Wednesday, January 24, 2024

 The ‘ravening wolf’ priest who led a doomed revolution

Daniel Brooks
Mon, January 22, 2024 

A 19th-century engraving of Thomas Müntzer’s marauding peasants - Alamy

The decisive battle of the German Peasants’ War was fought on May 15 1525, upon a hilltop outside Frankenhausen, a small town in the central state of Thuringia. An army of around 8,000 peasants, gathered under rainbow banners, were demanding the overthrow of the existing social order. Their leader, the radical preacher Thomas Müntzer, pointed to the sky – where a rainbow-like halo seemed to have formed around the Sun – and reassured his troops that they should “fight with their heart and be of courage”. Within hours, the artillery-equipped army of the Saxon and Thuringian nobles had crushed the rebels’ flimsy fortifications and killed some 5,000 of them.

Andrew Drummond’s history steals its outstanding title, The Dreadful History and Judgement of God on Thomas Müntzer, from a pamphlet printed, soon after Müntzer’s execution, by his rival Martin Luther. The men were both important figures in the Protestant reformations that swept Europe at the start of the 16th century but, while Luther remained an ally of the aristocracy, Müntzer was a true revolutionary who demanded nothing less than the dissolution of feudal and religious structures and the full emancipation of the peasantry. As Drummond puts it, the latter approach was “playing with fire in an age of theological arson”.

It’s easy to understand why some were drawn to such lofty ambitions. Drummond begins by outlining the miserable state of your average Holy Roman peasant, and the apocalypticism that had taken root in Germany at the end of the 15th century. Müntzer too believed the world was ending, and that only the spiritually pure “Elect” were equipped to change the tide of history. There was a feeling – it may be familiar to those who remember the turn of 2000 – that some great but unknown change was on the horizon, accelerated by the emergence of a new form of communication technology: in their case, the Gutenberg printing press.

The echoes of the present day are not accidental. While Drummond conjures a sense of historical place – with credit due for capturing the religious lives of his subjects while largely dodging the dense mire of theology – The Dreadful History and Judgement… is very much a book in the New Left tradition of materialist history. We get a tightly narrativised case study of local conditions from which we can draw easy parallels to modern social movements, but we sometimes lose sight of history’s specific power-centres. The figure of the “early capitalist”, for instance, receives more frequent mention than Charles V, Holy Roman Emperor.

Printing allowed for the spread of ideas by prominent intellectuals, but it also became a vehicle for some impressive mudslinging. In the various tracts that emerged, Müntzer was branded a “ravening wolf” and a “false prophet”, while a fellow firebrand, Heinrich Pfeiffer, was said to want “to introduce murder, riot, overthrowing of authority”. Müntzer’s ripostes laid into the “lavish mimicry of the Godless” and painted the nobility as a “dribbling sack”. Luther, he claimed, couldn’t have drawn crowds as big as his “if he were to burst”.


An 18th-cenutry engraving of Thomas Müntzer - Hulton Archive

When he wasn’t writing, Müntzer’s career took him from town to town, preaching and agitating. His first real controversy arose in Zwickau in 1520, where he, along with a weaver named Nicholas Storch, incited a series of riots against the local Catholic clergy. He was firmly told that he had to leave. In Prague in 1521, things continued in much the same way, and he fled under a hail of stones. He was run out of several other towns, climbing over the walls of Allstedt in August 1524 after a warning from local leaders, and slipping out of Mühlhausen a month later after the townsfolk voted to get rid of him. In both of the latter cases, Müntzer left his wife Ottilie and his young child behind.

And that’s the thing. Even accounting, as Drummond does, for the fact that the historical record was largely written by Müntzer’s enemies, Müntzer at no point comes across as a pleasant man, much less one who lives up to the ideals he ignites in the peasants whom he’ll eventually send to their deaths. The reformist Philipp Melanchthon, whose second-hand account no doubt reflects plenty of Lutheran bias, presented him as a charlatan who told the peasants that he would “catch all the bullets in his sleeves”.

