Thursday, March 30, 2023

U.S. Auto Union Leader Promises Fight To Get Workers A 'Fair Share'
UAW Local 2250 member Shana Shaw displays UAWD t-shirts that are for sale during the 2023 Special Elections Collective Bargaining Convention in Detroit, Michigan, U.S., March 27, 2023. REUTERS

Shawn Fain, the new president of the United Auto Workers union, on Monday said he is ready to go to war against "employers who refuse to give our members their fair share."

Fain spoke to a gathering of local union leaders in Detroit after being declared the UAW's new president on Saturday. He won a closely-contested race against incumbent Ray Curry by fewer than 500 votes, according to the count administered by a court appointed monitor.

Now, Fain faces the task of unifying UAW members for what promises to be difficult negotiations this summer and fall with the Detroit Three automakers - Ford Motor Co, General Motors Co and Stellantis NV's.

Fain said during his campaign that he will fight for substantial changes to the current master contracts with the Detroit automakers.

On the UAW president's agenda are ending the current two-tier wage system under which new hires at Detroit Three plants earn 25% less than UAW workers with five or more years on the job.

Fain has also called for reinstatement of cost of living adjustments, or COLA, to offset inflation, no concessions on health benefits and no U.S. plant closings.

The UAW last year negotiated 10% wage increases in the first year of a six-year agreement with farm equipment maker John Deere. Earlier this month, UAW workers at heavy equipment maker Caterpillar ratified a six-year contract providing for 27% wage increases over its life.

Those contracts could be models for the UAW's goals in talks with the Detroit automakers beginning this summer, analysts said.

The Detroit automakers have reported robust profits during the past four years from their North American operations, mainly thanks to the pickup trucks and SUVs that UAW members assemble.

However, North American operations for the Detroit Three automakers are under pressure as they pour billions into electric vehicles and battery production. All three companies have moved to cut costs, reducing salaried staff or, in Stellantis' case, idling a U.S. assembly plant.

The UAW and Detroit automakers will begin bargaining toward new contracts this summer.

In 2019, UAW workers at General Motors went on strike for 40 days before a new contract was ratified, costing the automaker $3 billion.

A UAW member wears a UAWD shirt during the 2023 Special Elections Collective Bargaining Convention in Detroit, Michigan, U.S., March 27, 2023. REUTERS


UAW President Shawn Fain chairs the 2023 Special Elections Collective Bargaining Convention in Detroit, Michigan, U.S. March 27, 2023. REUTERS
U.S. Labor Force Gap Mostly Due To Pre-pandemic Trends, Study Finds

By Howard Schneider
03/29/23
People walk on a street in New York, U.S., November 14, 2022. REUTERS

Almost all of the remaining shortfall in U.S. labor force participation is the result of demographic and other trends that predate the COVID-19 pandemic, according to new research that suggests little chance that growth in the number of workers will help ease a tight American job market.

After accounting for factors such as population aging and changes in education that influence people's willingness to work, the study showed that U.S. labor force participation was only about 0.3 percentage points short of where it would have been without the pandemic - equivalent to around 700,000 "missing" workers.

"Much of the decline in labor force participation over the past three years should have been anticipated even absent the pandemic," Katharine Abraham, a University of Maryland economics professor and former U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics commissioner, and Lea Rendell, a University of Maryland doctoral candidate, wrote in a study released late on Wednesday in conjunction with a conference at the Brookings Institution think tank.

They attribute the remaining gap largely to fear of COVID or the lingering impact of "long COVID" illness, though they say their numbers, far below what some other studies have found, were "very much in the nature of guesstimates" given the difficulties of pinning down a precise motivation for why people left the workforce.

Still, the figures suggest a winnowing down of COVID-related impacts on the labor force, a significant conclusion for U.S. policymakers hoping labor force participation rates could rebound to pre-pandemic levels.

As of February, about 62.5% of U.S. adults were either working or looking for work, 0.8 percentage points below where it was in February of 2020, according to government figures.

It has been in a steady decline for nearly a quarter century after peaking at 67.3% in April 2000. After a dramatic drop of more than 3 percentage points at the start of the pandemic, Federal Reserve policymakers have hoped the participation rate would both recover to its early 2020 level and regain some of the same dynamics that had begun to drive it higher.

