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Jim Jordan's Paranoid Stupidity Let the God-Kings of Tech Off the Hook Print
Written by <a href="index.php?option=com_comprofiler&task=userProfile&user=11104"><span class="small">Charles Pierce, Esquire</span></a>   
Thursday, 30 July 2020 12:42

Pierce writes: "The Masters of the Online Universe - Twitter Jack excepted - beamed into a House subcommittee on Wednesday in what was ostensibly a hearing on the antitrust implications of the corporate behemoths they run. This was a noble and healthy enterprise."

Republican Jim Jordan. (photo: Getty)
Republican Jim Jordan. (photo: Getty)


Jim Jordan's Paranoid Stupidity Let the God-Kings of Tech Off the Hook

By Charles Pierce, Esquire

30 July 20


Whenever the CEOs of Facebook, Google, Amazon, and Apple were cornered on antitrust issues, they just had to wait for the coatless nuisance from Ohio to take things to Stupidville.

he Masters of the Online Universe—Twitter Jack excepted—beamed into a House subcommittee on Wednesday in what was ostensibly a hearing on the antitrust implications of the corporate behemoths they run. This was a noble and healthy enterprise. There are, in fact, serious antitrust implications of how Facebook, Google, Amazon et. al. do their business, and their CEOs should be held responsible for those. However, this continues to be a House of Representatives with a Republican caucus, so all the four Godlike Beings had to do when things got tight was wait for someone like Rep. Jim Jordan, the coatless nuisance from Ohio, to take the proceedings on the express train to Stupidville. Jordan is a more reliable station agent on that one than anyone else in Congress.

In mid-afternoon, when his time came to question the witnesses, Jordan spent his five minutes haranguing Google CEO Sundar Pichai about Google’s alleged political partisanship. Listening to Jordan and the rest of the Republicans on the committee was to hear a virtual symphony in put-upon victimhood. (Retiring Congressman Jim Sensenbrenner was so deeply into his part that he tried to get Facebook’s Mark Zuckerberg to answer for an action taken against Donald Trump, Jr. by Twitter. That was embarrassing.) Jordan sang a bravura solo on these themes against Pichai.

JORDAN: So here's the question I think is on so many Americans’ minds. They saw the list we read here earlier. All the things Google has done. Google is siding with the World Health Organization over anyone who disagrees with them, even though the World Health Organization obviously lied to America and shills for China. YouTube and Google is siding with them. We have the history of what Google has done and the history of 2016, where they obviously, according to one of your marketing executives, tried to help Clinton. And here we are 97 days before the election and we want to make sure it's not going to happen again. Can you assure us you're not going to tailor or configure your platform to help Joe Biden? And second, that you're not going to use your search engine to silence conservatives? Can you give us those two assurances today?

PICHAI: Congressman, on our search engine, conservatives have more access to information than ever before—

JORDAN: We appreciate that, that wasn't the question. Can you assure us you're not going to silence conservatives and assure us that you're not going to configure your features as you did for Clinton in '16, can you assure us you're not going to do the same thing for Joe Biden in 2020?

Pichai did his best to answer Jordan’s performative paranoia. The next questioner, Rep. Mary Scanlon, Democrat of Pennsylvania, decided to try and get things back on track while also giving Jordan an elbow on the way by. 

Thank you, gentlemen. I’d like to redirect you to antitrust law rather than fringe conspiracy theories.

Annnnnd, thanks to Jim Jordan, we were off and running.

Mr. Chairman, we have the email! There is no fringe conspiracy theory.

Chairman David Cicilline of Rhode Island slammed the gavel. “Excuse me. It’s not your time!”

A general uproar ensued—"Mr. Jordan, you do not have the time. Will you please be respectful of your colleagues?"as committee voices seemed united in their desire that Jordan put a sock in it. Finally, Congressman Jamie Raskin hollered at Jordan, "Put your mask on!" To which Jordan replied:

Talk about staying on message. Thus do we achieve the unified field theory of Fox News.

