Sunday, May 07, 2023

The Exploitation Of Hollywood’s Writers Is Just Another Symptom Of Digital Feudalism
LOS ANGELES, CA - MAY 02: People picket outside of FOX Studios on the first day of the Hollywood writers strike on May 2, 2023 in Los Angeles. Scripted TV series, late-night talk shows, film and streaming productions.

By David Arditi
May 6, 2023
This article is part of TPM Cafe, TPM’s home for opinion and news analysis. It was originally published at The Conversation.

The current Hollywood writers strike has drawn international attention to the plight of TV and film writers in the streaming era.

Much has been made of television’s golden age, during which streaming platforms have offered audiences an abundance of well-written, highly produced television shows, often called “prestige TV.”

Whereas older television shows tended to be formulaic sitcoms or crime dramas, newer shows more closely mimic the serialized novels of the 19th century, with cliff-hangers that encourage binge-watching.

But not everyone in the industry has equally reaped the rewards. While there are certainly more writing jobs to go around, these roles often pay less and place writers on short-order contracts.

Furthermore, the unyielding demand for content, as more and more platforms compete for subscriptions, has trapped writers in what I call “digital feudalism.”

Echoes from medieval Europe

I use the phrase digital feudalism because today’s version of capitalism increasingly mirrors the transition from feudalism to capitalism in 16th-century England.

Beginning in the 16th century, the English Parliament passed a number of enclosure acts, which abolished common land and defined it as private property that the government reallocated to the elites.

These laws kicked peasants, known as serfs, off the land where they had lived and worked for generations. Many of them ended up heading to cities in order to find work. The ensuing oversupply of workers drove down wages, and many ex-serfs couldn’t find jobs or housing, becoming vagabonds.

In other words, serfs lost stability in their everyday lives as they were thrust into a new economic system.

Precarity, debt and a lack of stability are again the dominant themes in today’s digital economy.

The gig economy, in which people can juggle two or three part-time roles to make ends meet, is largely to blame. These jobs usually don’t offer full-time benefits, livable wages or job security. The roles – whether they’re working as an Uber driver, delivering food for DoorDash or cleaning homes through Task Rabbit – are often managed through digital platforms owned by powerful corporations that give their workers a pittance in exchange for their labor.

The serfs of Hollywood


So, why are TV writers feeling the pinch of digital feudalism if this is the golden age of television?

Streaming platforms like Netflix, Hulu and HBO Max brought about the golden age. But the gold prospecting has slowed, as the number of prestige TV shows seems to have hit a saturation point.

Starting in the 2010s, streaming platforms began hiring more and more writers. To lure customers, platforms needed quality content – otherwise, viewers wouldn’t continue paying the US$8 to $15 monthly cost of a subscription.

Platforms couldn’t market their content like network sitcoms, so they had to constantly develop new ideas for shows. Large stables of creative writers ended up forming the core of studio strategy.

Yet, as TV writers flocked to Los Angeles and New York City, entertainment companies took a page from the gig economy playbook in ways that worked against writers’ livelihoods.

The contracts were short and the pay lower. The formats of streaming shows – more one-off miniseries rather than sitcoms that could run for as long as a decade – rarely guaranteed work for any lengthy period of time.

Furthermore, streaming shows tend to have fewer episodes per season, with larger gaps between seasons, known as “short order.” An eight-episode season of a popular show that has a two-year gap between seasons leaves TV writers scrambling to figure out ways to pay the bills in between seasons.

Then came COVID-19. While people were stuck at home binge-watching TV, it became difficult to produce television. There was a major backlog in TV production because of the difficulties shooting TV shows in studios while complying with COVID-19 health regulations.

This created a major slowdown in TV production. At the height of the pandemic, TV studios closed to limit the number of people inside. With the slowdown of production, there wasn’t the demand for writers. As a result, many of the TV writers who had recently moved to Log Angeles and other big cities with high costs of living were faced with challenges finding jobs.

Core demands

Writers want to fix this by raising their minimum wage; they want writers for streaming platforms to receive the same royalties that theatrical film writers get; and they want to end the practice of mini rooms, where small groups of writers hash out scripts but often receive less compensation for a series that may not even get ordered.

Another key demand is to limit the use of artificial intelligence in television production.

Writers fear that studios will use AI to hire workers, select which shows to produce and, in the worst-case scenario, replace writers altogether. Interestingly, limits on AI have been the one point of contention that studios have been unwilling to even discuss.

It will be interesting to see whether the writers will be able to claw back some of the financial security that’s vanished across many industries, or if the larger economic forces that have powered the gig economy will work in studio executives’ favor.

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.
Erdogan’s persecution of journalists does not stop at Turkiye’s borders

Reporters Without Borders (RSF) calls for an end to the systematic intimidation of Turkish journalists based abroad who dare to criticise Turkiye’s government. The use of a range of methods to intimidate exile journalists, as well as those within Turkiye, was started by President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, who is seeking another term in next weekend’s elections.