It appears instead to have stalled at just above 62%.

Even absent pandemic impacts that Abraham and Rendell said may be sidelining around 1.2 million workers, the number of open jobs, at 10.8 million, remains far above the nation's supply of potential workers.

Another drag: The average hours worked per week fell by about 36 minutes per person from January 2020 through the end of 2022, a decline they said equates to the loss of about 2.4 million people.

They said they saw no clear explanation for that in the data, but suggested it might reflect "a broad-based re-evaluation regarding the balance people with to strike between their work and personal lives."
Sanders Slams Mullin Over Remarks About His Net Worth During Senate Hearing: 'That's A Lie'

By Binitha Jacob
03/30/23 

Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-VT) and Sen. Markwayne Mullin (R-Okla.) clashed over the former's net worth during a highly anticipated hearing about Starbucks' labor practices.

The senate hearing, which lasted more than three hours, saw Sanders aggressively questioning former Starbucks CEO Howard Schultz over the coffee company's union-busting tactics.

In addition to the tense exchanges between Sanders and Schultz, the Vermont senator also got into a heated back-and-forth with Mullin.

"I take offense to the chairman pointing out that all CEOs are corrupt because they're millionaires ... It's bothering to me because, Mr. Chairman, you yourself have been very successful. Rightfully so. Glad you have," Mullin said, as quoted by The Hill. "You've been in office for 28 years and you and your wife have [amassed] a wealth of over $8 million."

"If you can be a millionaire, why can't Mr. Schultz and other CEOs be millionaires and be honest too?" the first-term Republican senator added.

While defending business leaders, Mullin also mentioned Sanders' best-selling book.

"Why is it that Mr. Schultz, who actually creates jobs — a best seller of a book isn't creating any jobs — why is it that he's corrupt and you're not? Why is it that all CEOs are corrupt because they're wealthy? And yet our chairman, who is wealthy — and I'm glad you are — you're not?" Mullin asked Sanders.

Sanders clapped back and criticized Mullin for hitting an "all-time record" of misstatements.

"You've made more misstatements in a shorter period of time than I have ever heard. Well, if I'm worth $8 million, that's good news to me," said the chairman of the Senate Committee on Health, Education, Labor and Pensions. "I'm not aware of it. That's a lie."

Mullin retorted by saying he learned about the $8 million figure from public records, prompting Sanders to say the Oklahoma senator was "probably looking at some phony right-wing internet stuff."

"Read beyond that," the committee chairman told Mullin.

Sanders has long been a critic of billionaires and wealthy CEOs in the U.S. and has also been a vocal campaigner for the union movement. He acknowledged his millionaire status a few years back, and the bulk of his wealth came from book sales.

"Today in America, we have more income and wealth inequality than we've ever had with the top 1% owning more wealth than the bottom 90%, with CEOs now making 400 times more than their workers, and with 3 people on top now owning more wealth than the bottom half of American society," Sanders said before Wednesday's hearing on Starbucks' labor practices.

Starbucks' Ex-CEO Schultz Resists 'Union Busting' Claims By U.S. Senators

Sanders vehemently questioned the company's efforts to shut down its own workers' unionization efforts during the hearing.

"Over the past 18 months Starbucks has waged the most aggressive and illegal union-busting campaign in the modern history of our country," Sanders said. "The fundamental issue we are facing today is whether we have a system of justice that applies to all — or whether billionaires and large corporations can break the law with impunity."

"Sir, Starbucks coffee company, unequivocally — and let me set the tone for this very early on — has not broken the law," replied Schultz, who currently is the chairman emeritus of Starbucks.

U.S. Senator Bernie Sanders (I-VT) speaks during a U.S. Senate Budget Committee hearing about U.S. President Joe Biden's budget plan for fiscal year 2023, on Capitol Hill in Washington, U.S., March 30, 2022. REUTERS / ELIZABETH FRANTZ
Kathmandu’s longest chariot festival honouring Lord of Rain begins

ANI
30 March, 2023 
Kathmandu's longest chariot festival honouring Lord of Rain. (Photo/ANI)

Kathmandu [Nepal], March 30 (ANI): The chariot procession of Seto Macchindranath, one of the biggest chariot festivals celebrated inside Kathmandu valley formally started on Wednesday evening as the chariot rolled towards the main city square.

