Tuesday, August 27, 2024

From Nixon to Trump: How the GOP has weaponized 'othering' for political gain

Thom Hartmann
August 26, 2024 

Donald Trump and Richard Nixon

“Identity politics” can be either helpful to society or destructive of social cohesion and democracy itself. When used to bring people of different races, religions, and gender identities into the larger structure of society — to empower and lift up those who’ve traditionally been oppressed — identity politics becomes a platform for ultimately ending itself; once everybody has equal opportunity, it’s no longer needed.

The dark side of identity politics occurs when the dominant race/religion/gender (in today’s America that’s white Christian men) identifies people who aren’t part of their group as an “other” and uses this otherness as a rallying cry to enlist members of the powerful in-group against the “outsiders.”

This is what the GOP has been doing ever since 1968, when Richard Nixon picked up the white racist vote that Democrats abandoned in 1964/1965 when LBJ pushed the Civil Rights Act and the Voting Rights Act through Congress.

Nixon talked about his white “silent majority.” Reagan emphasized “states’ rights” to suppress the civil and voting rights of minorities. GHW Bush used Willie Horton to scare white voters in 1988 the same way his son vilified Muslims to win re-election in 2004. And, of course, Trump has been “othering” nonwhite people and women ever since he started his notoriously racist and hateful birther movement in 2008.

Science, however, is catching up with the Republican’s strategy, and showing us both how powerful it can be and also how to defeat it.

Rob Henderson’s excellent Newsletter turned me onto the new book The Goodness Paradox: The Strange Relationship Between Virtue and Violence in Human Evolution by Richard Wrangham, who does a deep dive into the past 600,000 years of our species and its immediate predecessors.

Wrangham points out how violent our chimp cousins are: female chimps are routinely beaten into submission before being raped and impregnated by the most powerful of the male chimps. He notes, “One hundred percent of wild adult female chimpanzees experience regular serious beatings from males.”

The consequence of this is that over generations genes for aggression have come to dominate that species; chimp society very much operates along the lines Thomas Hobbes argued human society would without “the iron fist of church or state.” Chimp life is nasty, brutish, and short.

But at some point in our prehistory, as humanity was evolving into its modern form, we developed language. Using that new ability to communicate, we developed complex societies.

Citing biologist Richard Alexander, Wrangham writes:
“In his 1979 Darwinism and Human Affairs, Alexander argues that at some unknown point in our evolution, language skills developed to the point where gossip became possible. Once that happened, reputations would become important.

“Being known as a helpful individual would be expected to have a big effect on someone’s success in life. Good behavior would be rewarded. Virtue would become adaptive.”

For human societies to survive and prosper in the face of an often-hostile natural world, cooperation became more important than dominance. We left behind the violence of alpha male chimps and instead embraced human teamwork and social harmony.

In my most recent book, The Hidden History of American Democracy: Rediscovering Humanity’s Ancient Way of Living, I document how Native Americans had, at the time of first contact in the 15th through 17th centuries, shared with Europeans how they’d developed highly democratic systems of governance. To a large extent, our Constitution was based on things learned directly from native people.

As I showed from that era, and Wrangham does with hunter/gatherer tribes across the world while examining anthropological evidence of early humanity, psychopathic and hoarding alpha males were consistently brought under control by the rules of human society itself.

Wrangham shows how, in multiple ancient and modern hunter/gatherer societies, when what we’d today call sociopathic or psychopathic alpha males would begin hoarding wealth or asserting dominance over others, they were simply killed.

Over thousands of generations, he posits, this altered our gene pool in a way that only a very small percentage of us — psychologists estimate between one and five percent — still carry and can act out the alpha male role in a way that involves high-level hoarding and social dominance. We call them sociopaths, billionaire hoarders, and violent psychopaths.

The good news is that they’re very much in the minority; the majority of us are not psychopaths, and are deeply wired for cooperation and social cohesion.

This evolutionary process, which I also document in American Democracy, makes societies more stable, enhances a culture’s or nation’s chances for survival in the face of crises, and improves the quality of life for the largest number of members of a society.

But, as both Wrangham and I point out, when societies are taken over by hoarding, violent, psychopathic men (Hitler, Saddam, Mussolini, Putin, Trump, Iran’s Ayatollahs, etc.) they become top-heavy and brittle, and thus more vulnerable to disruption by both external and internal events (including the death of the leader).

While the evolutionary basis of this, which Wrangham brings to us in his book, is new, the idea of a society or nation being most resilient when it’s most democratic is not; it’s been the subject of speculation, documentation, and scientific and social inquiry from the time of Socrates through the Enlightenment and the creation of the United States (as I detail in American Democracy).

What struck me from Wrangham’s book as most relevant to this moment, though, was his assertion that we humans are, both genetically and socially, vulnerable to psychopathic alpha males taking over when they use one particular strategy to gain and hold power: identifying an “other” who they can successfully characterize as a threat.