After the massacre, Müntzer somehow escaped the hill and was captured at a nearby inn; he would be executed soon after, but not before sending a final letter to his remaining acolytes. Here he claimed, in the tone of all failed revolutionaries, that his enterprise collapsed because it didn’t go far enough – that those who had died “only considered their own profit and thus destroyed God’s truth”.

Drummond has written a blisteringly good book about personal enmity, and the difference between revolution and reform. Müntzer’s head ended up on a spike outside of the gates of Mühlhausen, but Luther changed Christendom forever. The Frankenhausen hilltop was flattened in the 1970s by the East German government. They built a museum there, with a panoramic mural dedicated to the more-than-100,000 peasants killed in the war. Under the rainbow, defiant to the last, stands Thomas Müntzer.

The Dreadful History and Judgement of God on Thomas Müntzer is published by Verso 

Marxists.org

https://www.marxists.org/archive/marx/works/1850/peasant-war-germany/index.htm

Jun 6, 2023 ... The Peasant War in Germany was the first history book to assert that the real motivating force behind the Reformation and 16th-century peasant ...


Libcom.org

https://libcom.org/article/third-revolution-popular-movements-revolutionary-era

Jun 15, 2020 ... pdf (17.78 MB). ThirdRevVol2Pt1.pdf (12.23 MB). ThirdRevVol2Pt2.pdf (28.3 MB) ... Audiobook of Murray Bookchin's Ecology and Revolutionary Thought.


The Snow Queen, by Edmund Dulac [1911] (Public Domain Image)
The Snow Queen, by Edmund Dulac [1911] (Public Domain Image)

The Sorceress (La Sorcière)

by Jules Michelet

tr. by Afred Richard Allinson

[1939]

But the greatest revolution the Sorceress brought about, the chief movement of all in contradiction, in direct contradiction to the spirit of the Middle Ages, is what we might well call a rehabilitation of the belly and its digestive functions. They boldly proclaimed the doctrine that "nothing is impure and nothing unclean." From that moment the study of physical science was enfranchised, its shackles loosed, and true medicine became a possibility.--p. 86

This is a translation of Jules Michelet's La Sorcière, originally published in Paris in 1862. I have titled this text The Sorceress because that is a literal translation of the original French title. The original title of this translation was Satanism and Witchcraft, and it was later retitled Witchcraft, Sorcery and Superstition. However there is no need to sensationalize this book; the material is already sensational enough. And women are at the center of this book: peasant healers, aristocratic noblewomen, and nuns; we get an unparalleled look at the misery that medieval women faced, and some of the ways they rebelled.


 RIP

Death of man thought to be Burma Railway last survivor

Charlotte Cox - BBC News
Mon, January 22, 2024 a

Schoolchildren sang Happy Birthday to Mr Jennings when he turned 103

A former soldier thought to be the last surviving veteran of the infamous Burma Railway has died aged 104.

Jack Jennings was among 60,000 Allied prisoners forced by the Japanese to build a railway between Thailand and Myanmar, then Burma from 1942 to 1943.

In his final weeks at a Torquay care home, Mr Jennings was still playing his harmonica which he had used to entertain fellow troops.

His family said he had lived "a wonderful life".

Daughter Carol Barrett said: "I think we've been very lucky, that we had such a long time knowing him, loving him."

Mr Jennings' family believed he was the last survivor of 85,000 soldiers killed or captured when Singapore fell to the Japanese in World War Two.

The story of the World War Two prisoners of war camp featured in the Oscar-winning film starring Alec Guiness, The Bridge on the River Kwai.

Mr Jennings marked his 103rd birthday with a sing-along to the sound of his harmonica

Tens of thousands of people died during the construction and it became known as the "death railway".

The railway project led to the deaths of 90,000 Asian civilian workers and 16,000 prisoners of war.

Daughter Carol Barrett told the BBC: "He played his harmonica as a prisoner, I'm sure it helped him, and he was still playing it a week before he died.

"He was a carpenter and joiner by trade and he also made his own chess set, it gave them something to do while they were prisoners."

Captured on 15 February 1942 in Singapore as part of the Cambridgeshire Regiment, Mr Jennings remained a prisoner of the Japanese until the end of August 1945.

