Saturday, September 10, 2022

Trump is a 'deeply wounded narcissist' who is 'incapable of acting other than for revenge' — according to his former White House lawyer

Raw Story - Yesterday 11:04 a.m.
By Sky Palma

Shutterstock© provided by RawStory

A former White House lawyer during Donald Trump's administration says he thinks the Justice Department's investigation into whether Donald Trump improperly removed classified documents from the White House is actually related to Jan. 6, CBS News reports.

"It is about the bigger picture, the Jan. 6 issues, the fake electors, the whole scam with regard to the 'big lie' and the attempts to…cling to the presidency in a desperate fashion," Ty Cobb said on the The Takeout podcast.

"The search warrant is unusually large and broad," Cobb said. "It's very, very comprehensive in terms of the types of documents that the government could take."

"For example, you can take any box that has a document. You can take any box adjacent to a box that has it," he said. "Those are pretty broad parameters."

Related video: How Trump-linked lawyers shared sensitive data with conspiracy theorists    Duration 6:06   View on Watch


As CBS News points out, Cobb represented the White House during Robert Mueller's investigation into the Trump's campaign's alleged "collusion" with Russia -- an investigation that yielded no charges.

During his time in the White House, Cobb says Trump "was cautioned many times about not tearing up documents."

"In my own experience, I have to say, there wasn't really anything quite as consequential as the press reports that I've read," Cobb said. "I saw him tear up newspaper articles which sadly, some staffer would have to tape back together at the end of the day. I saw him tear up inconsequential documents, but I never saw him tear up a classified document or something that was important."

Cobb went to say that he does not believe the DOJ's investigation is the biggest threat to Trump

"I think the president is in serious legal water, not so much because of the search, but because of the obstructive activity he took in connection with the Jan. 6 proceeding," Cobb said. "I think that and the attempts to interfere in the election count in Georgia, Arizona, Pennsylvania and perhaps Michigan. That was the first time in American history that a president unconstitutionally attempted to remain in power illegally."

"I believe former President Trump to be a deeply wounded narcissist, and he is often incapable of acting other than in his perceived self-interest or for revenge," Cobb added. "I think those are the two compelling instincts that guide his actions."
Trump racketeering lawsuit against Hillary Clinton dismissed as 'political manifesto'

Ella Lee, USA TODAY - Yesterday 


WASHINGTON — A lawsuit filed by former President Donald Trump against 2016 Democratic presidential nominee Hillary Clinton was tossed out Thursday by a federal judge in Florida who dismissed the former president's legal complaint as a "200-page political manifesto."

VIDEO
Duration 2:37
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Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump and Democratic 
presidential candidate Hillary Clinton debate in St. Louis, Mo., on Oct. 9, 2016
.© PAUL J. RICHARDS, AFP via Getty Images

In a scathing rebuke of Trump's claims, U.S. District Judge Donald Middlebrooks wrote that the lawsuit contained “glaring structural deficiencies” and that many of the “characterizations of events are implausible.”

Middlebrooks also suggested that the lawsuit served as an outlet for Trump to air grievances with his opponents, not a legitimate legal effort.

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"This Court is not the appropriate forum," the federal judge wrote.

Trump v. Clinton: Donald Trump sues Hillary Clinton and the DNC over Russian interference allegations

The 108-page lawsuit, filed in March, claimed that Clinton, former FBI Director James Comey and other top Clinton and FBI officials schemed together to accuse Trump of colluding with Russia to win the 2016 election. It alleged that Clinton and the DNC "worked together with a single self-serving purpose: to vilify Donald J. Trump."

Special counsel Robert Mueller did not find evidence that Trump’s campaign coordinated with Russia to influence the election, but he noted in his report that the campaign was an eager beneficiary of Russia's interference.

The special counsel did not reach a conclusion on whether Trump had obstructed the investigation, but prosecutors found "multiple acts by the President that were capable of exerting undue influence over law enforcement investigations."

Efforts to obstruct the inquiry, Mueller said, "were mostly unsuccessful...largely because the persons who surrounded the president declined to carry out orders or accede to his requests."

Trump lawyer Alina Habba said in a statement that the former president’s legal team “vehemently disagrees” with the Court’s opinion, claiming it’s “rife with erroneous applications of the law.”

“We will immediately move to appeal this decision,” Habba said.

Read the judge's order to dismiss

Trump's legal woes: The lawsuits, investigations and legal troubles a 2024 Trump candidacy faces, explained

Mar-a-Lago search: Judge cites 'reputational harm' to Trump in ordering a Mar-a-Lago special master and pause in investigation


Contributing: Mabinty Quarshie, Kevin Johnson, Associated Press


This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Trump racketeering lawsuit against Hillary Clinton dismissed as 'political manifesto'
CRIMINAL CAPITALI$M
Kris Kobach resigns from We Build the Wall board after nonprofit indicted on money laundering

Jonathan Shorman, McClatchy Washington Bureau - Yesterday 

Former Kansas Secretary of State Kris Kobach, the Republican candidate for state attorney general, resigned Friday from the board of directors of We Build the Wall after the nonprofit organization was indicted on allegations of money laundering, conspiracy and fraud.


On Oct. 6, 2018, as Republican candidate for governor of Kansas, Kris Kobach, right, speaks at a rally with President Donald Trump at the Kansas Expocenter in Topeka, Kansas.© Scott Olson/Getty Images North America/TNS

New York state prosecutors unsealed an indictment against former Trump adviser Steve Bannon on Thursday, alleging he defrauded donors to We Build the Wall, which fundraised to construct privately-funded strips of wall along the southern border. We Build the Wall was also indicted and accused of the same crimes. Both Bannon and We Build the Wall have pleaded not guilty.