On the one hand, Wrangham points out how we’re capable of great tenderness and compassion. In his book’s introduction, he writes:
“In short, a great oddity about humanity is our moral range, from unspeakable viciousness to heartbreaking generosity. From a biological perspective, such diversity presents an unsolved problem. If we evolved to be good, why are we also so vile? Or if we evolved to be wicked, how come we can also be so benign?”

The answer, in short, is that we’re tender and loving to our own group, but perfectly willing to be astonishingly violent toward any “other” group that we see as substantially different from us and believe is a threat to us.

This, on the other hand, is a key part of preparing soldiers to fight in wars and violate that core human imperative of not killing: First, we must “other” the enemy. My dad, who volunteered to fight in World War II straight out of high school in 1945, referred to Germans and Japanese as “krauts” and “japs” to his dying days. Such a racist “other” perspective was pounded into our soldiers throughout basic training, just like veterans of George W. Bush’s Middle Eastern wars often refer to Arab people as “ragheads” and other slurs.

This “othering” of members and supporters of violent dictatorships we must go to war against is arguably a useful or even necessary tool to prepare our young men and women to kill or be killed on the field of battle.

Because it’s grounded in genetically-mediated survival instincts and strategies as ancient as humanity, it’s relatively easy to intentionally program into people, and, once they come to believe there is a real threat from an “other,” very hard to defy. During both WWI and WWII in America, for example, those who protested against those wars were vilified, ostracized, and, in some cases, even imprisoned, all with popular support for that separation from society.

It becomes particularly dangerous, though, when violent psychopathic alpha males in a political leadership position turn that same strategy against members of their own society, turning average citizens into monsters. As Wrangham writes:
“The killers who committed genocide in World War II, Cambodia, and Rwanda were caught up in societies where moral boundaries became excessively crystallized. Yet most were not sadistic monsters or ideological fanatics. They were unremarkable individuals who loved their families and countrymen in conventional moral ways.
“When the anthropologist Alexander Hinton investigated the Cambodian genocide of 1975–79, he met a man called Lor who had admitted to having killed many men, women, and children. ‘I imagined Lor as a heinous person who exuded evil from head to toe….I saw before me a poor farmer in his late thirties, who greeted me with the broad smile and polite manner that one so often encounters in Cambodia.’ The combination of horror and ordinariness is routine.
“According to the anthropologists Alan Fiske and Tage Rai, ‘When people hurt or kill someone, they usually do so because they feel…that it is morally right or even obligatory to be violent.’ Fiske and Rai considered every type of violence they could think of, including genocide, witch killings, lynchings, gang rapes, war rape, war killings, homicides, revenge, hazing, and suicide.”

Like Pol Pot, Adolf Hitler used this “othering” strategy against Jews, Gypsies, and homosexuals so successfully that “good Germans” largely went along with the Holocaust, often enthusiastically. Stalin did the same against Ukrainians who were part of his Soviet Union, starving to death over four million human beings — men women, and children — in the Holodomor.

And now Donald Trump and his followers and enablers in the Republican Party — and thirty or so almost certainly psychopathic alpha male billionaires — are using this “othering” strategy against American citizens and immigrants to gain and hold political power.

In doing so, they’re playing with the most deadly form of fire known to humanity.

Because our instinctual willingness — or even enthusiasm — for dominating, destroying, and killing any “other” we see as a threat is deeply rooted in our genetic code, it’s damn near impossible for people who’ve been inculcated with a clear identification and deep fear of an “other” to resist embracing forms of violence ranging from discrimination to excessive policing and imprisonment to outright extermination.

It’s so archetypal that it’s the essence and message of every Bruce Willis-type movie: “Use violence to destroy the bad people.” As we watch that story play out on the screen, and we cheer the murder of the bad guys, we feel a release and exhilaration that keeps bringing people back to the theater.

We didn’t “learn” to love this violence: it’s wired into our DNA. All of us. We are all vulnerable to this type of emotional manipulation.

Trump’s open embrace of rounding up 12 million “other” immigrants and putting them into concentration camps prior to deportation seems unspeakably cruel, but we forget the brutality of his family separations and caging of young Hispanic children at our own peril.

He and his acolytes are fully capable of committing horrors like the world sees in various places every few generations when an alpha male psychopath uses “othering” to gain and hold wealth and political power.

In both Wrangham’s book and mine, we find the way to combat this: shatter the “othering” meme by converting the “them” Republicans identify (queer people, racial and religious minorities, “liberals,” and women) into a massive, collectively diverse “us.”

This fracturing of the GOP “othering” efforts was hugely on display last week during the Democratic National Convention, as people of all races, religions, gender identities, and disabilities were featured as part of a grand, collective “us.” Increasingly, we’re also seeing it in our media, from commercials featuring queer and multiracial couples to movies and TV programs with diverse casts.