Hundreds of women came onto the street to pull the chariot through the mass of devotees with the fall of the day. The three days long Seto Macchindranath Jatra or the chariot procession honouring the god of rain is also known as Jana Baha Dyah Jatra.



A skyscraping chariot of Seto Machindranath is pulled from Teendhara Pathsala, in front of the former Royal Palace and is toured around the city during these three days. Each day when the chariot reaches its terminus, a group of soldiers fires their rifles into the air.

“We (women) have been pulling the chariot of Seto Macchindranath from 2073 BS (2017 AD). Women are voluntarily participating in the procession,” Nanira Maharjan, one of the members of the Baha Dyah Jatra organizing committee told ANI.

Seto Macchindranath is regarded as the god of contemporaneous and the god of rain who brings on rain and good harvest. After celebrating this festival, it is believed that there would be plenty of rainfall and famine would stay at bay.

Also, there is a belief that illness would get cured, there won’t be a situation like that of famine and would bring prosperity upon taking part and witnessing the procession.

“We have been involved in the forefront of cultural activities for a long. Women have been pulling the chariot on Indra Jatra which has hit the record of 11 years, rising from that spirit we are continuing to come to the front. In this chariot procession of Baha Dyah Jatra (Seto Macchindranath Jatra), we have completed four years of taking lead to pull the chariot. Female members of society have come from various walks of life in order to encourage others as well, after undergoing demonstrations. The exact number of women participating in the procession can’t be determined but we are here in about 200 in numbers,” another participating woman, Shanta Prajapati told ANI.

According to myth, during the regime of Yakshya Malla, King of Kantipur, people used to bathe in a holy river and visit Swayambhunath which was believed to possess the power of sending people to heaven after death.

Once Yamraj (God of Death) came to know the power of Swayambhunath and visited the holy temple. At the time of his return from the temple, Yama was captured by King Yakshya Malla and his Guru who possessed powers and demanded immortality.

As the King and his Guru didn’t let Yama escape, he prayed to Arya Awalokiteshwor (Seto Machhindranath) to free him. God heard his prayers and immediately appeared from the water.

The god was white in colour with his eyes half-closed. He told the king to build a temple where Kalmati and Bagmati met and to organize a chariot procession so that God could visit the people and bless them with contentment and long life. Since then, people started to celebrate this 3 days long procession to honour the god. 

(ANI)

This report is auto-generated from ANI news service. ThePrint holds no responsibility for its content.

 

Italy museum director: David statue controversy stems from alarming ignorance

By Javier Romualdo

Florence, Italy, Mar 29 (EFE).- “I was startled. I was surprised and I was frightened, because it’s alarming that there’s so much ignorance,” Cecilie Hollberg, the director of the Florence museum that houses Michelangelo’s David, said of the uproar at a Florida school after an image of the famed nude statue was shown to sixth graders during an art class earlier this month.

When parents complained about the image on March 17, the board of Tallahassee Classical School, a charter school in the state capital, swiftly forced Principal Hope Carrasquilla to resign.

Hollberg, a German-born art historian who since 2015 has been the director of Galleria dell’Accademia di Firenze, one of the world’s most-visited museums, told Efe that ignorance is what led parents to interpret a “pure” and “innocent” nude completed in 1504 as pornographic.

Michelangelo’s art has been altered in the past.

His Sistine Chapel ceiling was repainted to put clothes on some of the figures, while holes are still visible in the plaster fig leaf that was used to hide David’s genitals during the Counter-Reformation.

But Hollberg said there is a key difference between then and now.

“Now very little is taught, if anything at all is taught, about our culture,” she said. “It’s prohibited in school programs everywhere. You can’t even expect a class to be able to recognize the Virgin Mary or Jesus Christ.”

In that regard, the director said what happened at one particular school in the southeastern United States “unfortunately” is part of a global phenomenon.

