Monday, October 24, 2022

How Starbucks baristas spurred a new US labor movement

Daniel de Visé - THE HILL

On the day last winter when Starbucks workers at two coffeehouses in Buffalo, N.Y., voted to unionize, the moribund labor movement stirred to life.


How Starbucks baristas spurred a new US labor movement© Provided by The Hill

Petitions for union elections rose by 53 percent in the fiscal year that ended in September, a surge largely inspired by Starbucks baristas in Buffalo. The caseload of the National Labor Relations Board swelled by 23 percent, the largest year-to-year increase since the Eisenhower administration.

Union membership stands at a historic low. Yet, more Americans approve of unions now than at any time since 1965, according to Gallup polls. Union support stands at 89 percent for Democrats and 56 percent for Republicans, marking the first time Gallup has found a majority of Republicans willing to rally around organized labor.

“Unions are cool again, is what it comes down to,” said Ruth Milkman, a sociologist at the CUNY School of Labor and Urban Studies.

Over the past year, workers have organized unions at blue-chip corporations with hipster credentials and progressive images: Starbucks. Trader Joe’s. Chipotle. Amazon. REI. Apple.

Protests have also gone viral. A TikTok video of a walkout by Starbucks workers in Buffalo drew 30 million views.

All of these events have encouraged talk of a new labor movement.

“For sure, the needle is being moved by the number of union elections taking place,” said Will Brucher, an assistant teaching professor of labor studies and employment relations at Rutgers University.

“I think a lot of these workers understand their own value, that they’re the ones making it a fun place to shop,” Brucher said. “Sure, they want more money. It’s the highest inflation in 40 years. They’re working for companies that have made a ton of money.”

But even labor supporters concede they will need more than a few viral videos to reverse the decades-long decline of organized labor.

Since 1983, the share of U.S. workers represented by unions has fallen from 23 percent to 12 percent. One encouraging sign, amid the decline, is that women and men are now more or less equally represented in union ranks. Three decades ago, union men outnumbered union women almost 2 to 1.

If the new labor movement has a public face, it is Starbucks, or, more specifically, the Starbucks logo, the smiling siren replaced by a defiant fist clutching what appears to be a venti iced latte. More than 250 Starbucks shops have unionized. The movement started last December in Buffalo.

“I had a coworker who had been at the company for 13 years, and she was only making 25 cents more an hour than me when I started,” said Will Westlake, one of the Buffalo organizers.

“When I’m standing there making seven-dollar drinks, and I make 45 of them every half hour, and I’m only getting paid $15.26, when this campaign started,” Westlake said. “I know that it only takes maybe a month of sales, two months of sales, to pay the entire salaries of everybody in my shop.”

Half a century ago, the typical union man was a middle-aged, white Democrat with a high-school education and a blue-collar job. But today, the group of labor movement supporters appears to be more politically diverse.

“We do have Trump supporters on our organizing committees,” Westlake said. “We have moderate Republicans. We have centrist Democrats. We have progressives.”

Westlake is 25. At his own Buffalo union shop, he said, organizers are “mostly under 35, mostly women, and mostly queer.”

New York is a historically strong union state. But a recent union victory at an Apple store in Oklahoma City, and labor wins at Starbucks stores in Kansas, Florida and South Carolina, defy conventional wisdom that unions cannot prevail in labor-resistant enclaves.

“This isn’t a big union coming in and saying, ‘We’re going to organize Starbucks workers,” said U.S. Rep. Mark Pocan, a pro-union Democrat from Madison, Wis. “This is young, young people who are not part of the labor movement, organizing peers.”

Starbucks unions accuse the coffee chain of firing more than 100 union leaders in retaliation for their efforts. Westlake lost his own barista job this month after showing up to work wearing a suicide awareness button.

A Starbucks spokesperson countered that Westlake and his employer parted ways over “repeated attendance and dress-code policy violations.”

The Seattle-based roastery prides itself on a benevolent and forward-thinking corporate culture. From the 1990s, Starbucks offered health insurance and stock options even to part-time employees, calling them “partners” to suggest a flattened chain of command.

“No Starbucks partner has been or will be disciplined or separated for supporting, organizing, or otherwise engaging in lawful union activity,” the company spokesperson said in an email interview.

Apart from the millennial trappings, the labor battle at Starbucks has played out like many labor disputes of yore. Workers leveraged their collective voice to push improvements in pay, benefits and working conditions. The employer pledged support to the workers and their grievances, but not to the union, which it portrayed as a meddlesome intermediary.

“From the beginning,” the Starbucks spokesperson said, “we’ve been clear in our belief that we are better together as partners, without a union between us.”

Although union membership has dwindled in recent years, union support has rebounded.