He survived his ordeal, and overcame a period of serious illness, to return to his childhood sweetheart Lilian Mary, whom he married in December 1945.

They were together, said Mrs Barrett, until her mother's death 20 years ago.

Mr Jennings did not talk about his experiences "for many years".

However, after penning a memoir aged 73, that changed, said son-in-law Paul Barrett.

"Once he wrote the book and found people were interested in what he had written he then spoke about nothing else," he said.

A member of the Far East Prisoners of War association, the great-grandfather-of-three attended regular reunions, Mrs Barrett said, including four trips back to Singapore and Thailand, often with other family members.

Mr Jennings recalled being captured in Singapore and held for five days with 500 fellow prisoners on a tennis court before being taken to Thailand, where he was held at various camps along the railway.

On his return to the region many years later, Mrs Barrett said, "he remembered everything".

"But the scenery had changed so much and he was greeted with such generosity, so much respect, he found it quite cathartic, it was a healing process for him and he was able to lay his ghosts to rest," she added.

Mr Jennings died at a care home in St Marychurch, with his family by his side.

Originally from the West Midlands, Mr Jennings moved to Torquay in 2007 to be closer to his daughter Hazel Heath.

"He absolutely loved Torquay - going to Oldway Mansions, playing his harmonica," said Mrs Barrett.

The BBC met Mr Jennings in March 2022, when he celebrated turning 103 at the Oldway Tearooms in Paignton, with a sing-along to some tunes on his harmonica.

The Royal British Legion laid on an honour guard and schoolchildren from Oldway Primary sang Happy Birthday.

"I was surprised to see so many people here," said Mr Jennings at the time.

"If they are here and enjoying it, that's the thing in life isn't it?"
ARCHAEOLOGY

Remains of ancient Roman triumphal arch unearthed in Serbia

Story by Reuters
Tue, January 23, 2024 at 11:03 PM MST·2 min read

Braving bitter cold and wind, archaeologists in Serbia surveyed the site of an ancient Roman triumphal arch, one of only a handful in the Balkans, that dates back to the third century.

The triumphal arch was discovered in December at the site of Viminacium, a Roman city near the town of Kostolac, 70 kilometers (45 miles) east of Belgrade.

Miomir Korac, the leading archaeologist, said the discovery was made during excavation of the main street of Viminacium, the capital of the Roman province of Moesia.


“This is the first such triumphal arch in this area… It can be dated to the first decades of the third century AD,” Korac told Reuters on Monday.

Archaeologists estimate they have only scoured 5% of the 450-hectare excavation site, which they say is unusual in not being buried under a modern city. - Branko Filipovic/Reuters

Viminacium was a sprawling Roman city of 45,000 people with a hippodrome, fortifications, a forum, palace, temples, an amphitheatre, aqueducts, baths and workshops. It existed between the first and sixth centuries.

“When we found square foundational footprints made of massive limestone pieces… there was no doubt that this was a triumphal arch,” Korac said.

A fragment of a marble slab with letters reading “CAES/ANTO” suggested that the arch was dedicated to Emperor Marcus Aurelius Antoninus, known as Caracalla, who reigned from 198 to 217 AD.

It is believed that Caracalla was elevated to emperor in Viminacium, said Mladen Jovicic, an archaeologist.

“We are hoping to find more pieces… We have found one finely made pillar, beams, but we would like to find more from the inscription on the arch,” Jovicic said.

Archaeologists made the discovery while excavating Viminacium, the capital of the Roman province of Moesia. - Branko Filipovic/Reuters

Excavations of Viminacium have been going on since 1882, but archaeologists estimate they have only scoured 5% of the site, which they say is 450 hectares — bigger than New York’s Central Park — and unusual in not being buried under a modern city.

Discoveries so far include two Roman ships, golden tiles, coins, jade sculptures, religious items, mosaics, frescos, weapons and remains of three mammoths.


Inscribed blade hid under grave for almost 1,900 years — until now. What does it say?

