Monday, January 02, 2023

ABOLISH THE DEATH PENALTY
Missouri inmate may be 1st openly transgender woman executed in U.S.


There is no known case of an openly transgender inmate being executed in the U.S. before, according to the anti-execution Death Penalty Information Center. 
Photo by Getty Images

By —Jim Salter, Associated Press
Published on Jan 2, 2023 

ST. LOUIS (AP) — Unless Missouri Gov. Mike Parson grants clemency, Amber McLaughlin, 49, will become the first openly transgender woman executed in the U.S. She is scheduled to die by injection Tuesday for killing a former girlfriend in 2003.

McLaughlin’s attorney, Larry Komp, said there are no court appeals pending.

READ MORE: State-level anti-transgender legislation reverberates on Day of Remembrance

The clemency request focuses on several issues, including McLaughlin’s traumatic childhood and mental health issues, which the jury never heard in her trial. According to the clemency petition, a foster parent rubbed feces in her face when she was a toddler and her adoptive father used a stun gun on her. It says she suffers from depression and has attempted suicide multiple times.

The petition also includes reports citing a diagnosis of gender dysphoria, a condition that causes anguish and other symptoms as a result of a disparity between a person’s gender identity and their assigned sex at birth.

“We think Amber has demonstrated incredible courage because I can tell you there’s a lot of hate when it comes to that issue,” her attorney, Larry Komp, said Monday. But, he said, McLaughlin’s sexual identity is “not the main focus” of the clemency request.

Parson’s spokesperson, Kelli Jones, said the review process for the clemency request is still underway.

There is no known case of an openly transgender inmate being executed in the U.S. before, according to the anti-execution Death Penalty Information Center. A friend in prison says she saw McLaughlin’s personality blossom during her gender transition.

Before transitioning, McLaughlin was in a relationship with girlfriend Beverly Guenther. McLaughlin would show up at the suburban St. Louis office where the 45-year-old Guenther worked, sometimes hiding inside the building, according to court records. Guenther obtained a restraining order, and police officers occasionally escorted her to her car after work.

Guenther’s neighbors called the police the night of Nov. 20, 2003, when she failed to return home. Officers went to the office building, where they found a broken knife handle near her car and a trail of blood. A day later, McLaughlin led police to a location near the Mississippi River in St. Louis, where the body had been dumped.

McLaughlin was convicted of first-degree murder in 2006. A judge sentenced McLaughlin to death after a jury deadlocked on the sentence. A court in 2016 ordered a new sentencing hearing, but a federal appeals court panel reinstated the death penalty in 2021.

READ MORE: Virginia governor seeks to roll back transgender student accommodations

One person who knew Amber before she transitioned is Jessica Hicklin, 43, who spent 26 years in prison for a drug-related killing in western Missouri in 1995. She was 16. Because of her age when the crime occurred, she was granted release in January 2022.

Hicklin, 43, began transitioning while in prison and in 2016 sued the Missouri Department of Corrections, challenging a policy that prohibited hormone therapy for inmates who weren’t receiving it before being incarcerated. She won the lawsuit in 2018 and became a mentor to other transgender inmates, including McLaughlin.

Though imprisoned together for around a decade, Hicklin said McLaughlin was so shy they rarely interacted. But as McLaughlin began transitioning about three years ago, she turned to Hicklin for guidance on issues such as mental health counseling and getting help to ensure her safety inside a male-dominated maximum-security prison.

“There’s always paperwork and bureaucracy, so I spent time helping her learn to file the right things and talk to the right people,” Hicklin said.

In the process, a friendship developed.

“We would sit down once a week and have what I referred to as girl talk,” Hicklin said. “She always had a smile and a dad joke. If you ever talked to her, it was always with the dad jokes.”

They also discussed the challenges a transgender inmate faces in a male prison — things like obtaining feminine items, dealing with rude comments, and staying safe.

READ MORE: Report says at least 32 transgender people were killed in the U.S. in 2022

McLaughlin still had insecurities, especially about her well-being, Hicklin said.

