Author: Common Dreams

  • On the day Minneapolis police officer Derek Chauvin was convicted of murdering George Floyd, local law enforcement in my hometown killed my nephew’s father. His name was Jose Flores.

    When my local paper “reported” on Jose’s death, it was more a regurgitation of a police report than journalism. There were no interviews with Jose’s family, who were on the scene when police used tear gas and “less lethal munitions” to kill him.

    Sadly, it’s par for the course for police reports to frame officers in a favorable light—and the people they kill in a negative one.

    Jose could have been taken into custody. Instead, police transported his lifeless body to a nearby hospital where he was later pronounced dead.

    Reporters regularly rely on police reports as primary sources when covering police killings. That’s irresponsible to say the least. Examples of lies and omissions in police reports are ubiquitous, as several high-profile recent killings have made clear.

    Before the video of his killing went viral, police in Minneapolis reported simply that George Floyd “appeared to be suffering medical distress.” They failed to mention the cause of that distress was a knee on the back of his neck.

    When Mario Gonzalez was killed by police in Alameda, California, the police report said he too experienced a “medical emergency” during an altercation with officers. Body camera footage later revealed Mario’s “medical emergency” was caused by officers placing a knee on his back and an elbow on his neck, resulting in him losing consciousness and eventually dying.

    When 7th grader Adam Toledo was killed by police in Chicago, Cook County prosecutor James Murphy claimed Toledo had a gun in his hand when officer Eric Stillman killed him. Video evidence showed Adam’s hands were empty and raised above his head when he was shot.

    Sadly, it’s par for the course for police reports to frame officers in a favorable light—and the people they kill in a negative one.

    In Jose’s case, the news coverage quotes heavily from the police report and paints him as someone who perhaps deserved to die—noting, for example, that he was “known to the police department from several prior contacts and arrests involving violent offenses.”

    Was Jose a saint? Of course not. None of us are. But he was a son, a brother, and a father. Compounding the tragic nature of his death is that his third child is due in just two months.

    Jose, like George, Mario, and Adam, was many things, including a human being who deserved help in a moment of crisis. His death could have been avoided if police acted rationally. Instead, they rushed the situation to its lethal conclusion.

    Despite being under more scrutiny than ever, U.S. police killings in 2021 are actually right on pace to meet their annual average of 1,100.

    When police kill people, true justice is unachievable, and even accountability is rare. The arrest rate for police who fatally shoot people is just 1 percent, with the conviction rate being even lower.

    Like others who were needlessly killed by police, Jose should still be here today. He should be alive to see his child born this summer, or to watch his son’s little league game this week. Because police relied on violence as a first resort, he is gone forever.

    Jose would give the shirt off his back and the shoes off his feet to someone who needed them more than he did.

    That’s how I’ll remember Jose.

    This post was originally published on Radio Free.

  • Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez expressed solidarity with working people in Colombia in a statement released late Thursday, denouncing the recent killing of protesters by security forces in the South American country.

    The New York Democrat, whose congressional district includes parts of Queens—home to more Colombian-Americans than any other county in the U.S.—said she stands “with our Colombian brothers and sisters, in NY-14 and abroad, against the state killing of protesters.”

    “All people should have a fundamental right to demonstrate against their elected leaders,” Ocasio-Cortez said. “These citizens were protesting against anti-working class reforms and, for that, they lost their lives. There must be accountability for the long string of human rights abuses exercised by the Colombian government.”

    As Common Dreams reported this week, human rights advocates and world leaders have condemned the Colombian government’s violent crackdown on demonstrators at protests against a tax reform plan which favors the wealthy. The government recently reported an unemployment rate of 16% amid the coronavirus pandemic, and between 37% and 47% of Colombian people live below the poverty line. 

    At least 25 people have been killed—11 by right-wing security forces, according to CNN—and hundreds have been injured since the protests began on April 28. The demonstrations have spread to nearly 250 cities and towns as working class people express outrage over the government’s violent response, which has included the use of tear gas and batons. 

    President Ivan Duque has blamed “drug-trafficking mafias” for the unrest, echoing right-wing lawmakers and commentators in the U.S. who blamed violence at last year’s racial justice protests on demonstrators—despite data showing nearly 1,000 incidents of police violence at the protests. 

    The Colombian newspaper El Espectador reported on Ocasio-Cortez’s statement, along with expressions of solidarity from Reps. Jim McGovern (D-Mass.) and Ilhan Omar (D-Minn.) and New York state Sen. Jessica Ramos (D-13).    

    On Friday, Rep. Ayanna Pressley (D-Mass.) added her voice to the chorus of progressives speaking out against the state-sanctioned violence. 

    “State-sanctioned violence is a transnational issue,” Pressley said.

    This post was originally published on Radio Free.