The indictment put Kobach in the potentially politically precarious position of helping lead an organization under indictment while running to become Kansas’ top law enforcement officer. Kobach’s campaign told The Star he had resigned from the board after the newspaper asked about his continuing involvement with We Build the Wall.

Kobach had been the organization’s general counsel, in addition to serving on the board. He resigned both positions, according to state Sen. J.R. Claeys, a Salina Republican and Kobach’s campaign spokesperson.

If Kobach had remained on the board, he would have been part of a small team of corporate directors in charge of the organization as it faces allegations of criminal conduct. Kobach was on the board during at least part of the time period in which prosecutors allege Bannon and We Build the Wall engaged in money laundering and conspiracy.

Kobach has been on We Build the Wall’s board since at least July 2019, according to business filings in Florida, where the nonprofit was incorporated. The indictment alleges the money laundering, conspiracy and fraud took place between January or February 2019 and October or December 2019 – depending on the count.

We Build the Wall is no longer trying to build a private border wall, but at the height of its popularity in 2019 it had the support of a roster of right-wing figures, including businessman Erik Prince, the founder of the private military company Blackwater, and Kobach. Federal prosecutors charged Bannon and three others with defrauding donors in August 2020.

Florida business records currently list two other directors in addition to Kobach, Brian Kolfage and Amanda Shea. Kolfage pleaded guilty in connection to defrauding donors earlier this year. Shea is the wife of Timothy Shea, whose trial on federal charges ended in a mistrial earlier this year. Prosecutors plan to try him again.

Former President Donald Trump pardoned Bannon in his final hours in office, but the pardon doesn’t shield Bannon from state-level prosecution.

On Wednesday evening, before the indictment was unsealed, Kobach told reporters that he had remained affiliated with We Build the Wall because he is in the process of shutting it down. Kobach, an attorney, said a lawyer needs to be involved for an “orderly shutdown.”

Claeys said Friday that a nonprofit corporation could be shut down even if a case was proceeding against it.

Kobach said he doesn’t believe he is in legal jeopardy. Kobach hasn’t been accused of wrongdoing by either federal or New York prosecutors.

“An orderly shut down of WBTW is essential to the nation’s border security,” Kobach said in a statement Friday.

Kobach said that last week ownership of the New Mexico portion of wall constructed by We Build the Wall was transferred to the federal government. He said the U.S. Border Patrol now has full control of that section of wall. The wall includes an observation post that he said is “essential to stopping the Mexican cartels from smuggling fentanyl and other drugs.”

“This is one of the most important objectives that I wanted to achieve in assisting in the shut down,” Kobach said.

The indictment came as the race for attorney general heats up ahead of the Nov. 8 election. Kobach, who won the Aug. 2 Republican primary with 42% of the vote, is facing off against Democrat Chris Mann, a former Lawrence police officer and prosecutor in Wyandotte County.

“The attorney general is the chief law enforcement officer of the state. His character, reputation and moral judgment should be beyond reproach,” said state Rep. John Carmichael, a Wichita Democrat and an attorney.

We Build the Wall formed in late 2018 after Kolfage, a U.S. Air Force veteran of Iraq, initially raised money for a wall through a GoFundMe page. Kolfage was charged federally with conspiracy to commit wire fraud and conspiracy to commit money laundering. Kolfage pleaded guilty in April.

Federal prosecutors alleged Kolfage covertly used more than $350,000 in donations for his personal use. Bannon was also accused of using We Build the Wall funds to cover personal expenses. The two men, along with Andrew Badolato and Timothy Shea, were accused of concealing payments to Kolfage by routing them through a nonprofit and shell company controlled by Shea.

Badolato also pleaded guilty in April. Shea’s trial ended in a mistrial in June but prosecutors plan to try him again.

Kobach said he was on the witness list for both the prosecution and defense in Shea’s mistrial. It’s not clear whether Kobach would be a potential witness in the state-level case against Bannon and We Build the Wall.

“I’m sort of a person who kind of knows what the task of the company was,” Kobach said, explaining why he was a potential witness.

Court records indicate at one point Kobach was owed at least $75,000 in back pay from We Build the Wall, but much of its funds were frozen following the federal indictment. We Build the Wall went as far as asking the U.S. Supreme Court to take up its effort to gain access to the funds.

We Build the Wall’s petition to the Supreme Court was voluntarily dismissed in May by agreement of both the organization and the U.S. Department of Justice. No explanation was given at the time.

Kobach said Wednesday that he wasn’t paid at all for two years but that recently a federal court had freed up funds to allow We Build the Wall to pay its debts. He said he had been paid but didn’t disclose the amount.

©2022 McClatchy Washington Bureau. Visit at mcclatchydc.com. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.
Marsha Hunt, Actress Blacklisted in Hollywood, Dies at 104

Marsha Hunt, a veteran actress of the Golden Age of film, radio and Broadway who later saw her career wither over her protests against the infamous House Un-American Activities Committee (HUAC), died of natural causes on Sept. 7 in Los Angeles.

Maureen Lee Lenker - Yesterday -The Hollywood Reporter

Marsha Hunt, the bright-eyed starlet who stood out in such films as These Glamour Girls, Pride and Prejudice and Raw Deal before her career came unraveled by the communist witch hunt that hit Hollywood, has died. She was 104.