“Definitely a vulnerable person,” Hicklin said. “Definitely afraid of being assaulted or victimized, which is more common for trans folks in Department of Corrections.”

The only woman ever executed in Missouri was Bonnie B. Heady, put to death on Dec. 18, 1953, for kidnapping and killing a 6-year-old boy. Heady was executed in the gas chamber, side by side with the other kidnapper and killer, Carl Austin Hall.

Nationally, 18 people were executed in 2022, including two in Missouri. Kevin Johnson, 37, was put to death on Nov. 29 for the ambush killing of a Kirkwood, Missouri, police officer. Carmen Deck was executed in May for killing James and Zelma Long during a robbery at their home in De Soto, Missouri.

Another Missouri inmate, Leonard Taylor, is scheduled to die on Feb. 7 for killing his girlfriend and her three young children.


Related

U.S. returns looted 2,500-year-old sarcophagus to Egypt

Jan 2, 2023 


By —Associated Press

CAIRO (AP) — An ancient wooden sarcophagus that was featured at the Houston Museum of Natural Sciences was returned to Egypt after U.S. authorities determined it was looted years ago, Egyptian officials said Monday.

The repatriation is part of the Egyptian government’s efforts to stop the trafficking of its stolen antiquities. In 2021, authorities in Cairo succeeded in getting 5,300 stolen artifacts returned to Egypt from across the world.

WATCH: Museum works to repatriate artifacts looted from West Africa

Mostafa Waziri, the top official at the Supreme Council of Antiquities, said the sarcophagus dates back to the Late Dynastic Period of ancient Egypt, an era that spanned the last of the Pharaonic rulers from 664 B.C. until Alexander the Great’s campaign in 332 B.C.

The sarcophagus, almost 3 meters (9.5 feet) tall with a brightly painted top surface, may have belonged to an ancient priest named Ankhenmaat, though some of the inscriptions on it have been erased, Waziri said.

It was symbolically handed over at a ceremony Monday in Cairo by Daniel Rubinstein, the U.S. chargĂ© d’affaires in Egypt.

READ MORE: Looted Gilgamesh tablet, one of world’s oldest surviving works of literature, returns to Iraq

The handover came more than three months after the Manhattan District Attorney’s Office determined the sarcophagus was looted from Abu Sir Necropolis, north of Cairo. It was smuggled through Germany into the United States in 2008, according to Manhattan District Attorney Alvin L. Bragg.

“This stunning coffin was trafficked by a well-organized network that has looted countless antiquities from the region,” Bragg said at the time. “We are pleased that this object will be returned to Egypt, where it rightfully belongs.”

Bragg said the same network had smuggled a gilded coffin out of Egypt that was featured at New York’s Metropolitan Museum. Met bought the piece from a Paris art dealer in 2017 for about $4 million. It was returned to Egypt in 2019.
With shocking bias, ‘NYT’ treats ‘deadliest year since ’05’ as a Palestinian numbers game
PALESTINIAN ARTISTS PAINT A MURAL IN HONOUR OF SLAIN AL-JAZEERA JOURNALIST SHIREEN ABU AKLEH IN GAZA CITY A DAY AFTER SHE WAS KILLED. MAY 12, 2022. ABU AKLEH WAS AN AMERICAN CITIZEN BUT THE NEW YORK TIMES LEFT HER OUT OF A REPORT ON THE “DEADLIEST YEAR” FOR PALESTINIANS IN THE WEST BANK SINCE 2005. PHOTO BY ASHRAF AMRA (C) APA IMAGES.

Here’s a shocking and disgusting example of how the New York Times slants its coverage of Israel’s occupation of West Bank Palestine. You only have to contrast the Times with the Washington Post to see just how offensive the New York paper is.

First, the actual news. The Washington Post headline got straight to the point:

2022 was deadliest year for West Bank Palestinians in nearly two decades

The Post continued by warning that “The surging violence . . . could escalate further as Israel’s most far-right government, which includes Jewish supremacists who have incited violence against Palestinians, is sworn in. . .”

