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Disaster Coverage Still Has Blind Spot for Low-Income Victims Print
Saturday, 02 September 2017 08:43

Demause writes: "Days after Hurricane Katrina struck New Orleans in August 2005, the national news media expressed collective alarm at the discovery that in modern America, many people shelter in place during storms for the simple reason that they can't afford to get out."

A woman walks through a home looking at water damage. (photo: Claire Harbage/NPR)
A woman walks through a home looking at water damage. (photo: Claire Harbage/NPR)


ALSO SEE: In Houston, Floods Push
Impoverished Residents Into Crisis

Disaster Coverage Still Has Blind Spot for Low-Income Victims

By Neil Demause, FAIR

02 September 17

 

ays after Hurricane Katrina struck New Orleans in August 2005, the national news media expressed collective alarm at the discovery that in modern America, many people shelter in place during storms for the simple reason that they can’t afford to get out (Extra!, 7–8/06). As CNN commentator Jack Cafferty (9/1/05) said, in the wake of scenes of poor New Orleanians trapped at that city’s convention center with no food amid the bodies of their dead neighbors:

Many of them didn’t follow the evacuation orders because they didn’t have the means to get out of town. They just couldn’t do it. A lot of them are sick. A lot of them don’t have cars. A lot of them just didn’t have the means to leave the Big Easy.

Numerous media outlets (e.g., CNN’s Reliable Sources, 9/18/05)  vowed to do better in the future—though within months, reports on poverty and the poor had retreated to background levels, and CNN (2/27/06) was approvingly reporting on how New Orleans had ripped out the carpet at the convention center to “[bring] it back ahead of schedule,” even as at least half of the city’s actual residents remained displaced.

Twelve years later, as Hurricane Harvey has wreaked devastating flooding across southeast Texas, reporters’ ability to notice the nearly one-third of Americans living in or near poverty has again been put to the test. And though direct comparisons with Katrina are tough—Harvey is a different storm, playing out over days of rising waters instead of mere hours, and Houston chose not to call for residents to evacuate as New Orleans did in 2005—news coverage has revealed some of the same blind spots that have plagued reporting on previous natural disasters.

The slow progression of floodwaters made for plenty of ready-made drama: At times, CNN seemed to have converted itself into a 24-hour rescue network, with tales of narrow escapes and heroic first responders. And as more deaths have been discovered, including a mother who died trying to save her three-year-old daughter from floodwaters (Washington Post, 8/30/17), much coverage has focused on these stories, with investigations of the storm’s broader impacts having to wait.

Much of the more in-depth coverage has focused on the floods’ impacts on the aged and infirm, like the nursing home residents who were rescued after the daughter of one tweeted a photo of her walker-bound mother in waist-deep water (USA Today, 8/27/17). CNN (8/29/17) reported on howthere are still plenty of people back there who either didn’t want to leave or haven’t been able to leave,” focusing on two wheelchair-bound Houston residents, one who was rescued by jet ski, another whose fate was unknown.

But if the elderly got special notice in Harvey coverage—rightly—there was relatively little focus on another group that is especially susceptible to natural disasters: the poor.

“Whatever the inequalities of your society, those are very often replicated in the disaster,” says Jacob Remes, who teaches disaster studies at New York University. This plays out in several ways, he says:

People who have more money are likely to have friends who have more money, and so when they have to stay with friends, they’re going to stay in a guest room. When poor people have to evacuate, they stay on a floor or on a couch—and that’s if they’re lucky.

During Hurricane Sandy, he notes, when his college shut down for two weeks, “it was like a two-week vacation for me”—but “for people who work hourly, they were out of money.”

To discover what Harvey has meant to south Texas’s low-income residents—nearly 600,000 Harris County residents live below the poverty line—one had to read carefully between the lines. The New York Times followed up its in-depth report on storm survivors (8/27/17) with a long, sympathetic report (8/28/17) on residents temporarily being housed in Houston’s convention center.

But aside from the former story’s brief mention of an immigrant hotel worker who’d waded through waist-deep waters to get to her $10-an-hour hotel job, washing and ironing sheets and towels—and who, in the Times’ description, “seemed to epitomize Houston’s work ethic, its resolve and its shock”—the paper paid little attention to the wherewithal of those fleeing the storm or why they were there. The Times (8/27/17) did send a reporter on Saturday, as Harvey first hit, to report on homeless Houstonians trying to ride out the storm under flood-prone highway overpasses, but never followed up to see how they’d fared once the waters rose.