Public empathy for unions ran strong from the New Deal 1930s through the Great Society 1960s. Confidence flagged through the 1970s and 1980s, an era of perennial scandals. The decline of the American auto industry, and President Reagan’s unblinking crackdown on striking air traffic controllers in 1981, encouraged the view of labor organizing as archaic and counterproductive.

In years since, many Americans came to view unions as socialist and anti-American. Yet, overall public support for the labor movement dipped below 50 percent only once, in 2009, the year former President George W. Bush floated a controversial $80 billion bailout to automakers.

The Great Recession of 2008 inspired that bailout. The same downturn may have seeded the new movement.

“Millennials, Generation Z, generations that are more educated than any previous generation, were led to expect that going to college would lead to useful and remunerative careers,” said Milkman, of CUNY. “And then they faced this labor market where what’s available are very inferior jobs to what was available before.”

Millennial outrage over low wages and meager working conditions energized former President Obama’s campaign in 2008, Occupy Wall Street in 2011, Black Lives Matter in 2013 and Sen. Bernie Sanders’s (I-Vt.) presidential run in 2016.

Then came the pandemic.

Ava Alsens was working at a Trader Joe’s when COVID-19 hit. Like many in the retail industry, Alsens watched a relatively idyllic workplace fall to dystopian shambles.

“I’ve been through three or four major outbreaks of COVID involving 20 to 30 crew members at multiple stores,” Alsens said, using Trader Joe’s nautical lingo for its own employees.

“I started out at a store that had a lot of veteran crew members. And then half the people left. And on just an emotional level, it felt like a totally different place.”

Talk of unionization at Trader Joe’s began in 2020. The employer “sent out a letter to everybody in the company saying we didn’t need a union, that we were in a good position on our own,” Alsens said. “That ended up sparking a lot of conversations in the store.”

The Trader Joe’s in downtown Minneapolis, where Alsens now works, voted to unionize in August. Organizers followed the lead of the Trader Joe’s crew in Hadley, Mass., who formed a union in July. The Hadley crew followed the lead of Starbucks.

“When someone else does it,” Alsens said, “it makes you feel like you can, too.”

Right-wingers lose their minds after AOC responded to anti-LGBTQ protesters by dancing

The demonstrators reportedly stormed a town hall event to protest Ocasio-Cortez’s support for the LGBTQ community.
Monday, October 24, 2022

Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, AOC (D-NY) giving an impromptu interview on the street near the Capitol.Photo: Phil Pasquini / Shutterstock.com

Video from a recent town hall event held by Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-NY) has right-wingers losing their minds.

The meeting, which took place on October 19, was disrupted by protesters reportedly holding signs touting conspiracy theories. When the protesters started beating drums and chanting “AOC has got to go,” the Democratic congresswoman began dancing to the beat from her perch on the stage at the Boys & Girls Club where the event was held in Astoria, Queens.

The protesters reportedly heckled and chanted for about 20 minutes, preventing Ocasio-Cortez and other constituents from speaking. According to The Independent, the demonstrators were there to protest Ocasio-Cortez’s support for the LGBTQ community. One protester reportedly suggested that non-heterosexuals be banned from owning a house


















“These homophobes were yelling Westboro Baptist-style anti-LGBT+ slogans. What do you think I’m gonna do? Take them seriously?” the congresswoman, who represents New York’s 14th district, including parts of Queens and The Bronx, said in a Tweet after video of the town hall went viral. “If you want to associate w/ their views, that’s your business. But NY-14 will ALWAYS have a champion for LGBTQ+ people on my watch. Period.”



That didn’t stop right-wing media figures from blasting Ocasio-Cortez for supposedly “mocking her constituents.”

Rep. Lauren Boebert (R-CO) tweeted a clip mashing up video of Ocasio-Cortez trying to regain control of the town hall with a viral clip of a small child arguing with his mother, while Chadwick Moore, a contributing editor at The Spectator World, accused Ocasio-Cortez of never having lived in the district she represents.






“She is drunk with power & narcissism. Sandy doesn’t care what they think. That’s why she laughs & dances it all off,” tweeted Fox & Friends Weekend host Rachel Campos-Duffy, using a nickname for Ocasio-Cortez that the right uses to express their antipathy towards her.

“The disruptors at last night’s town hall are part of a far-right wing group that regularly protests at vaccine clinics, against LGBTQ rights, etc. They were not constituents,” a spokesperson for Ocasio-Cortez told The New York Post. “We’re grateful that we were still able to have a meaningful dialogue, in spite of that group of outsiders.”

Ocasio-Cortez is up for reelection next month and is heavily favored to win against her Republican opponent, Tina Forte.

11,100-year-old trap proves people lived in Alaska 1,000 years earlier than believed

Mark Price, The Charlotte Observer - 

















Remains of an elaborate stone fish trap have been discovered on the seafloor off Southeast Alaska, and scientists say it proves Indigenous people occupied the region 1,000 years earlier than previously believed.