Journalists critical of the Turkish government, including the several hundred living in self-imposed exile in European countries, have feared for their safety for years. The Turkish authorities stop at nothing in their attempts to intimidate them, including threats, armed attacks, trying them in absentia, getting Interpol to target them with red notices, or depriving them of consular services.

“Turkiye needs a new political climate that respects the rights of journalists and press freedom both within the country and abroad. We urge Turkiye’s future leaders to put an end to the intolerable harassment that has for years been threatening the safety of the many Turkish journalists living in self-imposed exile.”

Erol Onderoglu

RSF’s representative in Turkiye

There is no shortage of examples of the aggressive methods used to harass Turkish journalists who have fled abroad. The victims include Akin Olgun, who was granted political asylum in the United Kingdom after a trial dating back to 1995 and who now has British as well as Turkish nationality.

Olgun was detained preventively for more than a month following his arrest on the Greek island of Kos on 13 October 2022 because the Turkish authorities had persuaded Interpol to issue a red notice for him and were seeking his extradition. His crime? Simply sharing information on social media that President Erdogan’s son-in-law, Berat Albayrak, had moved to London after resigning as treasury and finance minister.

The persecution to which Can Dündar, the former editor of the daily newspaper Cumhuriyet (Republic), has been subjected for years illustrates the variety of methods used by the Turkish authorities to silence journalists. Dündar fled to Germany in 2016 and founded the Turkish-language news site Özgürüz (We are free) after being jailed in Turkiye in November 2015 over a report in Cumhuriyet exposing Erdogan’s arms deliveries to groups in Syria, and then being the target of an armed attack outside the Istanbul lawcourts following his release.

In late 2020, Dündar was sentenced in absentia to 27 years and 6 months in prison on charges of “obtaining information relating to the state for the purpose of political or military espionage” and “supporting the illegal organisation of Fethullah Gülen,” the person regarded by the Turkish authorities as the mastermind of the failed coup against Erdogan in July 2016.

But that’s not all. Dündar is also facing the possibility of an additional prison sentence for posting a video on Özgürüz on 1 March 2017 about the same case of arms supplies to groups in Syria. He could also receive a life sentence in connection with spurious allegations of “support for the massive demonstrations in Gezi Park” in Istanbul in the spring of 2013. And, since September 2022, he is under judicial investigation for “insulting the President” in a comment on YouTube referring to statements by an organised crime leader in exile about political corruption and the absence of justice in Turkiye.

Erk Acarer, a former columnist for the left-wing daily BirGün (Day), who exposed cases of corruption and abuses in Turkiye, was the target of a knife attack on 7 July 2021 at his home in Germany, where he has lived since 2017 to escape arbitrary prosecution in Turkiye in connection with his work as a columnist. The perpetrators of this armed attack were not identified but it is suspected that they were supporters of Turkiye’s ruling AKP party.

In recent years, there have also been physical attacks against Turkish journalists based in Sweden who are accused by the Turkish authorities of belonging to the movement led by Fethullah Gülen, the abortive 2016 coup’s alleged mastermind.

Diplomatic pressure, blackmail

Ragip Zarakolu, a writer and columnist for the left-wing daily Evrensel (Universal) who has lived in Sweden since 2012, has grounds for concern. His name is on the list of “terrorists” whose extradition the Turkish government is seeking in exchange for lifting its veto on Sweden joining NATO. Before fleeing to Turkiye, Zarakolu was charged with membership of the outlawed Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK). And, in December 2019, a Turkish court ordered the “partial seizure” of his property in an attempt to force him to return.

The European Court of Human Rights (ECHR) nonetheless ruled in September 2020 that Zarakolu’s imprisonment in Turkiye for five months at the end of 2011 was “arbitrary.” The Turkish authorities also accuse him praising the 2016 coup attempt and threatening President Erdogan in an editorial published on 5 May 2020 in the daily Evrenseland on Arti Gerçek, a news site created by Turkish journalists based in Germany.

Other Turkish journalists, such as Bülent Kenes, a Gülen movement supporter, are on the list of “terrorists” that Turkiye wants Sweden to extradite.

Many Turkish journalists based in Europe have told RSF that the Turkish authorities deprive them of consular services, such as passport extensions, if they are the subject of any legal proceedings or warrant in Turkiye. As a results, some journalists have been forced to apply for political asylum. They include Fehim Tastekin, a well-known Middle East expert and columnist for the GazeteDuvar news site who has lived in self-imposed exile in France since January 2017.

Dozens of other journalists, such as Kutlu Esendemir, Baransel Agca, Metin Cihan and Ertugrul Mavioglu, have been forced to live abroad for years because of the many kinds of threats to which journalists are exposed in Turkiye.

Türkiye
165/ 180
Score : 33.97
Published on 06.05.2023
EXCERPT
Mao’s Legacy Is a Dangerous Topic in China
Discussing the Cultural Revolution has become increasingly risky.