One question that reporters could easily have asked Harvey survivors, but generally did not, involved flood insurance. Only 17 percent of homeowners in affected counties have flood insurance, according to the Washington Post (8/29/17), while CNN (8/29/17) pegged that number at 15 percent. (No one seems to have asked about renters, who may lose to flooding both their personal possessions and, significantly to their economic well-being, their cars.)

The Associated Press (8/29/17) managed to write an entire report on Texans lacking flood insurance without talking to a single resident (it did note that “people in those areas and near them have complained for years that the premiums are too high,” without elaborating), while the Washington Post (8/29/17) worried only that “Houston’s middle-class homeowners are unlikely to have the savings or insurance to rebuild, and that could have devastating consequences for years to come.”

Largely uninvestigated in Harvey coverage, meanwhile, were the reasons why Texans might be deciding to go without flood insurance. The cost of the federal National Flood Insurance Program, the most commonly used policy, has been on the rise thanks to an increasing number of damaging storms that has drained the program’s finances (New York Times, 4/7/17; The Hill, 8/30/17)—a result of both stronger storms thanks to climate change, and increasing development sprawl that has left more residents in the path of danger. President Trump has proposed cutting funding for updated flood maps that would let residents know their risk and thus their need for insurance, a cost that the National Flood Insurance Program is likely to pass along in the form of higher insurance premiums (Forbes, 3/18/17); Just days before Harvey made its first landfall, Trump’s FEMA administrator, Brock Long, endorsed the idea of requiring either policyholders or state and local governments to take on higher costs of flood insurance (Bloomberg, 8/23/17).

Another disaster impact that falls unevenly on the poor is environmental. Even before the explosions at the Arkema chemical plant in Crosby, Democracy Now! (8/29/17) noted that neighborhoods near petrochemical facilities, according to environmental justice activist Bryan Parras, were “literally getting gassed” by effluents from shuttered oil refineries. A Houston Chronicle map (8/31/17) shows how petrochemical facilities are clustered on the city’s poorer east side; these largely low-income neighborhoods already suffer from high rates of respiratory disease and cancer (The Nation, 6/3/14), as well as high unemployment as both residents and businesses have pulled up stakes and fled the recurrent toxic fumes, leaving behind those who can’t afford to relocate.

“Houston is the fourth-largest city, but it’s the only city that does not have zoning,” explained Texas Southern University professor Robert Bullard on Democracy Now!. “And what it has is—communities of color and poor communities have been unofficially zoned as compatible with pollution.”

By contrast, most mentions of the petrochemical industry in Harvey coverage have been regarding its possible impact on car drivers in the rest of the US: As CNN’s Alisyn Camerota (8/29/17) put it, “The torrential rain and catastrophic flooding impacting America’s oil industry in a big way, and that means higher prices at the pump for you.”

Virtually every news outlet (e.g., Washington Post, 8/28/17; Wired, 8/28/17) devoted attention to Houston Mayor Sylvester Turner’s decision not to call for residents to evacuate—noting the lessons learned from Hurricane Rita in 2005, when dozens of people died on the roads during an evacuation panic. But few noted the problems faced by those who might want to evacuate, but lacked cars or the money for gas or a place to stay—though the LA Times (8/28/17) did note in passing that one reason not to call for an evacuation was that “the city would also have to scramble to transport the poor, the elderly and the disabled who did not have cars.”

In fact, remarkably few outlets investigated people’s reasons for staying put, financial or otherwise. A Guardian report (8/30/17) on Cajun Navy volunteer rescuers who had trouble convincing residents to be evacuated by boat never asked any of those declining help why they were choosing to stay put, despite reports that floodwaters could rise another four feet. A Vox report (8/25/17) on the eve of the storm, meanwhile, elaborated multiple possible reasons people might choose to remain in harm’s way, including disabilities, fear of looters or not wanting to be separated from pets—but not lack of a car or other resources—before spending much of the article discussing ways to frighten people into leaving, including using markers to write Social Security numbers on their skin so their bodies can be identified by search and rescue teams.

“Most reporters don’t understand what it’s like to live under severely constrained economic circumstances—and media rarely help people learn such things,” says Stephen Pimpare, a University of New Hampshire professor who has authored several books on Americans’ attitudes toward poverty. “So they are baffled by some people’s inability to do what, to them, seems easy and obvious.”