  • WASHINGTON – After the Texas House of Representatives passed SB7 in the dead of night, anti-voter legislation that will make it harder for voters across Texas to cast their ballots, Stand Up America Managing Director Christina Harvey issued the following statement:

    “Every day the Republican Party is working to strip Americans of their right to vote—and this shameful law passing the Texas House is just their latest attack on our democracy.

    “Congress has the power to nullify much of this law, and the responsibility to act immediately to prevent Republicans in Texas and dozens of other states from keeping millions of eligible Americans from casting their ballots in future elections.

    “Time is of the essence. The only path forward now is to pass the For the People Act and the John Lewis Voting Rights Act to stop this outright assault on the freedom to vote.”

    Over the past few months, Stand Up America’s Texas members made hundreds of calls to their state senators in opposition to Senate Bill 7. The group has mobilized its members in several other states to oppose Republican state lawmakers’ attempts to suppress the vote, driving thousands of constituent actions in states like Arizona and Texas.

    This year, Stand Up America has also driven over 25,000 constituent calls to Congress in support of the For the People Act, the most comprehensive package of anti-corruption, voting, and ethics reforms proposed in generations.

    This post was originally published on Radio Free.

  • WASHINGTON – In reaction to Republican commissioners on the Federal Election Commission (FEC) blocking the enforcement of clear campaign finance violations by former President Trump first raised in Common Cause complaintsPaul S. Ryan, Common Cause’s Vice President for Policy & Litigation, issued the following statement:

    Crystal Mason, a Black woman, was sentenced to five years in prison for inadvertently violating an election law in 2016. She thought she was allowed to vote and filled out a provisional ballot that was never counted. Donald Trump blatantly and intentionally violated federal campaign finance laws on his way to winning the 2016 presidential election. But former Attorney General Bill Barr—and now Republican FEC Commissioners Sean Cooksey and Trey Trainor—have blocked investigation and enforcement of Trump’s violations.

    Now it’s up to the Department of Justice (DOJ) to hold Trump accountable and make clear that no one is above the lawThe clock is ticking; a fiveyear statute of limitations for Trump’s campaign finance crimes gives the DOJ only 5 more months to prosecute these crimes. 

    In 2018 Common Cause filed complaints with the FEC and DOJ detailing multiple violations of federal campaign finance laws committed by Donald J. Trump, the Trump Organization, Michael Cohen and others through their $130,000 “hush” payment to Stormy Daniels just weeks before the November 2016 presidential election. Cohen pleaded guilty to these crimes and was sentenced to three years in prison. Cohen testified under oath that he had acted at the direction of Trump.

    The FEC’s nonpartisan career staff attorneys recommended that the Commission find reason to believe that Trump, his campaign committee, and the Trump Organization committed the violations alleged in Common Cause’s complaints. Democratic Chair Shana Broussard and Commissioner Ellen Weintraub voted in support of the staff attorneys’ recommendations to continue the enforcement action. But continued pursuit of the matter required at least four votes. Republican Commissioners Cooksey and Trainor overrode the career attorneys and Democratic Commissioners and killed the investigation.

    Today’s announcement that the FEC will not be holding Trump accountable for his campaign finance violations is just the latest display of dysfunction at the FEC. The Senate must pass the For the People Act, which includes provisions to significantly restructure the agency so it can do its job for the American people and enforce the law, in addition to including many tried and tested solutions to hold power accountable and make democracy work for everyone.

    This post was originally published on Radio Free.

  • The global spread of fascism is real, as real as the spread of COVID-19, and you better believe it.

    For purposes of academic analysis, it might be legitimate to distinguish between a “fascist-leaning” movement and a truly fascist one, or a far-right regime and fascist regime, or an authoritarian populist and a fascist. But I am a former member of the Philippine parliament and a street activist. While I have great respect for academics, those of us who operate in the realm of practical politics cannot afford to act as academics.

    Let us not repeat the mistake of the democracies of the early 20th century of hesitating to call that beast by its name.

    For me a movement or person must be regarded as fascist when they fuse the following five features: 1) they show a disdain or hatred for democratic principles and procedures; 2) they tolerate or promote violence; 3) they have a heated mass base that supports their anti-democratic thinking and behavior; 4) they scapegoat and support the persecution of certain social groups; and 5) they are led by a charismatic individual who exhibits and normalizes all of the above.

    Belittling the Threat

    When Mussolini and Hitler were still upstarts fighting to barge into the political mainstream in Italy and Germany, politicians of the left, center, and traditional right dismissed them as oddities who would either disappear or be absorbed into the parliamentary democratic system.

    When Donald Trump got elected president of the United States in November 2016, opinion makers—with the exception of a handful, like the progressive filmmaker Michael Moore—were taken by surprise. But most predicted that the office would transform the unpredictable star of reality television into a proper president, one respectful of the customs and traditions of the world’s oldest democracy.