Moira Ritter
Tue, January 23, 2024 at 7:19 AM MST·1 min read

Nearly 1,900 years ago, an ancient inhabitant of what is now Denmark was cremated and buried in an urn. Before they were buried though, a hole was dug and a treasured knife with a special inscription was placed beneath their grave.

That’s where the blade has stayed — until now.

Archaeologists from the Museum Odense recently unearthed the runic blade, according to a Jan. 22 Facebook post from the museum. The discovery marks the oldest known runes in Denmark.


Archaeologists said the knife dates to approximately 150. Møntergården Museum of Odense and Funen

Experts said the small knife dates back to about 150 A.D., and it is inscribed with a message using the oldest known rune alphabet.

The five runes spell the name “hirila,” which translates to “little sword” in Old Norse, the museum said in a news release. Archaeologists are unsure whether “little sword” referred to the blade’s owner or the blade itself.

Photos shows both sides of the blade: one with the runes and the other with an intricate chevron-like pattern followed by three holes.

The runes are the oldest known in Denmark, according to experts. 
All rights reserved photograph Rógvi N. Johansen, Museum Odense

The blade was buried beneath an urn grave, experts said. 
All rights reserved photograph Rógvi N. Johansen, Museum Odense,

The grave and knife were found in Tietgenbyen, less than 10 miles from the site where a similar discovery was made in 1865, experts said. That’s when archaeologists unearthed a comb from the same time period with a runic inscription meaning “harja.”

Archaeologists said the knife was likely a treasured possession to its owner.

Google Translate and Facebook were used to translate a news release and Facebook post from the Museum Odense.



Grave robber looted 2,400-year-old tomb in China — but left these treasures behind

Aspen Pflughoeft
Tue, January 23, 2024

In a cemetery in central China, a grave robber started to dig. The thief tunneled into an ancient tomb, stole some artifacts and vanished. The robbery, however, was only partially successful.

When archaeologists excavated the looted tomb, they realized the robber had left some rare treasures behind.

The Taosi Relic Site and Cemetery is a massive ancient cemetery in Shanxi Province that may have as many as 10,000 tombs, according to a 2018 news release from China Archaeology Network. Excavations of the cemetery have been ongoing for years, but archaeologists have only explored a fraction of the site.

During these excavations, archaeologists uncovered a 2,400-year-old tomb that had been looted by a grave robber, according to a Jan. 21 news release from CCTV News via the Institute of Archaeology at the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences and the China Archaeology Network.

The robber had entered the tomb in 2016 through a hole in one corner, the institute said. The thief stole artifacts from this corner but left most of the grave undisturbed.

Some of the chimes found at the 2,400-year-old tomb.

Archaeologists unearthed a large number of high-quality artifacts from the 2,400-year-old tomb. They found a set of 16 chimes engraved with sayings, weapons and jade artifacts.

A photo shows some of the ancient musical instruments found in the tomb.


A close-up of a chime found at the 2,400-year-old tomb.

The tomb also contained a bronze drum base, archaeologists said. The base has a hollow shape where a drum would be inserted. Measuring about 33 inches across, the newly found base is among the largest of these types of artifacts ever found in China.

Based on the artifacts found in the 2,400-year-old tomb, archaeologists believe the tomb belongs to a high-ranking aristocrat with significant power.

Another artifact found at the 2,400-year-old tomb.

Officials recovered some bronze artifacts stolen from the Taosi Cemetery in 2022, the institute said.

Taosi Relic Site and Cemetery is in Shanxi Province and about 250 miles southwest of Beijing.

Google Translate and Baidu Translate were used to translate the news release from CCTV News via the Institute of Archaeology at the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences and the China Archaeology Network.

Don’t use magnets to seek treasure, experts warn after technique damages Viking sword found in river

Craig Simpson
Tue, January 23, 2024 

A magnet fisherman shows his equipment

The British Museum has urged detectorists not to go “magnet fishing” to retrieve treasure after a Viking sword was damaged while being dredged from a river.

A record number of finds, from Iron Age coin hoards to Tudor rosary beads, are being unearthed in the UK, according to the Portable Antiquities Scheme (PAS) run by the British Museum.

