running up our rivers and wrecking the established local gene pool.

Each hypothesis, though, has serious holes. The Convention for the Protection of the Marine Environment of the North-East Atlantic – OSPAR – flatly declares ocean trawling is no longer a problem, however voracious some of our neighbours may have been 30 or 40 years ago.

‘Fisheries exploitation of Atlantic salmon was a great concern in the past century,’ OSPAR allows, ‘but average annual exploitation by commercial and recreational fisheries have greatly decreased over the last 60 years and are presently at very low levels.’

Nor is climate change some sort of appalling, novel emergency. It is a constant in history. The parching of Asian grasslands was central to the fall of the Roman Empire.

The Medieval Warm Period enriched England. The subsequent Little Ice Age helped to beggar Scotland and deliver the Union itself.

Indeed, we were still in the Little Ice Age when Govan lads were revolting against salmon yet again for tea – and things were warming up again when Mr Naylor on the Grimersta was reeling in a beauty on every cast.

Scapegoating fish farming has one howling flaw: there is scarcely any salmon farming on the east coast of Scotland, where wild salmon numbers have crashed so catastrophically.

A case can certainly be made that the cages are very bad for sea trout – which hang around our coast, rather than following their more famous kin into the deep ocean.

But aquaculturists – the sector is now almost wholly in Norwegian hands – are out to make money, and there is no profit in sickly, dying fish in filthy cages.

A much stronger ecological argument is the prodigious volume of fish harvested to feed caged salmon.

‘The Scottish salmon industry,’ thundered environmental campaigner Matt Mellen in 2020, ‘uses roughly the same quantity of wild-caught fish to feed its salmon, as is purchased by the entire adult population of the UK in one year.

‘And to raise a single adult fish in a cage requires the capture and slaughter of up to 200 wild caught fish, depriving those in lands far away of much-needed, local sources of protein...’ And all that fish processed into pellets for caged salmon is fish denied to their wild brethren at sea.

Meanwhile, the government’s timid Wild Salmon Strategy and Implementation Plan, published earlier this year, has been widely mocked in the angling press for its refusal to sanction the culling of seals, the licensed shooting of predatory birds, or to seriously study the impact of reintroduced beavers.

And while ministers will not support ‘further salmon and trout open-pen fish farm developments on the north and east coasts of Scotland,’ they have nothing at all to say about the west.

The fact is that the best stewards of our wild salmon are local anglers themselves, and that of late has been recognised at Lough Melvin on the Irish border.

It’s an intriguing place with three salmonid species – such as the gillaroo – found nowhere else in the world, and with generous runs of migratory fish.

And its County Fermanagh stretch is the only place in Northern Ireland where you are allowed to kill a salmon, such is the respect earned by the Garrison Anglers Club over decades of management and conservation.

It costs you £80 a season or £10 a day and you are also given two tags, entitling you to keep two salmon per season. (Northern Ireland also insists on a game-rod licence, but it is only £17 a year.)

A grown-up order by people who take angling seriously – and which Scotland might do well to emulate.
Tories 'highly alarmed' by network of pro-Russian Facebook pages interfering in UK election
abc.net.au
UK Reform leader Nigel Farage was criticised after claiming the West provoked Vladimir Putin's invasion of Ukraine.
(Reuters: Jeff Overs/BBC)

Revelations of foreign interference in the UK election, uncovered by the ABC, have been described as "highly alarming" by the Conservative Party, which will be writing to the Cabinet Office seeking urgent advice about how to combat it.

Ahead of the UK elections, the ABC has been monitoring five coordinated Facebook pages which have been spreading Kremlin talking points, with some posting in support of Nigel Farage's populist Reform UK party — a key challenger to the Conservatives in the July 4 poll.

The five pages identified by ABC Investigations as being part of a coordinated network appear to have little in common. One page presents itself as a pro-refugee left-wing group, while others reference white supremacist conspiracy theories and use AI-generated images of asylum seekers to stoke anti-immigration fears.

The ABC has been able to link these seemingly disparate pages by examining the location data attached to the pages' administrators, tracking paid ads, and by analysing the pages' similar or shared content.


Reform UK is a rival to the UK Conservative party, which is projected to be wiped out in the July 4 election.
( Ben Birchall/PA Images via Getty Images)

The ABC shared its findings with disinformation experts, who said the network's activity had the hallmarks of a Russian influence operation.

"For me, it's Russian," said AI Forensics head of research Salvatore Romano.

AI Forensics is a European non-profit research organisation that published research in April about a covert influence operation called "Doppelganger", and found that Facebook ads with pro-Russian messages were targeting EU voters. These ads, which reached more than 38 million users, were linked to EU-sanctioned Russian businessmen.

"Now if you ask Putin, Putin may say 'no, it's not us'," Mr Romano said.

"What is the smoking gun? Do you need to see these people behind their desks with the Russian flag?"


Examples of AI-generated anti-immigration images posted by the pro-Russian far-right Facebook pages. "Fake Image" label added by the ABC.(Supplied: Facebook)

The ABC also shared its findings with the UK's main political parties.

"This is highly alarming," a Conservative Party spokesperson told the ABC.

"We have seen this kind of activity from hostile states before and will be writing to the Cabinet Office to see what can be done about it".
Accounts run from Nigeria

Despite Meta, the parent company of Facebook, promising to take steps to address foreign interference and hate speech during the UK elections, these pages have been able to operate unchecked.

