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Boris Johnson Is Getting Mercilessly Owned Everywhere He Goes Print
Written by <a href="index.php?option=com_comprofiler&task=userProfile&user=47782"><span class="small">Paul Blest, Splinter</span></a>   
Sunday, 15 September 2019 08:29

Blest writes: "British prime minister Boris Johnson is not a very popular man in many parts of his home country (or with several people in his own family), which makes sense considering he's actively attempting to drive said country off of a cliff."

Boris Johnson. (photo: Phil Noble/Reuters)
Boris Johnson. (photo: Phil Noble/Reuters)


Boris Johnson Is Getting Mercilessly Owned Everywhere He Goes

By Paul Blest, Splinter

15 September 19

 

ritish prime minister Boris Johnson is not a very popular man in many parts of his home country (or with several people in his own family), which makes sense considering he’s actively attempting to drive said country off of a cliff. On Friday, he made the mistake of showing his face in public, where constituents repeatedly let him know just how much they loathed him in front of a bunch of television cameras.

In the northern town of Doncaster, Johnson was taken to task by a woman who slammed him not just over Brexit, but the Tories’ longstanding affinity for austerity as well.

“People have died because of austerity, and you’ve got the cheek to come here and tell us austerity’s over and it’s all good now,” the woman told Johnson. “It’s just a fairy tale.” Yikes.

Later, during a speech in the nearby town of Rotherham where he pledged to give local governments money to run their own railways—Johnson caught a bunch of heckling from the crowd.

After a bit of unintelligible yelling, Johnson responded: “Yes, I’m all in favor of our MPs.”

“Then why are you not with them in Parliament not sorting out the mess that you have created?” the man shot back, before being escorted out by security. “Why don’t you sort it out, Boris?” Double yikes.

This all follows an incident from last week where a man dressed him down for “playing games” and not working on the country’s withdrawal from the European Union, which is currently set to happen on October 31 with or without a deal with the EU. Johnson responded by just standing there and mumbling “That’s not true” like a goddamn moron. Also, this happened.

Johnson is set to meet with European Commission president Jean-Claude Juncker on Monday; adding to his woes is a new poll indicating growing support for Welsh independence if it meant that Wales would be able to stay in the EU.

As bad as it is out in the World for Boris, it’s no better for him in Parliament right now. Maybe just stay in bed and call a personal day next time, man.

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'Emperor Has No Clothes': Trump Asked of Egypt's al-Sisi, 'Where's My Favorite Dictator?' Print
Written by <a href="index.php?option=com_comprofiler&task=userProfile&user=51519"><span class="small">Juan Cole, Informed Comment</span></a>   
Saturday, 14 September 2019 12:40

Cole writes: "Yet another possible political scandal could be brewing in the Trump administration, this time over a whistleblower complaint that acting Director of National Intelligence Joseph Maguire refuses to hand over to Congress."

A poster depicting Egypt's President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi. (photo: Majdi Fathi/NurPhoto/Getty Images)
A poster depicting Egypt's President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi. (photo: Majdi Fathi/NurPhoto/Getty Images)


'Emperor Has No Clothes': Trump Asked of Egypt's al-Sisi, 'Where's My Favorite Dictator?'

By Juan Cole, Informed Comment

14 September 19

 

nn Arbor (Informed Comment) – Trump has long been accused of having a soft spot for dictators, but now he has admitted it, even if only in the form of a jest.

Nancy Youssef, Vivian Salama, and Michael Bender at the Wall Street Journal report that at the recent G7 meeting where Trump saw a delegation from Egypt, he came into the room asking “Where’s my favorite dictator?” he said, referring to President/ Field Marshall Abdel Fattah al-Sisi. They say the joke was met with stony silence from the Egyptians. It is not clear if al-Sisi was present at the room in the Hotel de Palais in Biarritz when Trump so spoke.

