Friday, February 21, 2020

Volcanic Evidence Suggests Aboriginal Story May Be Earth's Oldest Tale


THE CRATER OF BUDJ BIM, ILLUSTRATED BY EUGENE VON GUERARD IN THE 1860S WHEN IT WAS STILL KNOWN AS MOUNT ECCLES. CC BY 2.0/PUBLIC DOMAIN
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By Stephen Luntz19 FEB 2020

A story told for generations by the Gunditjmara people of southern Australia is thought to describe a volcanic eruption. Now, dating of lava produced by a volcano thought to feature in the tale shows the account is 37,000 years old, quite likely making it the oldest tale on Earth.

The lava flows of South-western Victoria mark it as a former volcanic province, but the timing of the last eruptions has been uncertain.

The traditional owners of the Budj Bim heritage area, the Gunditjmara, have an origins story about four giants who gave life and laws to the land. In the Dreaming, an ancestral being – Budj Bim – emerges from the ground to become a domed hill with lava spilling out of its head, while the story also includes references to the “land and trees dancing”. It's not hard to see how this could be a description of a major eruption, leading anthropologists to wonder if the Gunditjmara were living there at the time of the last eruption. The possibility gained a boost with the discovery in the 1940s of an ax beneath the most recent layer of ash.

Dr Erin Matchan of the University of Melbourne used 40Ar/39Ar to date the most recent eruptions from the Budj Bim and Tower Hill volcanoes. The technique relies on the fact potassium radioactively decays to argon-39, so as time goes on potassium-rich rocks the amount of argon-39 builds up relative to the more common argon-40. Advances in mass spectrometry have recently made this technique much more widely available for dating volcanic rocks. In the journal Geology, she reports they released lava and ash respectively around 37,000 years ago, with an uncertainty of 3,100 years.

These lava flows are part of a series produced by the Budj Bim volcano, the most recent of which, possibly recorded in Aboriginal myths, was 37,000 years ago. Robirensi/Shutterstock

If the Gunditjmara story really does describe one of these eruptions, it is almost certainly the oldest surviving story whose origins we can identify.

It might seem impossible that eye-witness accounts could survive over such a vast sweep of time, even modified into myth. However, around much of coastal Australia Aboriginal stories refer to lands that were overwhelmed by rising seas, matching events that happened 7,000 years ago. An account of a volcanic eruption in northern Australia appears to be from the same time.

Matchan thinks the four giants story is five times older, but if 7,000 is possible, why not 30,000 more? The hardest period for the story's survival would have been the last two centuries, during which Indigenous Australians were banned from speaking their own language, and frequently had their children stolen by white authorities.

Matchan pointed out to IFLScience it is well established that Indigenous Australians have been in south-eastern Australia for at least 40,000 years, so habitation of the Gunditjmara lands almost certainly stretches back that far. However, aside from the ax and one profoundly mysterious 120,000-year-old possible fireplace and midden all the evidence of human occupation comes from the last 13,000 years.
The lake in Budj Bim today. CC BY 1.0/Public Domain

Matchan and her co-authors admit the evidence for the origins of the four giants story is far from conclusive. It might not describe a volcanic eruption at all. Or perhaps it was inherited from people fleeing the eruption of Mount Gambier, 130 kilometers (80 miles) northwest, which could be as little as 5,000 years old.

Nevertheless, there is mitogenomic evidence that Indigenous peoples may have remained in discrete geographical areas for tens of thousands of years following initial migration from Northern Australia. A people forced into a major migration by a local disaster would be expected to have interbred much more with their neighbors. The area's remarkable eel traps, the world's oldest aquaculture remnants are part of the Gunditjmara culture, indicating their presence in the area for at least 6,600 years.

Proving the four giants story really does describe the eruption may never be possible, but recovering additional relics from before the eruptions might tell us a lot about the people who inhabited the area. The reason nothing new has been found for 70 years, Matchan says, “Is probably because no one has really looked. The ax was a chance find by a farmer digging post holes, rather than part of a deliberate search."
UPDATED
Rohrabacher partially confirms Assange pardon story

Former congressman Dana Rohrabacher has confirmed that he told Julian Assange that Donald Trump would give him a pardon if he gave him information proving that Russians had not been the source of the leaked Democratic emails that are thought to have been part of Moscow’s campaign to swing the 2016 for Trump.

The WikiLeaks chief’s lawyers said in court in London on Wednesday that Rohrabacher had offered the pardon on Trump’s behalf. The White House denied that claimed Trump “barely knows” the former Republican politician. (Trump invited him to a White House meeting in 2017.)

Rohrabacher – known as one of the most pro-Russian politicians in Washington – told Yahoo News:

I spoke to Julian Assange and told him if he would provide evidence about who gave WikiLeaks the emails I would petition the president to give him a pardon. He knew I could get to the president.

He said he did not discuss the issue directly with Trump, and said he only wanted “truthful” information from Assange.

He apparently believes a conspiracy theory that Seth Rich, a murdered former Democratic staffer, was the true source of the leak.

The pardon claim was made before the opening next week of Assange’s legal battle to block attempts to extradite him to the US, where he faces charges for publishing hacked documents.