But experts are determined to persuade those seeking treasure to stop using the increasingly popular technique of “fishing” for artefacts in waterways using powerful magnets.

They say the risks of the method include blowing up unexploded ordnance, and damaging artefacts.

The warning from the PAS comes after a Viking sword was damaged while being pulled out of the River Wallers Haven in Suffolk. The remains of the hilt fell off and were lost in the river.

Risks include explosives and drowning


The scheme experts wrote: “‘Fishing’ for metal objects with powerful magnets in lakes and waterways has become increasingly popular. However, there are many risks involved, including finding unexploded ordnance and possibly drowning.

“There is also the risk of damage to the object and its archaeological context, particularly at sites of ritual deposition. The PAS advises against this activity, which is banned by the Canal and River Trust on its waterways.”

The method also erases important archaeological context which offers clues as to the meaning of objects, and what they were used for.

In 2022, a record haul of archaeological finds were made in the UK, with detectorists largely responsible for the 53,490 discoveries.

Among the finds were an Iron Age hoard of coins in a flint container, and an eerie rosary bead carved in bone during the Tudor period, when the position of Catholics in Britain was precarious.

Thanks for detectorists

One side of the delicately carved object, found on the banks of the Thames near the City of London, shows the face of a young woman, but the other depicts a skull, reminding the owner of their mortality.

Mark Jones, the interim director of the British Museum, said: “The information about finds is being recorded by the PAS to advance knowledge of past peoples, where and how they lived.

“As such, it reflects every part of human history, from the Palaeolithic to more modern times, across the whole of England and Wales.

“Most of the finds recorded have been found by members of the metal-detecting community and I wanted to especially thank them for recording these items with the PAS.”
State Department responds to Putin on Alaska: ‘Certainly he’s not getting it back’

Miranda Nazzaro
Tue, January 23, 2024 


The State Department on Monday brushed off reports of Russian President Vladimir Putin ordering his government to look into the nation’s former “real estate” abroad, saying Alaska would be staying in American hands.

Putin signed a new decree last week to allocate funds for the research and registration of Russian property overseas, including that in former territories of the Russian Empire and Soviet Union, Russian state media TASS reported.

The decree, which comes amid Russia’s ongoing invasion of Ukraine, did not specifically mention Alaska, though it caught the attention of military bloggers, who argued Putin was using the decree to declare the 1867 Russian sale of the Last Frontier State to the U.S. is illegal.

“Well, I think I can speak for all of us in the U.S. government to say that certainly he’s not getting it back,” State Department principal deputy spokesperson Vedant Patel said during a Monday press briefing, prompting laughter from his audience.

The Institute for the Study of War last week noted the “exact parameters of what constitutes current or historical Russia property are unclear.”

“The Kremlin may use the ‘protection’ of its claimed property in countries outside of its internationally recognized borders to forward soft power mechanisms in post-Soviet and neighboring states ultimately aimed at internal destabilization,” the institute wrote in an assessment of the Russian offensive campaign.

It pointed to a Telegram post from a military blogger who suggested Russia could start enacting the law in Alaska and parts of Eastern Europe, the Caucasus and Central Asia.

Putin, in a 2014 question-and-answer with a studio audience, called the 1867 sale “inexpensive,” and argued people should “not get worked about it.”

“We can calculate the equivalent amount, but it was definitely inexpensive. Russia is a northern country with 70 percent of its territory located in the north and the far north. Alaska is not located in the southern hemisphere, either, is it? It’s cold out there as well. Let’s not get worked up about it, all right?” he said.

While Putin appeared to downplay the sale, Russian lawmaker Sergei Mironov in December hinted at Moscow reclaiming its previous territories in the future.

“Did you want a new world order? Receive and sign. Venezuela annexed a 24th state, Guyana-Essequibo. This is happening right under the nose of the once great hegemon of the United States. All that remains is for Mexico to return Texas and the rest. It’s time for Americans to think about their future. And also about Alaska,” Mironov wrote on X, formerly Twitter, last month.