    In the Philippines, after warning before our own 2016 elections that Rodrigo Duterte would be “another Marcos,” I wrote two months into Rodrigo Duterte’s presidency that he was a “fascist original.” I was criticized by many opinion-makers, academics, and even progressives for using the “f” word.

    How wrong the pundits were in dismissing these personalities as flukes, as they were when it came to others, like Victor Orban in Hungary, Narendra Modi in India, and Jair Bolsonaro in Brazil.

    Academics are scornful of what they put down as “loaded terms,” but the consequences of underestimating the threat posed to democracy by fascists are not academic. It would be superfluous to be reminded now of Trump’s almost successful effort to prevent a peaceful transfer of power in the United States by systematically spreading the lie that he lost the elections and instigating a violent insurrection.

    But for those who have not followed the career of other persons of interest as closely, let me acquaint you with the highlights of their respective reigns: Five years and over 20,000 extra-judicial executions later, the “f” word is one of the milder terms used for Rodrigo Duterte, with many preferring “mass murderer” or “serial killer.” Modi has made the secular and diverse India of Gandhi and Nehru a thing of the past with his Hindu nationalist project. And Orban and his Fidesz Party have almost completed their neutering of democracy in Hungary.

    Democracies in Peril

    The United States, India, Brazil, and the Philippines were four of the seven biggest democracies in the world just nine years ago. Today, three of them are led by fascists who are determined to complete their transformation into non-liberal democratic systems. The other barely survived a fascist’s determined effort to hold on to power.

    With 11 million more Americans voting for Trump in 2020 than in 2016, 70 percent of the Republican Party believing against all evidence that he won the election, white supremacy emerging as the guiding ideology of the Republican Party, and a coalition of angry extremists open to violent means of seizing power emerging as the party’s driving force, who can deny that American democracy is in intensive care, despite the passage of the presidency to Joe Biden?

    I would like to stress three things at this juncture.

    First, the features of fascism come together in unique ways. If we are waiting for the ideal-type fascist to make his appearance, meaning a spitting image of Adolf, then we will be waiting forever.

    Second, the key features of fascism do not become prominent all at once. They may, in fact, be institutionalized only late in the day, such as Mussolini’s eliminationist policy towards Jews, which he only made law in 1938, 16 years after he came to power.

    Trump’s true willingness to openly overthrow the cornerstone of democracy—the peaceful succession of power via majority decision of the electorate—was not on full display until he lost the November 2020 elections. Modi and the BJP’s incendiary views of Muslims were dismissed by many as simply rhetorical excesses until the BJP came to power in 2014. Then began the lynching of Muslims falsely accused of being cattle traders, followed by mob attacks on Muslim ghettos, and the legalization of the social subordination of Muslims.

    The third point is that the closer fascists come to power, the more some of them feel they must put on a pretense of respecting democratic processes and values to lull the electorate into believing they’re really not as bad as the liberal and progressive press make them out to be and evince horror at being branded as fascists.

    Leaders of the Alternative fur Deutschland (AfD) in Germany have been trying hard to cultivate the image of responsible politicians who can be trusted to behave in a coalition with the Christian Democratic Party, the country’s main traditional conservative party. Fortunately, just when they think they’ve succeeded, someone from their ranks lets the cat out of the bag—like Christian Lueth, formerly the press spokesperson of AfD, who recently slipped and publicly assured a right wing blogger on the question of migrants, “We can always shoot them later, that’s not an issue. Or gas them, as you wish. It doesn’t matter to me.”

    How can one deny that there is a fascist resurgence if one were to do even just a brief survey of today’s Western and Central Europe, which birthed fascism in the first half of the 20th century and has again become its fertile soil in the second decade of the 21st century?

    From having no radical right-wing regime in the 2000s, except occasionally and briefly as junior partners in unstable governing coalitions as in Austria, the region now has two solidly in power—one in Hungary, the Orban government, and one in Poland, the Peace and Justice Party. The region has four more countries where a party of the far right is the main opposition party. And it has seven where the far right has become a major presence both in parliament and in the streets.

    Seeding the Ground for Political Success

    It would be myopic to judge fascism’s resurgence only in terms of its political success. The spread of fascist ideas is much faster than the pace of its electoral successes and, indeed, seeds the ground for its eventual political success. Racism, white supremacy, promotion of violence, conspiracy theories—such as Muslims seducing Hindu girls “in love jihads” to change the demographic balance in India—all spread fast online, become normalized in the echo chambers of the internet, and eventually are legitimized.