Julian Assange Claims Trump Offered a Pardon for Help Covering Up Russia’s 2016 Hacking

Assange’s attorney said former U.S. Republican Congressman Dana Rohrabacher delivered the message to Assange at the Ecuadorian embassy in London in August 2017.


Cover: Wikileaks founder Julian Assange leaves Westminster Magistrates Court, London, where he was appearing for an administrative hearing relating to his extradition to the United States. (Photo: Dominic Lipinski/PA Images via Getty Images)


By Greg Walters Feb 19 2020


President Trump offered up a presidential pardon to Julian Assange if the jailed radical activist would deny that Russia hacked emails from Democrats before the 2016 election, Assange’s lawyer claimed in British court.

Assange, the incarcerated founder of the notorious ultra-transparency outfit WikiLeaks, is now in London court battling extradition to the United States for alleged crimes unrelated to the group’s role in the 2016 election, when it released damaging emails stolen from Democrats by Russian spies.

Assange’s attorney Edward Fitzgerald said former U.S. Republican Congressman Dana Rohrabacher, a man with his own legendary affinity for Russian President Vladimir Putin, delivered the message to Assange at the Ecuadorian embassy in London in August 2017.


Fitzgerald told the court that a statement from Assange’s lawyer, Jennifer Robinson, recounts “Mr. Rohrabacher going to see Mr. Assange and saying, on instructions from the president, he was offering a pardon or some other way out, if Mr. Assange… said Russia had nothing to do with the DNC leaks,” according to The Guardian.

News of the alleged offer arrives at a moment when Trump is waging an unprecedented assault on the American legal system, and publicly insisting he has the right to bend criminal prosecutions to punish his enemies and protect his friends if he feels like it. On Tuesday, Trump pardoned or commuted the sentences of 11 people, including a handful of political supporters and high-profile officials convicted of corruption.


Trump has long railed against any suggestion he might owe his 2016 victory to Russian interference, even though the entire American intelligence community concluded that Russia intervened in the election on Trump’s behalf, using social media and by using WikiLeaks as a conduit for hacked content.

Former special prosecutor Robert Mueller indicted a bevy of Russian cyber spies for interfering in the 2016 election to boost Trump. In a detailed indictment, Mueller laid out, almost to the keystroke, how they hacked into the computer systems of the Democratic National Committee and then turned over what they found to WikiLeaks.

On Thursday, a court in Washington D.C. is set to hand out a criminal sentence to Roger Stone, Trump’s longtime friend and former political advisor who was convicted of lying under oath about his attempts to contact WikiLeaks about those hacked files in the midst of the 2016 campaign.

Trump’s Department of Justice has suffered widespread criticism from former DOJ officials for intervening to try to protect Trump’s buddy Stone by reducing the prosecutorial sentencing recommendation ahead of Thursday’s hearing, when the judge will decide how long Stone should be in prison.

Neither Rohrabacher nor Assange’s attorneys were immediately available to comment.

Assange was never charged with a crime for his role overseeing WikiLeaks during the 2016 election.

Instead, in spring of 2019, he was hit with an 18-count indictment that accused him of unlawfully obtaining and disclosing national defense information.

Those charges revolve around Assange’s interaction with former Army intelligence analyst Chelsea Manning, who shared hundreds of thousands of classified documents with WikiLeaks in 2010 that offered unvarnished windows into the U.S. wars in Afghanistan and Iraq and treatment of prisoners in Guantanamo Bay.


This article originally appeared on VICE US.


WHEN ANTISEMITISM IS A TRADITION

Belgian carnival to go ahead despite row over 'hateful' antisemitism


Organisers in Aalst say they will defy calls from Israel’s government to cancel event


Daniel Boffey in Brussels

Fri 21 Feb 2020 12.49 GMTLast modified on Fri 21 Feb 2020 13.03 GMT




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Antisemitic figures at last year’s Aalst carnival. 
Israel’s foreign minister said Belgium should
 be ashamed. Photograph: Pen News

Organisers of a Belgian carnival, removed from a Unesco heritage list last year following criticism of its antisemitic floats, have said they will defy calls from Israel’s government for Sunday’s event to be cancelled.

Belgium’s prime minister, Sophie Wilmès, also described the parade as an “internal affair” after Israel’s foreign minister, Israel Katz, called for the authorities to “condemn and ban this hateful parade in Aalst”.

“Belgium as a western democracy should be ashamed to allow such a vitriolic antisemitic display,” Katz had tweeted.

Emmanuel Nahshon, Israel’s ambassador to Belgium, said he hoped the organisers and local authorities would “pull themselves together”, as he clarified the minister’s remarks.


Belgian anti-racism activist forced to flee town in blackface row

“What we are asking for is absolutely not the prohibition of carnival as such,” Nahshon said. “What we are asking for is the prohibition of all these antisemitic cartoons, which become beyond good taste, which have nothing to do with a sense of humour and which do not honour an exemplary democracy such as Belgium.”

During last year’s three-day carnival in the Flemish town, floats depicted Orthodox Jews with hooked noses standing on sacks of gold coins. One of the figures was carrying a white rat on its shoulder.
Last year Unesco removed the Aalst carnival from a list of “intangible cultural heritage”, an inventory of protected practices that includes Irish hurling and Cypriot-Greek Byzantine chant.