“We’re headed toward a very strange situation in which a minority rules over the majority. One person said the David is pornographic, and that led to an international scandal that gets politicized, and everyone gets involved,” she added.

According to a news article published last week by WCTV, a television station serving the Tallahassee, Florida, market, Carrasquilla was forced to resign after the image was shown to students between the ages of 11 and 12.

The incident in the classroom was not the only reason the principal was asked to resign, the board chair was quoted as saying in the article, which added that the art teacher who gave the lesson “was required to write an apology letter to parents but received no disciplinary action from the board.”

In the wake of the incident, Galleria dell’Accademia invited Carrasquilla to visit and Florence Mayor Dario Nardella told Efe at his office in the Palazzo Vecchio – a town hall whose entrance features a copy of Michelangelo’s David – that the former principal has been extended an invitation and would be recognized on behalf of the city.

“It’s the stupidest thing I’ve heard,” Nardella said, adding that while it is difficult to imagine a similar episode occurring in Europe, “given the times,” nothing should be ruled out.

“In this era of specialization, we risk losing sight of the values that have sustained modern civilization. And Florence is a fundamental part of that global heritage,” he added.

Hollberg, for her part, pointed out that hundreds of visitors wait their turn to see the David statue, one of Michelangelo’s masterpieces, every day of the year and at all hours of the day, and even did so during the pandemic.

“The museum was built for him,” she added.

Michelangelo’s David arrived at Galleria dell’Accademia di Firenze, a small building on Via Ricasoli, in 1872, with a view to both better safeguarding the statue and surrounding it with other works by that great High Renaissance artist.

A century and a half later, it has grown despite a lack of space and become the second-most visited art museum of its kind in Italy.

Nearly 2 million tourists visit the museum annually to admire Michelangelo’s muscular, confident David, which Italian Renaissance painter, architect and historian Giorgio Vasari described in the 16th century as the “perfect sculpture.”

 

Migrants protest on southern Mexico border after fire at migrant center

San Cristobal de Las Casas/Tapachula, Mexico, Mar 29 (EFE).- Migrants and activists protested on Wednesday in Mexico’s southern border state of Chiapas after a fire took the lives of 39 migrants at a National Migration Institute (INM) facility in Ciudad Juarez, on the US border.

In San Cristobal de Las Casas, demonstrators demanded the resignation of INM chief Francisco Garduño and a change in Mexico’s immigration policy to prevent more migrant deaths.

“For years, we’ve been demanding justice for different human rights violations. Today, in particular, we’re demanding justice over the fire and the National Migration Institute’s act of omission where it (failed) migrant comrades,” David Morales, a representative of the Southern Border Monitoring Collective, told EFE.

The migrants put up signs with phrases like “Complete closure of immigration detention sites,” “No person is illegal” and “Basta with the increase in massacres and disappearances.”

“For years, we’ve also been saying, above all starting during the pandemic, that these places have no prevention mechanisms or safety strategies and that’s just what happened,” Morales said.

The demonstrators questioned the Mexican government’s version of the incident, which blamed the migrants at the center for the fire and said that the facility was a “shelter.”

Maricela Sandybell Reyes, with the Mesoamerican Woman in Action with Migrant Peoples, said that “Mexico’s migration policies are migration policies of death, they’re … detentions and deportation of migrants.”

The collectives said that the presence of migrants in Mexico has increased in recent months after the United States announced the immediate deportation of migrants from Cuba, Haiti, Nicaragua and Venezuela under Title 42.

Another 10 organizations demonstrated in Tapachula, on Mexico’s border with Guatemala, saying that the INM’s migrant centers are a form of “torture.”

At that demonstration, some migrants escaped from a bus that was taking them to the Siglo XXI migrant center.

Arturo Antonio, a migrant from Honduras who managed to get out of the bus, said that he was in Ciudad Juarez in the past at the temporary center where the 39 migrants died.

He said that there are no beds at that center, the bathrooms are unhealthy and there’s no water or food that would allow people to remain there.

“We got out of the (bus) because they were going to lock us up and deport us to Honduras. We’re afraid of being locked up at the Siglo XXI migration center. I saw what happened in Juarez,” he said.