Later, the two did a joint photo op at which Trump said, “”We understood each other very well. He’s a very tough man, I will tell you that. But he’s also a good man, and he’s done a fantastic job in Egypt. Not easy,”

Both Trump’s remark and the Egyptian reaction tell us a great deal if we attend to them.

Trump is not as naive as he pretends, and he knows very well that the strongmen he admires, from Bolsonaro in Brazil to Kim Jong-un in North Korea are brutal dictators. Trump calls them “tough” and doesn’t care if they oppress tens of millions, as long as they act in ways that support his vision of geopolitics (white America on top, everyone else offering its corporations access to their economies and keeping down any forces that might interfere in all this).

As for the Egyptian elite, it is trying to pretend that the country isn’t a brutal dictatorship. There is an elected parliament, though it is powerless, since genuine power is in the hands of president al-Sisi.

Although al-Sisi took off his uniform and ran for president as a civilian in 2014 and again in 2018 (in phony elections), he remains a mouthpiece of the Egyptian officer corps, which made a 2013 coup against Egypt’s first and only elected president, Mohammed Morsi. who died in prison this past June, apparently from medical neglect. Tens of thousands of members of his movement, the Muslim Brotherhood, were arrested, hundreds were kiled, and all were branded terrorists. They had been a legitimate political party that won a plurality in parliament as well as the presidency in 2011-2012 after the Egyptian youth revolution of January, 2011. But now they were abruptly declared a terrorist organization and driven underground. It is true that Morsi had dictatorial tendencies himself and that the Brotherhood perhaps had undemocratic apparati, but their year in office was nothing as repressive as the al-Sisi dictatorship.

Human Rights Watch wrote of Egypt in 2018 (and it hasn’t gotten better this year):

    “Since President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi secured a second term in a largely unfree and unfair presidential election in March, his security forces have escalated a campaign of intimidation, violence, and arrests against political opponents, civil society activists, and many others who have simply voiced mild criticism of the government. The Egyptian government and state media have framed this repression under the guise of combating terrorism, and al-Sisi has increasingly invoked terrorism and the country’s state of emergency law to silence peaceful activists.

    The government continued to silence critics through arrests and unfair prosecutions of journalists and bloggers, and the parliament issued severely restrictive laws that further curtail freedom of speech and access to information. The intensified crackdown also includes lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender (LGBT) activists, artists, and alleged or self-described atheists. Authorities have placed hundreds of people and entities on the country’s terrorism list and seized their assets for alleged terrorism links without any hearing or proper due process.

    In addition to using the exceptional State Security Courts, for which court decisions cannot be appealed, authorities continue to prosecute thousands of civilians before military courts. Both court systems are inherently abusive and do not meet minimum due process standards.”

The Trump administraton has continued to give Egypt billions in aid, accepting the cover story that

Trump’s joke wasn’t funny to the Egyptians because it is all too true, in ways they cannot afford to acknowledge. Trump made the joke because he does not care about dictatorship or human rights, only getting what he wants.

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Yes, the United States Needs to Withdraw From Afghanistan Print
Written by <a href="index.php?option=com_comprofiler&task=userProfile&user=51614"><span class="small">Farooq Sulehria, Jacobin</span></a>   
Saturday, 14 September 2019 12:38

Sulehria writes: "When President Trump scuttled talks for a peace deal in Afghanistan, liberal media heaved a sigh of relief. But despite the risks, an end to the US occupation is a precondition for peace in the country."

U.S. Air Force F-15E Strike Eagle aircraft drop munitions on a cave in eastern Afghanistan. (photo: U.S. Armed Forces)
U.S. Air Force F-15E Strike Eagle aircraft drop munitions on a cave in eastern Afghanistan. (photo: U.S. Armed Forces)


Yes, the United States Needs to Withdraw From Afghanistan

By Farooq Sulehria, Jacobin

14 September 19


When President Trump scuttled talks for a peace deal in Afghanistan, liberal media heaved a sigh of relief. But despite the risks, an end to the US occupation is a precondition for peace in the country.

n February 14, Adil Ahmed Dar, a Kashmiri-origin suicide bomber, rammed his explosives-laden truck into an Indian military convoy in the Pulwama district of Kashmir Valley. The attack triggered India-Pakistan skirmishes. It was the most deadly attack since 1989 on Indian forces, claiming over forty lives. The suicide bomber was inspired by the Taliban victory over the United States in Afghanistan. This “inspiration” was flagged by the suicide bomber himself in a pre-recorded video message released soon after the incident by the militant outfit Jaish-e-Muhammad.