The UN organisation said the festival, which has been on the list since 2010, had been guilty of “recurring repetition of racist and antisemitic representations”.

The carnival’s organisers had pre-empted the sanction by requesting that the event be taken off the Unesco inventory, claiming that support for its inclusion within the local community had been lost.

At the time, Christoph D’Haese, the mayor of Aalst, who is in the Flemish nationalist N-VA party, claimed his citizens had “suffered grotesque accusations … Aalst will always remain the capital of mockery and satire”.

On Friday, D’Haese said this year’s carnival, the 92nd, would go ahead as planned as he defended the freedom of expression of those involved.

“A magnifying glass is now looking at a very beautiful folk festival that has been able to take place 91 times without any significant problems,” he told a Flemish radio station. “If we can avoid sensitive issues, or visualise a theme without causing hurt, I call for that. We need to be aware of the fact that a large community may feel hurt and have respect for it. But Aalst will always remain the odd one out.”

D’Haese said that “raising awareness is one thing; forbidding and censorship is something else”. “You can focus your magnifying glass on many things, but you can also focus on the creativity that the carnivalists put into their work and on the young people who work on all those floats,” he said.

Bart Somers, a minister in the Flemish government, said the mayor “should make more efforts to enter into dialogue with the carnivalists and try to convince them that they are not acting morally and ethically”. There is expected to be heavier security around the parade.



School bus stunt urges Prince Andrew to talk to FBI about Jeffrey Epstein

US lawyer Gloria Allred arranged for bus to be driven past Buckingham Palace with message for prince


Ed Pilkington in New York and agencies Fri 21 Feb 2020 
 
The message on the bus was from US lawyer 
Gloria Allred. Photograph: Stefan Rousseau/PA


An American-style school bus has driven past Buckingham Palace with a message on the side appealing for Prince Andrew to answer questions from the FBI about his links to the sex offender Jeffrey Epstein.

The stunt was arranged by the US lawyer Gloria Allred, who represents some of Epstein’s victims.

The prince stepped away from royal duties after his disastrous Newsnight interview about his relationship with Epstein.

The bus carried large pictures of the prince accompanied by the message: “If you see this man please ask him to call the FBI to answer their questions.”

Allred gave an impromptu press conference on the steps of the New York supreme court on Friday. She appealed directly to Andrew to come forward to the FBI and share with them information about what he had seen when spending time with Epstein at his properties in Manhattan and elsewhere.

“My clients deserve the truth. They have been denied justice so many times over so many years, and there will be no justice without the truth. And there will be no truth unless Prince Andrew stops hiding from the FBI and from the public. This is unacceptable.”

She went on: “I implore you Prince Andrew. You must do the right thing and stop shaming your family – the Queen, your children. If you have done nothing wrong then just talk to the FBI.”

Andrew has so far failed to respond to FBI approaches in the ongoing investigation into Epstein and his abuse of underaged girls.

Last month the New York prosecutor in the case, Geoffrey Berman, held a press conference outside Epstein’s Manhattan mansion house and revealed that the prince had to date provided “zero cooperation”. Those claims appear to have prompted anger in Buckingham Palace as sources close to the prince denied that he had been uncooperative.

According to sources who spoke to the Guardian, Andrew is “committed to the legal process”.
Canadian police had 'no authority' to search pipeline activists, says watchdog

Letter offers scathing criticism of police’s tactics against Wet’suwet’en people amid growing protest over gas pipeline


Tracey Lindeman in Ottawa Thu 20 Feb 2020 
 
A police officer crosses the railway tracks in front of where protesters maintain a railway blockade in St-Lambert. Photograph: Christinne Muschi/Reuters

Canadian federal police had “no legal authority” to make ID checks and searches on activists seeking to block a pipeline project on Indigenous territory, according to newly released correspondence from the force’s oversight body.

The nine-page letter written by Michelaine Lahaie, chair of the Civilian Review and Complaints Commission for the RCMP, offers scathing criticism of the police’s continued use of tactics against Indigenous people which she had previously warned against.

The document was released as Justin Trudeau’s government struggles to deal with a growing protest movement in support of the Wet’suwet’en nation’s fight against a controversial natural gas pipeline in British Columbia.


Canada: protests go mainstream as support for Wet'suwet'en pipeline fight widens

In recent weeks, demonstrations have sprung up across the country, blockading major railway lines and obstructing access to ports and government buildings.

On Thursday, Canada’s largest rail operator, CN Rail, obtained a court injunction giving it permission to remove a blockade in St-Lambert, a suburb of Montreal.

Quebec’s premier, François Legault, promised swift police-backed action to remove the protest, which since Wednesday has prevented trains from traveling between Montreal and eastern Canada, as well as the US.

Separately, Canada’s public safety minister Bill Blair said that the RCMP in British Columbia had agreed to leave the Wet’suwet’en territory.