To restore to our society the kind of resilient culture that has helped humanity survive to this point, we must defeat Donald Trump, JD Vance, and the psychopathic hoarder billionaires funding their attempt to take over America.

We must stop their effort to convert us into a fractured society with rich white Christian men in charge and everybody else subservient for another generation or more. As President Dwight Eisenhower warned in his prescient farewell address:
“…America knows that this world of ours, ever growing smaller, must avoid becoming a community of dreadful fear and hate, and be, instead, a proud confederation of mutual trust and respect.” He added: “We pray … that, in the goodness of time, all peoples will come to live together in a peace guaranteed by the binding force of mutual respect and love.”

America defeated fascists who had used “othering” to seize and assert power eighty years ago; they forced us to do it on the battlefield. Here at home, we fought back against and thwarted the psychopathic alpha male Robber Barons of the 1880-1930 era with antitrust law, union organizing, and heavy taxation of the morbidly rich.

Now we have an opportunity to bring Americans together, to embrace a collective and inclusive “us,” and to repudiate hate and “othering” as a political strategy.

If successful, we’ll usher in a new and beautiful America, and a grand example for the rest of the world. This could quite literally be a positive turning point for humanity for generations.

If only enough of us show up at the polls this November, and then stay engaged for at least a few years thereafter. As Tim Walz said, “We can sleep when we’re dead.”
‘Paroxysms of rage’: Analysis details why MAGA is so triggered by Doug Emhoff’s daughter

Adam Nichols
August 27, 2024

Ella Emhoff watches her father, Doug Emhoff, WITH HER MOTHER deliver a speech on the second day of the Democratic National Convention at the United Center on Aug.
 (Photo by Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images)

Ella Emhoff, the tattoo-covered stepdaughter of Kamala Harris, became an iconic image of last week’s Democratic National Convention.


And it left leading figures of the MAGA movement in meltdown, Salon’s Amanda Marcotte wrote Tuesday.

“A chorus of conservative commentators like Tucker Carlson and Charlie Kirk lost their minds at the sight of this young woman," she wrote.

“They complained that she's 'covered in tattoos,' which is held out as proof that [her dad] Doug Emhoff 'messed up.' (Real men, to the MAGA right, control their daughter's body from her skin to her hymen to how she dresses. Not weird at all!)

“They said she wore a 'man's suit' and looked like 'something out of a horror film.' They were especially incensed that her father showed affection for his fun, fashionable daughter, and freaked out that he gave his daughter a fatherly side hug during the convention."

In real life, Marcotte wrote, the 25-year-old Emhoff came over as a self-assured, beautiful and successful woman. A Parson School of Design graduate who has a contract with the modeling agency IMG, she appeared to be a woman comfortable in her own skin — and with showing love for her family.


That, Marcotte wrote, is what’s triggered the Republican right.

ALSO READ: Donald Trump exploits AP photo error for new $99 'Save America' book


Her “creativity, beauty, and easygoing love for her family has sent many on the right into paroxysms of rage,” she wrote.

“The daughter of Harris' husband, Doug Emhoff, triggers the incel-minded online right by being a Brooklyn hipster who rejects the tiresome conservative rules for how women are allowed to dress or behave. In response, Donald Trump's fanboys are in a total meltdown, unable to accept the existence of a woman who doesn't care what they think of her.

“And they can't hide that they're furious that she looks great doing so.”

Marcotte highlighted one commentator, right-winger Richard Hanania, who called the model the “nightmare scenario for most people with a daughter.”

“It's yet another sign of how out of touch and frankly weird the MAGA right is,” Marcotte wrote.

“No, most Americans would not find it a "nightmare" to have a daughter who is successful, popular, and confident. Most parents would feel how Doug Emhoff appears to feel: proud of the smart, independent woman he helped raise.

“ … The message to the bitter men of MAGA is about something else entirely. "This is why you don't have a wife," is the subtext of this grievance. "Because all the cute girls would rather move to Brooklyn and cuddle a cat than have anything to do with you."

The reference is to J.D. Vance, Donald Trump’s running mate who spurred outrage by referring to successful single women as “cat ladies.”

“Vance's catastrophic poll numbers, however, show there are real risks to the Trump campaign of pandering so heavily to creeps,” Marcotte wrote.

“The majority of Americans find it weird when men have an unhinged loathing of women who diverge from their "tradwife" fantasies.”

BALOCHISTAN

Pakistan hunts separatist militants who killed dozens



ByAFP
August 27, 2024

Militants took control of a highway and shot dead 23 people, mostly labourers from neighbouring Punjab province, blew up a railway bridge which connects Balochistan to the rest of Pakistan and stormed a hotel - Copyright AFP Banaras KHAN

Pakistani forces hunted separatist militants Tuesday who killed dozens when they pulled passengers off buses, blew up a bridge and stormed a hotel a day earlier.