MAY 6, 2023
By Tania Branigan,

Paramilitary police officers march past the portrait of Chinese leader Mao Zedong on Tiananmen Gate as it undergoes renovations in Beijing on May 18, 2019. 
GREG BAKER/AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES

“For Chinese people, history is our religion,” the intellectual Hu Ping has argued. “We don’t have a supernatural standard of right and wrong, good and bad, so we view History as the ultimate judge.” The Chinese Communist Party has finessed this tradition. It sees history not as a record, still less a debate, but a tool. It can be adjusted as necessary yet appears solid and immutable: Today’s imperatives seem graven in stone, today’s facts the outcome of a logical, inexorable process. The contingencies and contradictions of the actual past are irrelevant. The truth is what the Party says, and what the Party chooses to remember.

Its current narrative is enshrined in the National Museum of China. It stands in Tiananmen Square, directly opposite the Great Hall of the People, where grand political ceremonies are held; across the way hangs the portrait of late Chinese leader Mao Zedong, stretching 4.5 by 6 meters and reputedly 1.5 tons in weight. The picture morphed through a few incarnations before Mao approved its final template at the height of the Cultural Revolution. Now it is replaced with an identical version each year, just before October’s National Day celebrations. At least one spare is kept at the ready in case it is damaged, as in 1989, when dissidents pelted it with eggs (and paid with years in prison). Come what may, Mao continues to surveil his successors and his country. Most assume that the picture will hang there as long as the Party hangs on to power, so symbolic that the leadership would never dare remove it.

For centuries, this part of the city has been the political heart of the nation. The square lies in front of the Forbidden City, home of the emperors, on Beijing’s north-south central axis. Under Mao its size was quadrupled to 400,000 square meters, making it the world’s largest city square. The Great Hall of the People and what were then the twin Museums of the Chinese Revolution and Chinese History were completed in the same year, 1959, as part of a monumental building program marking the Party’s tenth year in power. It had established already that its rule depended not only on the promise of a better future, but also on a shared understanding of that pledge’s contrast with former misery. So the grand museums were erected, and workers and peasants were encouraged to dwell on long-gone injustices in rituals of “recalling past bitterness and cherishing present happiness.” The people were still developing their political consciousness. Sometimes they included the terrible famine just past in their list of miseries, but officials would quickly set them straight, reminding them that Past Bitterness meant the years before the Party came to power.


Mao is seen at a Red Guard rally in Tiananmen Square in 1966. His followers wave their “Little Red Books” as he passes. 
KEYSTONE/GETTY IMAGES

For Chinese people, Tiananmen Square is their history. It saw the nationalist student protests of the May Fourth Movement in 1919, Mao’s proclamation of the founding of the People’s Republic thirty years later, the mass rallies by Red Guards. Foreigners mainly associate it with the bloody crackdown on the protests which erupted here in 1989, attacking corruption and demanding reform and even democracy. When Chinese troops launched the final assault to clear the square, hundreds of soldiers poured in from behind the museum building.

Turning its guns against its citizens finally demolished the Party’s mandate: its claim to serve the people, already fatally undermined by the Cultural Revolution. Its rule now rests upon its promise of economic well-being and its restoration of national pride. The more conflicted and uncertain the former, with China’s years of double-digit growth rates well behind it and the effects of rapacious capitalism glaring, the more essential the latter. Since 1989 the Party has redoubled its commitment to patriotic education, portraying the Communist triumph over foreign aggression. It has rewritten textbooks and opened a swathe of red history sites. Officials and schoolchildren are bussed to places such as Shaoshan, Mao’s birthplace, and the former revolutionary base at Yan’an.

Chinese President Xi Jinping, born of the revolution, has embraced his party’s heritage. His first public act on assuming power was to escort the Politburo Standing Committee to the National Museum’s landmark exhibition: the Road to Rejuvenation, conceived a few years earlier but now promoted from its more modest home in the Museum of Military Affairs. A photograph blazoned across state media showed the seven men posed with such exquisite awkwardness that they could have been on show themselves. At the heart of the narrative was China’s Hundred Years of Humiliation at the hands of foreign bullies and its liberation by the Party. It was the story of the country’s suffering through the Opium Wars and subsequent imperialist aggressions; of how China had been brought to its knees; and how, through the sacrifices of heroic Party members, it had thrown off its shackles and returned to glory. It set the theme of Xi’s leadership: the Chinese dream of wealth and power. The last room portrayed both the glories and the comforts of modern China, from a space capsule for its taikonauts to a glass case of mobile phones.

“History has proven that without the Communist Party of China, the People’s Republic of China would never have come into being, nor would socialism with Chinese characteristics,” the exhibition concluded. The last six decades had been blurred into one broad advance, the sharp and deadly political clashes reshaped into a gentler, happier tale of historical inevitability under the Party’s benign leadership. It was not the historical inevitability of Karl Marx, with the triumph of the proletariat; rather, the notion that authoritarian power had brought greatness to the Chinese nation again. It was no coincidence that the Museums of the Chinese Revolution and of Chinese History had been fused into a single National Museum.