But Molly Wickham, the spokeswoman for the Gidimt’en clan in the Wet’suwet’en Nation, said that the RCMP had not yet vacated their territory.Q&A
Who are the Wet’suwet’en?Show

Speaking to reporters, Wickham said Blair’s comments were part of a “media strategy” to defuse the coast-to-coast protest movement along the nation’s rail lines that has led to major economic losses and layoffs.

Not all First Nations and clans are opposed to the pipeline. A number of others have signed agreements with the company behind the pipeline, Coastal GasLink, but the pipeline does not have the blessing of the Wet’suwet’en hereditary chiefs, and for months activists blocked pipeline workers’ access to the construction site.

Earlier this month, the RCMP enforced a court injunction allowing them access, but their tactics have ignited broad criticism, and in January the BC Civil Liberties Association, the Wet’suwet’en hereditary chiefs and the Union of BC Indian Chiefs filed a joint complaint to the CCRC.


According to the complaint, police created a large exclusion zone which it used to deny access to people including Nation members, media and legal counsel. Other witnesses said the police kept them at a checkpoint for hours in -37C weather while they were trying to deliver food and emergency supplies. The police have conducted raids and arrested activists.

Lahaie’s note is not an official report from the CRCC. In fact, the chair said she was not opening an official inquiry, because previous recommendations she made after 2013 Indigenous anti-shale protests in New Brunswick also applied to the Wet’suwet’en complaint. That report, completed in 2019, has not yet been made public.

However, Lahaie’s correspondence with the Wet’suwet’en – which was released by the complainants – said that while some elements of the RCMP’s behaviour were reasonable, ID checks, searches and restricting access to the territory were not.

Speaking at a press conference in Vancouver, judge Mary Ellen Turpel-Lafond, and Harsha Walia from the BC Civil Liberties Association, noted that the RCMP has been aware of Lahaie’s findings for more than a year and still behaved unlawfully in Wet’suwet’en.

“This letter suggests that there’s a very serious problem that the civilian oversight of the RCMP does not work,” said Turpel-Lafond.

The Highway of Tears – a lonesome stretch of highway along which unknown numbers of hitchhiking Indigenous women have gone missing – passes near Wet’suwet’en territory.

Last year, a federal inquiry on the issue heavily criticized the RCMP for its failures to take the issue seriously.

Turpel-Lafond said the Wet’suwet’en crisis had exposed a fundamental problem at the heart of Canada’s approach to missing and murdered Indigenous women and girls.

“Canada’s oversight of policing is clearly inadequate for First Nations. Even the commissioner is essentially saying to us, ‘I’m impotent to deal with this. Help me to get the RCMP to respond.’ That’s a very sad statement about the state of policing,” she said.
EDMONTON SOLIDARITY RAIL BLOCKADE
'This is not violence': Counter-protesters tear down blockade on CN rail line in Edmonton

FUNNY BUT THATS NOT WHAT THEY SAID ABOUT THE FIRST NATIONS PROTESTERS, BUT I AGREE IT IS NOT VIOLENCE IT IS VANDALISM

RED NECKS VS FIRST NATIONS

One of the organizers said they had planned to maintain the blockade until Justin Trudeau intervened and the RCMP left Wet’suwet’en territory


The Canadian Press
Colette Derworiz and Daniela Germano

February 19, 2020

EDMONTON — A blockade set up on a Canadian National rail line on the western edge of Edmonton in support of Wet’suwet’en hereditary chiefs was being dismantled — at least temporarily — Wednesday after a handful of counter-protesters showed up.

About 20 people called Cuzzins for Wet’suwet’en had set up barriers early in the day in solidarity with the chiefs who oppose a natural gas pipeline through their traditional land in British Columbia.

The blockade consisted of wooden pallets on the tracks and signs that say “No Consent” and “No Pipelines on Stolen Land.”

One of the organizers, who was wearing a balaclava and called himself Poundmaker to protect his safety, said they had planned to maintain the blockade until Prime Minister Justin Trudeau intervened and the RCMP left Wet’suwet’en territory in B.C.

Confrontations with counter-protesters at the site, however, led Poundmaker and the others to abandon the blockade. They said they wanted to keep it peaceful.

Poundmaker didn’t rule out erecting a blockade again at the site or somewhere else. “Site 1 wasn’t the only site we had in mind.”

THEY ARE CONVERSING, HAVING A CONVERSATION
WHICH IS ABOUT AS MEANINGLESS AS THE TERM 
A CONVERSATION MEANS NOTHING ACTION IS ALL
A counter protester argues with a protester as supporters of the indigenous Wet’suwet’en Nation’s hereditary chiefs camp at a blockade along the CN rail line in Edmonton, Feb. 19, 2020. Codie McLachlan/Reuters

Wet’suwet’en supporters linked arms in front their camp as a few counter-protesters tried to remove pallets and other materials from the tracks.

“This is the violence. See this is the violence,” said a protester, who had his face covered.

“This is not violence. I am just trying to remove some garbage,” a counter-protester responded.

Guy Simpson, an oilfield worker from Leduc, Alta., said he decided to show up at the blockade after seeing it on social media.

“One blockade at a time. I’ll clean it up,” he said after loading some items from the camp onto his pickup truck.

Simpson and other counter-protesters removed the wooden pallets and other materials that were on the tracks.