Militants in Balochistan took control of a highway and shot dead 23 people, mostly labourers from neighbouring Punjab province, attacked the hotel and the railway bridge which connects Balochistan to the rest of Pakistan.

Security forces have been battling sectarian, ethnic and separatist violence for decades in impoverished Balochistan, but the coordinated attacks that took place in several districts throughout the province were one of the worst in the region’s history.

The sites hit were cordoned off Tuesday as the search for assailants went on.

“But no arrests have been made so far, and no additional militants have been killed,” provincial government spokesman Shahid Rind said.

Monday’s death toll includes 34 civilians and 15 members of the security forces, while the military said troops killed 21 militants.

Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif said the attacks were “deplorable”.

“In Balochistan, the doors for negotiation are always open to those who believe in Pakistan and accept its constitution and flag,” he said Tuesday as he addressed a cabinet meeting.

The Baloch Liberation Army (BLA), the most active militant separatist group in the province which has previously targeted Chinese interests in the region, said it was responsible for the attacks.

Sharif said their “sole aim is to halt Pakistan’s progress, sabotage the development projects under the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC), and create divisions between Pakistan and China.”

The BLA is waging a war of independence against the state, which it accuses of unfair exploitation of resources by outsiders in the mineral-rich region.

– Targeting outsiders –

Balochistan, which borders Afghanistan and Iran, is Pakistan’s poorest province, despite an abundance of untapped natural resources, and lags behind the rest of the country in education, employment and economic development.

The China-Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC) has seen tens of billions of dollars funnelled into massive transport, energy and infrastructure projects.

But the safety of its citizens is becoming an increasing concern for Beijing.

Baloch separatists have intensified attacks on Pakistanis from neighbouring provinces working in the region in recent years, as well as foreign energy firms including deadly attacks on Chinese citizens.


Punjabis are the largest of the six main ethnic groups in Pakistan and are perceived as dominating the ranks of the military.

Eleven Punjabi labourers were killed when they were abducted from a bus in the city of Naushki in April, and six Punjabis working as barbers were shot in May.

Kiyya Baloch, an analyst and former journalist tracking violence in Balochistan, said authorities are solely using force to suppress the two-decade conflict instead of seeking political solutions.

“This approach has led to increased retaliation from the youth and has caused the insurgency to gain momentum rather than diminish,” he told AFP.

“Never before have so many coordinated attacks occurred simultaneously across multiple districts of Balochistan,” he said.

Japanese scramble to buy beloved rice as shortages bite


By AFP
August 27, 2024

A supermarket in Tokyo has empty rice shelves and a sign telling customers they can only buy one bag at a time when available - Copyright AFP Philip FONG

The threat of a “megaquake”, a series of typhoons, and a week-long national holiday have some Japanese scrambling to buy rice — the nation’s cherished staple food — with the government warning Tuesday against panic buying.

“We could only procure half the usual amount of rice this summer and bags of rice get quickly sold out,” a clerk at a branch of the popular Fresco supermarket chain told AFP in the Japanese capital.

Rice shelves in some stores emptied or stocks were rationed after a government warning this month — since lifted — of a possible “megaquake”, as well as several typhoons and the annual Obon holiday.

Other factors include lower harvests caused by hot weather and water shortages, as well as increased demand related to record numbers of foreign tourists.

At one food store in Tokyo, a sign seen by AFP read: “In order for many customers to be able to buy, we ask you to purchase one (bag of rice) a day per family.”



– ‘No prospects –



A worker at another store in Tokyo said: “We can’t purchase any rice at all, and there’s no prospect of buying anytime soon”.

The Fresco worker told AFP that daily stocks ran out by midday.

“Customers queue up before the store opens but piles of bags, each of which contains 10 kilograms (22 pounds), are always sold out during the morning,” he said.

Farm minister Tetsushi Sakamoto appealed for calm Tuesday.

“Please be cool-headed in your purchase activity by buying only the amount of rice you need,” Sakamoto said, stressing “the supply shortage situation will be gradually resolved.

Rice is deeply ingrained in Japanese culture and its harvesting has shaped the nation’s landscape — even being used as a currency in the 7th century.

With an annual consumption of seven million tons per year, it is by far the most consumed food staple in the country.

Demand has been falling for some time, however, because of a declining population and changing eating habits by many Japanese as they opt for alternatives.

The nation’s stockpile in June was the lowest since 1999 when comparable data was first collected, but officials believe the inventory is sufficient.

A new harvesting season has started with 40 percent of the crop available by the end of September, a farm ministry official told AFP.

Book review: A delightful guide to cultural entomology


By Dr. Tim Sandle
August 27, 2024


Butterly on a leaf. — Image by © Tim Sandle.

Imagine this scene: you are sitting in an intricately carved chair, rocking back and forth to the rhythm of music from a bygone era. Your clothes are comfortable and colourful, your hair is perfectly in place, and there are oil paintings and textiles on the walls. Wood furniture, trim, and floors glimmer with a waxen sheen. Everything around you is composed of or inspired by bugs.