A man admires Dong Xiwen’s “The Founding Ceremony“ in a museum in Beijing on June 27, 1996. The painting depicts Mao declaring the formation of the People’s Republic of China on the gate of the Forbidden City overlooking Tiananmen Square in 1949. 
GOH CHAI HIN/AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES

When it was rebuilt, in the late 2000s, the architects were instructed to ensure the result was larger than any other in the world. Nothing about the museum is human-sized. The ceilings are so high, the spaces so expansive, that weekend crowds look like model railway passengers clustering at a real station. The exhibition spanned four giant halls, but there was one small—very small—section titled “Setbacks and Progress in the Exploration of Socialist Construction.” It daintily posed the question of how the Chinese people, under CCP leadership, “overcame hardships,” without, of course, elucidating those hardships, still less exploring the causes. It did not educate; it confirmed, discreetly, and to a very limited degree. Only if you already knew your history could you see what it deigned to acknowledge.

A glass case held three documents dated 1961, including one captioned: “Liu Shaoqi’s notes from a meeting held during his investigations in Changsha and Ningxiang, Hunan.” This was part of Liu’s research into the Great Famine, and it helped to end the disaster, but it paved the way to his own death in the Cultural Revolution, thanks to a vengeful Mao.

There was little more on this second great disaster of the era. An exhibition which made space for two dozen different mobile phones could find only a dingy corner for the Cultural Revolution; and it dared not show the catastrophe itself, only its aftermath. High on the wall was a photo of Mao’s heir, Hua Guofeng, and other leaders, following the Gang of Four’s fall, and another of joyful youths massing in the square to celebrate the purge.

The Shanghai Cooperation Organisation likes to think of itself as an alternative to the United Nations, but it’s even less effective.

Newly declassified documents contain important lessons for U.S. China policy.

No country faces its past honestly, and some in China have asked why the West was transfixed by the Maoist trauma recorded in books like Wild Swans when it appeared uninterested in slave narratives. America’s self-image as a beacon of democracy is undimmed by its cozying up to dictators, plots to oust or kill elected leaders, and backing of murderous anti-communist purges. More Britons believe the empire was a source of pride than shame; a benevolent institution, not created at gunpoint to enrich ourselves but rolled out to bring railways, cricket, and Shakespeare to the globe’s four corners. The West didn’t consciously conceal as China did; in its arrogance, it rarely noticed there was something to forget. We had often preferred to export our greatest sadism, and to allow others to enrich us by means we never questioned or recognized.

In Britain, convenience, implicit bias, and power differentials were enough to produce the distortions and erasures. In China, explicit orders and self-censorship did the work. The Cultural Revolution was not a totally forbidden subject, as discussion of the 1989 crackdown was. People found spaces in which they could operate by picking their times, shunning the spotlight, bending the rules, and having the right connections. The haziness of the line between forbidden and permitted was partly a by-product of China’s size and the multiple levels of bureaucracy. But it was also deliberate. While some were adept at exploiting grey areas, many shrank back further. It was simply easier and more efficient to make people censor themselves.

Beijing residents inspect the damage in Tiananmen Square on June 4, 1989, following a violent military crackdown on pro-democracy demonstrations.
MANUEL CENETA/AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES

Blur the boundaries and you could also move them without acknowledging the shift. In some ways the Cultural Revolution had become less risky territory. Online discussion proliferated. One professor, though barred from launching a course called “The Cultural Revolution,” won approval by simply retitling it “Chinese Culture, 1966-1976.” But in most ways it had become harder to talk about. The amnesia about the Cultural Revolution is more recent than it seems. In its immediate aftermath, a flood of memoirs and novels had laid bare trauma and oppression, handily confirming the wisdom of the Party’s turn from Mao to market under Deng Xiaoping.

Then, in the early eighties, a campaign against bourgeois liberalism began to target such “scar literature.” In 1988 a regulation warned that, “from now on and for quite some time, publishing firms should not plan the publication of dictionaries or other handbooks about the ‘Great Cultural Revolution’.” In 1996 researchers held a symposium on the anniversary; ten years later they were warned off. In 2000 Song Yongyi, a repentant Red Guard turned historian, was held for more than five months due to his work, despite his American citizenship. And in 2013 Xi would issue a warning against “historical nihilism.”
The official Party verdict on the Cultural Revolution called it a catastrophe, which isn’t surprising. By the time it was formulated, Deng was in charge. He had been purged not once but twice, and his son has used a wheelchair since “falling” from a third-floor window while imprisoned by Red Guards. But Deng didn’t want to brood on what had happened: “The aim of summarizing the past is to lead people to unite and look ahead,” he instructed those drafting the judgement. It acknowledged that the events had caused “the most severe setback and the heaviest losses suffered by the Party, the country and the people since the founding of the People’s Republic.” It was “initiated by a leader laboring under a misapprehension and capitalized on by counter-revolutionary cliques.” Laboring under a misapprehension. It was worse than a crime, then; it was a mistake. Mao’s errors were acknowledged but could not be dwelled upon.