Olman Adonai, another migrant from Honduras, also fled the bus out of fear of being held at the center.

“That’s not a shelter, the food is no good. It’s more like a prison and so we didn’t want to go there,” he said.

Enrique Vidal, with the Fray Matias de Cordova Human Rights Center, said that the migrant centers in Mexico must be closed because it’s been verified that there are cells and people are being mistreated there.

“These installations are illegal in that they don’t recognize that depriving people of freedom must conform to international standards,” he added.

EFE –/bp

 

Australia legally requires companies to disclose gender pay gap

Sydney, Australia, Mar 30 (EFE).- Companies in Australia with 100 or more workers will be forced to reveal the gender pay gap annually, in accordance with the law approved Thursday by parliament.

“Women have waited long enough for the pay gap to close, this government will not let them wait another quarter of a century,” Finance and Women’s Minister Katy Gallagher said in a statement.

The minister spoke of several measures enacted since the current Labor government came to power in May 2022 and said that with the policy of the previous Conservative governments it would take “another 26 years to close the gender pay gap.”

The measure, one of the commitments of Prime Minister Anthony Albanese, seeks to end the wage gap for which a woman in Australia currently earns an average of 13.3 percent less than a man, that is, every week about AUD 253.50 ($ 169.31.)

Under this law, the government’s workplace gender equality agency would publish wage information provided by affected private companies.

Government did not say if it would impose sanctions on companies that do not comply with the new law.

The Australian measure is similar to those approved by the United Kingdom, in 2017, and the European Union, in 2021, which oblige companies with more than 250 employees to report the difference in the earnings of male and female staff. EFE

wat/lds

Rapidly melting Antarctic ice could impact oceans ‘for centuries’


A foraging Emperor penguin preens on snow-covered sea ice around the base of the active volcano Mount Erebus, near McMurdo Station, the largest U.S. Science base in Antarctica
 (File photo: Reuters)

AFP, Sydney
Published: 30 March ,2023:

Rapidly melting Antarctic ice threatens to dramatically slow deep-water currents in the world’s oceans, scientists say, impacting the spread of fresh water, oxygen and life-sustaining nutrients for centuries.

New modelling points to faster Antarctic ice melts driving a “substantial slowdown” of water circulation in the ocean depths if global carbon emissions remain high, researchers said in a study published in “Nature” on Wednesday.

The “overturning circulation” of waters in the deepest reaches of the oceans would slow by 40 percent by 2050 in a high-emissions scenario, according to the study, which warned of impacts that would last “for centuries to come.”

If the model holds true, the deep ocean current will be “on a trajectory that looks headed towards collapse”, said University of New South Wales (UNSW) climate professor Matthew England, who coordinated the study.

Trillions of tonnes of cold, highly salty and oxygen-rich water sink around Antarctica each year, sending a deep-water current northwards to the Indian, Pacific and Atlantic oceans, scientists say.

The greater volumes of melting ice make the Antarctic waters less dense and salty, however, slowing the deep-water circulation with consequences for climate, sea level and marine ecosystems.

“If the oceans had lungs, this would be one of them,” England said.

And if the oceans become stagnant below 4,000 meters, “this would trap nutrients in the deep ocean, reducing the nutrients available to support marine life near the ocean surface,” he added.

UNSW emeritus professor John Church, who was not involved in the study, said there were many uncertainties about the impact of a declining deep ocean circulation.

“But it seems almost certain that continuing on a high greenhouse gas emission pathway will lead to even more profound effects on the ocean and the climate system,” Church said.

“The world urgently needs to drastically reduce our emissions to get off the high-emission pathway we are currently following.”

The study team included lead author Qian Li of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and co-authors from the Australian National University and Australia’s national research organization CSIRO.

The Ecological Power Gap in Sweden

 
 MARCH 30, 2023
Facebook

Advertisement for a military submarine as a part of “nature” where defense firms are portrayed as ecological actors: A symbol of Sweden’s new brand of ecological militarism.