She died from natural causes on Tuesday evening at her Sherman Oaks home, where she had lived since 1946, Roger C. Memos — writer-director of the documentary Marsha Hunt’s Sweet Adversity — told The Hollywood Reporter.

Hunt also appeared opposite Mickey Rooney in the best picture Oscar nominee The Human Comedy (1943) during a period in which she was known as “Hollywood’s Youngest Character Actress.”

A former model who signed with Paramount Pictures at age 17, the Chicago native made her first big splash as a suicidal co-ed opposite Lana Turner in MGM’s These Glamour Girls (1939).

Playing Walter Brennan’s sweetheart in Joe and Ethel Turp Call on the President (1939), Hunt aged from age 16 to 65 onscreen. She portrayed the dowdy sister Mary Bennet in Pride and Prejudice (1940), and in Anthony Mann’s film noir classic Raw Deal (1948), she was the good girl opposite Claire Trevor and Dennis O’Keefe.

Years later, in Johnny Got His Gun (1971) — penned by blacklisted writer Dalton Trumbo — Hunt played the mother of Timothy Bottoms’ quadruple-amputee character.

Though she never achieved the stardom of some of her co-stars, Hunt was proud of her career, especially early on. “Before I was 30, I had played four aging roles, and I was Hollywood’s youngest character actress … no two roles alike,” she told the website Ms. in the Biz in 2015.

In 1947, Hunt and her second husband, screenwriter Robert Presnell Jr., joined the Committee for the First Amendment, which questioned the legality of the House Un-American Activities Committee that was seeking to flush communists out of the entertainment industry.

The committee, which also included Humphrey Bogart, Lauren Bacall, Danny Kaye, John Huston and other Hollywood liberals, chartered a plane to Washington to sit in on the HUAC hearings and support 19 creatives who had been under scrutiny.

However, Bogart and others quickly backpedaled, saying they were duped by communists and their trip to Washington was ill-advised. While that helped save their careers, Hunt did not repent. In June 1950, she was listed in Red Channels, the right-wing pamphlet that fingered scores of actors, directors, screenwriters and others for being sympathetic to “subversive” causes.

“You know, I was never interested in communism,” she said in a 2004 interview. “I was very much interested in my industry, my country and my government. But I was shocked at the behavior of my government and its mistreatment of my industry. And so I spoke out and protested like everyone else on that flight. But then I was told, once I was blacklisted, you see, I was an articulate liberal, and that was bad. I was told that in fact it wasn’t really about communism — that was the thing that frightened everybody — it was about control and about power.

“The way you get control is to get everyone to agree with whatever is proper at the time, whatever is accepted. Don’t question anything, don’t speak out, don’t have your own ideas, don’t be articulate about it, don’t ever be eloquent, and if you ever be one of those things, you’re controversial. And that’s just as bad, maybe worse, than being a communist. Which was still quite legal to be, you know: the Communist Party was still legal in America, running candidates for public office. But you lost your career, your good name, your savings, probably your marriage, your friends, if you had been a communist. It was appalling, just appalling.”

Her story was told in Marsha Hunt’s Sweet Adversity, released in 2015.


She was born Marcia Virginia Hunt in Chicago on Oct. 17, 1917. Her father, Earl, was an insurance executive and her mother, Minabel, a vocal coach. She and her family moved to New York City, and she graduated from the Horace Mann School for Girls at age 16.

Hunt fell into a career as a model when her high school yearbook photographer used her image as an advertising sample. She was signed by the Powers Agency, becoming a sought-after “Powers Girl” and learning how to pose and behave in front of a lens.

Friends with photographers-turned-publicists Robert and Sarah Mack, Hunt moved to Hollywood at 17, signed with Paramount when her agent, Zeppo Marx, got her $250 a week and landed the female lead in her first movie, The Virginia Judge (1935). She appeared as an ingenue and love interest in several films — John Wayne romanced her in Born to the West (1937) — but the studio declined to renew her contract in 1938.

She landed at MGM in The Hardys Ride High (1939) and went on to appear for the studio in The Trial of Mary Dugan (1941) as a Brooklyn chorus girl; in Kid Glove Killer (1942), director Fred Zinnemann’s first U.S. feature; in the World War II drama Cry ‘Havoc’ (1943); and as the top-billed title character in the Jules Dassin romantic comedy A Letter for Evie (1946).

An exhibitors poll had placed her among the “Top 10 Stars of Tomorrow” — others on the list included Roddy McDowall, Gloria DeHaven, Sidney Greenstreet, June Allyson and Barry Fitzgerald — and when she wasn’t acting, she was serving as a hostess at the famed Hollywood Canteen for American servicemen.

In 1948, Hunt made her stage debut in the Hollywood-set Joy to the World, directed by Jules Dassin; two years later, she was back on Broadway in George Bernard Shaw’s The Devil’s Disciple and graced the cover of Life magazine.

After Devil’s Disciple closed, Hunt departed for Europe, but when she returned, Red Channels had been published, and her career — she had made more than 50 films by then — would never be the same.

She went on to guest-star on such shows as The Ford Television Theatre, Climax! and Alfred Hitchcock Presents, was a regular on the short-lived 1959 series Peck’s Bad Girl and later appeared on Gunsmoke, The Twilight Zone, Ben Casey, My Three Sons, Ironside, Murder, She Wrote and Star Trek: The Next Generation.