Former Russian President Dmitry Medvedev joked about the State Department’s response later Monday, writing on X, “According to a State Department representative, Russia is not getting back Alaska, which was sold to the U.S. in the 19th century. This is it, then. And we’ve been waiting for it to be returned any day. Now war is unavoidable,” with a laughing emoji attached.
'Outrageous' CEO pay targeted in new bill from Bernie Sanders, US Democrats

Reuters
Mon, January 22, 2024 

U.S. Senator Bernie Sanders waits to speak during a rally in support of striking United Auto Workers members


WASHINGTON (Reuters) - U.S. Senator Bernie Sanders and a group of Democratic lawmakers are pushing to raise taxes for companies that pay their chief executives at least 50 times more than their typical worker's salary, saying the bill was needed to limit corporate greed.

The union-backed proposal, which could impact some of the nation's biggest companies and largest employers, would also require Treasury Department guidelines to prevent companies from avoiding the tax by using contractors rather than employees, the senators said in a statement on Monday.

The bill could generate $150 billion in U.S. revenue over 10 years, while companies could avoid the tax hike by raising workers' pay and reducing CEO salaries, they added.


Walmart, Alphabet's Google, Home Depot, JPMorgan Chase, Nike and McDonald's could all face millions more - in some cases billions more - in taxes, the group said.

"Americans across the political spectrum are outraged by the extreme gaps between CEO and worker pay," the group said. Sanders, an independent, generally caucuses with Democrats.

The bill would need 60 votes to clear the Senate, which Democrats narrowly control 51-49. It also likely faces an uphill battle in the Republican-controlled House of Representatives, which would also have to pass the measure in order to send it to Democratic U.S. President Joe Biden to sign into law.

U.S. elections on the horizon in November could also further complicate any effort to pass such a bill with the economy looming large in Biden's bid for re-election.

Representatives for the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, the largest U.S. business lobby, did not immediately respond to a request for comment on the Tax Excessive CEO Pay Act, which was introduced last week.

The measure would raise the tax rate on companies whose CEO-to-worker salary ratio was above 50 to 1, starting with a 0.5 percentage-point increase when the top executive earns 50 to 100 times more than the company's average worker, according to the proposed legislation.

Companies that pay their top executives more than 500 times what a typical worker makes would face a maximum tax penalty of 5 percentage points.

If the CEO did not receive the largest paycheck in the firm, the ratio would be based on the highest-paid employee, the senators said. CEO-to-worker pay data for privately held companies would also be made public, they added.

(Reporting by Susan Heavey in Washington; Editing by Matthew Lewis)
Supreme Court to weigh overturning Okla. death row inmate Richard Glossip's conviction


The U.S. Supreme Court on Monday said it will hear arguments this year on whether or not to overturn the murder conviction of John Glossip amid concerns that he received an unfair trial. File Photo by Bonnie Cash/UPI | License Photo

Jan. 22 (UPI) -- The Supreme Court on Monday announced it will hear arguments later this year on whether to overturn the murder conviction of Oklahoma death row inmate Richard Glossip.

Glossip, convicted of murdering his boss at an Oklahoma City motel in 1998, has come up against the possibility of being executed nine different times as his attorneys argued that he did not receive a fair trial after it was revealed that a key witness against him had an untreated psychiatric condition that was not disclosed to the court.

"We are grateful that the court is providing Richard Glossip the opportunity to argue that Oklahoma should not be permitted to kill him," Glossip's attorney, John Mills said. "We are also grateful that the state's chief law enforcement officer, Attorney General Gentner Drummond agrees that Mr. Glossip did not receive a fair trial and his conviction must be reversed."

Drummond last year opened an Independent Counsel review of Glossip's murder conviction and death sentence and the Supreme Court followed by blocking an execution attempt scheduled for May.

Related
Court delays execution of Oklahoma inmate amid questions on guilt
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"Public confidence in the death penalty requires the highest standard of reliability, so it is appropriate that the U.S. Supreme Court will review this case," Drummond said in a statement Monday.

Drummond's office noted that an Oklahoma Court of Criminal Appeals rejected Glossip's April 2023 appeal for a post-conviction relief -- a legal maneuver allowing a defendant to present new evidence after a judgment has been made -- "despite the State's extraordinary admission of error in Glossip's trial."