The Displacement of Environmentalism is a Failure to “Connect the Dots”

How did a nation whose prime minister, Olof Palme, promoted the idea of “ecocide” on the global stage become one of the premier advertising agents for green militarism? The problems are not simply external to social movements. The answer to the question tells us a lot about the failures of environmentalists to systematically accumulate power. These failures have to do with internal weaknesses and external threats from complexes of power that integrate economic, political and media capital. Let’s relate these external threats to internal organizing logic. If complexes of concentrated capital stop ecological progress, then isn’t the creation of ecological complexes based on systematic accumulation of diverse forms of capital the necessary answer? I have discussed elsewhere why this is the appropriate if not necessary response in various writings about left theories of technology, power and social change as well in other research about the advancement of green transit production.

The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change’s forthcoming report, Brad Plumer in The New York Times explains, says that the world is “likely to cross a critical threshold for global warming within the next decade, and nations will need to make an immediate and drastic shift away from fossil fuels to prevent the planet from overheating dangerously beyond that level.” A commentary on this report in Swedish radio on March 26, 2023, noted how crime and other issues have reduced the public’s focus on climate change. Novus, the poll agency, presented data on their poll regarding the most important political question for March 2023. Here they found the following: “Swedes’ most important political issue continues to be the healthcare issue (57%), followed by law and order (51%). The third most important issue also continues to be school and education (44%). Energy policy rises again now to fourth place (43%). Immigration/integration (42%) thus drops to fifth place. When it comes to the question of the environment and climate, we have divided these political issues into two so that the respondents have had to take a position on the climate separately and the environment separately. The climate (31%) ends up in eighth place – a significant decrease compared to the previous survey of 11 percentage points, and the environment (27%) drops to tenth place.”

The poll data which suggest that a down-grading of environmental politics in the face of other pressing concerns simply refers to a totality in which budget priorities, capitalism, bureaucratic/state failure, militarism and the unaccountable aspects of technocracy systematically generate problems. Most political parties fail to connect the dots, celebrate the state or the market, and fail to understand the common root of problems in the weakness or absence of democratic accountability systems and mechanisms to advance power accumulation supporting social inclusion, equitable economic development, and sustainability. These mechanisms govern the organization of energy, transportation, and the provision of basic goods like food and clothing. The best way to advance ecological concerns is to show its relationship with other issues, e.g. more money for war is less money for alternative energy, social inclusion and the capacity to reduce the fragmentation that triggers crime. Far right parties capitalize on failures in integration which they promote by supporting militarist budget diversions, weakening of immigrants’ capacities, and racist babble that dominates the airwaves.

From Militarist Dystopia to Ecological Imperialism

People who have closely followed Swedish environmental policy have noticed that there are important gaps. The divides are not just based on fuel subsidies, culture wars against wind power and military forces’ opposition to wind power. They are also based on the “social amnesia” (or displacement of memory) of key environmental thinkers as documented here.  The divide is also defined by the systemic import of goods from places like China; These imports represent ecological imperialism or ecologically unequal exchange.   Sweden lets China manufacture dirty products for it. Sweden also exports jet fighters, which increase the carbon footprint in countries such as Thailand, India and Brazil. In the past, Swedish leaders like Inga Thorsson supported disarmament and conversion to promote ecological goals as well as a more peaceful world. Today, the military industrial complex engages in poster campaigns that advertise ecological military submarines.

This ecological imperialism is a “blind spot” for some environmentalists or environmentalists who cannot see the connection between war and ecocide. If the military’s big technologies promote ecocide, just as wars precipitated them, we would expect environmentalists to fight for disarmament. Disarmament requires the conversion of military technology into civilian production. John F. Kennedy, President of the United States, supported comprehensive general and complete disarmament. Some political scientists say that this speech was simply a political move and Kennedy was not serious. This argument is irrelevant because Kennedy’s speech opened the discursive space to support disarmament, just like President Dwight D. Eisenhower’s speech about the “military industrial complex.”