Marsha Hunt with Franchot Tone (left) and Gene Kelly,
 her co-stars in 1943’s ‘Pilot #5.’

Hunt was a member of the SAG board and worked on various progressive committees; one counseled actress Olivia de Havilland in her groundbreaking legal case against the studio system and Warner Bros., and another petitioned studios to hire minority actors outside of stereotyped roles.

In 1955, a trip around the world opened her eyes to the plight of Third World nations, and she threw herself into humanitarian efforts, making appearances on behalf of the United Nations and becoming what she called a “planet patriot.”

In April 2015, she was named the inaugural recipient of the Marsha Hunt for Humanity Award, created by Kat Kramer, the daughter of the famed liberal director-producer Stanley Kramer.

Hunt was “one of the first major actresses in Hollywood to dedicate her life to causes,” Kat Kramer noted, “and she paved the way for Angelina Jolie, Sean Penn, Jane Fonda, Lily Tomlin, Patricia Arquette, Sharon Stone, George Clooney, Matt Damon, Don Cheadle, Tippi Hedren, Ed Begley Jr., Ed Asner and Martin Sheen — celebrities who use their fame as a voice for change.”

Hunt can be seen in all her glamour in the 1993 book The Way We Wore: Styles of the 1930s and ’40s and Our World Since Then, which features photos of her in many of her own clothes from the era.

Hunt moved to Sherman Oaks in 1946 and served as its honorary mayor for more than two decades. She and Presnell were married for 40 years until his death in 1986 at age 71. They had no children.

She is survived by a nephew, actor-director Allan Hunt, and other nieces and nephews. Donations in her memory may be made to L.A. Family Housing.

In 2008, Hunt starred in the 22-minute film The Grand Inquisitor, written and directed by Eddie Muller.

“To work with her was the most rewarding collaboration of my life. I suspect it always will be,” the host of TCM’s Noir Alley said after Raw Deal and The Grand Inquisitor played back-to-back on the cable channel last month. “She is simply the most exceptional human being I’ve ever known.”


David Rosenberg: The bullish case for LNG, a reliable energy source investors should tap into


Liquefied natural gas (LNG) should see strong growth in the next decade and more, writes David Rosenberg and his team
.

By David Rosenberg and Brendan Livingstone
Financial Post

The Russia-Ukraine war is bringing to the forefront the importance of energy security, which has been neglected in recent years as supply exceeded demand and governments felt increased political pressure to reduce our reliance on fossil fuels.

However, with households confronting much steeper energy bills, which are at risk of rising further as winter approaches, the focus has shifted back towards providing reliable energy solutions at favourable costs. Liquefied natural gas (LNG), which involves cooling natural gas to a liquid state, is an attractive solution because it allows for an efficient way for transportation and storage — to areas not endowed with natural gas reserves — and it is relatively clean in terms of production and combustion.

Over the next decade plus, we see strong growth in LNG — and all that goes with it — and so we believe investors will benefit from seeking out exposure.

LNG is natural gas that has been converted to a liquid by cooling it at -1,620 C (-2,600 F). In its liquid state, natural gas is about 600 times smaller than when it is in a gaseous state, making it substantially easier to store. In addition, the liquefaction process allows for the transportation of natural gas to places where natural gas pipelines are not feasible or do not exist.

Export facilities receive natural gas from producers by pipeline and then liquefy it for transport via LNG ships. Once the tankers reach their destination, LNG is offloaded at import terminals, stored in cryogenic storage tanks and then returned to a gaseous state. After which, natural gas is transported via pipelines to customers.


In recent years, the United States has become a major player in LNG, increasing its export capacity to about 10.78 billion cubic feet per day at the end of 2021 from less than one bcf/d per day in 2015. By the end of 2022, the U.S. is poised to become the largest LNG exporter in the world. About half of U.S. LNG exports go to five countries: South Korea (13 per cent), China (13 per cent), Japan (10 per cent), Brazil (9 per cent) and Spain (6 per cent).

LNG produces 40 per cent less carbon dioxide than coal and 30 per cent less than oil, making it among the cleanest fossil fuels. In addition, it drastically reduces emissions of nitrogen oxide, and it emits almost zero sulphur and particulate matter. As a result, due to its relatively favourable emissions profile — and, critically, its reliability as a fuel source — we see LNG as a great complement to renewable energy as governments work towards a reduction in greenhouse gas emissions.

Some pundits have labeled LNG as a “transition fuel,” but this understates its role in the energy mix of the future since it is a great backup for the natural intermittency of renewables such as wind and solar.

A McKinsey & Co. report — the Global Gas Outlook to 2050 — estimates LNG demand will grow by 3.4 per cent per annum until 2035, requiring approximately 100 million metric tons of additional capacity. While it believes that demand will then slow substantially — to growth of 0.5 per cent between 2035 and 2050 — this will still necessitate more than 200 million metric tons of new supply.

Most of this increase is expected to come from the United States, with smaller contributions from Canada, Russia, East Africa and potentially the Middle East.

Against a backdrop of strong growth over the next decade or so, especially in the U.S., we believe investors should look to have exposure to LNG in a portfolio. Renewable energy undoubtedly has the greatest future growth potential — as governments strive for “net zero” by 2050 (193 parties have signed onto the Paris Agreement) — but the reliability of LNG, combined with the lower associated emissions (relative to other fossil fuels), means governments can concurrently improve energy security while simultaneously reducing pollution.