Over to the New York Times. Even long-time observers of how the paper distorts the Israel/Palestine news will be astonished, even speechless, at how it twisted the year-end statistics of Palestinian deaths.

The article opens with a 4-paragraph anecdote about how two Palestinian militant groups tried to claim 27-year-old Muhammad Abu Naise as a member after Israeli troops had killed him. One quick paragraph summarized the year-end West Bank death statistics– “the deadliest ‌for Palestinians in the Israeli-occupied West Bank since 2005” — and then the long report promptly turned right back to its central theme:

The high Palestinian death toll has cast a fresh light on the practice of armed and political Palestinian groups claiming as members or publicly honoring all those killed by Israel, one that blurs the distinction between civilians and armed fighters. It is a tradition that some [Palestinian] families object to, saying they don’t want loved ones used for political purposes.

This is a jaw-dropper. You would think that, if anything, “the high Palestinian death toll” would be “casting a fresh light” on why Israeli soldiers are killing so many more of them, the highest number since 2005. But the Times report, by Raja Abdulrahim and Hiba Yazbek, continues in the same spirit, focusing on the Palestinian resistance organizations and their alleged questionable conduct after Israel kills Palestinians. This is a classic blaming the victim ploy.

By contrast, the Washington Post reports truthfully, and does include the point of view from the Israeli side, in the third paragraph. Post reporter Miriam Berger says,

Palestinian and Israeli human rights groups and U.N. experts have blamed the bloodshed on Israel’s excessive use of force and open-fire rules during near-daily military operations, as well as rising assaults by settlers in the West Bank. Israel said its forces are responding to fatal attacks on Israelis by Palestinian militants, which have also spiked this year.

The Post also reminds readers that Israelis this year killed 2 U.S. citizens — journalist Shireen Abu Akleh and Omar Assad. Neither appears in the Times account.

Finally, the Post warns that the West Bank violence will almost certainly get worse. “Far-right politician Itamar Ben-Gvir,” who just became Israel’s minister of national security, “has proposed giving police and soldiers wider latitude to use live ammunition and shielding them from criminal prosecution for killing or injuring Palestinians.”

The new security minister Ben-Gvir goes unmentioned in the New York Times article.

The abysmal New York Times article is more than just an accidental failure. You have to conclude that:

The Times realized it had to report the year-end casualty statistics.

So it looked for a way to shift attention away from the major perpetrators — the Israeli military and Jewish settler/colonists — and put it on the Palestinians.
LATEST BODY COUNT
Israeli army kills 2 Palestinians in West Bank confrontation

today


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Mourners carry the bodies of Samer Houshiyeh, 21, left, and Fouad Abed, 25, during their funeral in the West Bank city of Jenin, Monday, Jan. 2, 2023. The two men were killed in the village of Kafr Dan near the northern city of Jenin. The Israeli military said it entered Kafr Dan late Sunday to demolish the houses of two Palestinian gunmen who killed an Israeli soldier during a firefight in September. The military said troops came under heavy fire and fired back at the shooters. (AP Photo/Nasser Nasser)

RAMALLAH, West Bank (AP) — Israeli forces killed two Palestinians, including a man claimed by an armed group as a member, during a confrontation that erupted early Monday when troops entered a Palestinian village in the occupied West Bank, Palestinian health officials said.

The two men were killed in the village of Kafr Dan near the northern city of Jenin. The Israeli military said it entered Kafr Dan late Sunday to demolish the houses of two Palestinian gunmen who killed an Israeli soldier during a firefight in September. The military said troops came under heavy fire and fired back at the shooters.

It was the latest bloodshed in the region that has seen Israeli-Palestinian tensions surge for months. On Monday, the Israeli rights group B’Tselem said 2022 was the deadliest year for Palestinians since 2004, a period of intense violence that came during a Palestinian uprising.