What was striking about the hearing was that neither the witnesses nor many of the congresscritters showed much fluency in the language of monopoly power, which once was a lever moving the entire discussion of the American political economy. It was the energy behind the Progressive Movement in the early 20th Century. It was identified as being one of the primary villains behind the Great Depression. In the past 20 years, it manifested itself in the perils wrought on the country by the idea of Too Big to Fail. And, by the time the tech entrepreneurs hit the scene, they succeeded so well that, as has been the case in almost every breakthrough field in the economy down through time, they developed the skills of the monopoly power to crush (or to buy out) any newer ideas that came along. 

Somehow, over the past several decades, monopolies came to be seen again as natural products of a capitalist economy, and not as a perversion of, and a threat to, the fundamentals of capitalism. Politicians forgot how to talk about monopoly power. Therefore, antitrust law fell into desuetude. Monopolists, old and new, were of course perfectly fine with that. Tuesday’s hearing could have been a first step at reclaiming that progressive economic language. If only Jim Jordan would have put a sock in it.

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No, Trump Can't Delay the Election Print
Written by <a href="index.php?option=com_comprofiler&task=userProfile&user=51809"><span class="small">Ian Millhiser, Vox</span></a>   
Thursday, 30 July 2020 12:37

Millhiser writes: "President Trump, facing cratering poll numbers and the likelihood of an embarrassing defeat in November, suggested the country should 'Delay the Election' due to false fears of voter fraud."

President Donald Trump arrives to speak to the press ahead of a briefing of the Coronavirus Task Force at the White House on July 22. (photo: Brendan Smialowski/Getty)
President Donald Trump arrives to speak to the press ahead of a briefing of the Coronavirus Task Force at the White House on July 22. (photo: Brendan Smialowski/Getty)


No, Trump Can't Delay the Election

By Ian Millhiser, Vox

30 July 20


The law is very clear about this.

resident Trump, facing cratering poll numbers and the likelihood of an embarrassing defeat in November, suggested the country should “Delay the Election” due to false fears of voter fraud:

Let’s deal first with Trump’s claim that “Universal Mail-In Voting” will somehow lead to inaccurate or fraudulent results. There is no evidence whatsoever supporting this claim.

Universal mail-in voting refers to a practice where states automatically mail a ballot to all registered voters within the state — a ballot that can then be cast by mail or returned in-person to various polling sites. According to the Brennan Center for Justice, seven states — California, Colorado, Hawaii, Oregon, Utah, Vermont, and Washington — are vote-by-mail states.

Vote-by-mail is not a new practice. Oregon became the first state to adopt this practice in 2000. Since then, the state has provided over 100 million mail-in ballots to voters since 2000. It has only documented 12 cases of fraud.

In 2018, then-Secretary of Homeland Security Kirstjen Nielsen, a Trump appointee spoke to Colorado election officials and effusively praised the vote-by-mail state as a model of safe and secure elections. “We’d love to continue to use you as an example of what other states can adopt,” Trump’s homeland security secretary told the Colorado election officials at the time.

So Trump isn’t simply using false fears to justify delaying the November election — he’s using false fears that his own administration rejected as recently as two years ago.

This brings us to the question of whether Trump can actually delay, or even cancel, the election. The short answer to this question is “no.”

A trio of federal laws set Election Day for presidential electors, senators, and US representatives as “the Tuesday next after the first Monday in November.” If Republicans want to change this law, they would need to go through the Democratic House.

The 20th Amendment, moreover, provides that “the terms of the President and the Vice President shall end at noon on the 20th day of January.” Thus, even if the election were somehow canceled, Trump and Vice President Mike Pence’s terms would still expire as scheduled — although, as explained below, the question of who would succeed them is devilishly complicated.

That doesn’t necessarily mean that the November election is safe. Republican state governors and legislatures may still manipulate their own election rules to give an advantage to Trump. But Trump does not have the lawful power to delay or cancel an election.

Who gets to decide when an election is held?