Known as a fish weir, the ancient trap dates back about 11,100 years, the Sealaska Heritage Institute reported in a news release.

That makes it likely “the oldest stone fish weir ever found in the world ... and it is the first one ever confirmed underwater in North America,” scientists said.

It was discovered over the summer as part of a project funded by NOAA Ocean Exploration to search seafloor caves for evidence of early human occupation, according to the release.

The trap sits about 170 feet below the surface of Shakan Bay, on the west side of Prince of Wales Island, officials told McClatchy News. It takes the shape of five to six “semi-circular structures” that are up to 6 feet wide. Time has worn the walls down to about 1 foot in height, the institute said.

“Likely the rocks were piled much higher 11,100 years ago. ... People would have maintained the weir seasonally by restacking rocks and adding more rocks and possibly wooden stakes,” the institute said.

Such traps were typically built close to shore, in spots that would have been covered at high tide. However, the change in sea floor levels has left the weir “over 2 km (1.2 miles) from the closest modern shoreline.”

“It further substantiates the great antiquity of Native people in Southeast Alaska,” said anthropologist Rosita Worl of the Sealaska Heritage Institute.

“It also demonstrates that Native people had acquired knowledge about salmon behavior and migrations, then developed the technology to harvest a significant number of salmon.”

Sonar evidence of a structure at the site was first recorded in 2010, but “funding constraints” prevented experts from confirming their theories until this year, the institute said.


A robotic underwater craft was used to investigate the structure, piloted by archaeologist Kelly Monteleone at the University of Calgary, officials said.

“The entire vessel was bouncing with excitement when we realized it was indeed a weir,” Monteleone said in the release. “Personally, I felt relief after a decade of saying this was a weir.”

Examples of ancient fish weirs have been found around the world, and often employed the use of pile stones, reeds and/or wooden posts, experts say.

They were often built as “low arced walls” across coastal gullies.

“During high tide, the fish would swim over the stone walls, and as the tide ebbed, the fish would be trapped behind them, allowing fishers to catch them with nets, spears and other means,” the institute says.

Other weirs have been found in Southeast Alaska, but the oldest dated to only around 5,740 years ago, the institute reports.

The age of the weir in Shakan Bay was established “based on sea level reconstruction,” officials said.

Worl believes it is the work of a people who had been in the region long enough to develop sophisticated skills.

“It would have taken time for our people to learn enough about the environment and fish behavior to develop the technology to make the weir and to fish it successfully,” she said in the release.

NOAA Ocean Exploration was a primary financial backer of the project, and it reports followup work is expected next summer.


©2022 The Charlotte Observer. Visit charlotteobserver.com. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.


Why the Founding Generation Fell So Hard for the Illuminati Story

They looked at France and said: “Make it make sense.”

BY JORDAN E. TAYLOR
OCT 24, 2022

Photo illustration by Slate. Images by Samuel Finley Breese Morse/Yale University Art Gallery and Getty Images Plus.

Jedidiah Morse looked out over the crowded pews full of his parishioners at the New North Church in Boston. The sight of his crop of long gray hair and his severe face, creased with judgment, probably led some of his flock to flinch at the scolding they expected to receive. His stern persona was so familiar, in fact, that he had earned the nickname “Granny Morse.”

Growing conflict between the United States and France had led President John Adams to proclaim that the day, May 9, 1798, should be set aside for “Solemn Humiliation, Fasting and Prayer.” But Morse’s audience was not due for a lecture that morning. Instead, as he hesitated before launching into his sermon, he must have taken some private pleasure in knowing he was about to shatter their world. Perhaps he even disturbed the furrows of his face with a smile.

In that day’s speech, Morse unspooled a bizarre conspiracy theory alleging that a shadowy cabal of villains called the “Illuminati,” an offshoot of the Freemasons, were aiming to destroy everything that Americans held dear. This group of philosopher zealots, according to Morse, had “secretly extended its branches through a great part of Europe, and even into America.” Their goal was to abolish Christianity, private property, and nearly every foundation of good order around the world. According to Morse, they opposed marriage, encouraged people to explore all kinds of “sensual pleasures,” and proposed a “promiscuous intercourse among the sexes.” Just a few masks short of a Stanley Kubrick film, Morse’s story of the Illuminati played upon the darkest nightmares of the nation’s many devout Christians.

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Morse told his congregation that the Illuminati hoped to infect the people of America through a kind of cultural warfare. They were spreading their doctrines by worming their way in among “reading and debating societies, the reviewers, journalists or editors of newspapers and other periodical publications, the booksellers and post-masters” and infiltrating all “literary, civil and religious institutions.” The most prominent Illuminatus named by Morse was Thomas Paine, whose radical pamphlet The Age of Reason (published in installments in 1794, 1795, and 1807) had caused a political stir in the United States.