Another man with a beard and a ball cap and driving a black pickup truck stopped on the road over the tracks and yelled at the protesters from his window. “There’s a lot of hard-working people out of work,” he told them. “I’m taking time out of work right now so I can tell you punks to get to work.”

A protester sarcastically replied: “You really showed us.”

The pickup driver shouted as he drove off: “Why don’t you guys just drop dead? You can’t even uncover your faces.” 
 
A protester tries to block counter protesters from tearing down a blockade along the CN rail line in Edmonton, Feb. 19, 2020. David Bloom/Postmedia

Poundmaker said he knows people are upset that the blockades across the country are affecting the economy and jobs.

“I know they think we’re coming after oil and gas,” he said. “But we’re focused on justice for Indigenous people right now. We’re focused on trying to build a future for everyone.”

CN said in a statement earlier Wednesday that CN police and local police had responded to the blockade.

Later in the day, an Edmonton judge granted the company a 30-day injunction applying to all rail lines in Alberta. CN lawyers had argued that the company has nothing to do with the dispute and is being hurt economically by the blockades.

Lawyers said a train was bearing down on the blockade at about 4:30 a.m. when CN received an anonymous phone tip about the protest on the tracks. The train stopped 20 cars short of the blockade.

They said the blockade had held up 14 trains by lunchtime, backing up traffic and threatening perishable and hazardous goods.

Alberta Justice Minister Doug Schweitzer said he expects police to enforce the order on any other blockades.

“Albertans will not be economic hostages while lawbreakers block critical infrastructure such as rail lines,” he wrote on Twiter.
I AGREE IT IS SELF ORGANIZED RESISTANCE FROM BELOW

Hereditary chief says RCMP must 'pick up everything and go' before he meets with ministers

Premier Jason Kenney, who has been critical of the blockades popping up across the country, said he expected police to respect and enforce court orders.

He planned to be on an afternoon conference call with all of Canada’s premiers about the blockades.

“These illegal blockades — there is people losing their jobs, blue-collar people, vulnerable people,” he said in Calgary.

“What is happening here is anarchy.”

The Coastal GasLink pipeline the hereditary chiefs oppose has already received approval from elected band councils.

Protests began after the RCMP moved in to enforce an injunction to keep hereditary chiefs and their supporters away from pipeline worksites. Blockades by Indigenous people and supporters have shut down a good part of CN’s rail network, suspended most Via Rail passenger service, and temporarily blocked traffic on streets and bridges and at ports in multiple cities.
A protester tries to block counter protesters from tearing down a blockade along the CN rail line in Edmonton, Feb. 19, 2020. David Bloom/Postmedia

The Confederacy of Treaty Six First Nations, which represents 16 First Nations across Alberta, said in a statement that it supports the hereditary chiefs.

“We call upon law enforcement officials to ensure safety of peaceful land protectors and the railway workers,” said Grand Chief William Morin.

He urged the RCMP to leave Wet’suwet’en territory and asked that Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and B.C. Premier John Horgan meet with the Wet’suwet’en “to resolve this in a peaceful manner for all Indigenous Peoples and Canadians.”

In Ottawa, Trudeau said his government is trying to find a resolution, but he also acknowledged the economic affect the rail blockades are having across the country.

“We know that people are facing shortages. They’re facing disruptions. They’re facing layoffs. That’s unacceptable,” he said.

“That’s why we’re going to continue working extremely hard with everyone involved to resolve the situation as quickly as possible.”

— With files from Bill Graveland in Calgary and Dean Bennett in Edmonton


Counter-protesters demolish rail blockade

Protesters set up camp around 4 a.m. on Wednesday.