Five Ways Ecological Power is Constrained

The reduction of ecological power is based on five key principles, one of which has been explained. First, a memory failure, “social amnesia“, where previous ideas are forgotten. The forgotten ideas include a discussion about “jobs blackmail” in which the advancement of ecological goals is said to threaten jobs. The problems generated by the failure to address the potential but not necessary tradeoff between ecological goals and growth is a lesson already learned by scholar activists within the United States during the 1980s. Yet, this lesson about the need to integrate ecological and economic goals has not been applied sufficiently within the ecological movement in Sweden. While the Green Party has talked about the integration, others promote a zero growth scarcity that simply provides fuel for extremist parties fueled by scarcity and austerity. Even the Green Party and others on the left have backed policies causing economic hardship for those dependent on fossil fuels or polluting measures. The purchase of electric cars is limited to those having greater financial means, while some can use such vehicles as part of a service attached to their jobs, e.g. taxi drivers.

Second, another problem is created by the institutionalization and “fossilization” of social movements’ driving force. Radical movements used to shape environmental policy, now much of this policy is mediated by politicians, corporations, NGOs and the technocracy (politics from above the machine). Some companies are pioneers, but sometimes the change is dependent upon collaboration with social movements. This coalition can bring about radical changes, e.g. partnership or connections between movements and wind power in Denmark. Basically, some movement people become co-opted by the deal-making and diplomacy required to work with Social Democrats (none of whom could bring themselves to vote against NATO, another machine supporting ecological devastation which attempts to greenwash a pathway to displace its responsibility for diverting resources needed to ecological renewal).

Third, systemic social change requires the deployment of mediating and proactive actors in religious institutions, unions, universities, study circles, community colleges, civil rights groups, and exchanges for transformative coalition politics.  Many environmental leaders cannot bring themselves to promote connections, however. The environmental movement is too white, often avoids discussions of demilitarization, and rarely addresses divestment from polluters (a key focus here must be on banks’ contributions towards climate change, but there are no visible campaigns aimed at banks). Nor can the peace movement demonstrate a connection between social exclusion and military budgets (in contrast to Martin Luther King). Social movements are serialized, where various ideas are disconnected from each other.

The fourth problem concerns a failure to organize through coalitions from below as opposed to engaging in attempts that petition the technocracy. The technocracy represents the bureaucratic decision-makers who organize policy from above. Ecological theory suggests that changes are needed from the top down as well as bottom up. Yet change from below is often absent or weak. Here are some examples: 1) Environmental organizations have a very weak presence on university campuses, concentrating efforts on a special green week, but do not showing up systematically on campuses to solicit and raise money; 2) There is no mobilization to transform universities to become more green; 3) There are no penalties for leaving lights on and failing to recycle products properly at universities; 4) There are no poster campaigns that are visible in the public sphere because it is considered old-fashioned in contrast to the Internet (yet any Internet intervention has to compete with millions of other websites) and ubiquitous practices of corporations and franchise chains; 5) there are no mass meeting mobilizations where the whole country gathers in media-mediated face-to-face gatherings tied to strategic actions, e.g. boycott grossly unecological products, or forge connections between issues. The right seized the initiative by linking ecological controls to higher gas prices and electricity shortages to the left’s abandonment of nuclear power. While the market and decay of nuclear power plants led to the abandonment of nuclear power, right-wing politicians systematically mis-represented the truth. Swedish media, particularly on television, did not forcefully attack the lies. Those paying more for gas did not want to be penalized. The problems here are the moral vacuity of the middle class when it comes to paying more for fossil fuel usage, the absence of even greater state subsidies for electric cars, and the way in which the state, media, and military championed subsidies for militarism rather than a green transition. The Social Democrats’ embrace of war and militarism and failures to capitalize on the crime issue helped sink their party in the recent parliamentary election.

The fifth problem concerns a failure to properly organize economic and media power. On the economic front, the key effort would be a campaign to invest in green entrepreneurs, innovators and cooperatives where employees democratically make decisions.  I recently attended a briefing of leading Scandinavian alternative energy companies in March (2023) and did not see many ecological organizations present. Economic democracy is a way to democratize capital for environmental work. I don’t hear green politicians talking about it, even when they are addressing a supposedly “left” audience. When it comes to media power, the basic approach is to trust that established media will do their job properly. One idea is to just appear in the media. When Dagens Nyheter invited Greta Thunberg to edit a special issue, they thought it would bring change. Nevertheless, this newspaper has advocated Swedish military commitments and NATO involvement that represent ecocidal tendencies and budget restructuring towards militarism. When debates among parliamentary leaders come about, the media demonizes the Green Party as inconvenient and a nuisance or threat for the lifestyles of the middle class. The appropriate response is direct action and protest outside television stations and other media. Instead, the movement response is a passive do-nothing, fatalism, sadness and cheerleading by green politicians whom the media isolates when not demonizing them.