There are different sets of rules for congressional elections and presidential elections.

For congressional elections, the Constitution provides that “the times, places and manner of holding elections for Senators and Representatives, shall be prescribed in each state by the legislature thereof; but the Congress may at any time by law make or alter such regulations, except as to the places of choosing Senators.” This means that both Congress and state lawmakers have control over when a congressional election is held, but Congress has the final word if there’s a disagreement.

Congress has set the date of House and Senate elections for “the Tuesday next after the 1st Monday in November.” Neither Trump nor any state official has the power to alter this date. Only a subsequent act of Congress could do so.

The picture for presidential elections is slightly more complicated. A federal statute does provide that “the electors of President and Vice President shall be appointed, in each State, on the Tuesday next after the first Monday in November,” so states must choose members of the Electoral College on the same day as a congressional election takes place.

That said, there is technically no constitutional requirement that a state must hold an election to choose members of the Electoral College. The Constitution provides that “each state shall appoint, in such manner as the Legislature thereof may direct, a number of electors, equal to the whole number of Senators and Representatives to which the State may be entitled in the Congress.” So a state legislature could theoretically decide to select presidential electors out of a hat. More worrisome, a legislature controlled by one party could potentially appoint loyal members of that party directly to the Electoral College.

Yet while state lawmakers theoretically have this power, the idea that presidents are chosen by popular election is now so ingrained into our culture that it is highly unlikely any state legislature would try to appoint electors directly. By 1832, every US state except South Carolina used a popular election to choose members of the Electoral College. South Carolina came around in the 1860s.

Moreover, once a state decides to hold an election to choose members of the Electoral College, all voters must be afforded equal status. As the Supreme Court explained in Harper v. Virginia Board of Elections (1966), “once the franchise is granted to the electorate, lines may not be drawn which are inconsistent with the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment.”

Additionally, even if a state did decide to appoint electors directly, that would require the state to enact a law changing its method of selecting members of the Electoral College. Several crucial swing states, including Wisconsin, Michigan, Pennsylvania, and North Carolina, have Democratic governors who could veto such legislation.

All of which is a long way of saying that the risk that an election will be outright canceled — or that a state may try to take the power to remove President Trump away from its people — is exceedingly low.

Okay, but if the election is canceled, what happens then?

Let’s presume, for just a moment, that the election does not happen as scheduled, for whatever reason. Who does that leave in charge? It turns out that the answer to this question is surprisingly complicated, and it may turn on whether at least one state manages to name individuals to the Electoral College.

Buckle up. This is about to get really deep into the constitutional weeds.

The 12th Amendment provides that after the members of the Electoral College are chosen, those electors shall meet and cast their ballots, and “the person having the greatest number of votes for President, shall be the President, if such number be a majority of the whole number of Electors appointed.”

It’s unclear what happens if only some states hold the presidential election as scheduled, while others fail to appoint electors at all, but the 12th Amendment’s text (“a majority of the whole number of Electors appointed”) suggests that the total number of electors needed to choose a president declines if some states do not appoint anyone to the Electoral College. If only 100 electors are appointed, 51 electoral votes could potentially be enough to choose a president.

Needless to say, this quirk of the Constitution’s text gives every state an incentive to hold their election. If a bloc of red states delays the election, while blue states do not, Republicans could effectively forfeit the Electoral College vote.

But let’s say that no one wins a majority of the electors. If that happens, the power to choose a president falls to the House — but with a twist. If the House is called upon to choose a president, it must choose one of the three candidates who received the most electoral votes. Moreover, each state’s congressional delegation has only one vote, and “a majority of all the states shall be necessary to a choice.”

While Democrats have a substantial majority in the US House as a whole, Republicans control a majority of the House seats in 26 states — just enough to choose a president. That said, this number could easily change. In many states, one party controls only one or two seats more than the other. If a handful of House members are incapacitated due to coronavirus, that could potentially alter the outcome of a House vote to choose the president.