Conventional wisdom has it that the Party had no other way to square this circle: Mao was both Russian revolutionary Vladimir Lenin and Soviet premier Joseph Stalin. Chinese communism’s triumphs and disasters cannot be separated; he stands for both and still commands love and respect from many. To cut him off would saw away the roots which anchor the Party’s power, as well as raising dangerous questions about other leaders’ failure to stop him. Cloaking the Party in Mao’s aura also veiled its rejection of its past and its adoption of the things it once sought to destroy. Instead of acknowledging its turn to the market, the Party proceeded as though nothing had happened: Deng said his reforms were upholding Mao Zedong Thought. Mao’s preservation, psychically and even physically, made sense in terms of the Party’s own past: the Lenin/Stalin dilemma. But it addressed a larger problem too. Allowing people to judge their history acknowledges their right to judge things in general. Permit them to repudiate Mao, and they may repudiate you.

This article is adapted from Red Memory: The Afterlives of China’s Cultural Revolution by Tania Branigan (W.W. Norton, 304 pp., $29.95, May 2023).
This article is adapted from Red Memory: The Afterlives of China’s Cultural Revolution by Tania Branigan (W.W. Norton, 304 pp., .95, May 2023).Tania Branigan is a Guardian leader writer and author of Red Memory: Living, Remembering and Forgetting China's Cultural Revolution.

IOF Quell Anti-settlement Protest in Masafer Yatta

Dozens of Palestinians took part in an anti-settlement protest in al-Tuwana village and its neighboring villages in Masafer Yatta
B.M | DOP - 

Israeli occupation forces IOF attacked a Palestinian anti-settlement protest in Masafer Yatta, south of occupied Hebron on Saturday, May 6, 2023.

Rateb Al-Jbour, coordinator of a local popular committee in the Hebron area, reported that IOF fired live bullets and tear gas canisters at Palestinian protesters.

Activist Al-Jbour pointed out that dozens of Palestinians took part in a protest in Masafer Yatta to denounce the Israeli settlement expansion.

In addition, he said that IOF attacked Palestinian journalists and impeded their arrival at the protest place in Masafer Yatta.

Israeli occupation forces and settlers escalated their attacks against Palestinian families, lands, and properties in Masafer Yatta.

Under international law, all Israeli settlement activities in occupied Palestine are illegal. However, the Israeli new government has settlement expansion at the top of its priorities.

According to UN reports, the number of Israeli settlers in the occupied West Bank had grown from 520,000 to over 700,000 during the past decade.

Space agency's GOP fans make their case to shield it from cuts

Aidan Quigley, CQ-Roll Call on May 6, 2023


​WASHINGTON — As House Republicans sit down to write their fiscal 2024 spending bills, appropriators are vowing to protect defense, veterans and border security funding from cuts. Some are pushing to add another spending category to the protected list: NASA.

While the space agency has long seen bipartisan support in Congress, Republican plans to slash spending to the fiscal 2022 top-line level of $1.47 trillion mean $131 billion in cuts have to come from somewhere.

But some Republican appropriators say they’re aiming to carve out NASA, which received $25.4 billion for the current fiscal year in the December omnibus package.

Rep. Mike Garcia, R-Calif., who sits on the Commerce-Justice-Science Appropriations panel that oversees NASA’s budget, said NASA missions have national security implications and he is fighting to “keep the agency whole.”

Garcia credited NASA for keeping its requested budget increases to single digits in recent years. He pointed to the Ingenuity Mars Helicopter that has flown in Mars’ atmosphere and a major launch associated with the agency’s planned mission to return to the moon in November as examples of recent NASA successes.

“NASA’s been responsible,” he said. “We’re getting results. ... Very important stuff NASA is doing, we’re getting our bang for our buck out of them.”

NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory is located at the California Institute of Technology, not far from Garcia’s district, where top aerospace contractors Northrop Grumman Corp. and Lockheed Martin Corp. have facilities. Garcia’s former employer, Raytheon Technologies Corp., also is a major NASA contractor.

President Joe Biden requested $27.2 billion for NASA in his fiscal 2024 budget request, a 7% increase, with a focus on its planned return trip to the moon. That program, Artemis, would receive $8.1 billion, a $500 million increase or 6.6% over the current fiscal year.

House Commerce-Justice-Science Appropriations Chairman Harold Rogers, R-Ky., expressed support for NASA during the agency’s April subcommittee budget hearing, calling it an “exciting program that we all share in admiring.”

“There’s a lot of reasons why NASA enjoys almost unanimous support here on the Hill, certainly bipartisan support, nonpartisan support I should say,” Rogers said.

Morehead State University in Rogers’ district has a robust space science program, and the university has been involved in the launch of five NASA-funded satellites. Rogers requested a nearly $10 million earmark this year to improve the university’s space tracking systems.

Rogers said during the hearing that balancing the need to fund NASA at the appropriate level while focusing on stemming the growth of government spending is a “difficult balance to strike.”

“We want to ensure that the United States remains the world leader in space, particularly in light of the aggressive investments China has made in space exploration,” Rogers said. “We’re also accountable to the taxpayer, to ensure that NASA remains focused on its core mission.”