If the Illuminati were beginning to corrupt the United States, according to Morse, they had gone much further already in Europe. The evil society’s greatest triumph to date, Morse wrote, was its recent work to hatch the French Revolution and disguise it as a mild, moderate event following the model of the American Revolution. With France’s increasing radicalism, anticlericalism, and disorder, it seemed obvious to Morse that the French Jacobins, the political faction that seized control of the nation in 1792, were simply Illuminati by another name.

Morse got most of this story from a book written by a Scottish academic named John Robison, who in turn took many of his ideas from the abbé de Barruel, a French priest. Robison’s book provided rich source material for Morse’s imagination. It was full of dramatic details, such as an account of the Illuminati possessing “tea for procuring abortion” as well as a mysterious “composition which blinds or kills when spurted in the face.” The Illuminati, according to Robison, defended suicide and discouraged patriotism and property owning. Claiming to worship human reason above all else, they practiced a blinkered ethics in which the means always justified the ends, as long as those ends were the growing power of the organization.

These accounts of the Illuminati were, of course, utterly false. Though a group of Enlightenment intellectuals led by Adam Weishaupt, calling themselves the Illuminati, had existed briefly in Bavaria in the 1770s, they were defunct by the 1790s. They endorsed tolerance and rationalism, but not the kind of extreme amoral worldview attributed to them. There is no evidence that the Illuminati ever held anywhere near the power that its critics claimed. There is certainly nothing to suggest that the reach of the Illuminati extended across the Atlantic to the United States. Nevertheless, in the months following Morse’s dramatic speech, the Illuminati conspiracy theory became an immediate sensation in the United States and Canada.

This was not a fringe conspiracy theory championed by uneducated outsiders. Quite the opposite: Many of the nation’s leading figures put their reputations behind it—both in public and in private correspondence. In one private letter, former President George Washington wrote that he was “satisfied” that the Illuminati had spread their “Doctrines” to the United States. First lady Abigail Adams read Robison’s book and recommended it to friends. New England’s preachers were among the most consistent promoters of the Illuminati conspiracy theory, both from their pulpits and behind closed doors, at a time when religious leaders commanded the respect of large audiences. So why did these well-informed, well-educated individuals fall for it?

The most important reason that the Illuminati theory became popular, as I show in my new book, Misinformation Nation, was that it explained the otherwise inexplicable matter of why the French Revolution had spiraled out of control. The early stages of the revolution in France had thrilled Americans. It seemed that the French, their recent wartime allies who had helped them to secure independence, were following in their footsteps. Until 1798, most Americans remained hopeful that the French Revolution would follow the model of the American Revolution. Even news of guillotines, massacres, and growing public hostility to religion did not deter the most hopeful Francophiles, who dismissed such accounts as exaggerations by British propagandists.

Jedidiah Morse had, earlier in the decade, distinguished himself as an apologist for the violent excesses in revolutionary France. In 1793, as violence erupted in France, Morse explained to his parishioners that despite the nation’s “errors and irregularities,” which were similar to the excesses of the American Revolution, the French Revolution’s cause was “unquestionably good.” Even as his peers started to question the wisdom of the French Revolution, Morse held fast. In 1796, he complained that “very few of the clergy in the circle of my acquaintance seem disposed to pray for the success of the French.” In 1797, a skeptical Noah Webster wrote to Morse, “Your good opinion of the French is very flattering.”

But in early 1798, this all changed. Americans’ hopes that the French Revolution would follow their model began to deflate. French vessels attacked American ships crossing the Atlantic to prevent them from supplying their wartime enemies. When President John Adams sent a delegation to Paris to resolve this problem, the French appeared to insult the delegation and demand a bribe. The dispatches from Paris documenting this dispute, which became known as the XYZ Affair, were published in Philadelphia in April 1798.

This news caused Americans to turn swiftly and furiously against France and its revolutionary politics. Anti-French hatred became the order of the day. But there was a problem. If the French Revolution had birthed an evil nation, as it now seemed, why did Americans celebrate this horrible revolution for so long?

Morse happened to be traveling through Philadelphia in April as the XYZ dispatches became public. That month also happened to be the moment when John Robison’s book about the Illuminati was first published, also in Philadelphia. Here at once was Morse’s undoing and his salvation. Just as the French Revolution was becoming indefensible, the revelation of the Illuminati conspiracy offered Morse a convenient explanation for why he had remained one of France’s most steadfast defenders.

Historians now usually interpret the French Revolution in terms of actions and reactions, theses and antitheses. It wasn’t controlled by any single group but took shape through competition between many opposing individuals: Napoleon defeated the Directory, which displaced the Jacobins, who succeeded the Girondins, and none of them quite agreed on what France was and what it could be. Properly told, it’s an intricate, unpredictable story full of mistakes and confusion, but no evil geniuses.