Attacks like this haunted observers of the now-scuttled US-Taliban negotiations. Won’t a US withdrawal unleash a renewed wave of fundamentalist terror emboldened by a victory over the United States as was the case after the Soviet withdrawal from Afghanistan? Most importantly, won’t Afghanistan plunge into a new spiral of civil war once the US forces pull out?

The talks came to an abrupt end on September 8 when President Trump, in a series of tweets, scuttled the process after “an attack in Kabul that killed one of our great great soldiers.” Thousands of Afghans killed during nine rounds of US-Taliban negotiations did not merit any tweet.

Just ahead of Trump’s September 8 tweets, media were reporting a “deal” between Washington and the Taliban. Details of the “deal” were kept secret even from the Afghan government, which was in fact locked out of the negotiation process by the US representative Zalmay Khalilzad. If one goes by media leaks, the ill-fated deal would have had the United States pull out without the Taliban agreeing to a ceasefire. The Taliban, meantime, would not attack the departing troops. In simple words: the United States was abandoning Afghanistan to a bloody civil war.

If the reports were true, the “deal” hammered out by Khalilzad epitomized opportunism of the highest order. In media commentaries, a sigh of relief has been heaved on Trump’s tweets derailing the “deal.” After all, even an optimist could argue that a US withdrawal may perpetuate and aggravate the bloodshed in Afghanistan.

Yet an end to the US occupation of Afghanistan would be a welcome step. Arguably, it will create the necessary conditions for a return to peaceful times in the country. A balance sheet of US misadventure will provide the necessary context.

The 9/11 Moment as Year Zero

The seventeen-year-long US war in Afghanistan has cost, according to President Trump himself, over $2 trillion. Annually, this war is costing $45 billion. However, economic costs pale before the human toll. Over 35,000 Afghan civilians, only since 2011 — besides 2,400 US service members since 9/11 — have been killed. The Afghan government conceals exact figures for the deaths of Afghan security forces, but the Watson Institute at Brown University estimates a death toll in the range of 58,000. At least, 42,000 “insurgents” have also been killed in clashes with security forces.

Most mainstream narratives of Afghanistan begin with 9/11. The whitewashing of pre-9/11 history conceals the hypocrisy of the US occupation. While it’s frequent to find a passing reference to Moscow-sponsored “brutal communist” rule (1979–1992), any reference to the reign of terror (1993–97) unleashed by the Mujahideen to militarily dislodge the “communists” is expediently sidelined. Yet the Mujahideen regime proved the most horrible phase in the Afghan conflict that began unfolding in 1978.

Once the Soviet troops crossed the bridge over River Amu in 1989, the regime spearheaded by the People’s Democratic Party of Afghanistan (PDPA) disintegrated quickly. For roughly the next four years, 1992–97, various Mujahideen factions reduced Afghanistan to rubble in their bid to capture Kabul. In the process, countless died. Women were raped. Teenage boys were kidnapped for abuse. Afghanistan became a fiefdom of various brutal warlords. Some of them were rehabilitated by the US occupation.

Two major factions spearheading this civil war were the Northern Alliance, led by Ahmed Shah Masood; and Hezb-e-Islami, led by Gulbadin Hikmatyar. While Masood, ethnically a Tajik, was sponsored by India and Turkey, Hikmatyar was a proxy for Pakistan. Both factions and their leaders were fundamentalists, brutal, and antiwomen. Unlike the stereotypical understanding of Afghanistan in which the Taliban regime is the original architect of Afghanistan-as-women’s-prison, the Mujahideen factions had already consigned Afghan women to the Stone Age well before the Taliban movement was born in an organized fashion.