Tough choices

Rogers’ balancing act will be on display in the coming weeks when his subcommittee unveils its fiscal 2024 spending bill.

The numbers are under tight wraps. But early speculation is that some of the House nondefense appropriations bills could get rolled back to funding levels enacted four or even five years ago to accommodate expected boosts in defense and veterans programs.

For example, NASA, which typically makes up roughly one-third of the Commerce-Justice-Science panel’s budget allocation, received $20.7 billion in fiscal 2018. That level would represent a nearly 19% cut from the agency’s current funding and a 24% reduction from the president’s fiscal 2024 request.

Earlier this year, House Appropriations ranking member Rosa DeLauro, D-Conn., asked agency heads to model the impacts of a potential 22% cut to their budgets, or roughly the average reduction if defense and veterans funds were spared the ax.

NASA Administrator Bill Nelson wrote in a March letter that under that scenario, NASA’s return mission to the moon would be delayed and 4,000 employees and contractors could lose their jobs.

“If the Congress comes in with some across-the-board sequester cut, or if the Congress reverted to the 2022 budget with the exception of defense and veterans, NASA would be devastated,” Nelson said during a Senate Commerce-Justice-Science Appropriations Subcommittee hearing last month.

In an interview, House Commerce-Justice-Science ranking member Matt Cartwright, D-Pa., said NASA’s long-term projects, like the Mars Sample Return mission, need consistent funding levels to ensure the programs stay on schedule.

“There are certain things you need to pay for on time, in order to meet the end deadline of the program” Cartwright said. “If you don’t meet that expenditure on time, the whole program gets delayed.”

Rep. Robert B. Aderholt, R-Ala., a member of the Commerce-Justice-Science panel, said he wants to protect NASA’s budget “as much as possible” and hopes that there are other places in that bill to trim.

“I think it’s a national security issue; one thing we’ve been trying to focus on is making sure our defense, national security and homeland security are protected,” said Aderholt, the subcommittee’s former top Republican.

Aderholt said that while NASA is growing its partnerships with private companies, the agency must remain the leader in space. If there are cuts to NASA, Aderholt said they must be done in a way to avoid harming the agency’s core mission.

NASA’s Marshall Space Flight Center is in Huntsville, Alabama, in the district next to Aderholt’s. Huntsville is home to NASA contractors including Dynetics, which was selected in 2021 to build NASA’s lunar lander.

Chopping block

Protecting NASA from steep cuts could mean taking a meat cleaver to other agencies and programs in the Commerce-Justice-State measure.

Nearly half of the bill’s allocation typically funds the Justice Department, which received $38.5 billion in fiscal 2023.

Democrats and the White House have been highlighting potential impacts of a 22 percent cut, such as Drug Enforcement Administration furloughs that could impact efforts to block fentanyl trafficking, local police hiring freezes, and the loss of thousands of FBI agents, federal prison correctional officers and more.

The remainder of the bill is largely the Commerce Department, funded at $11.2 billion this year, and the National Science Foundation, at $9.5 billion.

Cartwright said Republicans keep adding popular programs to their lists of areas that will be protected from cuts.

“We go through hearing after hearing, illustrating the items that would get cut,” Cartwright said. “We tend to pick very popular programs, and what we hear from the other side is — well, we didn’t mean that.”

House Freedom Caucus member Rep. Andrew Clyde, R-Ga., said he thinks NASA will have to share in the pain as GOP lawmakers try to hold overall discretionary spending down to fiscal 2022 levels.

“I think there’s going to have to be a haircut for a lot of folks,” said Clyde, a first-year appropriator and member of the Commerce-Justice-Science panel. “I get that they do good work, but they have to be financially and fiscally responsible just like the rest of us, because right now we are on borrowed money.”

©2023 CQ-Roll Call, Inc., All Rights Reserved. Visit cqrollcall.com. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.
DESANTIS KULTURKAMPF
German conservatives' meeting with controversial US governor slammed

2023/05/06
Sven Lehmann, Parliamentary State Secretary at the Federal Ministry for Family Affairs, Senior Citizens, Women and Youth and Queer Representative of the Federal Government, presents the Federal Government's first action plan "Queer Living" for acceptance and protection of sexual and gender diversity at the Federal Press Conference.
 Bernd von Jutrczenka/dpa

A meeting of German opposition conservative politicians with controversial Florida Governor Ron DeSantis has sparked criticism.

The politicians are from the Christian Social Union (CSU), the sister party of Germany's Christian Democratic Union (CDU) in the southern state of Bavaria.

"If De Santis' policies are a model for the CSU, then good night," the German government's queer commissioner, Sven Lehmann, told Redaktionsnetzwerk Deutschland media group on Friday.

"The far-right politician is leading a culture war in Florida against women and against lesbians, gays and transgender people. His laws are an imminent threat to minorities," Lehmann continued.

On Friday, the former transport minister at federal level, Andreas Scheuer of the CSU, posted photos of a meeting with Republican Governor DeSantis on Twitter.

