Thursday, September 26, 2024

 USA

Trump’s Racism Brings Chaos to a Small Town in Ohio

Tuesday 24 September 2024, by Dan La Botz

We know racism stands at the center of Donald Trump’s politics, but one recent absurd story shows just how dangerous it is. And it reveals just how profoundly sick is our society, that he still has the support of half of the electorate.

During the presidential debate between Kamala Harris and Donald Trump, he claimed that the country was being invaded and overrun by millions of illegal immigrants, released from prisons and mental hospitals in countries around the world, who have caused a wave of crime in American cities. And, he said, in one town, Springfield, Ohio, “they’re eating the dogs, the people that came in, they’re eating the cats, they’re eating the pets of the people that live there.”

The story began with a Facebook post by Springfield resident Erika Lee who claimed a neighbor saw her daughter’s boyfriend’s cat, which had been missing, taken and eaten by Haitians. “I’ve been told they are doing this to dogs, they have been doing it at Snyder Park with the ducks and geese.” There was no truth in any of this. But the Facebook post was picked up on far-right social media sites and then by Senator J.D. Vance, Trump’s running mate, who repeated the story. Once Trump said it in the debate, the story became national news.

Springfield’s mayor and city manager repudiated the false claims about immigrants eating pets, yet both Trump and Vance continued to repeat the story at their rallies. The story, of course, suggested that the Haitian people were savages.

Donald Trump, Jr., who often speaks for his father, added this. “You look at Haiti, you look at the demographic makeup, you look at the average I.Q. — if you import the third world into your country, you’re going to become the third world,” he said on a conservative broadcasting network. “That’s just basic. It’s not racist. It’s just fact.”

The Trumps’ racist language soon created chaos in Springfield as provocateurs, began to call in bomb threats that eventually led authorities to shut down local schools, hospitals, and city hall, as well as Wittenberg University and Clark State College. Springfield officials also canceled a planned Culture Fest, featuring art and music, “in light of recent threats and safety concerns.” The Haitians in Springfield feel fearful and worried.

Mike DeWine, the Republican governor of Ohio, who was born and grew up in Springfield, also repudiated the false claims about the Haitian immigrants and wrote in a New York Times opinion piece, “As a supporter of former President Donald Trump and Senator JD Vance, I am saddened by how they and others continue to repeat claims that lack evidence and disparage the legal migrants living in Springfield. This rhetoric hurts the city and its people, and it hurts those who have spent their lives there.”

Springfield is a town of 60,000 that has in recent years received between 12,000 and 15,000 Haitian immigrants. The immigrants are not “illegals,” as Trump and Vance have claimed, but enjoy “temporary protected status,” which allows them to live and work in the United States because it is not safe for them to return to their home country. As DeWine wrote, “They are there legally. They are there to work.”

As his rallies Trump rails against what he calls an invasion of immigrants who are he says, “animals,” “vermin,” and “poisoning the blood of our country.” Trump promises that as president he will launch a national effort to round up millions of illegal immigrants and deport them. Now he says that he’ll begin in Springfield.

All the more reason to stop this dangerous racist from becoming president.

P.S.

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Portugal: Deadly forest fires

Monday 23 September 2024, by Bloco de Esquerda

Seven people have died and 118 have been injured in the fires that have been raging since September 15 in the north and centre of the country. In just three days, 2024 has become the year with the fourth-largest area burned in the last decade.

Sven people have died and 118 have been injured in the fires that have been raging since September 15 in the north and centre of the country. In just three days, 2024 has become the year with the fourth-largest area burned in the last decade.

Between Sunday and late Tuesday afternoon, more than 71,000 hectares burned in Portugal, compared to 22,500 hectares previously, including the 5,000 hectares of the Madeira fires. In just three days, what was supposed to be a quiet year in terms of burned areas has become the fourth-worst year of the last decade. The figures are published by Público , but the newspaper warns that they are based on satellite images and therefore may be excessive. But even if we do not take into account 15 per cent of the burned area, this year’s figures are only exceeded by those of 2016, 2017 and 2022.