Renowned entomologist Dr. Barrett Klein has been examining such a scene, focusing on the phenomenon of how humans and insects relate on a cultural level in her forthcoming new book, titled The Insect Epiphany: How Our Six-Legged Allies Shape Human Culture (Timber Press | Hachette; Oct 15, 2024, $35 hardcover). The book is a guide to cultural entomology.

Klein studied entomology at Cornell University and the University of Arizona, fabricated natural history exhibits at the American Museum of Natural History, worked with honeybees for his doctorate at the University of Texas at Austin.

In the book, Klein argues that our world, from the physical reality to the artistic conceptualisation, would look very different if we did not have insects. This is not because many are pollinators who play a crucial role in our environments, but also because insects inspire so many aspects of our culture.

Throughout the pages Klein celebrates biodiversity and the intersection of science and art and believes fully that embracing the beauty of insects can transform our lives and our world.

“The spellbinding diversity of insects is complemented by a diversity of humans and cultures,” Klein states in an advance of the text. This captures both her inspiration and innovation.

In the text, The Insect Epiphanyexplores the ways humanity has used insects’ bodies (as examples, for silk, pigments, food, medicine), how we try to recreate them (for flight technology, architecture, social structures), and how we mimic them (for fighting, yoga, music, fashion).

Throughout the book, the enormous impact insects have had on human civilization is highlighted by the use of over 100 images. These stretch from ancient etchings to avant-garde art, from bug-based meals to haute couture fashion, and everything in between.

“We can revel in knowing we are deeply connected to our multifarious and multifaceted neighbors. We can choose to celebrate insects, knowing that without them we would sacrifice significant aspects of our heritage, our humanity, and much of life as we know it.,” Klein observes.

Klein investigates mysteries of sleep in societies of insects, creates entomo-art, and the book captures his ongoing search for the curious connections that bind our lives with what he perceives as our six-legged allies.

The text celebrates the myriad ways insects have inspired many aspects of what makes us human, The Insect Epiphany is a insightful, captivating, and, to those who have not thought about the subject before or who are perhaps squeamish, a surprisingly delightful love letter to bugs.

Clean water and good hygiene vital to ‘killing the menace’ of African mpox

ByDr. Tim Sandle
DIGITAL JOURNAL
August 27, 2024

A patient with mpox in Burundi is among roughly 170 cases confirmed by the East African country - Copyright AFP Tchandrou NITANGA

The World Health Organisation (WHO) has declared the mpox spread in Africa as of international concern. In response, the charity WaterAid (an international non-governmental organization, focused on water, sanitation and hygiene) has stressed the need for improvements to be made to water, sanitation and hygiene to help tackle the spread of the disease. This is under the banner “kill this menace”.

The WHO is considering declaring a global emergency. Director-General Dr Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus has said: “Stopping these outbreaks will require a tailored and comprehensive response, with communities at the centre.”

READ MORE: Mpox in DR Congo: Who, what, when, where, and why

As a continent-wide public health emergency for mpox is declared by the African Centre for Disease Control, WaterAid has warned that without clean water and good hygiene, we cannot contain the spread of the virus from spreading across borders and claiming more lives.

The viral disease outbreak has already spread from the Democratic Republic of Congo to neighbouring countries such as Uganda, Rwanda and Burundi which have never had cases before as well as countries further afield like Nigeria and South Africa.

With reports that adequate vaccine provision is likely to be months away, WaterAid warns that it has never been more important that communities have access to water, sanitation and hygiene to avoid mPox claiming more lives.

The infectious virus can be spread through contact with physical materials – from bedsheets, sharps, to kitchen surfaces and eating utensils – these routes can be greatly minimised through proper washing and hand hygiene. Women and children are particularly vulnerable due to such regular physical contact, with any crowded environment including health care facilities, schools and hotels at high risk as it is hard for infected people to isolate.

Furthermore, the charity argues, it is important that water, hygiene and sanitation is available in health care centres where the disease will be treated.

The African Centre for Disease Control Chief of Staff Dr Ngashi Ngongo has told WaterAid that improving community access to water, sanitation and hygiene (WASH) was “an important component and main feature of their response plan both at a household level and in health care facilities”.

As part of its international efforts, WaterAid is targeting Britain to lead the international governmental support. In particular, the charity is urging the UK government to:allocate a minimum of 10 percent of the Official Development Assistance budget to water, sanitation and hygiene.
make sure every healthcare facility, everywhere has clean water, sanitation and hygiene services (WASH) – our first line of defence against these infections.

WaterAid Health Policy Analyst Irene Owusu-Poku has explained to Digital Journal: “We will fail at killing the menace that is Mpox without clean water and good hygiene. While vaccines are important, they are not the only way out of this urgent and escalating health emergency”.