The photos show the defence policy spokesman of the CSU, Florian Hahn, and the vice-chairman of the joint CDU/CSU parliamentary group, Dorothee Bär.

Scheuer captioned the photos saying: "The governor’s strong strategic and foreign policy assessments highlight trans-Atlantic cooperation."

The criticism comes after DeSantis expanded the ban on teaching about sexual orientation or gender identity in Florida. With a few exceptions, the regulation applies up to and including the 12fth grade.



Russian theatre director accused of 'justifying terrorism' remanded in custody

2023/05/05


MOSCOW (Reuters) - A prominent Russian theatre director was remanded in custody for two months on Friday after being accused of justifying terrorism with an award-winning play about Russian women who married Islamic State fighters, the state news agency TASS reported.

Investigators opened a case this week against Yevgenia (Zhenya) Berkovich and playwright Svetlana Petriychuk, alleging that Petriychuk's "Finist, the Brave Falcon", which premiered in 2020 under Berkovich's direction, had broken the law.

Since Russia sent its armed forces into Ukraine last year, Moscow has intensified a clampdown on freedom of expression, and encouraged citizens to report anyone they suspect of demonstrating disloyalty.

"Finist, the Brave Falcon" won two "Golden Mask" national theatre awards last year, and Berkovich also received a nomination for best director.

The detention of the two women has drawn condemnation from several prominent Russian artists and cultural figures.

Journalist Ksenia Sobchak said the case against them showed "rampant ignorance", and that the play in fact had an anti-terrorist message.

"The heroines leave their families, their universities, their jobs and go into hell to their new lovers, who promise them love and a happy life," she wrote on her Telegram channel.

"There they first become semi-slaves in the militant units and then return to their homeland as prisoners. It's clear that the production has an anti-terrorist message."

(Reporting by Reuters; Editing by Kevin Liffey and Jonathan Oatis)









© Reuters

Russia: Outrage after director and playwright detained

Two women, a director and a playwright, face charges of justifying terrorism over a play about Russian women recruited to marry radical Islamists in Syria

Deutsche Welle Published 06.05.23

Russian actors and directors who fled abroad have come to the defense of director Zhenya Berkovich (pictured above) and playwright Svetlana PetriychukDeutsche Welle

A court in Russia ordered pretrial detention for a prominent theater director and a playwright on Friday after the two were accused of "justifying terrorism."

Director Zhenya Berkovich and playwright Svetlana Petriychuk will be jailed for at least two months while awaiting trial, Russian news agencies reported.

The charges come as many in Russia's theater and arts community have fled the country amid a widespread crackdown on dissent at home amid Russia's war in Ukraine.

What are they accused of?

Berkovich and Petriychuk were arrested on Thursday in Moscow. Authorities also raided the homes of Berkovich's parents and grandmother in St. Petersburg.

The charges against the two stem from a play entitled "Finist, the Brave Falcon," which was named after a Russian fairy tale.

The play, which is performed only by women, tells the story of Russian women who faced prosecution after being recruited online to marry radical Islamists in Syria.

Authorities allege that the play "justifies terrorism" — a charge that could carry a sentence of up to seven years in prison.

In court on Friday, Berkovich's lawyer noted that "Finist, the Brave Falcon" won two Golden Mask theater awards last year — which is Russia's most prestigious national theater award. The play was also supported by the Russian Culture Ministry.

Petriychuk's lawyer added that the play was read to inmates in a women's prison in Siberia in 2019 and that Russia's state penitentiary service praised the work on its website.

What has the reaction been?

The arrest of the 38-year-old theater director and the 43-year-old playwright sent shockwaves through the Russian theater scene — both at home and abroad.

Many Russian actors and directors described the charges as absurd, with some suggesting that the charges had less to do with the play and more to do with Berkovich's opposition to the war in Ukraine.

Berkovich has published several poems criticizing President Vladimir Putin's more than year-long war in Ukraine.

By Friday evening, an open letter supporting the two artists had been signed by over 3,400 people. The letter, which was started by the independent Novaya Gazeta newspaper, argued that the play "carries an absolutely clear anti-terrorist sentiment."

"It is a bit like arresting Dostoyevsky for justifying killing old ladies after writing Crime and Punishment," journalist Alexander Baumov was quoted as saying on the Meduza news website.

Berkovich was also a former student of one of Russia's most successful directors, Kirill Serebrennikov, who fled the country.

"Such people in culture in a normal country are a rarity, a miracle, pride. But in Russia, everything is now the other way around," Serebrennikov said after the announcement of Berkovich's arrest.

"You are a star," he said, calling her his "most talented" student.

Crackdown on artists


Following Russia's full-scale invasion of Ukraine in February 2022, the government and authorities launched a campaign of repression not seen since the Soviet era.

Criticism of the war has been effectively criminalized — with those who speak out against Russia's actions facing lengthy prison terms.

Many actors, writers, directors and musicians have faced mounting pressure — prompting many to flee the country.