If the Illuminati had plotted the revolution from the beginning, though, there was quite a simple explanation for its decay: These daring deceivers had pretended all along that the French Revolution was something that it was not. They had managed to convince millions that France was pursuing the path laid out by the American Revolution, even as they plotted out a contrary course of violence, extremism, and atheism. Nothing had changed. The revolution’s evils had simply been unmasked. This version of the French Revolution, centered around the lies of the Illuminati, absolved Morse and his allies of misjudgment. Morse had not erred—he had been deceived. As one sympathetic commentator wrote, Robison’s account “unravels everything that appears mysterious in the progress of the French Revolution.”

By late 1799, some skeptics began to pick apart the Illuminati conspiracy theory. Forced to defend his views in public newspapers and in private correspondence, Morse’s story crumbled. As he received correspondence from European intellectuals who cast doubt on the Illuminati story, Morse began to fall silent. Though he never admitted it, perhaps he realized that he had been deceived. Without fresh evidence to sustain it, the Illuminati scare faded away nearly as quickly as it had arrived.

But the basic outlines of the Illuminati conspiracy theory proved too irresistible to disappear entirely. In the 19th century, many Americans developed a renewed fear of Freemasonry and all sorts of secret societies, even forming the Anti-Masonic Party in the 1820s. In the mid-19th century, some Americans and Europeans began to embrace antisemitic conspiracy theories claiming that a small group of Jewish bankers, especially the Rothschild family, secretly ran the world. In more recent years, conspiracy theorists have grasped onto similar stories about other all-powerful secret societies, such as the “New World Order,” the Bilderberg Group, Bohemian Grove, and QAnon’s “cabal.” Some have returned to the Illuminati, imagining celebrities such as Beyoncé and Jay-Z to be members of this satanic cult.

The names and characters change over time, but the basic template has remained remarkably durable over the centuries: A small, yet nearly omnipotent, group of amoral globalist elites secretly directs world events. This paranoid vision has persevered in large part because it helps their believers to make sense of a rapidly changing world. The faceless structural forces remaking our present—such as globalization, accelerating inequality, deindustrialization, racial justice movements, and cultural fragmentation—require explanation.

Just as the Illuminati explained the otherwise inexplicable course of the French Revolution in 1798, these conspiracy theories allow their believers to explain the apparent decay of American society as the will of evil elites, rather than the unintended consequences of a complex mix of historical forces. At the core of every conspiracy theory is the observation that only bad intentions can produce bad outcomes. There are no accidents, only evil people.


SEE



Colombians protest against tax reform bill

October 24, 2022

BOGOTA (AFP) – Thousands of Colombians rallied nationwide on Saturday against a proposed reform that would raise taxes on the upper classes to pay for social programme.

The legislation is being pushed by President Gustavo Petro, the South American country’s first elected leftist president.

“Today, we ask the government to take into account the productive sector of the country, to understand that tax reform is not needed in the way they are doing it,” businessman Alvaro Aparicio, 58, told AFP in Bogota. Wearing white and waving the national flag, people also took to the streets in Cali, Barranquilla, Medellin and other cities against the bill pushed by Petro, who took office in August.

Congress is debating the reform, which would raise taxes on the upper classes to finance programmes to fight poverty and inequality.

Meanwhile, Colombia like other countries around the world is enduring high inflation, as well as an historic devaluation of the peso against the dollar. Unemployment stands at 10.6 per cent.


People protest against a tax reform proposed by the government of leftist President Gustavo Petro, in Bogota, Colombia.
PHOTO: AFP

Petro campaigned on a platform of raising taxes on the rich, stopping oil exploration and distributing fertile land among landless farmers.

Former right-wing president Ivan Duque (2018-2022) faced massive protests in 2019, 2020 and 2021.

The bloodiest occurred last year, when the then president tried to tax the middle class to deal with the ravages of the pandemic.

This sparked violent demonstrations that lasted two months and left 46 dead, including civilians and police, according to the United Nations (UN).


G7 condemns Russia’s kidnapping of Ukraine power plant leadership

Zach Schonfeld - Yesterday 

The Group of Seven (G7) on Saturday condemned Russia’s kidnappings of Ukrainian employees at the Zaporizhzhia Nuclear Power Plant (ZNPP), the latest sign of international concern about the embattled facility.


G7 condemns Russia’s kidnapping of Ukraine power plant leadership
© Provided by The Hill

Kyiv in recent weeks has accused Russia — which controls the area in and around the facility while reportedly intimidating Ukrainian staff into maintaining the plant’s operations — of kidnapping the facility’s two top managers as well as stoking fear among Zaporizhzhia’s other employees.