Now let’s shift gears to a scenario where no members of the Electoral College are appointed. In this scenario, the House cannot choose a president because the 12th Amendment requires it to choose from among the three candidates who receive the most electoral votes.

Under the 20th Amendment, “the terms of the President and the Vice President shall end at noon on the 20th day of January, and the terms of Senators and Representatives at noon on the 3d [sic] day of January.” So, if no one is elected to replace these officials, Trump and Pence cease to be elected officials the minute their terms expire on January 20. Members of the House serve two-year terms, so all members of the House will cease to be representatives on January 3; one-third of senators’ terms also expire on that date.

Ordinarily, if the presidency and vice presidency are both vacant at the same time, the office falls to the speaker of the House. But if there is no election, there will be no speaker when Trump and Pence’s terms expire because all House seats will become vacant on January 3.

If there is no president, vice president, or speaker, the next official in line is the president pro tempore of the Senate, a largely ceremonial position that is traditionally held by the most senior member of the majority party. Right now that is Sen. Chuck Grassley (R-IA).

But wait! Recall that the terms of many senators also expire on January 3. As it turns out, 23 seats held by Republicans and only 12 seats held by Democrats are up for election this year, so if no election is held, Democrats will have a majority in the Senate once these seats become vacant. Which would mean that Senate Democrats would be able to choose a new president pro tempore. If they follow the tradition of choosing the most senior member of their caucus, that would place Sen. Patrick Leahy (D-VT) next in line for the presidency.

Things actually get even more complicated from here. The 17th Amendment permits state governors to name temporary senators to vacant seats, but not all states allow their governors to do so. It’s also not immediately clear who would be the governor of many states if no election takes place in 2020, because much of the line of succession in those states could be rendered vacant as well.

In any event, if you’ve read this far, your eyes are probably glazing over by now. The quirks of presidential succession provide fodder for constitutional lawyers to chew over, but, at the end of the day, the federal government’s power flows from the consent of the people. We allow our leaders to govern because we trust that they’ve been selected in a constitutionally valid process. And we trust that process because it is, at least, vaguely comprehensible.

If someone starts calling themselves “president” because they were chosen by a subset of a Senate that is missing a third of its members, a likely outcome is civil unrest — especially in a nation that is already on edge because of the extraordinary measures needed to check the spread of the Covid-19 pandemic.

In the exceedingly unlikely event that the 2020 election is canceled, the result isn’t likely to be an extended term for President Trump. The most likely result is chaos.

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FOCUS: Okay. Wow. All Right. Okay. "Demon Sperm," Now? Fine! Print
Written by <a href="index.php?option=com_comprofiler&task=userProfile&user=55429"><span class="small">Kenzie Bryant, Vanity Fair</span></a>   
Thursday, 30 July 2020 11:32

Bryant writes: "Demon sperm. What is it? Why is it? Why are we yelling about it? These are questions we're made to answer because, in short, we live in hell."

Dr. Stella Immanuel, center, speaks with members of the group America's Frontline Doctors. (photo: Twitter)
Dr. Stella Immanuel, center, speaks with members of the group America's Frontline Doctors. (photo: Twitter)


Okay. Wow. All Right. Okay. "Demon Sperm," Now? Fine!

By Kenzie Bryant, Vanity Fair

30 July 20

 

emon sperm. What is it? Why is it? Why are we yelling about it? These are questions we’re made to answer because, in short, we live in hell. There appears to be no immediate escape from the daily affliction of Donald Trump’s presidency, and this time is no different. Where to start on this week’s heinous development? Where to begin? What is it all about? How to stop stalling and just get into it already?

Okay, here we go. Just going to dive in. Here we go. Okay: Understanding how “demon sperm” entered the discourse should start, I suppose, with the woman who inadvertently introduced the phrase to the broader public in the first place, pediatrician and fire-and-brimstone-type minister Stella Immanuel. The Houston doctor joined the group of other medical professionals on Monday in D.C. in what they’ve called the “White Coat Summit,” a Tea Party–driven gathering meant to drive a wedge of distrust into COVID-19 consensus. They have some pretty kooky ideas in general. Immanuel, for example, recounts in sermons and books the devil’s various plots to take over the world, which is obviously wrong because as I stated above, we are already living in hell.