In fact, the Taliban first drew favorable public attention when they rescued a teenage boy from a local warlord. Such was the brutality of Mujahideen’s period that sections of Afghan society passively welcomed the Taliban takeover. The Taliban, they argued, were at least not plundering, raping, or kidnapping. However, the Taliban would not have reached Kabul without Pakistani sponsorship. Islamabad, upon realizing that Hikmatyar cannot outfox Masood, betted on Taliban founder Mullah Omar.

The above brief on the pre-Taliban years is a necessary reminder that the Mujahideen symbolized terror, rape, fundamentalism, and plunder while the Taliban, in comparison, were viewed by sections of Afghans as a lesser evil. Post-9/11, the discredited and hated Mujahideen were rehabilitated, rearmed, and redeployed as the political plank of the US occupation. No doubt, a few Mujahideen had their beards trimmed for the consumption of Western media. Hardly surprising that Hikmatyar is one of the presidential candidates in the elections due on September 28. The political facade erected by the US occupation was unpopular, unrepresentative, and isolated from the start. It could not be otherwise. Occupations install puppet regimes in order to consolidate the occupations.

Failed Reconstruction Efforts

While the hated Mujahideen provided a political facade for the US occupation, an NGO-led reconstruction effort turned Afghanistan into a neoliberal laboratory.

During 2002–2013, the international community pledged $90 billion for reconstruction (ultimately only $69 billion was committed and $57 billion actually disbursed). But inside Afghanistan, traces of a $57 billion development are largely missing.

It’s not that nothing has happened. As a regular visitor to Afghanistan, this author has seen massive improvements in certain sectors. For instance, 4,000-kilometer-long paved highways have been built. Primary education, in particular, is a step forward. Besides seven million children in schools, aid money has helped build 3,500 schools. Roughly 30 percent of Afghanistan has been electrified. Now 85 percent of the population has access to some basic health facilities.

However, Afghanistan remains one of the poorest countries in the world, and living standards are abysmally low. The reconstruction bid has largely failed. This can be seen in Kabul, which was the largest beneficiary of development aid. Roughly $3 billion was spent, yet most of the streets remain unpaved while clean drinking water is a rarity. The plight of hospitals, schools, and civic amenities will require a separate book-length story. What went wrong with reconstruction?

The failure of Afghan developmental plans is often blamed on corruption. This discourse was lent an aura when, in 2010, Transparency International declared Afghanistan the world’s second most corrupt country. Corruption, no doubt, is a problem. However, it was the flawed development model (which also made corruption easy) that bred the failure. The model was to rebuild Afghanistan through NGOs instead of the state. This is not unique as development aid is increasingly reaching Global South countries through NGOs. But Afghanistan, in particular, as a “clean slate,” was converted into a laboratory for neoliberal NGO-ized experimentation. The excuse behind channeling development aid through NGOs is that state establishments/institutions are corrupt, hence, inefficient.

To offset the presumed corruption of Afghan bureaucracy, aid was handed down to NGOs, which mushroomed overnight. Many arrived almost onboard US B-52s. Between 2002–2010, over 82 percent of development aid bypassed the Afghan government/state and ended up with the NGOs. Unsurprisingly, the NGOs proved many times more corrupt than the Afghan bureaucrats and politicians. From 2009–2010 onward, foreign assistance has tilted back in the favor of the Afghan state.

But corruption and lack of accountability were not the only problems in the NGO sector. On the one hand, ministries were denied the chance to learn and administer development projects; on the other, resources were lavishly wasted. For instance, certain projects were subcontracted five times, and every subcontractor earned a 5–10 percent profit from the deal. Moreover, since the state was not involved in planning or executing the overall development picture, some sectors drew huge resources while others were gravely ignored.