“These actions further impair the nuclear safety and security of the ZNPP by preventing key personnel from executing their indispensable functions,” the G7 Non-Proliferation Directors Group wrote in a statement. “We strongly reject these reckless, cruel and dangerous acts and demand the immediate release of those detained.”

The nuclear plant, Europe’s largest, has become a focal point in Russia’s invasion, with international observers raising alarm bells about the kidnappings and shelling near the plant, warning that a misfire could result in a nuclear disaster.

The G7 — comprised of the U.S., Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, the United Kingdom and the European Union — also urged Moscow to return full control of the plant to Ukraine, referring to the country as the facility’s “rightful sovereign owner.”

The plant is located along the Dnieper River on the border of one of four Ukrainian regions that Russia annexed earlier this month. The group in its statement condemned the annexations and reiterated the countries’ positions that the land grab is null and void.

The International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) has sought to establish a “nuclear safety and security protection zone” around the plant, and the group’s director has personally negotiated with Russian President Vladimir Putin and Ukrainian officers about such a solution.

“We support IAEA efforts to facilitate the implementation of these pillars and uphold the safety and security of Ukraine’s nuclear facilities, while fully respecting Ukrainian sovereignty,” the G7 non-proliferation group said. “We welcome the Director General’s work to ensure the safety and security of the ZNPP.”

Ukrainian employees at the plant have also detailed how Russian forces shot and beat them to intimidate the staff into running the nuclear plant.

“This is important, but cavemen only understand the language of power,” Andriy Yermak, the head of Ukraine’s presidential office, said of the G7 statement on his Telegram channel.

“This war proves that the enemy is retreating under the pressure of the Armed Forces, its economy is collapsing due to systemic sanctions,” Yermak continued. “More determination is needed to collectively finish off the enemy. Nothing else works with terrorists.”

As Ukrainian forces also make progress in reclaiming territory in the south, Kyiv is warning that Russia plans to blow up a major dam in the area.

Beyond the expected flooding from such an explosion, Ukrainian officials have also raised concerns about Zaporizhzhia’s reliance on a reservoir created by the dam for cooling the nuclear plant.
Ancient legacy rouses interests

October 24, 2022


ANN/CHINA DAILY – Popular appeal of the past continues to grow as value of nation’s historical heritage is better understood

In 2019, the archaeological ruins of the centre of power and belief of an early regional society, which existed in the lower reaches of the Yangtze River in the Late Neolithic period of China, were inscribed on the list of UNESCO World Heritage Sites.

People today marvel at the exquisite jade items uncovered amid the Archaeological Ruins of Liangzhu City in Zhejiang province, the legacy of a society that excelled in water conservancy and rice cultivation.

Although it dates back 4,300 to 5,300 years, the Liangzhu site resonates with Chinese people today despite that broad span of time as the influence of its key cultural elements has endured through the millennia.

“It is a physical testimony of the 5,000-year-old civilisation in China,” said archaeologist Wang Wei, a researcher at the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences’ Academic Division of History. “More importantly, it may contribute to drafting a new definition of civilization in the world.”


ABOVE & BELOW: 
Archaeologists measure excavated stone carvings at the Shimao ruins in Shenmu City, northwest China’s Shaanxi Province; and visitors look at gold wares unearthed from the tomb of Marquis of Haihun displayed at Emperor Qinshihuang’s Mausoleum Site Museum in Xi’an, northwest China’s Shaanxi Province.
 PHOTOS: XINHUA














A bronze altar excavated from the No 8 sacrificial pit at Sanxingdui Ruins site in southwest China’s Sichuan Province

Chinese archaeologists are sparing no effort to better trace the country’s rich history through well-organised excavations. Over 8,800 excavations were conducted in the past decade, and telling stories of traditional Chinese culture through archaeological findings has stepped into the spotlight.

The Political Bureau of the Communist Party of China Central Committee has held two group study sessions on archaeology, one in September 2020 and the other in May this year.

At these meetings, President Xi Jinping highlighted the importance of archaeology and urged further efforts to advance the study of the history of Chinese civilisation so its achievements can help the nation strengthen its cultural confidence.

Apart from Liangzhu, a long list of key achievements in deciphering the early stages of Chinese civilisation have been made in the past few years, including the discovery of magnificent 4,000-year-old “palaces” in the stone city ruins of Shimao in Shaanxi province, the rigidly-designed urban road network of Henan province’s Erlitou site, the capital city of a central dynasty from about 3,500 years ago, and the fruitful findings in the 3,000-year-old Sanxingdui site in Sichuan province, where an astonishing gold mask and breathtaking bronze wares were uncovered.

“The recent studies have enriched our understanding of how our civilisation started,” said director of the Institute of Archaeology at the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences Chen Xingcan.