About half-a-dozen counter protesters dismantle a blockade built by First Nations protesters on a CN Rail line west of Edmonton on Wednesday afternoon. The blockade of wood and barrels was constructed to show solidarity with the Wet’suwet’en protesters who are currently embroiled in a battle with RCMP and the Coastal GasLink project on First Nations’ territory in B.C. CHRIS COLBOURNE/St. Albert Gazette
A group of around a dozen counter-protesters tore down a rail blockade southeast of St. Albert.
Early Wednesday morning, a group of protesters set up a camp near the Winterburn Industrial Area close to Acheson to show solidarity with the Wet’suwet’en blockades taking place in B.C.
The camp set up early in the morning and dozens of protesters blocked the rail tracks with a car and wooden pallets that read, "No consent" and "Reconciliation is dead.” A car also blocked the tracks.
Protesters let vehicle traffic through but early in the morning protesters said a train had approached the tracks and one of the protesters laid down on the tracks to stop the passing of the train.
One man, who went by the pseudonym Poundmaker, said they were standing in solidarity with the Wet’suwet’en protests.
“These blockades could be solved so easily but I think we are just going to see the government talk, talk, talk and then just raid our territories again.”
Poundmaker said the only thing that will stop the blockades is Coastal GasLink and RCMP removal from Wet’suwet’en territory.
During the noon hour counter-protesters gathered and attempted to tear down the camp and push past the protest. They tried to push past protesters into their camps, take down the pallets and rolled away garbage cans next to the camp.
The counter-protesters backed a truck up next to the camp and started trying to load parts of the camp into the truck.
An older woman, Arlene Seegerts, hopped into the back of the truck with another protester trying to pry their items back from the men.
As the counter-protest group grew in size, they became more vocal and bold.
“Your violence is not welcome here,” protester Michael James told the counter-protesters.
The men shouted at the protesters telling them to get jobs and said their camp looked like litter and they were just cleaning it up.
“You liberal paid friggin' protesters can go away,” a counter-protester shouted.
James said he was standing with the First Nation people to make sure their human rights aren’t being abused.
“This is a peaceful protest and we're exercising our democratic right (which) is a right to protest in this country,” James said.
“We just want people to have a dialogue. You don't need violence. You guys, you can see the violence is coming at us. It's not something that we're bringing,” James said.
James noted he was also brought out because of his concerns over the climate crisis.
Seegerts said the Wet’suwet’en people are standing up for the rights of all Indigenous people to live peacefully in their territories.
"If those rights go, everybody's rights go. There won't be an Indigenous person here to claim to have any rights if the government takes them," Seegerts said.
"Yes, it is about the pipeline but that's not the issue. The issue is a violation of Indigenous rights to live on their own lands and their own territories, the right to free, prior and informed consent of what comes on to those lands and what doesn't."
As drivers passed the camp, many told them they are blocking farmers from getting their grain out and one man told the protesters to “drop dead.”
As the counter-protesters pushed on, some of the protesters shouted back and a couple of people tried to wrestle their items back, but the majority formed a human chain and began singing the Strong Woman song.
As the crowd was singing, a process server arrived and dropped off a court injunction at the feet of everyone forming a human chain.
With the counter-protesters becoming increasingly aggressive and a court injunction being served, the protesters decided they needed to pack up their camp.
“The violence that these counter protesters are bringing, we're not comfortable with. We are peaceful protesters,” James said.
While the protesters were preparing to leave, the counter-protesters continued to tear down their camp, filling up a trailer behind a truck.

Court injunction

On Wednesday afternoon, Court of Queen’s Bench Justice Paul Belzil ruled in favour of CN and granted an emergency injunction to the rail line. The injunction will apply province-wide for 30 days, and police can be called to serve and enforce that order.
A lawyer for CN told the court that eastbound and westbound cars carrying perishables, industrial products and flammables were stopped, which would have a “severe” impact on the Canadian economy.
Another lawyer said the blockade is creating a serious safety issue.

Poll Results

Should protesters be allowed to block Canada's rail lines?

Yes, making a stand against climate change is important27 votes 11.34 %
No, they are breaking the law and should be arrested211 votes 88.66 %

Total votes: 238
Added: 


Trump's agriculture department announces 30% biofuel goal for 2050

P.J. Huffstutter, Mark Weinraub

WASHINGTON/CHICAGO (Reuters) - The U.S. Department of Agriculture on Thursday announced a goal for biofuels to make up 30% of U.S. transportation fuels by 2050, a move that could bolster an industry that has been otherwise battered by the Trump administration.

Refineries are currently required to blend 20.09 billion gallons of biofuel in 2020, about 10% of projected crude oil production, according to the U.S. Energy Information Administration.

President Donald Trump has been criticized by the corn-based ethanol industry after his Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) granted exemptions to the blend requirement for dozens of oil companies over the last two years.

The biofuel goal, which also included getting the blend rate to 15% in 10 years, is part of a new department-wide sustainability initiative aiming to boost farm production by 40% and cut the farm sector’s environmental impact by 50% during the same period. The environmental goal also could deflect criticism from farmers and ethanol producers in an election year.

“I think, really, that’s maybe one of the easiest to achieve, with going from E10 to E15 … that’s a 50% increase,” USDA Secretary Sonny Perdue said at a news conference.

Ethanol producers were waiting to see the reaction of the EPA, which has thwarted the move toward a 15% blend rate in the past even as the USDA has called for increased production of the corn-based fuel, said Todd Becker, chief executive officer of Green Plains Inc , which operates 13 ethanol plants.

“I don’t think this is a supportive EPA of ethanol,” Becker said. “I think they are being dragged into it kicking and screaming.”

The EPA said in a statement that it looks “forward to continuing working with USDA to support sustainable farming.” It noted that it approved E15 for year-round sales in 2019.

Trump’s first term ends in 2021, and he is campaigning for re-election in November.

The plan stands in stark contrast to the Trump administration’s ongoing approach toward environmental issues. Trump has described climate change as a “hoax.” Over the past two years, the EPA has granted more than 30 biofuel waivers to refineries, including facilities owned by Exxon Mobil Corp and Chevron Corp .

The farm community’s anger over the administration’s ethanol policy has continued and given a potential opportunity to Democratic rivals, who hope rural voters in corn-producing states such as Iowa may be more open to voting for a Democrat – or simply not turn out on election day.