The importance of having LNG exposure, especially during energy crises, has been on full display this year. Bloomberg Intelligence’s LNG Liquefaction Peer Group — an equally weighted equity index of some of the major LNG producers globally — is up 25 per cent this year as of the end of August, versus the 17 per cent decline for the S&P 500.

Beyond its positive future growth profile, LNG stocks also have the benefit of being attractively priced. The group trades at an EV-to-EBITDA ratio of 4.7x, well below its 10-year average (8.6x), and considerably less than the S&P 500 (13.5x). Other ways to play the LNG theme are through companies involved in the regasification process, transportation (tankers) and infrastructure construction.

David Rosenberg is founder of independent research firm Rosenberg Research & Associates Inc. Brendan Livingstone is a senior markets strategist there. You can sign up for a free, one-month trial on Rosenberg’s website.
Sweden goes to the polls tomorrow at a historic moment for future NATO membership

Daniel Stewart - News 360


Sweden is preparing to go to the polls on September 11 in an election in which the Social Democratic Party of the current Prime Minister, Magdalena Andersson, will face the conservative bloc at a historic moment for the country because of its future accession to the Atlantic Alliance.



Archive - Magdalena Andersson, prime minister of Sweden - 

Andersson, the first woman to lead a government in Sweden, was elected Prime Minister in November 2021, although she resigned shortly after being appointed following the departure of her coalition partner, the Green Party, which decided to withdraw from the Executive after realizing that they would have to govern with bills proposed by the opposition.

Andersson presented her resignation to the President of the Swedish Parliament, Andreas Norlen, amid widespread astonishment, which caused a political crisis that was solved a few months later, when the Social Democrat was sworn into office in a solo government.

This Sunday's elections are also decisive because of Sweden's future integration into NATO, since the pro-union parties control more than 40 percent of Parliament, but the far-right Sweden Democrats, led by Jimmie Akesson, do not rule out changing their position and tipping the balance.

Another potential stumbling block for Andersson is the pressure from the conservative and opposition leader, Ulf Kristersson, of the Moderate Party, who has also made the NATO accession process part of his election campaign, but has differentiated himself from the Social Democrats by demanding more speed and decisiveness from the government to speed up membership.

The elections will therefore inevitably be marked by Sweden's future entry into NATO, since last May Stockholm applied for formal entry into the Alliance together with Finland in reaction to Russia's war against Ukraine.

POSSIBLE ALLIANCES 

The Swedish electoral system is proportional, which means that the number of seats a party obtains in the Swedish Parliament, with 349 seats, is proportional to the number of votes the party harvests in the elections.

According to the voting system, any party must receive at least four percent of the vote to be allocated a seat. It should be remembered that all Swedish citizens over the age of 18 are called to the polls.

In the last election, held in 2018, the Social Democrats totaled 28.3 percent, followed by the Moderates (19.8 percent) and the Sweden Democrats (17.5 percent), a far-right anti-immigration party key to future post-election alliances within the conservative bloc.

Another key party is the Swedish Greens, who triggered the political crisis after breaking up the coalition and have traditionally supported the Social Democrats alongside the Left Party, which forced the resignation of coalition leader Stefan Lofven in June 2021. Andersson will therefore have to convince these minority parties to govern.

On the side of the conservative bloc, Kristersson could win the prime minister's post if he manages to push for an alliance of the right and extreme right, with the Sweden Democrats, the Christian Democrats and the liberal minorities, the latter two being against making a pact with the extreme right.

According to the latest polls by Kantar Sifo, the Social Democratic Party has almost 30 percent of the support, followed by the Sweden Democrats, with 20 percent, while the Moderate Party is projected with 17 percent.

VIOLENCE: KEY IN THE ELECTION CAMPAIGN 

The election campaign has focused on issues such as migration, the energy crisis and gang violence. Opposition leaders, the Moderates and the Sweden Democrats argue that Andersson's government has maintained a soft stance on the fight against drug trafficking.

In particular, one of the events that triggered opposition criticism of the Swedish Social Democrats was a shooting last August in a children's playground in the city of Eskilstuna, a city of about 60,000 inhabitants 120 kilometers from Stockholm, the capital.

A mother and child were caught in the crossfire between rival gangs, prompting the far-right Akesson to visit Arby, where the shooting took place, where he urged the government to take serious steps to tackle crime in Sweden.

"After the visit, I submitted a demand on behalf of Sweden Democrats. The next government's most important priority must be the judiciary, and we demand that an additional SEK 20 billion per year be invested in this," he said at the time on his official Twitter profile.

NATO Sweden is on track to break with its neutrality, by virtue of which it stayed out of the two world wars and avoided aligning itself with any bloc after the fall of the Soviet Union. The Russian invasion of Ukraine has been the definitive trigger, as if in January only 37 percent of Swedes supported NATO membership, the figure now rises to 53 percent, according to a Novus poll published in May.

Turkey has not yet ratified the accession of Sweden and Finland to NATO, already endorsed by two thirds of the member states, because Ankara reproaches Stockholm for its relationship with the Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK), something the government has already denied on several occasions.

Ratification is the longest stage in the process of accession to the military organization, with the bureaucratic procedure of all the allies having different validation systems and involving, in many cases, parliamentary votes.