Owusu-Poku adds: “WaterAid is calling on national and regional health authorities in affected countries to prioritise water, sanitation and hygiene in all emergency response efforts, so we can stop this infectious virus in its tracks…Longer term, to help halt the spread of deadly diseases that are a threat to us all, we also need global governments to increase funding globally for water, hygiene and sanitation – including in health care facilities.”

Durov’s Telegram: ‘weapon of war’ under increased scrutiny

B yAFP
August 27, 2024

Telegram is under increased scrutiny after Durov's arrest 
- Copyright AFP Richard A. Brooks

Anna Smolchenko

The arrest of maverick entrepreneur Pavel Durov has drawn global attention to the importance of his messaging app Telegram for Russian troops and propagandists as Moscow’s war against Ukraine grinds into its third year.

Since the Kremlin invaded Ukraine in 2022, Telegram, which has over 900 million active users, has emerged as a crucial platform used by pro-war bloggers to justify Moscow’s invasion and sow disinformation in Ukraine and the West.

It is also used as a tool by Ukraine — President Volodymyr Zelensky posts his daily nightly address on Telegram — although for Kyiv the app appears to lack the same military significance.

Observers say that in the absence of a modern battlefield management system, Russian troops have also grown to rely on Telegram in their day-to-day operations, using the encrypted app for everything from the transfer of intelligence to course-correcting artillery attacks and guiding Iskander missile systems.

The arrest of the Russian-born Telegram chief in France has sent shockwaves among Russian authorities and war propagandists who fear the popular app will be compromised if Durov hands the encryption keys over to Western intelligence.

“They’re terrified,” Ivan Filippov, who studies Moscow propaganda, said, referring to influential pro-war bloggers with tens of thousands of followers.

If Western intelligence gets a backdoor into Telegram “it would be an absolute disaster” for Russia, Filippov told AFP, summing up their thinking.

“It’s about management on the ground,” added Filippov, who runs a widely-followed Telegram channel.

A self-proclaimed libertarian, Durov has championed confidentiality on the Internet. Moscow tried to block Telegram in 2018, but abandoned those efforts two years later.

Pro-war blogger Andrei Medvedev said Telegram had emerged as the “main messenger” of Russia’s invasion against Ukraine.

“This is an alternative to classified military communications,” Medvedev said.

Alexei Rogozin, head of the Centre for the Development of Transportation Technologies, said many joked that Durov’s arrest was tantamount to “the arrest of the chief of communications for the Russian armed forces –- this is how troop battlefield management depends on Telegram today.”

“Intelligence transfer, artillery course-correction, video streaming from copters and many other things are indeed often carried out with the help of Telegram,” said Rogozin, the son of the controversial former Russian space agency chief, Dmitry Rogozin.

– ‘Stuck in the past’ –

Mykhailo Samus, director of the New Geopolitics Research Network, a Kyiv-based think tank, said that while Russia has command and control systems, “they are not efficient on the battlefield”.

“The Russian army is stuck in the past,” Samus told AFP.

Samus pointed out that the Ukrainian army has successfully relied on Delta, a battlespace management system developed by Ukrainians in collaboration with NATO. Delta has earned high praise from the Western military bloc, which called the system “ground-breaking.”

While military observers do not expect Durov’s arrest to have any immediate impact on Russia’s war in Ukraine, it might spur the development of alternative encrypted communications systems in Russia.

Medvedev said it was now “vital” for the Russian army to create a proper military messenger as “it is difficult to predict how long Telegram will remain the way we know it” or “remain at all”.

– ‘A tool of Putin’s war’ –

France issued an arrest warrant for Durov in a preliminary investigation into alleged offences including fraud, drug trafficking, cyberbullying, organised crime and promotion of terrorism.

The Kremlin warned Paris on Tuesday against trying to intimidate Durov.

“The charges are indeed very serious, they require no less serious evidence,” Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said.

The team and supporters of the late Russian opposition leader Alexei Navalny also actively use Telegram, and Durov’s detention has split the anti-Kremlin opposition.

Many Kremlin critics called France’s actions an assault on the freedom of speech, while others said Telegram should become more responsible.

Bulgarian journalist Christo Grozev, who has investigated Russian intelligence services and was close to Navalny, said Russian domestic security service FSB and the GRU military intelligence have used Telegram to recruit saboteurs and plot “terrorist acts”.

“I believe that France has no right to treat him any differently than anyone who runs a marketplace selling drugs and child porn, and refuses to remove such services,” Grozev told AFP, referring to Durov.

“And this has nothing to do with the freedom of expression or protection of user rights,” added Grozev.

The Free Russia Forum, co-founded by Kremlin critic and former world chess champion Garry Kasparov, said Durov — “willingly or unwillingly” — has allowed Telegram to become a “weapon of war.”