NGO-driven development is, however, only a partial explanation of this mega-failure. Another major factor was the militarization of the aid. Fifty percent of aid was spent in the name of security (the US DoD appropriated over half the aid money), and the militarization of aid also meant that the prioritization of projects was not based on need, but on which areas the military identified as important for winning support for the United States.

But then occupations are not meant for development, anyway. The argument here is not that a different political model coupled with an efficient reconstruction effort would have yielded different results — rather it is that the occupation submitted Afghanistan to its own interests at the cost of Afghans. It could not have been otherwise. Consequently, Afghan revolt was inbuilt in the occupation. However, the US failure to consolidate the occupation does not imply an automatic victory for the Taliban in the event of a US withdrawal, as many liberal commentators in the media suggest.

The Taliban Cannot Win

Back in 1997, objective conditions favored the Pakistan-sponsored Taliban’s seizure of Kabul. Arguably, a disinterested Washington welcomed Taliban arrival in the capital. To quote the New York Times, the “State Department was touting the Taliban as the group that might finally bring stability.” A US diplomat, Jon Holtzman, was advised to visit Kabul. The trip was, however, canceled after a media kerfuffle about women’s rights. Still, $125 million was granted in aid (the largest foreign aid package received by the Taliban).

The State Department maintained a secret correspondence with the Taliban regime. At the time, the media was replete with rumors regarding US-backing for the Taliban. Unlike the anti-US image the Taliban cultivated afterward, they were pretty cozy with “infidel” Uncle Sam. The US rationale for the Taliban support was not merely an over-publicized gas pipeline project that Unocal wanted to pursue. The Clinton administration, it was rumored, had Iran in mind while welcoming the Taliban. Whether or not these rumors were true, the Taliban’s second major sponsor, Riyadh, definitely wanted to contain Iran through the staunchly anti-Shia Taliban.

Equally important was the turmoil in Russia and in the Central Asian Republics (CARs). Following the Soviet dissolution, new regimes in Russia and in the CARs were struggling to consolidate. Most importantly, Afghans were desperate for peace after years of brutal infighting among Mujahideen gangs. Hoping against hope, at least a section of Afghans (conditioned as this was by ethnicity) pinned their hopes on the Taliban even if it meant sacrificing civil liberties.

Presently, the odds are stubbornly going against the Taliban. Saudi royals, one of them personally humiliated by Mullah Omar on the question of Osama bin Laden’s expulsion, would find it imprudent to annoy Washington by patronizing the Taliban. Regimes in the CARs and Russia, dealing with confessional militancy, would not sit idle in the face of a Taliban takeover of Kabul (Moscow hosted talks between the Taliban and Afghan Opposition in February this year).

China, facing Uighur dissent, has publicly expressed disapproval of the Taliban. Most importantly, a large majority of Afghans, particularly the non-Pashtuns that constitute almost 55 percent of the population, having lived the Taliban nightmare are not ready to experience it one more time. Hence, the Taliban march on Kabul may not be resisted only by the United States, Iran, India, China, CARs, and Russia, but also by most Afghans.

However, despite lacking a mass social base, the Taliban have the advantage of an unceasing supply of fanatics ready to explode on Afghan streets en route to paradise. This implies that bloodshed will not come to an end despite a US withdrawal. Also, certain Taliban factions may not agree to any final settlement with the Trump administration. War, after all, is also a lucrative drug trade and a flourishing economy for the Taliban commanders. Still, there is a strong case for US withdrawal.

The Case for US Withdrawal

The US-Taliban “deal” announced by Khalilzad in the last week of August was not only opportunistic, but it was also so risky that even Mike Pompeo was reluctant to sign it. One hopes that any future “deal” has a ceasefire as a precondition. However, though there may be many qualifications, the urgent priority is still US withdrawal.