The Palestinian Health Ministry identified those killed as Samer Houshiyeh, 21, and Fouad Abed, 25. Houshiyeh was shot several times in the chest, according to Samer Attiyeh, the director of the Ibn Sina Hosipital in Jenin. Attiyeh initially said Abed was 17, but the ministry later gave his age as 25.

An armed group, the Al Aqsa Martyrs’ Brigades, later claimed Houshiyeh as a member. The group, an offshoot of Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas’ Fatah party, published an older photo in which Houshiyeh had posed with rifles. Video on social media showed his body wrapped with the armed group’s flag as his mother and other mourners bid farewell.

It was not immediately clear whether the second Palestinian killed was also affiliated with a militant group.

Israel says it demolishes the homes of militants as a way to deter potential attackers. Critics say the tactic amounts to collective punishment.

The Israeli military has been conducting near-daily raids into Palestinian cities and towns since a spate of Palestinian attacks against Israelis killed 19 last spring.

Nearly 150 Palestinians were killed by Israeli fire in the West Bank and east Jerusalem last year, according to B’Tselem’s figures, making 2022 the deadliest since 2004, when 197 Palestinians were killed. A fresh wave of attacks killed at least another nine Israelis in the fall. The Israeli army says most of the Palestinians killed have been militants. But stone-throwing youths protesting the incursions and others not involved in confrontations have also been killed.

Israel says the raids are meant to dismantle militant networks and thwart future attacks. The Palestinians see them as further entrenchment of Israel’s 55-year, open-ended occupation of the West Bank.

Israel captured the West Bank, along with east Jerusalem and the Gaza Strip, in the 1967 Mideast war and the Palestinians seek those territories for a future state.


With start of new year, Israel kills 2 Palestinians, demolishes 2 homes

Israel has already killed two Palestinians and demolished two homes in 2023, signaling that 'Operation Break the Wave' is far from over.

BY MARIAM BARGHOUTI
MOURNERS ATTEND THE FUNERAL OF MOHAMMAD HOSHIEH AND FUAD ABED WHO WERE KILLED BY ISRAELI FORCES DURING A RAID, IN THE WEST BANK CITY OF JENIN ON JANUARY 2, 2023. 
(PHOTO: BY AHMED IBRAHIM/APA IMAGES)

On Monday morning, January 2, Israeli military forces invaded the town of Kufr Dan and killed Foad Mahmoud Abed, 18, and Mohammad Samer Hosheyeh, 22. Three others were injured, with one critically wounded in the chest.

Abed and Hosheyh were killed during armed confrontations with Israeli soldiers who invaded Kufr Dan with the purpose of punitively demolishing the homes of Abed al-Rahman Abed, 22, and Ahmad Abed, 23, two Palestinians who had carried out the Jalameh checkpoint operation in September of last year that killed one Israeli soldier. Three apartments were destroyed, displacing 13 people.
‘Break the Wave’ continues

Foad Abed is the first Palestinian killed in Jenin this year. Last year was one of the deadliest years in the West Bank since 2005, as Israeli forces and settlers killed 231 Palestinians through extrajudicial assassinations and home invasions.

Israeli forces invaded the town around midnight where armed confrontation with youth ensued. By 3:00 a.m, Israeli soldiers had shot and killed two Palestinians. Hosheyeh was killed with a bullet to the chest while Abed was killed with several bullets to his abdomen and thigh.

Hosheyeh’s mother made her way through a group of men just before the call for dawn prayers to carry the body of her slain son on her shoulders.

In a statement, the Israeli military spokesperson said that “the IDF is currently conducting a military activity in Kufr Dan in the district of Jenin to demolish the homes of those that clashed with soldiers near the Jalamah crossing and in which an army commander was killed on September 14, 2022.”

On September 14 of last year, Ahmad and Abed al-Rahman shot at the military checkpoint of Al-Jalameh, west of Jenin, killing the deputy commander of the Nahal Brigade’s Special Reconnaissance Unit, Major Bar Falach, 30.
Homes punitively demolished

At approximately 12:00 a.m. on January 2, Israeli jeeps raided Kufr Dan with the purpose of demolishing two Palestinian homes as a measure of collective punishment against the families of the two men who carried out the Jalameh checkpoint operation.