There were some improvements over Katrina coverage, which was notable for reports, later revealed to be unsubstantiated, of widespread violence and looting. When ABC News reporter Tom Llamas (Twitter, 8/29/17) reported on “looting” at a Houston supermarket—and then noted seemingly in passing that a dead body had been discovered nearby—he was lambasted on social media, and in several news reports (MarketWatch, 8/30/17), and even columnist Becket Evans of the conservative Washington Examiner (8/29/17) cited “Christian theology” as justification for taking another’s property when in fear for your life.

“I think there’s been a lot of realization that that rhetoric of dangerous, animalistic people in New Orleans was seriously harmful, because it kept away real aid,” says Remes, noting that he’s seen articles for journalism students on this very subject.

Looting panic did break out in some corners of the media, but remained relatively contained. Both Fox 5 San Diego (8/28/17) and the Daily Caller (8/28/17) repeated the Facebook claims of Clyde Cain of the Louisiana Cajun Navy rescue team that thieves had tried to make off with one of their boats—a charge that other news outlets revealed to be unconfirmed (Miami Herald, 8/29/17). The Houston Chronicle (8/29/17) reported without questioning statements by Houston Police Officers Union vice president Joe Gamaldi that looters had fired shots at police and firefighters responding to the scene, which also turned out to be unverified.

Some of the most incisive reporting, meanwhile, came from the international press. The BBC (8/27/17) reported on residents of “hardscrabble” Rockport who were hit by the brunt of the storm, unable to flee because, as one resident said, “I had some problems getting out of town, a little broke and stuff, so I had to come home and, you know, tough it out.”

The Atlantic (8/27/17) was one US-based exception, noting that “while many South Texans evacuated North per the recommendation of Gov. Greg Abbott, poorer or disabled residents may not have had the resources or the capability to follow that advice,” and pointing out that poorer residents tend to be concentrated in areas more prone to flooding.

Poor people being subjected to misery, of course, aren’t news in the same way that the wealthy are. The New York Times (8/31/17), in a puzzling article headlined “Storm With ‘No Boundaries’ Took Aim at Rich and Poor Alike,” reported on two flooded-out Texans, one a working-class construction worker, one a well-off doctor. While the Times briefly noted that “there are huge differences between the options open to the poor and to the well-to-do”—the doctor has savings and flood insurance, the construction worker does not—it concluded that “the devastation is connecting people of disparate means in one common experience: loss,” leaving readers with the impression that the true tragedy here was that the flooding hadn’t spared those with expensive homes.

And on Tucker Carlson Tonight (Fox News, 8/29/17), correspondent Trace Gallagher remarked over footage of flooding that the damage includedhundreds of houses in a very upscale neighborhood here in Lake Houston,” where “400 people [were] taken out on rescue boats.” Carlson’s response: “And not just people, but deer.”

In fact, there were occasions throughout the Harvey disaster where animals appeared to be getting more attention than poor people. NBC News (8/30/17) and Fox News (8/30/17) were among the outlets reporting on pet rescues, while an image of a dog named Otis carrying a bag of scavenged dog food went viral, with the pooch being called “sweet” by AOL.com (8/29/17) and “resourceful” on the Today show (8/28/17). No outlets, at least, accused Otis of looting—if that’s progress, we’ll have to take it.

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How to Win Medicare for All Print
Saturday, 02 September 2017 08:40

Petty writes: "The recent debates about Medicare for All in the United States reflects a number of positive developments."

A health care rally. (photo: Health Care for All)
A health care rally. (photo: Health Care for All)


How to Win Medicare for All

By Sean Petty, Jacobin

02 September 17


The Medicare-for-All movement needs a goal that will help broaden its base and inspire the next big push. A national march could do just that.

he recent debates about Medicare for All in the United States reflects a number of positive developments. For one, the campaign for truly universal health care has gained serious momentum for the first time since the Affordable Care Act (ACA) passed in 2012. At that time, despite valiant efforts to insert a single-payer proposal, most politicians and activists stayed loyal to President Obama’s public-private partnership strategy.

Before the ACA, Michael Moore’s 2007 documentary Sicko — which focused on the victims of the for-profit health insurance industry rather than on the United States’ exclusion of fifty million people from health care coverage — provided a serious boost to activist organizing for Medicare for All.

The only other time in the last forty years that Medicare for All took center stage was in 1992, after Bill Clinton made universal health care a frontline campaign promise. Hillary Clinton’s subsequent task force buried that possibility after handing out shovels to the health insurance industry.