First of all, eighteen years of US occupation has only complicated, intensified, and prolonged the conflict. This track record is itself the biggest argument in favor of US withdrawal. Ironically, over this time the Taliban have not merely regained the control of considerable parts of Afghanistan, they at one time extended their writ to Pakistan through their Pakistani cousins. It’s worth noting that since Vietnam, it has been established that the most powerful imperial countries can destroy a country in the Global South, but it cannot occupy them colonial-style.

Secondly, a US withdrawal will deny the Taliban their appeal as the “resistance force.” It is the presence of foreign occupying troops that legitimize the Taliban terror. For almost a decade now the Taliban have stopped targeting civilian targets.

After the death tolls from suicide bombings began to isolate the Taliban, they announced their intention to aim only at foreign forces or Afghan security services (though such attacks claim civilian lives anyway). Attacks on Shia-Hazara schools and mosques in recent years have been claimed by ISIS (Da’esh). The Taliban have religiously denied attacks on the Shia-Hazara community.

Thirdly, if the United States pulls out, the Taliban’s main sponsor, Pakistan, will be under huge external and internal pressure to stop patronizing the Taliban. Most importantly, Islamabad will forego the blackmailing power it currently musters owing to the fact that US military supplies depended on Pakistani cooperation. Already, Pakistan’s Foreign Minister Shah Mehmood Qureshi has ironically suggested that the US forces should not pull out in haste (implying that a US pullout will render Pakistan rudderless).

Fourthly, as argued above, a US withdrawal does not automatically imply a Talibanized Afghanistan. Despite Trump’s example, it is possible to engineer a withdrawal and a deal that involve many more stakeholders and draw better plans for ending the country’s civil war.

Finally, and most importantly, the Afghan people increasingly want a US withdrawal. They never invited or endorsed the US occupation. They have paid a huge price. They do not want to be sandwiched anymore between a US hammer and the Taliban anvil.

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Migrating Birds May Be Collateral Damage for a Popular Pesticide Print
Written by <a href="index.php?option=com_comprofiler&task=userProfile&user=51612"><span class="small">Jim Daley, Scientific American</span></a>   
Saturday, 14 September 2019 12:32

Daley writes: "One of the most widely used agricultural insecticides causes severe weight loss in white-crowned sparrows and delays the migration of these common North American songbirds, according to a new study published Thursday in Science. The finding suggests exposure to the pesticide could be contributing to declines in certain bird species over the past half-century, experts say."

A white-crowned sparrow affixed with a lightweight digitally-coded radio transmitter that broadcasts signals that relay the bird's whereabouts. (photo: Margaret Eng)
A white-crowned sparrow affixed with a lightweight digitally-coded radio transmitter that broadcasts signals that relay the bird's whereabouts. (photo: Margaret Eng)


Migrating Birds May Be Collateral Damage for a Popular Pesticide

By Jim Daley, Scientific American

14 September 19


Neonicotinoids may be partly responsible for declines in songbird populations

ne of the most widely used agricultural insecticides causes severe weight loss in white-crowned sparrows and delays the migration of these common North American songbirds, according to a new study published Thursday in Science. The finding suggests exposure to the pesticide could be contributing to declines in certain bird species over the past half-century, experts say.

The study examined the effects of imidacloprid, part of a class of neurological toxins called neonicotinoids used to target insect pests in farm fields. These chemicals, which can be directly applied to seeds and are absorbed into plant tissue as crops grow, were thought to be less toxic to vertebrates than other pesticides. When a neonicotinoid is applied to a seed, however, less than 20 percent of it will end up in the plant—and these pesticides are turning up in the environment. The chemicals have increasingly come under fire in recent years because their presence in the wild has been linked to losses of honeybee populations and implicated in birth defects among deer and other mammals.

“This [new] paper is a signal,” says Nicole Michel, a senior quantitative ecologist at the National Audubon Society, who was not involved in the study. “It’s the canary in the coal mine that says neonicotinoids are very bad for bird populations.”

The researchers who conducted the research previously showed that imidacloprid causes weight loss and weeks-long disorientation in captive birds. Their new study is the first to examine what it does in wild birds during migration.