Anyway, their main claim is that there is a cure for coronavirus and it’s hydroxychloroquine (there isn’t yet and it is not). And yet, Breitbart posted the video of the speeches that same day, and within hours, it was the second-most popular video on Facebook, reportedly getting 14 million views in that short time. Madonna’s Instagram co-signed Immanuel’s words, calling her “my hero.” Donald Trump Jr. said the video is a “must watch” (for which he got temporarily suspended from Twitter for promoting false information). And, of course, the president retweeted it to his millions of followers on Twitter.

The drug hydroxychloroquine is meant to treat malaria, and the president has touted it repeatedly as a one-stop shop for all your COVID-cure needs, despite several studies saying that it has limited success with coronavirus patients and puts some people at risk for heart rhythm problems.

In reporting on Trump’s role in spreading the false information, Will Sommer of the Daily Beast dug into some of Immanuel’s other beliefs, and they include something about needing Dr. Anthony Fauci’s pee (?), lizard people and alien DNA (??), and insisting that ovarian cysts are caused by demon sex. So here we are again. What is demon sex? A fun bit of trouble to get into when its hot as Hades out? A particularly bad Tinder date? No, it is sex with demons in one’s dreams and the demon sperm causes the gynecological issues and general maladies in one’s body and marriage.

Would you believe that it didn’t end there with the demon sex and the demon sperm discussed at a national level? Facebook removed the video of Immanuel and others promoting hydroxychloroquine as the COVID “cure,” which the president retweeted late Monday night because, according to a spokesperson, it was “sharing false information about cures and treatments for COVID-19.” By Tuesday, after “demon sperm” fully metabolized in whatever gastrointestinal recesses that process trending topics on social media platforms, Trump commented on the video, suggesting that his was not just another random retweet, but a thoughtful one, unfortunately.

“I thought she was very impressive in the sense that from where she came—I don’t know which country she comes from, but she said that she’s had tremendous success with hundreds of different patients, and I thought her voice was an important voice,” Trump said of the doctor.

This was coincidentally the same week that the leaders of the Big Four—Google, Twitter, Amazon, and Facebook—would sit before the House Judiciary Committee as the U.S. government flirts with the idea of regulating the awesome, often unchecked power over-information and privacy they’ve accumulated in the last decade or so. Also on Tuesday, a memo circulated among Republicans, encouraging them to grind the familiar “censorship” gear, that is the perceived “anti-conservative” bias at work on the platforms.

The timing is probably a correlation-not-causation thing. Like Trump and others probably didn’t intend to promote false claims about life-saving drugs in the middle of a pandemic and also inadvertently start a conversation about demon sex, only so that their retweets would get taken down. Like, if you close your eyes and point randomly to any day on your Google calendar, some addled malcontent in D.C. will have complained about how one of these companies is treading on their right to confuse and endanger enormous swaths of the public. But boy, did they pick an egregious one to focus on this week of all weeks.

How will this story play out? Is it over as one might hope? Or is the final beat in this horrendous cycle also the worst one, in which Mark Zuckerberg utters the words “demon sperm” under oath in response to a question from Jim Jordan? If that were to happen, then at least we would know absolutely for sure this was hell on Earth. Your “kooky” uncle’s Facebook post just writes itself on that one.

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By Threatening Unemployment Benefits, Republicans Risk Sending the Economy Over a Cliff Print
Written by <a href="index.php?option=com_comprofiler&task=userProfile&user=44720"><span class="small">The Washington Post Editorial Board</span></a>   
Thursday, 30 July 2020 08:29

Excerpt: "The 31.8 million U.S. workers currently receiving unemployment insurance benefits need that help - and they need clarity about how much help they are going to get, and for how much longer."