Towards an Ecological Solution through Economic and Social Reconstruction

All these failures indicate that we need a new political party in Sweden to compensate for failures. A new political party could address the shortcomings of both right-wing and left-wing discourse. The survey below tries to identify the gaps in Swedish discourse. The goal is to promote system change, not climate change. The following poll illustrates the issues at stake in Swedish discourse. The incompetence of contemporary parties suggests the pathway for system change. Of course, creating a political party before economic and media power is accumulated might not be tactically wise. Yet, organizing for such a party to address the intellectual vacuum would be very wise. Ultimately, one needs a social movement and audience mobilization, that mobilizes consumption and financial power, that promotes media power and thus political power and cooperative/innovative interventions. The creation of new institutional spaces is an urgent need. Society needs to be reconstructed. The capacities of individuals to create such institutions based on their own capacities is a basic principle of economic and social reconstruction. Cooperatives are based on these principles of leveraging the power of consumption, work, finance and rent payments, etc., to build new institutional spaces for promoting social change and equitable development. Reconstruction also requires that we divest and pressure the banks, oil companies and defense firms wrecking the ecosystem as I have outlined elsewhere (ideas championed by Bill McKibben in the U.S. and Sasja Beslik in Sweden).

The Internet Needs a Country of Its Very Own

 
 MARCH 30, 2023
Facebook

Photo by Joshua Sortino

On March 23, Axios reports, Utah governor Spencer Cox signed two bills “aimed at limiting when and where anyone younger than 18 years old can interact online, and to stop companies from luring minors to certain websites.”

The laws require social media companies to “instate a curfew for minors in the state, barring them from using their accounts from 10:30pm to 6:30am” and “to give a parent or guardian access to their child’s accounts.”

Even ignoring the blatant unconstitutionality of both laws — both vis a vis the First Amendment and the reservation of the power to regulate interstate commerce to Congress, not state legislatures — making it likely they’ll be quashed in court, I have to wonder just how Utah’s Division of Consumer Protection intends to enforce these incredibly dumb ideas.

The bills are titled “Social Media Regulation Amendments,” but if Utah has truth in advertising laws they really should be titled “Amendments to Encourage Minors to Lie About Their Age and Learn to Use Virtual Private Networks to Hide Their Locations,” which pretty much describes the effect they’ll have if there’s any real attempt to enforce them.

Unfortunately, Congress also seems to be tip-toeing through the tulips of “social media regulation” in similar ways, from prospective app bans (if you think a successful TikTok ban would be the last such action, think again) to various measures for suppressing “disinformation” (read: Stuff politicians don’t want you to see).

And it’s not just an American thing. Globally, various regimes (including supposed “democracies” like India) increasingly arrogate to themselves the power to just shut down the Internet any time they find public communication inconvenient.

While there are workarounds for all this nonsense, and while each such episode encourages more people to learn about those workarounds, what the Internet really needs is a country of its very own.

It doesn’t necessarily have to be a NEW country. Any existing regime with robust telecommunications capabilities — perhaps a Caribbean or Pacific island nation? — will do, if it’s willing to put enforceable “separation of Internet and state” provisions in its constitution, set a nice low tax rate, and watch the revenues roll in as existing tech giants and ambitious start-ups abandon nosier and costlier jurisdictions (and those jurisdictions’ regulations).

Users would take care of the rest.

Short of shutting down Internet access entirely — and likely finding themselves overthrown — the busybodies couldn’t do much about it.

Get this done, Big Tech.

Thomas L. Knapp is director and senior news analyst at the William Lloyd Garrison Center for Libertarian Advocacy Journalism (thegarrisoncenter.org). He lives and works in north central Florida.