Berkovich, who is raising two adopted daughters, has refused to leave Russia.
Charities can be used to move 'dark' money that shapes public policy: report

David McAfee
May 6, 2023

'Businessman displaying a spread of cash' [Shutterstock]

Part of how political activists move their "dark" money is by using public charities and donor-advised funds, according to a recent report.

The subject of the report is Leonard Leo, the Federalist Society leader who has organized or bankrolled conservative efforts to take over the judicial system. Leo—who has also helped former President Donald Trump select judicial nominees—also reportedly arranged for Clarence Thomas' wife Ginni to receive tens of thousands of dollars for consulting work, all while intentionally keeping her name off the paperwork.

But how does Leo's money move? One way is by using an independent 501(c)(3) public charity, such as Schwab Charitable, according to Dan Petegorsky, who works on the Emergency Charity Stimulus project at the Institute for Policy Studies.

"With newly released tax filings from Schwab Charitable — one of the nation’s largest sponsors of what are called donor-advised funds — we have another major piece of information on how this 'dark money' moves," Petegorsky wrote in the opinion piece.

"During its most recently reported fiscal year (July 2021 to June 2022), Schwab made an enormous grant of $141.5 million to the 85 Fund, a key part of Leo’s burgeoning empire, formerly known as the Judicial Education Project. The 85 Fund is a 501(c)(3) public charity," he added.

The report notes that donor-advised funds, unlike private groups, are "not independent organizations that need to report their activities to the IRS and make those reports available to the public."

"Instead, they’re accounts set up under a 'sponsor' — in this case Schwab Charitable — a public charity that can house hundreds or even thousands of funds," according to the article. "And while those sponsors need to file annual reports with the IRS, they do not have to report which of those DAFs make which grants."

That makes them "ideal vehicles" to conceal the donors behind funding sources, according to the report.

Media missed how Proud Boys worked with FBI to bring down left-wing operations: report

David McAfee
May 6, 2023, 

Proud Boy Enrique Tarrio (Photo by Chandan Khanna for AFP)

Despite the Proud Boys being all over the news for seditious conspiracy convictions, most outlets failed to mention that the FBI was actively working with numerous members of the far-right group, including its former leader, to specifically target those on the left, according to a report from Jacobin.

Former Proud Boys leader Enrique Tarrio is among up to nine members who reportedly served as informants to the FBI. Those informants were partly helping law enforcement target "Black Lives Matter protesters and other left-wing activists," according to Jacobin's Branko Marcetic.


"That fact doesn’t just make the FBI’s failure to detect and prevent the Capitol riot even more baffling," Marcetic wrote. "Revelations from the trial suggested that the FBI’s historical and ongoing fixation on left-wing protests potentially blinded it to the threat of the far right, and that the bureau is even happy to collaborate with far-right groups as a way of neutralizing what it sees as a greater threat from the Left."

Marcetic said only two news outlets, including the Associated Press and the Washington Post, mentioned the FBI connection at all.

"The AP’s reference was perfunctory — contained in a single line about how 'revelations of government informants in the group' prolonged the trial — leaving the Post as the one and only news outlet that specified that Tarrio himself was a longtime informer for law enforcement in a wide range of groups beyond and before the Proud Boys," according to the Jacobin report. "His own lawyer called him 'prolific' informer in a 2014 court proceeding."

Marcetic said mainstream outlets like CBS, ABC, NBC, and USA Today had no mention of the FBI's informant deals.

"Explicitly progressive or liberal-leaning outlets were no better than the mainstream," the report says. "Tarrio and other Proud Boys’ status as FBI informers was absent from Mother Jones’s write-up on the verdict, as well as those of the Guardian, Vice, Huff Post, and Salon."
China's Hozon to Produce EVs in Thailand for Southeast Asian Market

By Reuters
May 6, 2023

People wearing face masks following the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) outbreak stand under a Neta by Hozon logo as they attend the Beijing International Automotive Exhibition, or Auto China show, in Beijing, China September 27, 2020. REUTERS/Tingshu WangREUTERS

BANGKOK (Reuters) - China's Hozon New Energy Automobile will make electric vehicles in Thailand for the Southeast Asian market, a Thai official said on Saturday, as it follows others in building facilities in the region's major auto production hub.

Hozon signed an agreement with Thailand's Bangchan General Assembly this week to start production of its NETA V model, expected in 2024, Thai government spokesperson Tipanan Sirichana said in a statement.

The EV maker launched its NETA V model in the Thai market last year and planned to start offering its NETA U and NETA S models in the near future, Tipanan said.

Other Chinese EV makers like BYD have also invested in Thai plants as demand heats up among domestic consumers choosing from brands like Great Wall Motors and Tesla.

Last month, a Thai official said China's Changan Auto would invest $285 million in a facility in Thailand.

Thailand is Asia's fourth-largest autos assembly and export hub for carmakers like Toyota and Honda.


The country aims to become a key player in the global EV supply chain outside of China by offering tax cuts and subsidies to drive EV adoption and production.


It has set a target that 30% of domestic auto production be EVs by 2030.