To test the effects of the insecticide, Margaret Eng, an ecotoxicologist at the University of Saskatchewan, and her colleagues captured migrating white-crowned sparrows at a stopover site in southern Ontario and fed them seeds treated with varying doses of imidacloprid. They weighed the birds and attached tiny radio transmitters to them to track their movements. Sparrows exposed to the highest dose—3.9 milligrams per kilogram of their weight—lost 6 percent of their body mass in just six hours and stayed at the stopover site a median of three and a half days longer than nondosed control birds did.

Because migration is so fine-tuned, body-mass loss and extended stopover times could have devastating effects. Michel says some 90 percent of bird mortality occurs during such trips. “A delay of three and a half days may not sound like much, but it is huge,” she says. Songbirds are more vulnerable to predators during migration when postponements occur, and they can make it harder to find mates and quality nesting sites at the end of the journey.

The Crop Science division of the company Bayer, which makes neonicotinoid insecticides, has provided Scientific American with a statement that disputes the conclusions Eng and her colleagues drew from their findings: “The study does not establish a link between use of neonicotinoid insecticides [in agriculture] and negative effects on populations of migrating songbirds,” the statement reads in part. “The authors have previously reported biological monitoring data that contradicts the notion that migrating songbirds are frequently being exposed to significant amounts of neonicotinoids.” But study co-author Christy Morrissey, also an ecotoxicologist at the University of Saskatchewan, contends this criticism is incorrect: she argues that she and her colleagues detected low levels of imidacloprid in the blood of 78 percent of captured birds in their previous research. “This is a clear indication that the sparrows were recently exposed to the chemical, as these are known to be rapidly metabolized and cleared from the body,” she says. “This suggests exposure to imidacloprid is widespread and common in migratory songbirds.”

Michel says Eng and her colleagues exposed the birds to an “extremely conservative” dose of imidacloprid. Birds are “absolutely coming into contact with treated seeds in the environment,” she adds.

Eng, Morrissey and their colleagues suggest this exposure to neonicotinoids may be directly contributing to population declines in bird species that depend on agricultural habitat since the 1960s. Stuart MacKenzie, director of migration ecology at the conservation organization Bird Studies Canada, who was not involved in the research, says it is difficult to pin down what is causing the worldwide crash of migratory bird populations. But he agrees these chemicals could be a factor. “In most cases, we don’t know why declines are happening, and it’s often a complex arrangement of reasons,” he says. “This study gets at least one of the potential causes for declines in a variety of species.”

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RSN: Commemorating an Astonishing Act of Bravery & Compassion in a Time of Cowardice & Hate Print
Written by <a href="index.php?option=com_comprofiler&task=userProfile&user=6004"><span class="small">Harvey Wasserman, Reader Supported News</span></a>   
Saturday, 14 September 2019 11:47

Wasserman writes: "As we flounder in the sea of hate spewing out of the White House and all around it, honoring one of humankind's greatest acts of compassion might help us heal, and renew our faith that change can still come."

'On and after October 1, 1943, thousands of Danish families left their lives behind. A makeshift armada hastily ferried more than 7,000 Jews and their spouses across the water to neutral Sweden.' (photo: Museum of Danish Resistance)
'On and after October 1, 1943, thousands of Danish families left their lives behind. A makeshift armada hastily ferried more than 7,000 Jews and their spouses across the water to neutral Sweden.' (photo: Museum of Danish Resistance)


Commemorating an Astonishing Act of Bravery & Compassion in a Time of Cowardice & Hate

By Harvey Wasserman, Reader Supported News

14 Saturday 19

 

s we flounder in the sea of hate spewing out of the White House and all around it, honoring one of humankind’s greatest acts of compassion might help us heal, and renew our faith that change can still come.

It happened October 1, 1943 – 76 years ago this coming month. Jews around the world were celebrating Rosh Hashannah, their Holy New Year.