“No matter how Durov’s French saga ends, we hope that Telegram will stop being a tool of Putin’s war.”

UAE seeks consular services for arrested Telegram boss


By AFP
August 27, 2024

Durov is being held at France's National Anti-fraud Office in Ivry-sur-Seine, south of Paris - Copyright AFP Richard A. Brooks

The UAE said Tuesday it had requested consular services for Telegram’s Pavel Durov after the Dubai-based tech boss was arrested in France over alleged failings to curb criminality on the app.

“The UAE is closely following the case of its citizen Pavel Durov, founder of Telegram, who was arrested by the French authorities in Paris–Le Bourget Airport,” the Gulf state’s foreign ministry said in a statement.

“The UAE has submitted a request to the Government of the French Republic to provide him with all the necessary consular services in an urgent manner,” it added.

Durov, the 39-year-old billionaire founder of the messaging platform, was arrested at the Paris airport late on Sunday.

He is accused of failing to curb the spread of illegal content on Telegram, which has more than 900 million users. The company has rejected the accusations.

French President Emmanuel Macron on Monday denied there was a political aspect to Durov’s arrest as the internet mogul spent a second day in French custody.

Late Monday, French authorities again extended his initial detention for questioning until Wednesday, according to a source close to the investigation.

Durov set up Telegram after leaving Russia a decade ago, and Forbes magazine estimates his current fortune at $15.5 billion.

He holds a French passport in addition to Russian nationality. In its press information, Telegram says its founder has “dual citizenship of the United Arab Emirates and France”.

Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said Monday Moscow had received no information from France about why he was detained, and “we do not know concretely what Durov is accused of”.

Dubai-headquartered Telegram said on Sunday that “Durov has nothing to hide and travels frequently in Europe”.

“Telegram abides by EU laws, including the Digital Services Act — its moderation is within industry standards,” it added.

“It is absurd to claim that a platform or its owner are responsible for abuse of that platform.”

Silver Lining movie: New documentary explores the potential harm from EMF

ByDr. Tim Sandle
August 27, 2024
DIGITAL JOURNAL

Starlink dishes are hooked up to routers that create a small wifi hotspot. — © AFP

Several studies, selected researchers, and a range of published papers have reported concerns about electromagnetic field (EMF) radiation. This centers on how the radiation can potentially produce various health problems.

Selected medical reports describe the symptoms characterized from EMF as ‘electro-hyper-sensitivity’ (EHS). These symptoms are commonly reported by people living surrounded by electronic devices.

Other symptoms reportedly experienced are memory problems, difficulty concentrating, eye problems, sleep disorder, feeling unwell, headache, dizziness, tinnitus, chronic fatigue, and heart palpitations.

According to the World Health Organization: “It is not disputed that electromagnetic fields above certain levels can trigger biological effects. Experiments with healthy volunteers indicate that short-term exposure at the levels present in the environment or in the home do not cause any apparent detrimental effects. Exposures to higher levels that might be harmful are restricted by national and international guidelines. The current debate is centred on whether long-term low level exposure can evoke biological responses and influence people’s well being.”

What are EMFs?

Electromagnetic fields (EMFs) are physical fields produced by electrically charged objects and consist of electric and magnetic components. The most common objects allegedly causing sensitivity are power lines, fluorescent lights, antennas, electrical wiring, satellite systems, cell towers, radio stations, mobile phones, microwave ovens, radar systems, medical devices (MRI and X-ray machines), Wi-Fi, cordless phones, and so on.

In terms of how harmful EMFs are, the WHO states it is a question of proximity and exposure time: “Based on a recent in-depth review of the scientific literature, the WHO concluded that current evidence does not confirm the existence of any health consequences from exposure to low level electromagnetic fields. However, some gaps in knowledge about biological effects exist and need further research.”

The documentary expresses more serious concerns, and it is up to the viewer and reader to determine the relative risk.

New documentary

To highlight the risks, The Silver Lining Film has been produced. This is a dark thriller about electromagnetic radiation and the harmful effects of technology. The film is promoted by the activist platform The Elegant Initiative.

The movie is directed by Mikey Altoft, produced by Haitam Banoori, stars Bibi Lucille and Bella Granville. The film focuses on the potentially harmful effects of technology, such as everyday devices and electricity sources.

“The Silver Lining” film, will be released, on the platform The Elegant Initiative.

Promotion

Helping to promote the film is Devansh Sood, the founder and CEO of the silver-made certified EMF protective brand Fique which blocks out Radio Frequencies (RF) and Electromagnetic Frequencies (EMF).

Sood has told Digital Journal he is increasing concern about the many health problems as a result of exposure to radiation including cancer, infertility, and neurological disorders.

Sood hopes the film inspires, provokes, and brings awareness about the harmful effects of technology by exploring the ethical implications and the themes of power and social accountability.