The line at an employment office in Las Vegas. (photo: John Locher/AP)
The line at an employment office in Las Vegas. (photo: John Locher/AP)


ALSO SEE: The $600 Unemployment Bonuses Did Not Lead to
People Working Less, Yale Study Shows

By Threatening Unemployment Benefits, Republicans Risk Sending the Economy Over a Cliff

By The Washington Post Editorial Board

30 July 20

 

he 31.8 million U.S. workers currently receiving unemployment insurance benefits need that help — and they need clarity about how much help they are going to get, and for how much longer. Too bad neither the Republican majority in the Senate nor the White House can get its act together to meet those needs, especially with a July 31 expiration date for a covid-19-related $600-per-week supplement fast approaching.

The GOP has proposed renewing the supplement at a lower level, $200, through September, to be followed by a new system under which recipients get 70 percent of their previous wages, up to $500 per week. Democrats want the $600 per week to continue unchanged through the end of this year. It’s anyone’s guess how this might be resolved before Friday.

Perhaps it would help to recall that the $600 supplement, like the March 27 Cares Act, of which it was a part, was actually a bipartisan measure. Democrats and Republicans agreed that workers being thrown out of their jobs because of the nationwide pandemic response should get the same weekly income they had on the job. Calculating a 100 percent wage replacement for everyone proved technically infeasible, however, because of the insufficent investments states had made in their computer systems. So lawmakers approved the $600 flat rate as a rough-and-ready substitute.

It was understood at the time — some GOP senators even raised the issue — that many beneficiaries would get more in unemployment than at work, and that this could create a disincentive to work. Given the lack of jobs, and the need to shore up family budgets, as well as the proven role of unemployment insurance in boosting much-needed demand, this anomaly was deemed acceptable.

The GOP goal of 70 percent wage replacement retreats from this previous consensus, in the name of restoring work incentives, though it is better than the 45 percent that states typically provide. Democrats correctly respond that there is not yet much evidence of a negative impact on labor supply because of the $600 supplement, largely because there are still so few jobs open. The economic outlook is uncertain at best. It stands to reason, however, that perverse incentives will grow in significance as time goes on and the labor market heals. The Congressional Budget Office estimates that 5 of every 6 unemployed Americans will be better off receiving benefits than working by the end of 2020, if the $600 supplement remains in place.

The best approach would be to shoot for a higher level of wage replacement than the GOP has proposed, while still reducing the percentage of workers receiving more in unemployment than they could by working. To that end, it may make sense to create a trigger mechanism to reduce supplemental benefits as unemployment shrinks. Major investments in technology are also urgent, so state agencies can at last do the calculations necessary to optimize benefit levels.

The worst outcome would be for the $600 supplement to lapse with nothing to replace it, sending workers, and the economy, over a cliff. As matters now stand, the country is dangerously close to the edge.

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Trump's Sanctions Are Crippling Syria's Beleaguered Health Sector Print
Written by <a href="index.php?option=com_comprofiler&task=userProfile&user=55425"><span class="small">Kamal Alam, Middle East Eye</span></a>   
Thursday, 30 July 2020 08:29

Alam writes: "It has been a month since US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo announced Caesar Act sanctions coming into play as policy on 17 June."

An injured Syrian child receives treatment at a hospital in Idlib province in November 2019. (photo: AFP)
An injured Syrian child receives treatment at a hospital in Idlib province in November 2019. (photo: AFP)


Trump's Sanctions Are Crippling Syria's Beleaguered Health Sector

By Kamal Alam, Middle East Eye

30 July 20


Many hospitals need urgent reconstruction, but sanctions are preventing them from importing critical equipment

t has been a month since US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo announced Caesar Act sanctions coming into play as policy on 17 June. 

There has been a clear mismatch in US priorities, as seen by the differences between Pompeo and US President Donald Trump referenced by former UN ambassador John Bolton in his new book; Trump was more interested in hostages than in what Pompeo or Bolton had to say about Syria. But whatever the politics behind the Caesar Act, it is hurting ordinary Syrians already suffering amid the collapse of Lebanon’s economy. Healthcare stands as the best example of this. 