In Denmark, there was little to celebrate. The Nazis had occupied this small, northern European country in April 1940. For three years, they maintained an uneasy truce with King Christian X and Denmark’s parliament and people. Among other things, there was a tenuous agreement that Hitler would not send more than 7,000 Jewish Danes to his concentration and death camps to the south.

But as the war dragged on, relations deteriorated. Danish resistance forces grew restive. In August-September, the Nazis declared martial law. Popular legend has it that Hitler ordered Denmark’s Jews to wear the yellow star of David, as he had ordered in other countries. The King, says the folklore, then donned one himself.

That did not happen. But what did pass was even more astounding.

In late September, a Nazi diplomat named Georg Ferdinand Duckwitz quietly warned Danish sources that Hitler had decided it was time for the Jews to go. A deportation coordinator came to Copenhagen. The Jews’ destination would be the infamous concentration and death camps to the south. Nearly 8,000 Jewish Danes and their non-Jewish spouses would face the Final Solution.

The King and others spread the word. On and after October 1, often with just hours’ notice, thousands of Danish families left their lives behind. A makeshift armada hastily ferried more than 7,000 Jews and their spouses across the water to neutral Sweden, which had signaled it was willing to take them.

Some of the trips were just a few miles, but the conditions were perilous, and some voyages were far longer. Many of the fishing folk and others who did the job were paid, though the sums varied widely, and many were not paid at all.

In some cases, the rescuers sailed their small, shallow-bottomed boats directly across minefields, knowing Nazi patrol craft would not follow them. Some estimates put the toll of those lost at around two dozen, an astonishingly low number given the magnitude of the operation.

Though many got out in one incredible night, evacuations continued for a while.

Ultimately, several hundred Jewish Danes were left behind. Many were picked up by the Nazis and sent to the Theresienstadt concentration camp in occupied Czechoslovakia. But the Danes were able to monitor the status of many Danish prisoners and get them special provisions through the Red Cross. Ultimately, the death toll among Danish Jews held by the Nazis was far less than of those from other countries.

This near-miraculous Exodus is almost without parallel in human history. Paid or otherwise, hundreds of non-Jews risked everything to save the lives of their fellow Danes. Amidst a complex flow of influences, Sweden opened its doors to all refugees.

By contrast, the US had already refused entry to more than 900 Jews aboard the USS St. Louis, which was turned back from Miami in 1939. At least a quarter of the refugees ultimately died at the hands of the Nazis.

Countless thousands throughout Europe perished after the United States refused them entry. Among them was Anne Frank, the legendary teenage Dutch diarist, whose family was specifically denied papers before she needlessly died (and was thrown into a mass grave) at Bergen-Belsen.

At today’s southern border with Mexico, horrifying cruelty and sadistic inhumanity is being perpetrated by the Trump junta on desperate refugees fleeing starvation, torture, and murder in Latin American countries long ravaged by our own corporations. Trump is also stonewalling desperate survivors of Hurricane Dorian, which just ravaged the Bahamas, as our nation has denied entry to those fleeing Haiti and other global-warming climate catastrophes.

As the Jewish New Year approaches (October 1) citizens throughout the world would do well to honor with grateful hearts and minds those Danish and Swedish heroes and so many other Righteous Humans who have saved so many “Others” in dire danger over the centuries.

We might all, as human beings, be proud that there remains in our species’ genetic code a part of us that can be counted on for such inspirational, self-sacrificing bravery and compassion in the face of terrible cruelty.

As Americans, we must also fiercely escalate the struggle to rid our nation of the hideous bestiality being perpetrated by the current occupant of the White House and his goose-stepping minions.



Harvey Wasserman’s The People’s Spiral of US History: From Deganawidah to Solartopia will be out October 1 at http://www.solartopia.org/. Harvey hosts California Solartopia at KPFK/Pacifica 90.7 fm, Los Angeles, and Green Power & Wellness at prn.fm.

Reader Supported News is the Publication of Origin for this work. Permission to republish is freely granted with credit and a link back to Reader Supported News.

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