Once all alliance members and candidates have approved these protocols, the next step leads to Washington, where the documents are deposited with the U.S. Government, specifically the Department of State. It is not until they are all submitted that the applicant country becomes a NATO member.
NATIONALISM IS FASCISM
François Legault Apologized After Seemingly Linking Immigration In Quebec To Violence

Mike Chaar - Yesterday - 
 mtlblog

François Legault 

François Legault has found himself in some hot water following a press conference on Wednesday, September 7, during which he seemingly linked violence in Quebec to immigration. The premier is now backtracking on his statement and has issued an apology for any confusion his words may have caused.

During the press conference, which tackled agriculture in Quebec, Legault was asked about the possibility of increasing immigration targets throughout the province. François Legault was quick to nip that in the bud by stating that his government had no plans of doing so as "Quebecers are peaceful. They don't like extremists [or] violence." Well, then...

It did not take much time before many members of the public called out the Coalition Avenir Québec leader for apparently connecting immigration with "extremism" and "violence." But, according to Legault, that simply was not the case.


In a tweet issued the evening of September 7, Legault stated that "immigration is an asset for Quebec. Integration will always be a challenge for a francophone nation in North America. I did not mean to associate immigration with violence. I'm sorry if my words caused confusion. I aim to bring people together."

Despite his apology, many are still furious over his words. One Twitter user called Legault out, stating his apology was untrue. "False. Your aim is to divide to rule. You are not fooling anyone. On October 3, you're out," they wrote.

Another wrote that the damage had already been done. "Too late, the damage has been done and your electoral base is in agreement with what you said. Bad communicator or a divisive one?"

With the Quebec election less than a month away, this was certainly not a great look for Legault.

This article's cover image was used for illustrative purposes only.
Grocers gear up to fight fed decision to include compostable bags in plastics ban

Jake Edmiston - Yesterday - Financial Post

Calgary Co-operative's compostable grocery bags do not make the cut under the new federal rules regarding single-use plastics.

Calgary Co-Operative Association Ltd.’s executives weren’t all that concerned this spring when the federal government revealed its plan to ban shopping bags and other single-use plastics. The grocery chain — which runs dozens of supermarkets, liquor stores, cannabis shops and gas bars — had already swapped plastic shopping bags for compostable ones a few years earlier.

“We didn’t for a second actually believe there was any impact to our bags,” chief executive Ken Keelor said. “It was about plastic, and this is not plastic.”

But the official regulations, published in June in the Canada Gazette , say there isn’t enough evidence that plant-based “compostable” plastic alternatives will fully break down in nature. As a result, Calgary Co-op’s bags and others like them will be treated in the “same manner as their conventional plastic counterparts,” according to the government. In other words, they’re forbidden as of the end of next year

“We were going, ‘No way. That can’t be,'” Keelor said. “We were all looking at each other, going, ‘We did the right thing. We can’t be included.'”

A call to the federal Environment and Climate Change department confirmed his fears.

“We were kind of told, ‘Look, you know, the final decision has been made,'” Keelor recalled.

Nevertheless, the grocery industry is gearing up for a push to change the government’s mind.

The Canadian Federation of Independent Grocers (CFIG) has opted to back Calgary Co-op in its fight, warning a ban on compostable bags could impact grocers across the country.

“I have to imagine there’s going to be hundreds and hundreds of businesses across Canada that are going to be in the same position as Calgary Co-op, but just aren’t aware of this,” CFIG’s senior vice-president Gary Sands said. “We hope more businesses will become aware of this and support what we’re saying.”

Sands, who has also met with government officials on the issue, said it didn’t make sense that public consultations on the rules were held from October to December 2020. The government also held further consultations in late 2021.

“They did this consultation during COVID,” he said. “The last thing (grocers) had on their mind was plastic bags. It was surviving.”

The government, however, said it’s not going to budge.

“The Government of Canada has no current plans to reopen consultations on the existing regulations,” Cecelia Parsons, an Environment and Climate Change Canada spokesperson said in an email on Thursday.

She said compostable plastics can end up in recycling facilities and contaminate real plastics, and they’re also often screened out of composting facilities, because they take longer to degrade than food or yard waste.

“And they have not proven to perform better than conventional plastics when littered on land or in water,” she said.

But Calgary Co-op said its bags are an example of a company and a municipal waste system coming together to get around those challenges. The company boasts it has avoided using more than 100 million plastic bags since switching to compostable ones in 2020.

Rob Morphew, the company’s director of health, safety and environment, said he worked with the city to make sure the bags stayed out of recycling facilities. The trick, he said, is that Co-op made sure the bags fit as liners in the compost bins the city hands out for residents to use in their kitchens.

“If they were ending up in the recycling facility, we would know about it because it doesn’t work,” he said.

The City of Calgary tested the Co-op bags at its municipal composting facility and found they successfully break down, spokesperson Jaime Stopa said in an email.

The federal government’s ban will put an end to all manufacturing of plastic shopping bags for domestic sale by the end of the year. Stores must stop using them by December 2023, and manufacturers have to stop making them for export by the end of 2025.

The manufacturer that supplies Calgary Co-op will lose roughly half its sales due to the ban, according to Jerry Gao, chief executive and founder of Calgary-based Leaf Environmental Products Inc.

“It’s in the millions for sure,” he said.

Gao said banning compostable bags will also chill innovation in Canada, which could become a leader in manufacturing compostable plastics because they are often made using starch from corn — a crop grown in abundance here.

“This is bad news,” he said.

But an engineering professor who studies these materials said allowing compostable plastics could backfire, especially without strong public education campaigns to explain how best to dispose of them.