In the north and centre of the country, the fires have spread due to weather conditions considered to be the most severe, particularly the easterly wind with strong gusts. On Wednesday, the National Emergency and Civil Protection Authority (INEM) counted five deaths and 118 injured , including ten in serious condition, stressing that the number of deaths was transmitted to it by the INEM and does not include the two civilians who died of a sudden illness. The maximum risk of fire affected 50 municipalities on Wednesday and the government decided to extend the state of alert until Thursday.

More than 100 active fires

On Wednesday morning, there were more than 100 active fires, with restarts and wind changes during the night, which made the situation in Águeda "uncontrollable" and approached urban centres. The firefighters who fought the Albergaria a-Velha fire , which has entered the resolution phase, are also fighting these fires. During the night, the Castro Daire fire progressed towards Arouca , reaching the Paiva footbridges and confining several villages, after people with reduced mobility had been evacuated. In Covilhã, the night was spent fighting a fire in a pine forest area in Gibraltar that had escaped the Serra da Estrela fire two years ago.

Very complicated traffic

Several fires are also raging in the Porto district and some villages have evacuated their inhabitants . In Mangualde and São Pedro do Sul, it is reported that homes and businesses have been destroyed by fire. By late morning, Civil Protection reported 142 fires, 58 of which were in the final stages, with more than 5,500 agents on the ground, accompanied by 1,700 land resources and 37 air resources.

At the same time, the government reported that rail traffic on the Douro line between Marco de Canaveses and Régua and on the Vouga line had been interrupted, with several trains suspended. The A43 motorway between Gondomar and the A41 and the A41 between Medas and Aguiar de Sousa were also closed on Wednesday morning, as was the A25 between Albergaria and Reigoso ( Viseu ), as well as several national roads.

P.S.

If you like this article or have found it useful, please consider donating towards the work of International Viewpoint. Simply follow this link: Donate then enter an amount of your choice. One-off donations are very welcome. But regular donations by standing order are also vital to our continuing functioning. See the last paragraph of this article for our bank account details and take out a standing order. Thanks.

When China becomes supreme leader in Africa

Sunday 22 September 2024, by Paul Martial

The Ninth Summit of the Forum on China-Africa Cooperation was held in Beijing from September 4 to 6. It brought together almost ¬all African countries around Xi Jinping ,who detailed his African policy.

Dependency relationship

The shock announcement is obviously the 50 billion dollars intended for the countries of the African continent. A sum certainly significant but to be put into perspective. Spread over three years, it is broken down into 30 billion in loans, 10 billion in investments by private actors and 10 billion in development aid.
In his opening speech, Xi Jinping tried to respond to the many criticisms about the asymmetry of relations between Africa and the Middle Kingdom. To this end, he announced measures such as the elimination of customs duties on agricultural exports from the 33 poorest African countries and the creation of a million jobs thanks to investments by Chinese companies. The same ones that overexploit African workers ïn insalubrious working conditions.

These announcements are far from changing the unbalanced relations between the Asian giant and Africa, and they are similar in every way to a North-South relationship resulting in imports of raw materials and exports of manufactured products.

Source of inspiration for dictators

What has gone less unnoticed - yet stated as the primary objective in Xi Jinping’s speech - is the promotion of its governance as an alternative to the Western model. This desire is accompanied by a Chinese presence that goes beyond the strictly economic domain. Thus, China plays a major role in the UN peacekeeping policy, as the largest financial contributor and second in terms of the number of soldiers in the various UN missions. It has also strengthened its political weight in recent years through the launch of training institutes for executives of African political parties and senior state officials. The idea defended is that democracy is first and foremost economic development, made possible by the party’s domination of state structures, whether civilian or military. This political model is also taught in military training where senior African officers note that the Chinese army is at the service not of the government but of the dominant party. A policy, as one might expect, that is not displeasing to many of the dictators who are rampant on the continent.

One can also legitimately ask the question of the relevance of the need for this type of training, whether it is Chinese or Western. Indeed, it reflects a condescending vision and a lack of knowledge of the rich political culture of Africa, nourished in particular by decades of struggle for its liberation.