Political and financial crisis

Far before the enactment of the Caesar Act, Syria’s economy had collapsed from already austere sanctions, combined with a war economy that has dramatically worsened living conditions for ordinary Syrians. Syrians are suffering from ailments beyond the immediate scope of the war, including cancer, diabetes and the resurgence of once-eradicated diseases like polio which made a comeback in 2015 but now gone again.

The current situation is terrible, even worse than the expected aftermath of nine years of fighting. It has been exacerbated by the political and financial crisis in neighbouring Lebanon, alongside the global coronavirus pandemic. 

While Emirati and Kuwaiti healthcare aid to Syria has helped hospitals in Damascus, it is not nearly enough. David Beasley, executive director of the World Food Programme, has repeatedly said that the world must help Syrians in Syria as the best way to tackle the overall crisis. 

Before the war, Syrian healthcare was the envy of the region, as noted by the World Health Organisation. Around 1.6 million Iraqi refugees had made Syria home and were able to access high-quality care. In this regard, a Brookings Institution analysis described a welcoming environment in Syria. 

Syria had already dealt with wars in Iraq and Lebanon, and its health system looked after Iraqi, Lebanese and Palestinian refugees better than any other Arab state. Its healthcare system has long been linked to border economies.

Out of commission

In an earlier piece co-written with Peter Oborne, I argued that financial sanctions hinder payments for healthcare imports - which is a massive obstacle, despite western officials claiming that Caesar does not impact healthcare transactions. On the ground, it is a different story, far removed from the comfort of thinktanks in DC or London.  

Doctors relayed that it was difficult to even speak to suppliers, because of their fear of sanctions and the inability to process payments. Many hospitals and healthcare centres are out of commission and need urgent reconstruction. While countries such as the UAE, Indonesia and Kuwait have helped, Caesar now threatens to halt international cooperation. 

Diagnostic equipment, such as MRI and CT scanners, are failing or missing vital parts. Ventilators and laboratory equipment are lacking. Cardiologists told me that endoscopes, cardiac catheters and coronary stents, along with renal dialysis facilities, are all suffering due to sanctions. Even private hospitals that can afford repairs cannot get them, as companies do not want to sell them the required equipment for fear of repercussions.

Essential equipment and medicines are affected by sanctions in terms of supply, manufacturing and importing. Banks are refusing to open credit for importing urgently needed healthcare goods amid fears that sanctions may affect their business. 

Insurance companies are refusing to provide cover and when they do, the costs are unbearable. Listing Syria as a high-risk area, shipping companies are refusing to import medical equipment to Syria. Large companies are refusing to send equipment, medicines, ambulances or even baby formula. 

Breaking with the US

Healthcare is not just about the practical and applicable sciences, but it is also about vital research. Doctors cannot attend regional conferences because of visa restrictions, or subscribe to scientific journals as they cannot pay the required fees due to financial sanctions. Most surgeons told me they were going by prewar research and limited access to online health tool kits. 

There are huge questions over the wisdom and long-term viability of sanctions, including from European allies. Syrian economist Amer al-Hussein has argued that it may be time for the EU to break with the US on Syria policy. Oxford professor Adeel Malik, an expert on Arab economies, notes that there is a plethora of evidence highlighting how sanctions fail to meet their objectives and instead strengthen regime interests. In an interview with Malik, he told me:

“The Iranian case is instructive. US sanctions have hurt the independent private sector and middle classes, the very constituencies that could push for economic and political reform,” Malik said. “In Saddam-era Iraq, sanctions proliferated smuggling opportunities. Sanctions are a collective punishment of society. They are a moral disgrace and should be viewed as such.”

Syrian healthcare is suffering. It has a regional role beyond the Syrian state, and as with all things related to the ongoing war, when Syria suffers, the region suffers.

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