After killing the two martyrs at the beginning of this year, the Israeli military continued its demolition mission of the family home of Ahmad Abed, expelling the family members before the demolition.

According to local journalists in Jenin, at approximately 8:50 a.m., the second home, belonging to the family of Abed al-Rahman Abed, was also forcibly evacuated at gun-point and detonated, reducing it to a pile of rubble. The family was forced outside of the house without enough clothes for the cold.

Punitive home demolitions as a measure of collective punishment has been practiced by the Israeli state since the 1980s. Illegal under international law, this practice was first employed against Palestinians by the British during its colonial Mandate over Palestine.

New Israeli government will finally produce crisis in U.S. Jewish support

BY PHILIP WEISS
28 OCTOBER 2022, ISRAEL, JERUSALEM: RIGHT-WING ISRAELI POLITICIAN ITAMAR BEN GVIR, INTERACTS WITH SUPPORTER DURING A CAMPAIGN AT THE JERUSALEM MARKET, AHEAD OF THE GENERAL ELECTIONS SCHEDULED FOR THE FIRST OF NOVEMBER 2022. 
(CREDIT IMAGE: ILIA YEFIMOVICH/DPA VIA ZUMA PRESS/APAIMAGES)

The news from Israel is that the job of explaining Israel to America — hasbara, Hebrew for propaganda– just got a lot harder.

That’s because Israel swore in a government filled with messianic rightwing Zionists, two of them convicted criminals, and newly-returned prime minister Netanyahu, himself on trial for taking bribes, declared the new government’s basic principle is, “The Jewish people have an exclusive and unquestionable right to all areas of the Land of Israel,” including “Judea and Samaria.” Palestinians– you’re just interlopers here.

Israel’s friends here are struggling with the hasbara job. Stay calm; Netanyahu will control the extremists, some assure us. While Haaretz reports that leading American pro-Israel groups are trying to maintain a business-as-usual approach but are worried about what will shake loose. “Our love and commitment to the Jewish state transcends any one government, any one point in time, and any particular policy or statement,” the Jewish Federations said– in expressing “concerns.” While Israel Policy Forum fretted the extremists in the government will “stress U.S.-Israel relations” and “create rifts with North American Jewry.” Today Americans for Peace Now held a protest at the Israeli embassy.

Sadly, this radical government is sure to hurt a lot of people, but the good news is that it will shake up American Jewry by exposing a terrible truth– tearing off the mask. It is not a departure from Israeli policies, it is a crystallization of them. For decades, Israeli governments have built more Jewish colonies in the West Bank in the name of the “Jewish people,” and killed Palestinians who resist that process (231 this year).

Serious people must acknowledge that the new government’s policies are no departure. Just look at former Prime Minister Yair Lapid’s farewell speech, two days ago, bragging of rightwing achievements in the last year, from refusing to allow the U.S. to reopen a consulate serving Palestinians in Jerusalem, to sending a “record number of Jews… up to the Temple Mount.”

The simple reason the tough Jewish expansionists have been replaced by fascistic Jewish expansionists is that the issue of Palestinian freedom is the most important problem in Israeli society, and no one has ever figured out a good answer, and the problem just gets worse, so Israelis demand more security. Even as its standard of living surpasses Germany, the UK, and France.

Netanyahu was able return to power on the backs of criminals because a shocking number of Israelis including many young Jews found the “nice” Bennett-Lapid government– beloved by the Biden administration as it killed 231 Palestinians– to be too soft on Palestinians. So they voted for the fascistic Religious Zionism party, giving them 14 seats, and banished the leftwing Zionist Meretz party, which lately had six seats, from the parliament.

There’s a clear logic to Israel getting more extremist. Israel is defiantly a Jewish state; and Palestinians will always demand equal rights. Even leftwingers who believe in a Jewish state are doomed to racism. As a Laborite politician (David Ben-Simon) said on i24 News two days ago, “The Palestinians are making life impossible for us.”