It therefore seems fitting that her historic failure of a presidential campaign has paved the way for this much-needed resurgence in the movement for universal health care. A coalition of single-payer activists groups — including National Nurses United (NNU), New York State Nurses Association (NYSNA, of which I am a member), Amalgamated Transit Union, United Electrical workers, and a number of smaller unions and locals grouped together as the Labor Campaign For Single Payer Healthcare, Physicians for a National Health Program, and Healthcare-NOW — are stepping up the fight for health justice.

In January, this network of Medicare-for-All supporting organizations settled on a new strategy. Instead of reacting to Trump, the groups decided to go on the offensive. We agreed that, while the ACA lacks public support and perpetuates an unequal system, Trump’s health care proposals will be much worse. In this context, Medicare for All will gain popularity on the local, state, and national level. The guiding idea — validated by Bernie Sanders’s campaign and Hillary Clinton’s defeat — was that you can’t fight the Right from center.

So far, this strategy has been vindicated. In the face of various iterations of Trumpcare, angry voters confronted their representatives at fiery town hall meetings. Medicare-for-All initiatives in California and New York came within one or two votes of reaching their governors’ desks. As is often the case, overt and covert Democratic Party obstruction killed these bills, but the legislation garnered more support — both from politicians and voters — than ever before. Indeed, a recent poll shows that 62 percent of Americans now believe that the government should make sure that everyone has health care coverage.

This means that while Trump, McConnell, and Ryan are trying dismantle as much of the federal government’s responsibility for health care coverage as they can, almost two-thirds of the population wants the exact opposite. And many of them know that the status quo of Obamacare is not going to get us there.

Changing the Political Landscape

The Medicare-for-All movement is engaged in a number of strategic debates right now. Should we puruse a state-based legislative strategy or a national one? How much of our collective resources should we devote to political lobbying and electoral campaigns versus broader political organizing? How do we organize the millions of health care victims? How do we build Medicare-for-All committees in communities and workplaces?

But the question receiving the most attention, especially among the growing socialist movement, is whether we should hold a national march. Jacobin has published multiple arguments on either side of the debate, and the authors have brought important considerations to light.

I’d like to offer my perspective as an organized socialist, a pediatric emergency room nurse in a public hospital who has built several successful (and many failed) workplace campaigns, an active participant in the Medicare-for-All movement, and an elected leader of the NYSNA. I believe that a national march can push us further toward our goal, but only if a coalition of unions, socialist organizations, and other social forces combine efforts to build a large, unified mobilization.

First off, our movements need to build power to win. Their side has money, our side has collective action. All progressive movements must figure out how to use this power in the face of obstacles.

A national march would play a positive role in this process. We shouldn’t overstate the effects of Washington, DC, days of action. Some produce little discernable change, and not all are worth the time and energy required to plan them. But they can transform the people who participate in them, advancing a number of critical ideological and organizational processes.

Even some supporters of the national march proposal dismiss its effects on the political landscape. But a cursory glance at similar mobilizations from the last twenty years should convince them otherwise. The anti-globalization actions from 1999 through 2001 in Seattle, DC, and Los Angeles helped develop a critical approach to institutions like the WTO, IMF, and World Bank, as well as policies like North American Free Trade Act (NAFTA) and the Free Trade Area of the Americas. They created a generation of activists who built power throughout the 2000s, culminating in Occupy Wall Street. Those who participated in the Battle for Seattle likely didn’t know that their work would set the stage for the activists in Zuccotti Park, but we can’t tell the story of the Occupy movement without reference to these earlier struggles.

Likewise, the global day of action on February 15, 2003, drew over one million protesters to New York City to resist the Iraq war. The New York Times called the new antiwar movement the world’s second superpower.

This year, the Women’s March helped set the tone for resistance to Trump’s agenda, erasing any belief that the new president had a popular mandate.

Michael Kinnucan, in his argument against the national march, sees these events differently. He writes, “While some [marches] have shaped the national mood, none has significantly altered the political landscape.”

Perhaps this statement depends on how you define “political landscape.” A more narrow view would only rate actions as successful if they move politicians to change their public positions. Indeed, Kinnucan offers only dismal predictions for a Medicare march:

It is hard to imagine how demobilizing and dispiriting this project will be for the activists involved, many of whom are new to politics …

A futile march on Washington will not interest anyone except the tiny minority of Americans who already support single payer, who already engage in left-wing activism, and who can travel across the country for a protest.