Mohini Sain, a mechanical industrial engineering professor who leads the Centre for Biocomposites and Biomaterials Processing at the University of Toronto, said a bag advertised as biodegradable or compostable doesn’t mean it will easily break down in a landfill.
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“It might biodegrade, but over a longer term, not immediately,” he said, adding that composting facilities use enzymes to break down the material. “You need a specific enzyme, a bug, to eat it. And that bug might not be in the landfill.”

Sain also questioned why the government is applying a blanket ban on compostable plastics. If the concern is whether a material is totally compostable, there’s a “well-agreed” standard test — created by the American Society for Testing and Materials — to definitely say one way or another.

“There’s a very clear pathway,” he said.

• Email: jedmiston@postmedia.com | Twitter: jakeedmiston
RISE Against Racism targets anti-Indigenous hate in our health system

Yesterday 11:31 a.m.


The death of 37-year-old Indigenous Canadian Joyce Echaquan at a Quebec hospital, shortly after she recorded a Facebook Live that showed her screaming in distress and health-care workers abusing her, was the catalyst for a national campaign targeting anti-Indigenous racism in our health system.

RISE Against Racism, which will officially launch later this year, is an initiative created by the First Nations Health Managers Association, in partnership with the First Peoples Wellness Circle and the Thunderbird Partnership Foundation.

The campaign, said one of its key organizers, comes on the heels of Echaquan’s death on Sept. 28, 2020, at Centre hospitalier de Lanaudière in Saint-Charles-Borromee , Que. Echaquan was admitted to hospital with stomach pains two days prior to her death. She was restrained and administered morphine, despite her concerns she might be allergic to it. She live-streamed on Sept. 28, during which at least two hospital employees could be heard insulting and berating her in French. She died later that day. Her family later said she was allergic to morphine. A nurse and an orderly were subsequently dismissed from the hospital
“You say the words very delicately that we have to come back to remind ourselves about where we are in 2022,” said Marion Crowe, CEO of the First Nations Health Managers Association and vice-chair of the board of governors at the Ottawa Hospital Research Institute.

Crowe said Echaquan’s very tragic and public death, unfortunately, isn’t the first time such a tragedy involving an Indigenous Canadian played out in the public.

“We all know about the tragic death of Brian Sinclair, who was literally ignored to death in Winnipeg in a hospital,” Crowe said. On Sept. 21, 2008, Sinclair waited 34 hours for medical attention at Winnipeg’s Health Sciences Centre and died waiting. He’d developed rigor mortis by the time staff attended to him. “Joyce Echaquan’s story out of Quebec is really what started the dialogue,” about the need for real change, Crowe said.

Several meetings with Indigenous partners and health-care officials produced a consensus: “We have a lot of work to do,” Crowe said.

“When somebody has the courage to film themselves in a hospital the way Joyce did, and we saw the horrific ways she was being treated by those we entrust the most -- health-care workers who care for us in our greatest times of need -- that speaks volumes,” Crowe said. “And it's one instance that just happened to be captured on video.”

RISE Against Racism will focus on hospitals, health-care providers, health authorities and medical schools in a bid to change problematic biases and perceptions by promoting mutual respect, understanding and empathy toward Indigenous Peoples seeking health services, according to a news release from the campaign. Along with print marketing, the campaign will also produce a series of TV interviews, radio interviews and commercials, along with public service messages to communities informing them of available resources.

“I’ve seen racism, felt racism first-hand,” Crowe said. “I can be present in a hospital and until they see that R on my health card in Saskatchewan, saying I'm registered, you can see the transition of people’s faces. I look white, but I'm First Nations and they don't know that until they get that health card -- and the day and night difference is atrocious.”

Crowe, who is from Piapot First Nation in Saskatchewan, said the lack of education of Indigenous history and studies across Canada is partly to blame for such a campaign even being needed. Atrocious stories playing out in the media should not be what it takes to raise awareness and educate, she said.

“There are a number of things that really pushed these horrifying stories that the rest of the population just doesn't comprehend or understand because we haven't been taught it in school,” she said. “The education system has really failed in telling the story of the history and the richness of culture that existed pre-Colonialism and that first point of contact. And I think that's an epic failure.

“It's a lack of education and awareness and that is why we have created the RISE Against Racism campaign,” Crowe said. “It's everything we've heard in the national dialogues on anti-Indigenous racism in Canada’s health system.”

Crowe said she envisions a national health system built on equality “in which we can walk two worlds, where we have spaces where we can access Western medicine, but also where we can create space that is safe and allows Indigenous populations to practice their health teachings as well, whether that's creating smudging spaces, land for ceremonies, bringing back Indigenous languages,” she said, adding that the RISE Against Racism campaign will create a space where racism can be reported.

Crowe had a very clear messages to those affected, those who can help and to those responsible for the inequality in Canada’s health system.

To those affected by racism in our health system, she said: “Canada has heard. Through various reports, the (Truth and Reconciliation Commission report) , missing and murdered Indigenous women and girls reports, there are more reports than we can count, but now is the time for action. I feel hopeful for the first time in a long time that we are going to move the measurement needle and increase the number of years that we live less than the rest of the population because of all the health inequities out there. I say to everybody, you have to report it, we have to document it. We’re not going to be able to provide measurement and effectively change the systems without everybody being involved.”

Crowe did acknowledge Canada’s efforts to create dedicated resources for Indigenous Canadians.