Marilyn Neimark explained the logic nine years ago: Israel just keeps getting worse because of its constitution: Jewish hegemony masquerading as democracy.

Maybe it’s better to ask, over these 65 years has Israel been tracing an arc that bends toward justice, speaking of Martin Luther King, of course? If the answer is No, could it be because no matter the potential merits and good will of the founding plan, the effort to establish and sustain the Jewish character of the intended Jewish democracy doomed the democratic character from the start, and it’s been spiraling downward ever since? For whatever the starting point was, I think we mostly agree that Israel has become less democratic in recent years, and every time the separation between religion and state dwindles, free speech is curtailed, or minority rights are trampled, it is … in the name of preserving the state’s Jewish character– that is, Jewish hegemony.

Neimark spoke at a progressive panel at an alternative New York synagogue in 2013, in a landmark moment in the American Jewish awakening to what Zionism has done to Israel and what it’s done to American Jews.

Today we’re at another landmark in that process. Israel’s new racist/fascistic government has soured even Tom (“Israel had me at hello”) Friedman. Jeffrey Goldberg is long gone. Eric Alterman is backing away.

Friedman and Goldberg had a serious job. They explained away apartheid and massacres by telling Americans how unreliable Palestinians are and what a bad neighborhood Israel is in. “How do you explain that the most liberal and highly educated group in America — Jews — have supported apartheid?” John Mearsheimer asked me years ago. The lies we told ourselves worked on us because of the inter-generational trauma of the Holocaust. Traumatized by the genocide of a third of our population, Jews justified any action in the name of security. Hitler’s posthumous victory was reducing Jews to one question, Is it good for the Jews? (Norman Mailer’s line).

The new Israeli government is a shock to that system. Its nakedly fascistic politics are a wakeup call to American Jews. We are enabling apartheid. We are the political lifeline for racist zealots in Israel who are going to hurt a lot more Palestinians this year. Supporting them goes against Jewish traditions. Why, J Street even said so last month. And some liberal Zionists are finally endorsing sanctions against ceaseless, illegal Israeli expansionism.

The new Israeli government will bring the U.S. Jewish community to the tipping point, and the project of explaining will fail this year. And American Jews will finally turn on Israel as an apartheid state whose indifference to human rights is actually a danger to Jews everywhere.
IT'S ABOUT SOMALILAND
America Redeploys Troops To Somalia After Withdrawing Them During Trump’s Era



The United States of America has redeployed 500 troops to Somalia to help in the fight against militant Islamists.

The redeployment came after former US President Donald Trump ordered the withdrawal of the troops in December 2020 following years of strained relations with President Hassan Sheikh Mohamud’s predecessor Mohamed Abdullahi Mohamed “Farmajo” who was voted out of office by Somalia’s lawmakers.

The US considered Mohamed Abdullahi Mohamed “Farmajo” to be a failure both in terms of governance and the campaign against Islamist militant groups al-Shabab and the much smaller Somali branch of the Islamic State (IS) group.

The US Africa Command (Africom) said it will maintain a “small, persistent US military presence” in Somalia.

This comes as Somalis have experienced a surge of Islamist attacks since the departure of U.S. troops.

The number of al-Shabab attacks rose from 1 771 to 2 072 in the year following the US pull-out, according to The Africa Centre for Strategic Studies.

Last month, security officials said that about 450 al-Shabab fighters attacked an African Union base in southern Somalia, killing at least 40 Burundian soldiers.

United Nations experts have described al-Shabab as al-Qaeda’s most powerful and wealthy affiliate. They estimate it has as many as 12 000 fighters and the ability to raise a monthly revenue of about $10m (£8m).

A previous campaign of US air strikes disrupted the group’s activities, preventing senior militants from moving around and making it more difficult for al-Shabab infantry to carry out big attacks.

Some are sceptical about the return of the US military, highlighting that ordinary people have become victims of US drone attacks.