“That will greatly help to build up an academic system of archaeology with Chinese characteristics.”

The long course of the nation’s history is being charted by the revelations brought to light by Chinese archaeologists’ shovels.

Monumental discoveries have continually emerged in recent years, including the 2,000-year-old tomb of Marquis of Haihun in Jiangxi province, Nanhai One, a fully loaded shipwreck from the Southern Song period (1127-1279) off the coast of Guangdong province, and the recent discovery of a one-million-year-old human skull fossil in Hubei province.

“Booming interdisciplinary research and the adoption of new high-tech approaches are ensuring that Chinese archaeology makes bigger achievements,” Chen said. “Technology also provides good ways to promote archaeology to the public.”

A long list of successful TV shows featuring archaeology and cultural relics have hit Chinese screens in the past decade. Some of the recent findings have been written into school textbooks.

In 2020, livestreaming broadcasts of an annual appraisal meeting of the country’s top 10 archaeological discoveries attracted an audience of 28 million. The excavations at the Sanxingdui site have become a cultural phenomenon with the public lining up to view them in 2021 and this year.

“Archaeology is no longer in an ivory tower,” Wang added. “Wider exposure of our work has ignited people’s passion for traditional Chinese culture.”

Over the past decade, museums have become popular destinations in China, especially for the young generation.

Since 2012, the number of tourist visits to the Palace Museum in Beijing, which is also called the Forbidden City, has increased sharply.

Before the COVID-19 pandemic, the number had risen to 19.33 million in 2019. Last year, Sanxingdui Museum in Guanghan, Sichuan province, made headlines many times and became a popular destination. The museum situated in a small city known for its bronze wares of interesting shapes, such as masks with bulging eyes and big ears, received about 1.5 million tourist visits in 2021.

Director of Hubei Provincial Museum Fang Qin said that visiting museums is becoming a routine leisure activity, just like going to movie theatres. Ten years ago, there were few visitors to the museum, he said.

In July, Fang livestreamed a show about the Shijiahe group of late Neolithic sites in Tianmen, dating back 5,900 years, which attracted about 10 million viewers.

“I could never imagine 10 years ago that museums could be so popular,” said the 53-year-old.

The number of museums in the country has increased to 6,138 this year from 3,866 in 2012. Most of them are free to the public, according to a news conference held on October 8 in Beijing introducing the development of China’s culture industry. The number of tourist visits grew from 560 million in 2012 to 1.2 billion in 2019.
Beto O'Rouke Surges, Closing Gap With Greg Abbott in Texas: Poll

ON 10/23/22 

Texas Democratic gubernatorial candidate Beto O'Rourke is within 2 percentage points of Republican Governor Greg Abbott in the latest poll released by Beacon Research on Sunday, showing a possible shift in momentum just two weeks away from the midterm election.

The poll shows Abbott with 48 percent of the vote compared to O'Rourke's 46 percent. The survey polled 1,125 Americans who said they "definitely plan" on going to the polls and was conducted from October 15 to 19. The margin of error for the poll is 2.8 percentage points.

Meanwhile, a Texas Democratic strategist, who did not want to be named, told Newsweek on Sunday, "I can't imagine Beto not capitalizing on this. People on the ground are fed up with Abbott."

While this shows a glimmer of hope for Democrats in the Lone Star State, other polls have not been so favorable for O'Rourke, who was a former congressman. According to the latest FiveThirtyEight average of recent polls, the Republican governor has a strong lead over his Democratic challenger with a near 8-point advantage. In the RealClearPolitics average, Abbott stretched his lead to 8.7 percentage points against O'Rourke.

Above, Texas Democratic gubernatorial candidate Beto O'Rourke speaks at a rally on October 18 in Houston. A new poll shows O'Rourke closing the gap with Texas incumbent Republican Governor Greg Abbott.
BRANDON BELL/GETTY IMAGES

Former President Donald Trump took aim at O'Rourke at a rally in Robstown, Texas, on Saturday night and said: "Seventeen days from now, the people of Texas are going to defeat Beto O'Rourke, a flake. He's a flake! And we're going to keep Greg Abbott, a wonderful man, a great man, a great governor, we're going to keep him in the governor's mansion."

Trump added that he plans to bring the "MAGA movement" to Texas next month. The former president's rally came just two days before early voting opens in the state.

"Voters all across this state are ready to turn the page on Greg Abbott's failures and vote for change after eight years of him putting his extreme agenda over the people of Texas," O'Rourke said, according to the Texas Democratic Party. "With over 100,000 volunteers, we have the largest on-the-ground organizing program in Texas history that is committed to turning out the new, infrequent and overlooked voters who will be the margin of victory on the eighth of November."