The Criminal Appeals Court "refused to accept the state's confession of error, instead reaching the extraordinary conclusion that Glossip's execution must go forward notwithstanding the State's determination that his conviction is unsustainable," Glossip's legal representatives said about the April 2023 court decision.

Don Knight, another attorney for Glossip, said the state attorney general's "concession of error is historically unprecedented." Knight went on to say that "two independent investigations cast grave doubts on the reliability" of Glossip's original murder conviction.

Mills noted it took 25 years for Oklahoma "to disclose that the undisputed killer and the prosecution's star witness, Justin Sneed, was lying and that it did not correct his falsehoods for the jury." The state, Mills concluded, "now agrees this failure, and the cumulative effect of other errors in the case, require a new trial" for Glossip.
FOR PROFIT MEDICINE

NYC announces program to forgive $2 billion in medical debt


Mayor of New York City Eric Adams speaks with the press after meeting with members of Congress at the U.S. Capitol in on December 7, 2023. He announced a medical debt plan for New York City on Monday. Photo by Bonnie Cash/UPI | License Photo

Jan. 22 (UPI) -- A new program introduced by New York City Mayor Eric Adams and Health Commissioner Ashwin Vasser on Monday seeks to retire some $2 billion in medical debt owed by thousands of residents.

The announcement said the new RIP Medical Debt program would cost the city about $18 million to retire the debt over three years.

The plan centers on program purchasing of bundled medical debt portfolios from hospitals, commercial debt buyers and other providers, and erasing the debt with no further obligations.


To be eligible for the program, individuals must have an annual household income of at or below 400% of the federal poverty line and have medical debt equal to 5% or more of their annual household income.

Related

Citing 'fairness,' Biden unveils new rules on surprise medical bills, junk fees

"Getting healthcare shouldn't be a burden that weighs on New Yorkers and their families," Adams said in a statement. "Up to half a million New Yorkers will see their medical debt wiped thanks to this life-changing program -- the largest municipal initiative of its kind in the country."

The city said the program will partner with the Mayor's Fund to Advance New York City to raise additional funds to cover the medical debt.

"For hundreds of thousands of New Yorkers and millions of Americans, medical debt creates anxiety, uncertainty and stress," Anne Williams-Isom, the deputy mayor for health and human services, said in a statement. "New York City's investment through this partnership will help working people and families advance their health and financial well-being so they can thrive, instead of just survive."

The announcement comes on the heels of Adams this month vetoing several sweeping police accountability bills passed by the city council, saying they would make the city less safe, drown police officers in paperwork and increase police overtime pay over time.



BAIT AND SWITCH
FTC: Intuit must stop advertising TurboTax as 'free'



The FTC on Tuesday ordered Intuit to stop advertising TurboTax as free, unless it was free to all users or it clarified who does not have to pay. 
File Photo by Coolcaesar at en.wikipedia.


Jan. 23 (UPI) -- The FTC ordered TurboTax owner Intuit Inc. to cease marketing the tax filing software as free unless it is free for all consumers or Intuit clearly shows the percentage of taxpayers who qualify for the free service.

In the order filed Monday, the FTC said Intuit deceived consumers by falsely claiming Turbotax is free when many consumers must pay to use them.

The agency said if a majority of consumers don't qualify for the free offer, Intuit could state that a majority of consumers don't qualify instead of providing a percentage indicating the amount who do.

If the company chose to display the data showing the percentage of qualifying consumers it must be located near any representations claiming TurboTax is free.

Related
Judge: TurboTax software company Intuit misled customers with claims of 'free' use
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The FTC order also requires Intuit to clearly and conspicuously disclose all of the terms, conditions and obligations required to qualify for the free tax filing service. If advertisements and marketing appeals for the TurboTax app and service don't have room for the qualifying terms and conditions, Intuit can include a link to the detailed terms and conditions.

The FTC order also banned Intuit from misrepresenting the cost, refund policies or tax filers' ability to obtain a tax credit or deduction or file their taxes online without using the paid TurboTax service. Intuit must compile reports for the next 20 years that show its compliance with the FTC order.