The UAE, Qatar, the UK, the European Union, Eritrea, Uganda, Kenya, Djibouti and others have also been involved.

This has led to a lack of coordination within the security forces. In some cases, troops trained by a particular country become aligned with a particular political group.

In April 2021, fierce fighting erupted between different factions of the security forces in Mogadishu sparking fears of a return to the catastrophic civil war of the 1990s.

Rumour is rife in Somaliland that America is planning to build a military base in Berbera.

There are plenty of reasons for the US to be interested in Somaliland, a territory that is in a highly strategic location, according to The Star.

i). Its 800km (500-mile) coastline stretches along one of the world’s busiest shipping routes.

ii). Its neighbour, Djibouti, is “full” offoreign military bases, including Chinese and American ones.


iii). Berbera offers an attractive alternative as it is close to some of the world’s most unstable places, including Yemen, Somalia and Ethiopia, which has been a key US ally in the “War on Terror”.

Meanwhile, Somalia regards Somaliland as an integral part of Somalia which means the U.S. has to be cautious.
Planning Mass Protest at UK Parliament, Extinction Rebellion Halts Disruptive Tactics

The group's U.K. arm announced a New Year's resolution: leaving "the locks, glue, and paint behind" to organize a demonstration of 100,000 people and pressure the government to take climate action.



A demonstrator holds a sign during an Extinction Rebellion action in Melbourne, Australia.

(Photo: julian meehan/flickr/cc)

JULIA CONLEY
Jan 02, 2023

In preparation for a nonviolent mass direct action planned for April that Extinction Rebellion says will be "impossible" for policymakers to ignore, the global climate movement's United Kingdom arm on Sunday announced a resolution for the new year: temporarily ending its headline-grabbing, disruptive tactics including gluing protesters to government buildings and rush-hour trains and blocking traffic to draw attention to the climate crisis.

The U.K. group will no longer use "public disruption as a primary tactic," saying in a statement that "what's needed now most is to disrupt the abuse of power and imbalance, to bring about a transition to a fair society that works together to end the fossil fuel era."

"In a time when speaking out and taking action are criminalized, building collective power, strengthening in number, and thriving through bridge-building is a radical act."

"This year, we prioritize attendance over arrest and relationships over roadblocks, as we stand together and become impossible to ignore," Extinction Rebellion U.K. (XRUK) said.

The group announced the shift away from public disruption as it prepared for a mass protest called "The Big One," in which it's planning to mobilize 100,000 people to surround the Houses of Parliament in London on April 21 and demand climate action and an end to the government's support of the fossil fuel industry.

Instead of orchestrating actions in which demonstrators disrupt daily life, the group said, XRUK is urging supporters to spend the 100 days leading up to The Big One "holding millions of conversations with friends, family, colleagues, and strangers" to spread the word about the action as organizers work to partner with other environmental campaigns.

"A powerful targeted marketing campaign across all channels will reach new audiences with an accessible, inclusive, and easy-to-understand invitation while simultaneously bringing in funds," said XRUK.

The group's shift away from disruptive tactics follows the introduction of new protest restrictions in the U.K. The Police, Crime, Sentencing and Courts Act made it an offense to "intentionally or recklessly [cause] public nuisance" and allowed police chiefs to impose start and finish times for demonstrations and set noise limits. A new bill proposed in October by the Conservative government would make "interference with key national infrastructure" punishable by imprisonment.

"In a time when speaking out and taking action are criminalized, building collective power, strengthening in number, and thriving through bridge-building is a radical act," said the organization.

While XRUK is targeting dialogue between communities and direct nonviolent pressure on policymakers—choosing 100,000 people for the April 21 protest because that is the number of signatories needed for a petition to force Parliament to address a demand—groups such as Just Stop Oil have recently drawn attention to their disruptive tactics, vandalizing works of art such as Vincent Van Gogh's "Flowers" at London's National Gallery.