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The USDA unveiled its Agriculture Innovation Agenda on Feb. 20. The initiative, in part, aims to support renewable fuels, including ethanol, biodiesel and ...
Yesterday


US agriculture secretary breaks ranks to endorse carbon pricing
A member of Donald Trump's cabinet has broken ranks with many other Republicans and endorsed putting a price on carbon dioxide, a climate change policy ...
2/20/2020

2019

Sec. Perdue is open to carbon markets for farmers, Pingree says
Food & Environment Reporting Network-May 14, 2019
Agriculture Secretary Sonny Perdue expressed support for carbon ... knew a lot about the idea of carbon markets, had a price in his head.” ... which Pingree supports, but said didn't include “enough elaboration on agriculture.


SECRETARY PERDUE IS OPEN TO CARBON MARKETS FOR FARMERS, PINGREE SAYS

By Leah Douglas 5/15/2019 USDA

Agriculture Secretary Sonny Perdue expressed support for carbon markets for farmers during a meeting, Representative Chellie Pingree said on Monday. An upcoming agriculture appropriations bill will likely include language that urges USDA to research the possibility of such markets, added the Maine Democrat, speaking at a Food & Environment Reporting Network event.

“He sat in my office for an hour,” Pingree said of her meeting with Perdue, though she didn’t specify when the meeting occurred. “He was surprisingly receptive, knew a lot about the idea of carbon markets, had a price in his head.”

Agriculture is responsible for about 10% of greenhouse gas emissions in the U.S., but farms also have the ability to sequester carbon from the atmosphere through measures such as planting of cover crops. But planting those crops isn’t always profitable enough to make it worthwhile, especially if the crop can’t be sold. One way that environmental, food, and farming groups have proposed solving this dilemma is through carbon markets, or paying farmers for the amount of carbon they sequester.

“He brought it up, that the USDA should be the place that the standard’s set,” she continued. “Honestly, I was pretty surprised.”

The Trump administration has expressed skepticism about climate change, and the president announced a withdrawal from the Paris climate accord that was designed to keep global warming below 2˚ Celsius. But Pingree said Perdue was open to discussing new carbon market opportunities for farmers as a way to get money into their pockets.

Pingree said that she is working on putting language into an upcoming agriculture appropriations bill that would urge USDA to “research the opportunity for farmers to participate in carbon markets, and what would be appropriate metrics.” A sticky issue is figuring out how to measure soil carbon so farmers can be compensated.

“We talked to [Perdue] about that and he didn’t oppose it,” she said.

In March, a coalition of environmental organizations and food companies announced their efforts to build a market that would pay farmers for carbon sequestration and cleaner water. General Mills, ADM, Cargill, McDonald’s, and The Nature Conservancy are among 10 groups involved in the effort. The program would give farmers credits for their efforts to sequester carbon or protect water quality, and then companies could buy those credits to reach their own sustainability goals. They plan to build the market by 2022.

In her remarks, Pingree noted that few members of Congress have made agriculture, and particularly its relationship to climate change, a central issue. “We’ve been trying to push [carbon markets] with Congress,” she said. “Farmers have an opportunity here. Let’s get them in early and change the dialogue.”

Pingree also noted that literacy among members of Congress about climate change is lower than other pressing policy issues. “We debated repealing the healthcare bill 60 times, or 55 times. Members of Congress are extremely well versed in preexisting conditions,” she noted. “But we haven’t talked about climate change for a really long time. Everybody told us it’s not an election-year issue. Also, we didn’t have hearings or anything else going on. We don’t even know what the current science is for the most part.”

In April, Pingree released a five-point plan to engage farmers around responding to climate change. The five initiatives included building healthy soil, supporting pasture-based livestock, reducing food waste, and investing in rural energy. The plan was released in response to the Green New Deal, which Pingree supports, but said didn’t include “enough elaboration on agriculture.”

Pingree has represented Maine’s first congressional district since 2010. She sits on the House Agriculture Committee and the House Appropriations Committee, where she serves on the Subcommittee on Agriculture, Subcommittee on Interior and the Environment.

New Zealand's Greens pit teenaged activist against Ardern for election

Praveen Menon


WELLINGTON (Reuters) - A week shy of his 18th birthday, climate activist Luke Wijohn is planning to take down New Zealand’s Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern in a general election later this year, having been selected by the Green Party to contest her constituency.


FILE PHOTO: New Zealand's Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern listens to questions during a media standup in the aftermath of the eruption of White Island volcano, also known by its Maori name Whakaari, at Whakatane, New Zealand December 13, 2019. REUTERS/Jorge Silva

Should he take Auckland’s Mount Albert seat off Ardern in the Sept. 19 poll, which appears unlikely, Wijohn would become the youngest lawmaker to be elected in New Zealand.

“What I want is action on climate change and social inequality...that would be the two main points for my campaign,” Wijohn told Reuters by telephone from Auckland following his selection earlier this week.

Climate change is a key issue in the election this year. New Zealanders have been shocked in recent months as ash from the bushfires in neighboring Australia turned its skies red and its glaciers brown.

Proud of being one of the most pristine, and beautiful countries in the world, New Zealand introduced climate change curriculum in its schools last month.

Parliament passed a zero carbon bill last year, and there are other measure in the pipeline to limit the impact of climate change.

The aspiring politician is far from an unknown quantity, having gained prominence for organizing the ‘School Strike 4 Climate’ marches in the country last year.