In the latest Quinnipiac University poll, the "most urgent" issues facing Texans are the Texas-Mexico border, abortion and inflation. Nationally, economic issues like jobs, inflation, and unemployment have been top issues for voters. The poll also shows that likely voters are split over Abbott's bussing of migrants to Democratic-led states. He shows a 51 percent approval rating on the issue versus a 47 percent disapproval rating.

Political science professor and analyst Dr. Susan MacManus told Newsweek on Sunday, "At this point with weeks out until the election it is really Abbotts' to lose. How Beto handles those key issues is telling...those positions lean Republican."

"We are such a polarized country, people see Americans through two different lenses," MacManus added about the sky-high interest surrounding the midterm elections this cycle.

Meanwhile, the new Beacon Research poll also shows that Abbot and O'Rourke hold on to 90 percent of their party, however independents were shown to swing in favor of O'Rourke.


Thousands In New Moldova Anti-government Protest

By Alexander Tanas
10/23/22 



Police officers block a street during an anti-government protest in Chisinau, Moldova October 23, 2022. 
REUTERS/Vladislav Culiomza

Several thousand protesters denouncing Moldova's pro-Western leaders marched through ex-Soviet state's capital for the sixth consecutive Sunday and set up a new tent camp days after police cleared a similar encampment.

About 7,000 demonstrators decried steep price increases, particularly for gas bought from Russia. They called for the resignation of President Maia Sandu and her government.

The protests, organised by the party of exiled opposition politician Ilan Shor, underscore the most serious political challenge to Sandu since her landslide election win in 2020 on a pro-European and anti-corruption platform.

But Sandu and her government, backed by a big parliamentary majority, appear in little danger of falling for the moment in what is one of Europe's poorest countries wedged between Ukraine and European Union member Romania.

Demonstrators converged on Chisinau's central square in four columns but police kept them well away from the parliament and the president's residence.

Three smaller parties, including Moldova's Communists, joined in the protest for the first time. Activists set up an encampment of several dozen tents by the prosecutor's office, five days after police removed without incident a much larger camp outside parliament.

Shor, convicted of fraud in connection with a $1 billion bank scandal,
appealed to protesters by Skype from Israel to press for early elections "so that people will come to power capable of making life easy for Moldovagaz".

That was a reference to Moldova's difficulties in securing and paying for gas from Gazprom - the government complained last week that the Russian giant had refused to say what volume of supplies it would provide next month.

Gazprom has already cut October supplies by 30% and insists Moldova settle outstanding debts totalling $709 million.

(Editing by Ron Popeski and Daniel Wallis)
Brazilians honor coronavirus victims in Sao Paulo homage

By Leonardo Benassatto and Brian Ellsworth - Yesterday 


Brazilians pay tribute to the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) victims in Sao Paulo© Reuters/MARIANA GREIF

SAO PAULO (Reuters) - Brazilians on Sunday paid tribute in Sao Paulo to friends and family members who died of the coronavirus by writing messages on a mural set up on a boulevard in honor of the 680,000 people Brazil lost to the pandemic.


Brazilians pay tribute to the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) victims in Sao Paulo© Reuters/MARIANA GREIF

The South American nation as of July had the world's third-highest death toll from the disease, which critics of President Jair Bolsonaro called the result of delays in obtaining vaccines and his repeated dismissal of the seriousness of the disease.



Brazilians pay tribute to the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) victims in Sao Paulo© Reuters/MARIANA GREIF

On the bustling Paulista Avenue, which is closed to vehicle traffic on Sunday, participants wrote messages with red markers on a white mural, some hugging one another as they remembered lost loved ones.


"My companion would probably have lived if the vaccine had been purchased in September of 2020," said Fatima Oliver, 65, an occupational therapist, whose partner died at 66 from COVID-19. "What we watched was an insult. We watched a crime, we watched the banalization of death."

Representatives from the Terena and Guarani tribes joined the demonstration, some donning headdresses and black-and-red face paint.

"I think it's important for us to pay homage to a moment that was so important in our lives, to remember everyone who lost someone," said Maria Botafogo, who wrote a message to a math teacher who she said had been important to her.



Brazilians pay tribute to the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) victims in Sao Paulo© Reuters/MARIANA GREIF

Former President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, who faces Bolsonaro in a presidential run-off vote on Oct 30, has attacked the president's pandemic response while on the campaign trail.

Bolsonaro's supporters say Lula has politicized the issue, and argue that the deployment of the vaccine was in line with that of other developed countries.

"The companies that developed the vaccines, they first used them in their own countries," said Jackson Vilar, 43, who was collecting signatures on Sunday in favor of Bolsonaro on the same boulevard.

"The left takes that and uses it for all sorts of politicking, it's really ugly."

(Reporting by Leonardo Benassatto and Brian Ellsworth in Sao Paulo; Editing by Bill Berkrot)