But many protesters I’ve marched with take different lessons from these mobilizations. Time and time again, I come away from national demonstrations with the conviction that even the most routine event can change thousands of people’s lives forever. Indeed, my experience reminds me of a John Berger quote, which appeared in this excellent article about the Women’s March:

The importance of the numbers involved is to be found in the direct experience of those taking part in or sympathetically witnessing the demonstration. For them the numbers cease to be numbers and become the evidence of their senses, the conclusions of their imagination. The larger the demonstration, the more powerful and immediate (visible, audible, tangible) a metaphor it becomes for their total collective strength.

When we consider the health care march, we should expand our understanding of the political landscape to include how an action changes popular opinion, provides momentum for the movement, and politically develops the participants. From that perspective, the strategic question becomes not whether a national march is ever useful, but whether the outcome in a particular moment justifies the effort that went into it.

Mobilizing is Organizing

Berger’s quote points to one of the main dangers of strategic debates: creating false, or at least exaggerated, dichotomies. Some of those discussing the march put national action in contrast to local organizing, or oppose organizing to mobilization. These are, of course, different aspects of activist work, but rather than thinking of them in tension, we should recognize that these dynamics are intricately connected.

For example, my union first started getting involved in the climate change movement following Superstorm Sandy. Since then, we’ve volunteered for relief efforts, adopted an official position on the Keystone XL pipeline, and held press conferences and workshops. But it wasn’t until the People’s Climate March in New York that our work cohered.

This national action included local rallies all over the country and became the largest environmental demonstration in American history. It also represented the largest union mobilization around climate change: over one hundred locals and several internationals endorsed the march, and close to ten thousand union members participated.

NYSNA used this opportunity to convince others in the New York labor movement to join the struggle and to develop strategies to educate and organize union members around climate change. Our union held lunchtime educational session in hospitals, which drew over two hundred attendees and helped educate and train rank-and-file nurses, elected leaders, and union staff to connect climate change, health care, and labor..

This year, we mobilized again for the People’s Climate March in Washington, DC. This effort built on the previous mobilization and subsequent organizing work, increasing the number of nurses who participated and developing key organizers. It’s naive to think that a national mobilization wouldn’t be able to help local organizing, or that Medicare for All can succeed without developing a national character.

On a similar note, Kinnucan rather simplistically opposes the concepts of organizing and mobilizing, a central issue in the labor movement. Some unions focus on staff-heavy turnout drives that don’t build power in the workplace, using their strength to demonstrate electoral capacity to politicians rather than to win a particular demand. But as Dustin Guastella points out, all organizing involves mobilizing and all mobilizing involves some degree of organizational buildup. Social movements need a dynamic mix of both to accomplish either, and dogmatically weighing one over the other will not help us make strategic decisions in the fight for health justice.

The question remains: should we plan a national Medicare-for-All march on Washington? I say yes, so long as the organizers work alongside the current movement. The issue can reach beyond those already involved in leftist organizing and the fight for single payer.

For example, this February in the small town of Newburgh, New York, the conservative Democratic congressperson organized a town hall. The feisty meeting was so overcrowded they had to move to a much larger space. The crowd repeatedly shouted down their representative around two major issues — the construction of the Pilgrim natural gas pipeline and Medicare for All.

The fact that a leading Democrat faced challenges from the Left on health care in a county that voted 51% for Trump proves that we have entered a new stage of the fight. Participating in a national mobilization could become a transformative experience for these new activists. This would also make a major difference in areas without a state single-payer fight.

Further, we can’t assume that all or even most members of large health care unions support Medicare for All or, if they do, have decided to devote their time to building the movement. Focusing on a national mobilization can help create a systematic process for increasing their level of involvement.

For example, the Service Employees International Union (SEIU), the largest health care union in the US, has taken an ambiguous position on Medicare for All. We can change this. Building toward a national march will give rank-and-file members the opportunity to engage in the campaign and potentially overcome their organization’s political hesitancy. Same goes for any number of other international and local unions.  It provides those unions with the opportunity to back a fight that is increasing in popularity and will improve the lives of millions.

Focusing on a national march does not mean abandoning state-level campaigns. State single-payer fights will play a crucial role in the path to a national victory.  California and New York have high concentrations of taxable, super-wealthy individuals who can provide funding. Both states have Democratic governors who, while beholden to corporate interests, are vulnerable on their left. Also, as the single-payer movement in Canada demonstrated, state-based campaigns can provide an effective model. There, activists won government-provided health care first in Saskatchewan, where it became so popular, it helped bolster the national movement.