Read more: https://www.digitaljournal.com/tech-science/silver-lining-movie-new-documentary-explores-the-potential-harm-from-emf/article#ixzz8kAWUaOFw

CARBON CAPTURE 

Warren Buffett's Quiet Power Move: Why He's Betting $35 Billion On A 'Yet To Be Proven' Renewable Energy Solution


Claire Shefchik
Tue, Aug 27, 2024

Warren Buffett's Quiet Power Move: Why He's Betting $35 Billion On A 'Yet To Be Proven' Renewable Energy Solution

Warren Buffett is at it again, and the financial world is buzzing. He's investing $35 billion into a renewable energy initiative that's still “yet to be proven.” What's surprising is that the famously cautious investor is doubling down on fossil fuels at the same time.

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We're not talking pennies here. Chevron is one of the biggest holdings in Berkshire Hathaway's portfolio – almost $19.1 billion. Buffett made his move during the 2020 energy downturn. Although he trimmed his position slightly this year, he remains heavily invested. Chevron's not buying the "fossil fuels are fading" narrative. They've cranked up oil and gas production by 12% and are diving into major projects in the Gulf of Mexico and Israel.

But hold on, there's more. Buffett's got his eye on Occidental Petroleum too. His stake? Close to $15.7 billion. He's been gobbling up shares like they're going out of style. He's even stated that Occidental is one of the few stocks Berkshire would consider holding indefinitely. Under CEO Vicki Hollub, Occidental's making moves, like a $12 billion deal to acquire Crownrock, another oil and gas player.

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So, why's Buffett all in on fossil fuels when everyone else is running the other way? It's all about Carbon capture technology. Both Chevron and Occidental are investing heavily in this area. Hollub has even suggested that if carbon capture proves successful, “there’s no reason not to produce oil and gas forever.”


Buffett acknowledges the risk, stating that the “economic feasibility of this technique has yet to be proven." However, Buffett has made risky bets before, and they've often paid off. He's betting that Chevron and Occidental's investments in carbon capture will sustain the oil and gas industry, even as the world shifts toward renewables.


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Buffett isn't just focused on short-term gains; he's looking at the long-term potential, particularly with carbon capture technology. If successful, this could transform the industry, making fossil fuels cleaner and more sustainable. That's why he's willing to put so much on the line. Buffett has seen industries change before, and he's positioning himself to be ahead of the curve once again.

In a world where many are following the crowd, Buffett is doing what he does best: going against the grain. Will this gamble pay off? Only time will tell. But if history is any guide, the “Oracle of Omaha” might just be onto something big again.
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This article Warren Buffett's Quiet Power Move: Why He's Betting $35 Billion On A 'Yet To Be Proven' Renewable Energy Solution originally appeared on Benzinga.com

© 2024 Benzinga.com. Benzinga does not provide investment advice. All rights reserved.

Volt Lithium Installs A Field Unit In Permian Basin, Takes A Major Step Toward Commercial Production

Stjepan Kalinic
Tue, Aug 27, 2024, 

Volt Lithium Installs A Field Unit In Permian Basin, Takes 
A Major Step Toward Commercial Production

Volt Lithium (OTC:VLTLF) has announced the deployment and installation of its first Field Unit in the Permian Basin, Texas. After over a year of discussions with major oil companies in the region, this development represents a major milestone for the company.

"Our team is thrilled to share that we have successfully deployed, installed and commenced function-testing of the Field Unit on-site at our strategic partner's Permian Basin location in West Texas," said Alex Wylie, President & CEO of Volt Lithium.

"The introduction of this initial Field Unit marks the achievement of another critical milestone of our strategy to become one of North America's first commercial producers of lithium from oilfield brine," he added.

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The newly deployed Field Unit can process over 200,000 liters (approximately 1,250 barrels) of oilfield brine daily, doubling the company's previous processing capability.

It is a significant scale-up from the previously announced 96,000 liters per day, aligning with the company's goal of reaching full commercial production.

This modular unit is designed not only to meet the current processing demands but also to be scalable for future expansions. By adding modules or optimizing lithium extraction times, Volt aims to increase its processing capacity further, eventually targeting commercial production levels of 100,000 barrels per day.

"Our upfront cost to go full-scale commercial is $20 million for phase one production plans. To scale up, you just build more. Our footprint this summer will be 50 feet by 50 feet. The full-scale commercial might be 100 feet by 150 feet," Wylie previously told Benzinga.

Volt completed successful tests in its Field Simulation Centre in Calgary, Alberta. However, the company's ability to scale up its extraction process at a competitive cost is a significant advantage.

According to Wylie, even when working with low-grade brine, production costs only $2,900 per ton—well below the current spot price of around $9,600 per ton, per Shanghai's exchange closing price on August 26.

"It is a $6 billion cash flow opportunity within the next three to five years, and we're a $20 million company," Wylie told Benzinga in June.

Since then, the stock has soared 240%, rising to CA$0.48 per share.