“I look at the Federation of Sovereign Indigenous Nations in Saskatchewan, who are creating an ombudsman position for anti-Indigenous racism. I look at the new president-elect of the Canadian Medical Association, Dr. Alika Lafontaine, our very first indigenous CMA President whose created a whole system on reporting racism. I think that we are in an era where we've gone from being angry Indians pounding on the door to get up the table… We're at tables now, and let's not be tokens. Let's use our voice to advocate for the services that we desperately need to change the outcome.”

To non-Indigenous Canadians, especially those who may be witness to inequalities inside our health facilities: “Rise! If you see something, say something. Rise against racism. Be allies in the approach. Do your due diligence on personal education as well.”

And to those responsible for the mistreatment or hate toward Indigenous patients: “To those who are in hospitals, health authorities, any kind of health organization delivering services to Indigenous patients, I would say please understand cultural competence and cultural safety. We have to be able to deliver health services in a cultural humility-type way where we understand the population, that this specific population has been underserved, underfunded and has greater health inequities. It’s is on their backs that we (get) the privilege to thrive in Turtle Island. We owe it to all patients to give equal, equitable and quality services, too.”

Jan Murphy is a Local Journalism Initiative reporter who works out of the BellevilleIntelligencer. The Local Journalism Initiative is funded by the Government of Canada.

Jan Murphy, Local Journalism Initiative, Belleville Intelligencer
Beautiful act of reclamation': Indigenous love and joy in the spotlight at TIFF
Yesterday .


Filmmakers are challenging the way Indigenous love stories have previously been portrayed with the release of two projects that explore romantic relationships and sensuality at this year's Toronto International Film Festival.

In "Stellar," from Anishinaabe writer and director, Darlene Naponse, two people seek comfort and connection during a single night in a dive bar as they watch the world outside of them rupture from a window.

The film is an adaptation of Naponse's short story by the same name and stars Elle-Máijá Tailfeathers and Braeden Clarke in the title roles of She and He.

A single touch between the two characters sets off a cosmic connection. The film features minimal dialogue instead relying on physical contact to explore the two characters connection to each other.

Naponse says she wanted to showcase the strength of touch in community — an act that was tarnished by the abuses carried out in the residential school system and the Sixties Scoop.

The project departs from a trauma narrative often seen with Indigenous characters in film and television and instead reclaims the importance of physical connection to First Nations communities.

"It was really about wanting to understand, celebrate and explore that beauty of falling in love and touch," said Naponse.

The connection between the two characters provides a pathway for a new narrative — one that shows touch can restore the past while bringing hope to the future.

Tailfeathers, who is Blackfoot and Sámi from Kainai First Nation, joined the project after Naponse reached out to her directly for the role of She.

The film challenges viewers to think differently about Indigenous love and Indigenous futurism, says Tailfeathers.

There is a desire for more stories of love, intimacy and healing because they are concepts that have been stripped away from Indigenous Peoples for many generations through colonialism, she added.

"Just thinking about the radical act of love and joy and what it means to feel as an Indigenous person today knowing everything we've been through. There's something so radical about the capacity to feel love, joy and hope. It's a beautiful act of reclamation," she said.

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Duration 1:49 View on Watch

The complexities of love and sex on screen involving members of the BIPOC (Black, Indigenous and people of colour) community shouldn't be reduced to stereotypes or "trauma porn," says Tamil filmmaker V.T. Nayani, who is making her feature film debut at TIFF with "This Place."

The queer love story is set in Toronto in 2011 two years after Tamil-Canadians across the country protested the Sri Lankan government's treatment of Tamil citizens. It follows a Tamil woman and a Mohawk and Iranian woman, as they navigate familial responsibilities, displacement and newfound love.

In the film, Kawenniiohstha has just moved from Kahnawake Mohawk Territory to the city to attend school. Unknown to her mother she is also looking to connect with her Iranian father for the first time. She meets Malai, who is grappling with the notion of reconnecting with her alcoholic father before it's too late while encouraging her brother to do the same. The two women develop a relationship after a fateful encounter at a laundromat and a lost notebook.

Nayani co-wrote the film with Mohawk actor Devery Jacobs, most recently known for her role in the FX dramedy "Reservation Dogs," and Iranian actor and writer Golshan Abdmoulaie.

"We're in the long, extended season of 'trauma dramas.' I want there to be joy, hope and a sense of possibility because we deserve that," Nayani said in an interview.

"When I look at my communities I see those kinds of love stories. I see queer folks and other folks of colour just falling in love and having these conversations every day. This is everyday life for us."

Through sharing stories and life experiences the three writers found even though they came from different cultural backgrounds there were similarities within their communities.

Nayani came up with the premise of the film nearly a decade ago when a family friend approached her and asked about the significance of protesting on stolen Indigenous land.

It was a question Nayani had herself after participating in protests in Toronto in 2009 following the events in Sri Lanka.

"It really showed me how much I lacked a relationship and maybe sense of responsibility to Indigenous communities here as someone whose family arrived here for some semblance of safety," Nayani said in an interview.

The filmmaker then posed her own question, "what happens when you have an Indigenous woman and a woman who is the daughter of refugees come together?" Nayani wanted to explore what those conversations look like.

Tamil actor Priya Guns stars as Malai. She was living abroad when she was first sent the script.

Guns says she was drawn to film because it put the realities of BIPOC people in the forefront and explored elements of class and queerness.

"Right away, I've never seen anything like this," she said in an interview.

"I feel like if I had seen this film growing up, a lot of things would have made sense."

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Sept. 9, 2022.

Brittany Hobson, The Canadian Press