Yes, We Should March

For the first time since Medicaid and Medicare came into being, we are within striking distance of a successful fight for universal health care. But we are not yet on the precipice of victory. We desperately need to develop the social forces capable of challenging both parties’ pro-corporate obstinance toward government-provided health care.

Again, Guastella makes an important intervention. He states that we can count on some support from Democratic congresspeople, but we shouldn’t depend on that to win. The political establishment, whether Republican or Democratic, will reflect the balance of class forces. We must force the issue, which means we must develop a national movement.

We should therefore be wary of politicians who want to direct our energy toward electoral campaigns. The diversion of antiwar forces toward John “reporting for duty” Kerry’s presidential campaign in 2004 is just one infamous recent example.

Barney Frank’s pithy dig at the National Equality March in 2009 follows the same logic: “The only thing they’re going to be putting pressure on is the grass.” He was wrong. That protest helped provide the momentum for the social forces that won marriage equality fights across the US.

Fortunately, this perspective has not appeared in the current debate in Jacobin, but we should expect it to enter the conversation soon. The Democratic Party has co-opted many social movements, lowering supporters’ expectations and wasting their time and energy. The Medicare-for-All movement is not immune to this danger.

It is the right time to push for Medicare for All. We have state-based momentum, and these campaigns aren’t likely to heat up again until spring of next year. Meanwhile, activists will be fighting the various sequels to the Trumpcare debacle for the next several months. Perhaps most importantly, Senator Bernie Sanders is set to release his national single-payer bill. The Medicare-for-All movement needs a goal that will help broaden its base and inspire the next big push. A national march can do just that.


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If Trump Revokes DACA, It Will Create a Humanitarian Crisis Print
Friday, 01 September 2017 13:27

Wadhwa writes: "The ugliness we have seen in Charlottesville and Washington D.C. will pale in comparison to the images of students being handcuffed, forced into buses, and ejected into the dark."

Undocumented activists demonstrate in support of the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals. (photo: Getty)
Undocumented activists demonstrate in support of the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals. (photo: Getty)


ALSO SEE: Will Trump Kill the
Dream for These Immigrants?

If Trump Revokes DACA, It Will Create a Humanitarian Crisis

By Vivek Wadhwa, PBS News

01 September 17

 

s Americans are still reeling from the shock of hearing their President dignify the actions of hatemongers, there is another social crisis brewing. Starting on Sept. 5, more than a million immigrant children could be kicked out of their jobs, rounded up by police, and deported to countries where their lives are at risk—and which are foreign to them.

This is because several attorney generals have challenged a program that former President Obama launched in 2012 which allows young, unauthorized immigrants, known as “Dreamers,” to live in the U.S. without fear of removal and work legally. The deadline the attorney generals have given is Sept. 5, and all indications are that President Trump will either let this program lapse or fail to defend it.

The ugliness we have seen in Charlottesville and Washington D.C. will pale in comparison to the images of students being handcuffed, forced into buses, and ejected into the dark.

The Migration Policy Institute estimates there are as many as 1.8 million children who could qualify for legal permanent residence under the Dream Act of 2017, a bill that has been under consideration but not enacted by the House and Senate. The parents of these children brought them here to give them better lives. The children didn’t knowingly break any laws. These Dreamers grew up as Americans, believing they were entitled to the same rights and freedoms as their friends were. Yet when they became old enough to work or to go to college, they learned that there are limits on where they can study and what they can do. They had to live as second-class citizens—in the shadows of society.

In June 2012, Obama launched the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) program, which allowed Dreamers who passed a rigorous background check to receive a renewable two-year period of deferred action from deportation and eligibility for a work permit. The plan was to follow this up with comprehensive immigration reform—a full legalization of status.

Nearly 800,000 children put aside their fears and applied for the permit under the belief that this would take them closer to gaining legal status. They provided detailed information about their backgrounds and locations. Now, this trust in the American government may lead to their deportation.

Trump has on several occasions expressed compassion for these children. He said at a press conference in February: “We’re going to show great heart. DACA is a very, very difficult subject for me, I will tell you. To me, it’s one of the most difficult subjects I have because you have these incredible kids.” He refrained from doing what he promised during the election campaign: to deport these children.

But Trump may have been as deceptive about this impending tragedy as he was about his sympathy for racists in Charlottesville. Because at the same time, according to the The Los Angeles Times, the White House had been looking for ways to end protection for Dreamers and shield the president from the blame; it was considering having several states do the dirty work by filing a lawsuit against DACA and then having the Justice Department provide new guidance on deportations.