The network identified by ABC Investigations consists of five Facebook pages with a combined 190,000 followers. The pages have repeatedly shared the same images, text posts, and talking points and often post around the same time.


An example of the Facebook pages' coordination. The same caption and photo are posted at similar times.(Supplied: Facebook)

The five pages all feature criticism of several UK parties including the Conservatives and Labour. Some of these pages have supported Reform UK leader Nigel Farage, with two calling him "the people's champion".

Mr Farage came to prominence after spearheading the UK's Brexit movement. His party is standing Reform candidates in some historically Conservative seats and could intensify the electoral wipe-out the incumbent party is expected to receive on July 4.

Facebook pages for local Reform UK branches have shared some of the AI-generated anti-immigration content from these pages but there is no evidence of direct involvement by the party.

Reform UK did not respond to ABC questions.

Names of Facebook pages in pro-Russian network identified by the ABC:UK Patriots
British Patriots
Common Sense Britain
BritBlend
BeyondBorders UK

ABC's analysis of the five pages found that while they claim to be based in the UK, most of the administrators for each page are based in Nigeria, with a small number being listed as based in the UK.

All the pages have run paid ads on Facebook. "Patriotic UK" has also run political ads, with one in 2022 criticising western support of Ukraine and another this week supporting Mr Farage to win the UK election.

Ad library data showed it targeted the ads to British men who were older than 65 years old and were paid for using Nigerian currency (NGN).

The Nigerian connection is significant because previous online Russian propaganda networks were found to have been operating from Africa.

Meta, the parent company of Facebook, in 2020 exposed Russia as being behind troll networks from Ghana and Nigeria, which was targeting US voters with disinformation.

Earlier this month, an ITV and Cardiff University investigation also traced a batch of suspicious accounts on TikTok that were pushing pro-Reform UK messages after a leader's debate to Nigeria.

Beyond the Nigerian connection, the five pages all promote Kremlin narratives — particularly those criticising Ukraine.


Russia's President Vladimir Putin walks to a car upon his arrival in Vietnam in Hanoi this month. (AFP: Nhac Nguyen)

The "Common Sense Britain" page shared screenshots of anti-immigrant headlines from Russia Today (RT), a Kremlin-controlled media outlet.

"Patriotic UK" shared conspiracy theories about an unfounded claim that the Jihadist terrorist attack in Moscow's Crocus City Hall in March was orchestrated by the West; around the same time the left-wing page "BritBlend" claimed Ukranian citizens had celebrated the mass murder.

The "British Patriots" page has shared a fake headline from a pro-Russian website about Ukranian president Volodymyr Zelenskyy being asked by the CIA to not embezzle money. The "BritBlend" page in a post also copy-and-pasted a video caption from "British Patriots" criticising a British parliamentarian, without sharing the video or any further context.

"BritBlend" and "BeyondBorders UK" have also criticised Ukraine, painting it as a bloodthirsty state, with the former posting "there's only one side that celebrates the death of civilians and that is Ukraine". Both pages have argued that the UK's support of Ukraine was a waste of money.

The UK election is Labour's to lose

Even loyal Conservative voices are predicting a Tory wipeout, but with Nigel Farage on the scene it won't be smooth sailing for Labour.


Britain is one of Ukraine's most steadfast supporters, both in military aid and public opinion polling. Mr Farage was criticised last week for claiming the West had provoked Russian President Vladimir Putin into invading Ukraine.

He later clarified he disliked President Putin and opposed the invasion of Ukraine, but urged President Zelenskyy to seek a peace deal.
'Division and chaos'

Disinformation expert and political communications professor at the UK's Loughborough University Andrew Chatwick said the content being pushed by the network identified by the ABC were about "sowing division and chaos".

"These kinds of campaigns can generally undermine trust in the media environment and the electoral process," he said.

"If they [these pages] are coordinated… this fits with previous patterns we have seen, for example the activities of the Russian Internet Research Agency in the United States."

Right-wing political leader Nigel Farage is shaking up UK politics ahead of the election

AI Forensics's Salvatore Romano said the ultimate benefactor of the division wrought by these networks was the Kremlin.

"We are in a critical moment where there is an escalation of international conflicts and digital warfare is basically in the middle between diplomacy and actual war," he said.

"This type of interference will intensify. It's a serious concern … it's a deliberate attack to freedom of information and a deliberate attack to democracy."

Lessons from Poland in countering Russia's disinformation campaign

Poland's response to the human tide from Ukraine is already a case study in effective crisis management. But dealing with Russian disinformation – now morphing into subversion and outright sabotage – has been a consistent problem.



Meta earlier this month launched a UK-specific "Elections Operation Center" to "identify potential threats and put mitigations in place in real time".

Meta's UK Public Policy director Rebecca Stimson said one of the company's pillars of focus would be countering covert influence operations and identifying and stopping coordinated unauthentic behaviour.

"We applied new and stronger enforcement to Russian state-controlled media, including blocking them in the EU and the UK and globally demoting their posts."

Meta was reached for comment and was provided with the ABC's findings about the five pages and at time of publication the pages were still active.

UK Labour was contacted for comment.

None of the identified pages in the pro-Russian network responded to ABC questions.