Judge D. Michael Chappell in September ruled Intuit "engaged in deceptive advertising in violation of Section 5 of the FTC Act"after FTC officials filed an administrative complaint in the matter in March 2022.

"In fact, most tax filers can't use the company's 'free' service because it is not available to millions of taxpayers, such as those who get a 1099 form for work in the gig economy, or those who earn farm income," Chappell said in his September ruling.

CRIMINAL CAPITALI$M

Appeals court upholds Martin Shkreli's lifetime ban from pharmaceutical industry

HUBRIS

A federal appeals court on Tuesday upheld a lifetime ban placed on former Turing Pharmaceuticals CEO Martin Shkreli, who is also known as "Pharma Bro."
 File Photo by Dennis Van Tine/UPI | License Photo

Jan. 23 (UPI) -- A federal appeals court on Tuesday upheld a lifetime ban on Martin Shkreli working in the pharmaceutical industry and ordered him to pay a multimillion-dollar disgorgement fine for illegally hiking drug prices.

The three-judge panel of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit ruled Tuesday that a lower court did not err when it imposed a lifetime ban on the 40-year-old man known by the moniker "Pharma Bro," upholding the original ruling that found his anti-competitive and illegal scheme to be "egregious, deliberate, repetitive, long-running and ultimately dangerous."
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"Given Shkreli's pattern of past misconduct, the obvious likelihood of its recurrence and the life-threatening nature of its results, we are persuaded that the district court's determination as to the proper scope of the injunction was well within its discretion," the court said in its ruling.

In January 2022, a federal district court found that Shkreli had illegally maintained a monopoly over the drug Daraprim, an anti-parasite medication used to treat HIV patients and others with compromised immune systems, for which his company raised its price by 4,000% from $13.50 a tablet to $750.
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As punishment, it imposed a lifetime pharmaceutical ban upon Shkreli and found him liable for $64.4 million in disgorgement.

Shkreli then filed an appeal arguing the district court erred by imposing disgorgement and for banning him from the industry for life, saying the ruling was overly broad and limits his public speech -- arguments the appeals court rejected Tuesday.

"The Second Circuit's decision is a win for consumers seeking affordable, lifesaving medication and clearly demonstrates that corporate executives will be held personally liable for anti-competitive actions that they help orchestrate," Bureau of Competition Director Henry Liu said in a statement.

Shkreli was sentenced to seven years behind bars after being found guilty of securities fraud in 2017. He was released early in 2022.
RECESSION? WHAT RECESSSION!
Dow surpasses 38,000 for first time as Wall Street surge continues


Wall Street's bull market reached new highs on Monday as the Dow Jones Industrial Average surpassed 38,000 for the first time. 
File Photo by John Angelillo/UPI | License Photo

Jan. 22 (UPI) -- Wall Street again reached record territory on Monday, continuing a recent surge that saw the Dow Jones Industrial Average climb 138 points to finish above 38,000 for the first time in its history.

The S&P 500 index also posted a new all-time high of 4,850.43 on Monday, rising by 0.22%, while the Nasdaq Composite advanced 0.32% to 15,360.29 in its best finish in more than a year.


It was the third record close for the Dow this year, continuing a trend fueled by expectations of hefty corporate profit margins as the new earnings season kicks off, as well as by hopes for interest rate cuts with inflation cooling.

Technology oriented companies are providing much of the impetus for optimistic earnings expectations, with firms such as Netflix, Verizon and AT&T getting ready to release results in the coming week -- investors are betting on good news from them.

The markets are also reacting to positive news on the consumer sentiment front. On Friday, University of Michigan data indicated consumer sentiment improved dramatically in January, buoyed by expectations of cooling inflation.

The survey found consumer sentiment rose 13%, reaching its highest level since July 2021, while year-over-year consumer sentiment was up 21.4% over January 2023 levels.

The Federal Reserve, meanwhile, has hinted that interest rate cuts could be on the way, although its Open Market Committee is widely expected to hold interest rates steady for the fourth straight meeting when it gathers next week.