The LA Times speculated that Attorney General Jeff Sessions, who was a vocal critic of deportation relief as a senator, would direct department of Justice lawyers to review the program and, if they determined “that DACA is not legal or is no longer a responsible use of prosecutorial discretion, the Department of Homeland Security would be instructed to stop awarding and renewing work permits.” And then “Sessions could instruct his lawyers not to defend the program in court, exposing it to indefinite suspension by a federal judge.”

This is exactly the scenario that appears to be playing out. Ten states, led by Texas, have written a letter demanding that the 15 June 2012 DACA memorandum be rescinded by Sept. 5, failing which they will file a lawsuit. Given that in 2016, Texas successfully challenged an effort by President Obama to expand DACA, it is likely that such a lawsuit will succeed. And the chances that Sessions will defend DACA are slim given that in July, he reiterated that the Department of Justice could have no objection to abandoning it “because it is very questionable, in my opinion, constitutionally.”

David Bier of The CATO Institute estimates that with DACA rescission, 110,653 permits will expire in 2017, 404,909 in 2018, and the remainder in 2019. This means that these children will be subject to deportation at the whim of Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents—who will be given vague guidelines. And even though President Trump has shown no willingness to move more aggressively against DACA recipients than is necessary, “certain ICE agents seem zealous about targeting them,” Bier writes.

The hell we have seen in Charlottesville is nothing compared to what lies ahead. And by playing with the lives of immigrant children, we are hurting the soul of America itself.


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We Have a Moral Duty to Talk About Climate Change Print
Friday, 01 September 2017 13:11

Lynas writes: "It is not politically opportunistic to raise this issue now. Instead we have a moral duty not to accept the attempted conspiracy of silence imposed by powerful political and business interests opposed to any reduction in the use of fossil fuels."

U.S. Navy conducts a helicopter rescue. (photo: CNN)
U.S. Navy conducts a helicopter rescue. (photo: CNN)


We Have a Moral Duty to Talk About Climate Change

By Mark Lynas, CNN

01 September 17

 

his is what climate change looks like. Entire metropolitan areas -- Houston in the United States and Mumbai in India -- submerged in catastrophic floods.

Record-breaking rainfall: Harvey's 50-plus inches of torrential deluge set a new national tropical cyclone rain record for the continental United States.

They used to make Hollywood disaster movies about this sort of thing. Now it's just the news.

Officials as senior as Kellyanne Conway, counselor to President Donald Trump, have suggested that now -- during a natural disaster -- is not the time to raise the divisive and highly politicized issue of global warming. But if not now, when? After the waters subside, the news crews pack up, and the long task of rebuilding begins, the world's attention inevitably moves on.

Watching Trump tour the flooded areas, I was reminded of his Rose Garden press conference less than three months ago announcing the US withdrawal from the Paris climate treaty. In that act of wanton international vandalism, Trump was helping condemn millions more people to the threat of intensified extreme events in future decades.

It is not politically opportunistic to raise this issue now. Instead we have a moral duty not to accept the attempted conspiracy of silence imposed by powerful political and business interests opposed to any reduction in the use of fossil fuels. We owe this to the people of Texas as much to those of Bangladesh and India, and Niger -- which was also struck by disastrous flooding this week.

Climate disasters demonstrate our collective humanity and interdependence. We have to help each other out -- in the short term by saving lives and in the longer term by cutting greenhouse gases and enhancing resilience, especially in developing countries.

No, of course climate change did not "cause" Harvey in any singular sense. Nor does smoking definitively "cause" any individual case of lung cancer. Smoking increases the risk of cancer, just as increased global warming increases the risk of extreme rainfall events.

This is not scientifically controversial. There is a straightforward physical relationship between a warming atmosphere and extreme rainfall potential.

Hotter air can hold more water vapor. And hotter water can provide the fuel for more intense tropical storms.

Yes, the vagaries of the weather played a part. Harvey stalled close enough to the Texas coast to continue drawing in tropical air from the Gulf of Mexico that was supercharged with moisture.

But the climate change fingerprint is undeniable, too. Sea surface temperatures across the Gulf on August 23, just before Harvey made landfall in Texas, were ominously warm, 1.5 to 4 degrees Celsius (2.7 to 7.2 F) hotter than the average of a few decades ago. These warm waters helped Harvey develop from a mere tropical depression to a Category 4 hurricane in just 48 hours.

If disasters ever have a silver lining, it is that they bring us together. Witness how ordinary people risked their lives to save others as the floodwaters rose around Houston. These were not unusual heroes; they were just normal people doing what they knew was right.