Wijohn’s activism also led to a one-year ban from parliament’s premises, as the speaker barred him and more than a dozen others for causing disturbances in the public gallery during a protest in support of ethnic Maori land rights.


“Currently in parliament we’ve got an average age of mid-fifties,” said Wijohn, who hopes to attract youth voters to the Green cause.

Having become the youngest elected head of state when she won office in 2017, Ardern hardly lacks demographic appeal.

Now 39, she is seen as a liberal, progressive and environment-friendly leader whose coalition, which includes the Green Party, has acted on issues of climate change, social justice, equality. The Greens, however, want more to be done.


Responding to questions sent by Reuters, Ardern avoided mention of personalities but encouraged young people to join politics to make their voices heard.


“We have some very strong young leaders in New Zealand – and globally – and that can only be a positive thing,” she said.


The opposition National Party clearly thinks the same, as it has also put an 18-year-old on the ballot.
Exclusive: Sears snags new financial lifeline as losses continue - sources

Jessica DiNapoli, Mike Spector




FILE PHOTO: The Sears store is pictured during Black Friday sales in Cutler Bay, Florida, U.S. November 29, 2019. REUTERS/Maria Alejandra Cardona

(Reuters) - U.S. department store operator Sears has reached a deal for a fresh financial lifeline totaling roughly $100 million from hedge fund Brigade Capital Management LP, as it tries to stabilize after bankruptcy, people familiar with the matter said on Thursday.

Sears’ billionaire owner Eddie Lampert rescued the retailer from liquidation in a $5.2 billion takeover during bankruptcy proceedings a year ago. The company’s unabated need for new funding underscores Lampert’s challenges in turning it around.

Sears reached an agreement with Brigade for the $100 million financing in recent weeks, according to the sources, who spoke on the condition they not be identified because the negotiations were confidential. Lampert has also bankrolled Sears in recent months, the sources added, without disclosing the total amount of funding he provided.

A spokesman for Sears, now called Transform Holdco LLC, declined to comment. Brigade did not respond to a request for comment.

Brigade has extended loans to other troubled retailers, including high-fashion chain Barneys New York Inc and childrens’ clothing shop Gymboree.

Last year, Sears sold its DieHard car battery business to Advance Auto Parts Inc (AAP.N) for $200 million and clinched a separate $250 million loan from Lampert’s hedge fund, ESL Investments Inc, and other investors. The company has also been paying down some of its borrowings from banks, one of the sources said.


Sears said in November it would close nearly 100 stores, leaving it with only about 182, down sharply from the 425 Lampert acquired when he rescued the chain from bankruptcy. The department store operator is a shadow of the company created by Lampert more than 15 years ago through its merger with Kmart, when it boasted $55 billion in annual sales.

Sears lost money nearly every year over the past decade, amid competition from e-commerce firms such as Amazon.com Inc (AMZN.O), while Lampert, formerly the company’s chairman and chief executive, provided financing lines to keep it afloat.

The company’s struggles have drained its cash coffers, risking a potential breach of its debt agreements with banks, people familiar with the matter have said. That has left Sears with the choice of raising additional capital or closing even more stores.
Extraditing Assange would hit press freedom, rights advocate tells UK
LONDON (Reuters) - WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange should not be extradited to the United States because it would have a chilling effect on press freedom, a European human rights chief said on Thursday.



FILE PHOTO: WikiLeaks' founder Julian Assange leaves Westminster Magistrates Court in London, Britain January 13, 2020. REUTERS/Simon Dawson

Assange, 48, is in prison in London, where an extradition hearing begins next week. The U.S. authorities want to try him on 18 counts including conspiring to hack government computers and violating an espionage law.

Dunja Mijatovic, the Council of Europe’s Human Rights Commissioner, said Assange’s case raised questions about the protection of people who publish classified information in the public interest, exposing human rights violations.

“The broad and vague nature of the allegations against Julian Assange, and of the offences listed in the indictment, are troubling as many of them concern activities at the core of investigative journalism in Europe and beyond,” she said.


“Consequently, allowing Julian Assange’s extradition on this basis would have a chilling effect on media freedom, and could ultimately hamper the press in performing its task as purveyor of information and public watchdog in democratic societies.”

Mijatovic said she was also concerned about detention conditions in the United States and about the sentence likely to be imposed on Assange. He could spend decades in prison if convicted.

The Council of Europe, which describes itself as the continent’s leading human rights organization, has 47 member states including Britain, all of which are signatories to the European Convention on Human Rights.

Assange’s WikiLeaks website made global headlines in early 2010 when it published a classified U.S. military video showing a 2007 helicopter attack in Baghdad that killed a dozen people, including two Reuters news staff.


Since then, the website has published a vast amount of secret U.S. diplomatic cables and other confidential documents.

Assange presents himself as a champion of free speech holding a superpower to account, but critics accuse him of irresponsibly putting lives at risk with his unedited information dumps.

After WikiLeaks published leaked emails during the 2016 U.S. presidential campaign that damaged Democratic candidate Hillary Clinton, he was accused of complicity in Russian efforts to meddle in U.S. politics and undermine the West.


Reporting by Estelle Shirbon; editing by Stephen Addison
Our Standards:The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.