XRUK argued in its statement Sunday that widespread anger in the U.K. over the cost of living makes it all the more likely that members of the public will be open to assembling at Parliament to voice their discontent with a government that is continuing to issue oil and gas licenses in the North Sea and subsidize fossil fuel companies, despite dire warnings about continued oil and gas extraction.

"This is a moment of huge potential," said XRUK. "Word on the streets is that the cost-of-living crisis is the price of climate inaction. The government's unlawful plans have never been so transparently flawed and widely understood... Worsening climate conditions are already impacting global food supplies and that will only further exacerbate the cost-of-living crisis, meaning that change is not only necessary, it is inevitable."

By leaving "the locks, glue, and paint behind" and assembling in large numbers at Parliament Square for as long as they are able, supporters of the protest "will create a positive, irreversible, societal tipping point," XRUK added.

"Recent history is full of examples of the power of people power—of your power. Here are just a few:Epifanio de los Santos Avenue, Manila, February 1986;Wenceslas Square, Prague, November 1989;Maidan Square, Kyiv, November 2004," said the group. "All that's missing from the list is Parliament Square, London, April 2023."
New York City nurses, hospitals resume contract talks as possible strike looms


By —Associated Press
Health Jan 2, 2023

NEW YORK (AP) — A possible strike by thousands of New York City nurses loomed Monday even as nurses at one hospital reached a tentative agreement hours before their contract was set to expire.

The pact affecting 4,000 nurses at NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital awaits ratification.

WATCH: Why 15,000 nurses went on strike in Minnesota

Contract talks between nurses and seven other hospitals will resume this week to avert a strike by 12,000 other nurses as early as next Monday, Jan. 9. Their contracts expired Tuesday.

“Striking is always a last resort, but nurses say they are prepared to strike if hospital administration gives them no other option to protect their patients and their practice,” the New York State Nurses Association said in a statement over the weekend.

The union issued a 10-day notice that it intends to strike if an agreement isn’t reached. The advance notice is required by law to give hospitals to arrange for alternative staffing.

The nurses have been calling for what they described as safe staffing levels, fair wages, no cuts to their health coverage, and health and safety protections in light of the “tripledemic” of COVID-19, RSV and flu


Union nurses with the New York State Nurses Association (NYSNA) walk the picket line after walking out on strike outside Montefiore New Rochelle Hospital in New Rochelle, New York, U.S., December 1, 2020. REUTERS/Mike Segar.

They also want community benefits such as funding programs to recruit and train nurses from within the communities they serve.

The seven hospitals where the nurses could strike include Montefiore, Mount Sinai Hospital, Mount Sinai Morningside and West, Maimonides, BronxCare, Richmond University Medical Center, and Flushing Hospital Medical Center.

Representatives of several hospitals said Friday they remained hopeful contract agreements will be reached before a strike but said they are prepared to bring in outside workers as a precaution as they face high patient volume because of the triple health threats.

The union congratulated its members at NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital on reaching a tentative agreement on what it called “a fair contract” hours before their contract expired.

The hospital said it was pleased to have reached a tentative agreement.

“With this agreement, which is still subject to ratification by the nurses, we are making a significant investment in our outstanding nursing team and ensuring that we can continue to deliver the highest level of care to our patients,” the hospital said in a statement.

Home Depot Founder ‘Worried About Capitalism’

Home Depot founder Bernie Marcus told the Financial Times that he’s “worried about capitalism.”

Thanks to “socialism”, he says, “nobody works. Nobody gives a damn. ‘Just give it to me. Send me money. I don’t want to work — I’m too lazy, I’m too fat, I’m too stupid.’”



Republicans to End Unionizing Congressional Offices

“Republicans are set to end Capitol Hill’s short-lived experiment with allowing staffers to unionize,” Semafor reports.

“Last year, House Democrats voted to let congressional offices organize and collectively bargain for the first time, despite some nagging logistical questions about how it’d all work. But that measure will be revoked under that rules package the GOP is getting ready to introduce when it takes over this week; none of the offices that voted to unionize last year will be recognized in the new House.”