In life-threatening situations our human empathy swamps our day-to-day divisions of politics, nationality or religion. In South Asia, the International Red Cross and Red Crescent Movement is already supporting 200,000 people in direst need of food and shelter.

Somehow, we need to find a way to extend our capacity to empathize and support each other across political and social divides in the long term. If climate change remains as politically toxic as it is today in America, we will never be able to address it properly.

We all have a duty to confront denial and speak out. If we fail, the Harveys, Katrinas and Sandys of the future will be even worse than the storms we experience today. And in the future, as now, each subsequent climate disaster will just be "news." Surely we can do better than that.


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FOCUS: President Trump Is Giving Police Forces Weapons of War. This Is Dangerous Print
Friday, 01 September 2017 11:33

Johnson writes: "The president has signed an executive order that will reopen the floodgates of military-grade weaponry entering American streets."

Police with military-style assault weapons. (photo: Scott Olson/Getty)
Police with military-style assault weapons. (photo: Scott Olson/Getty)


President Trump Is Giving Police Forces Weapons of War. This Is Dangerous

By Hank Johnson, Guardian UK

01 September 17


The president has signed an executive order that will reopen the floodgates of military-grade weaponry entering American streets

standing military force, with an overgrown Executive will not long be safe companions to liberty.” – James Madison, Constitutional Convention (1787).

Our Founders opposed using a standing army to patrol our streets, and for good reason. While most of America is rightfully focused on the destructive path left in the wake of tropical storm Harvey this week, Donald Trump lifted the ban on certain military-grade weapons and equipment available from the Pentagon to our local police forces across the nation.

Trump’s unwise and ill-considered executive order reopening the floodgates of free surplus military-grade weaponry (as reported on CNN) from war zones across the world straight onto the streets of American cities, towns and university campuses, is the fulfillment of a campaign promise to the law enforcement lobby.

It is not just bad policy – it’s dangerous.

Before Barack Obama signed an executive order in 2015 limiting the transfer of certain types of military equipment under the Pentagon’s 1033 Program, the Department of Defense transferred more than $5bn in surplus military equipment directly to police agencies across the nation.

Because of lax oversight, some of the equipment has gone missing or been sold, possibly falling into the hands of wrongdoers.

The Pentagon program creates a pipeline that bypasses normal city council and county commission procurement processes, enabling police departments to acquire expensive-to-maintain and often unneeded military equipment directly from the Pentagon without the approval or even knowledge of government officials elected by citizens.

This is undemocratic and cedes too much power to unelected bureaucrats. The citizens are left to pay the price when these military “toys” are put into the anxious hands of often untrained local law enforcement.

What makes it dangerous is the fact that this program requires that the equipment be “placed into use” within 12 months of being acquired. The use of military-grade weapons at an inappropriate time by an untrained police officer is a recipe for disaster, as evidenced by the Ferguson police department’s response to non-violent protesters after the killing of unarmed teenager Michael Brown.

Handing our police weapons of war, including but not limited to large-capacity, rapid-fire weapons and ammunition – including .50-calibers – bayonets, grenade launchers, armored vehicles including military tanks, unmanned vehicles (armed drones), explosives and pyrotechnics, and similar explosive devices, makes us less safe.

It also drives a wedge between police officers and the communities they are sworn to protect and serve. Militarization runs counter to concepts of community policing, and hurts efforts to bridge the growing chasm between police and our communities.

Trump’s reckless action highlights why Congress must pass my bill – the bipartisan Stop Militarizing Law Enforcement Act of 2017 (SMLEA), HR 1556 – which would restore civilian authority over law enforcement by shutting down the direct pipeline between Department of Defense and law enforcement for certain types of military-grade weaponry.

The Stop Militarizing Law Enforcement Act would limit the requirements that incentivize law enforcement to use the equipment. It would also require that recipients account for all military weapons and equipment, create enforcement mechanisms to better monitor and control the transfer of equipment and require the Pentagon to take back weapons from state and local law enforcement agencies that are being investigated by the Department of Justice for civil rights violations.

Our nation was built on the principle that there are clear lines between our armed forces and domestic police. Moreover, just like the military, law enforcement is subject to civilian authority. This program blurs those lines.

It’s time for Americans to stop and take notice of the creeping militarization our streets before it changes the character of our country forever. Militarizing America’s main streets won’t make us any safer, just more fearful and more reticent. It’s time to stop militarizing law enforcement before it’s too late.


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