    Especially alarming for people in the West who think liberal democratic beliefs are too solidly entrenched in their polities to be eroded should be the fact that holocaust denial is now more widespread in Europe than three decades ago, and that in the United States, surveys suggest broad ignorance about the Holocaust among millennial and Gen-Z respondents . These inroads in eroding the collective memory of 20th century fascism’s most diabolical crime must surely count as one of 21st century fascism’s biggest successes.

    If you think I am exaggerating, listen to the German authorities, who report that anti-Semitic incidents in Germany in 2020 rose to 2,275, the highest since they started collecting data on politically motivated criminality in 2001. Listen to Charlotte Knobloch, former head of the Central Council of Jews in Germany, who tells us, “Anti-Semitism has become socially acceptable again.” Talk to the German domestic intelligence agency BfV, which has made the unprecedented request to the judiciary to place the AfD, Germany’s biggest opposition party, a hotbed of both Islamophobia and anti-Semitism, under scrutiny as a suspected fascist organization.

    Why Fascists Target Migrants First

    Especially targeted by fascists today are non-white migrants. Now, just because an individual is anti-migrant does not mean he or she is a committed fascist. The problem is anti-migrant attitudes today are bound up with support for repressive moves against them, like drastically limiting asylum to political refugees, deporting large numbers of them as “criminals” or “national security risks,” physically breaking up their communities under the pretext of “assimilation,” and denying them fundamental human rights, like the right of parents and children to stay together, which the Trump administration violated in the case of Central American and Mexican migrants.

    The most vulnerable groups, like migrants, are the first targets of fascists, but you can be sure they won’t stop with them. As Pastor Niemoller’s celebrated poem reminds us, you only think you’re safe until they come for you and “there won’t be anyone left to speak” for you.

    The beast is struggling against its chains in Germany. It has bared its fangs in Washington, D.C. It has shed blood in the Philippines and India. Let us not repeat the mistake of the democracies of the early 20th century of hesitating to call that beast by its name.

    This post was originally published on Radio Free.

  • The only way to end the Covid-19 pandemic is to immunize enough people worldwide. The slogan “no one is safe until we are all safe” captures the epidemiological reality we face. Outbreaks anywhere could spawn a SARS-CoV-2 variant that is resistant to vaccines, forcing us all back into some form of lockdown. Given the emergence of worrisome new mutations in India, Brazil, South Africa, the United Kingdom, and elsewhere, this is no mere theoretical threat.

    Worse, vaccine production is currently nowhere close to delivering the 10-15 billion doses needed to stop the spread of the virus. By the end of April, only 1.2 billion doses had been produced worldwide. At this rate, hundreds of millions of people in developing countries will remain unimmunized at least until 2023.

    It is thus big news that US President Joe Biden’s administration has announced it will join the 100 other countries seeking a Covid-19 emergency waiver of the World Trade Organization intellectual-property (IP) rules that have been enabling vaccine monopolization. Timely negotiations of a WTO agreement temporarily removing these barriers would create the legal certainty governments and manufacturers around the world need to scale up production of vaccines, treatments, and diagnostics.

    Last fall, former President Donald Trump recruited a handful of rich-country allies to block any such waiver negotiations. But pressure on the Biden administration to reverse this self-defeating blockade has been growing, garnering the support of 200 Nobel laureates and former heads of state and government (including many prominent neoliberal figures), 110 members of the US House of Representatives, ten US Senators, 400 US civil-society groups, 400 European parliamentarians, and many others.

    An Unnecessary Problem

    The scarcity of Covid-19 vaccines across the developing world is largely the result of efforts by vaccine manufacturers to maintain their monopoly control and profits. Pfizer and Moderna, the makers of the extremely effective mRNA vaccines, have refused or failed to respond to numerous requests by qualified pharmaceutical manufacturers seeking to produce their vaccines. And not one vaccine originator has shared its technologies with poor countries through the World Health Organization’s voluntary Covid-19 Technology Access Pool.

    As for-profit entities, pharmaceutical corporations are focused primarily on earnings, not global health.

    Recent company pledges to give vaccine doses to the Covid-19 Vaccines Global Access (COVAX) facility, which will direct them to the most at-risk populations in poorer countries, are no substitute. These promises may assuage drug companies’ guilt, but won’t add meaningfully to the global supply.

    As for-profit entities, pharmaceutical corporations are focused primarily on earnings, not global health. Their goal is simple: to maintain as much market power as they can for as long as possible in order to maximize profits. Under these circumstances, it is incumbent on governments to intervene more directly in solving the vaccine supply problem.

    A Commonsense Solution

    In recent weeks, legions of pharmaceutical lobbyists have swarmed Washington to pressure political leaders to block the WTO Covid-19 waiver. If only the industry was as committed to producing more vaccine doses as it is to producing specious arguments, the supply problem might already have been solved.

    Instead, drug companies have been relying on a number of contradictory claims. They insist that a waiver is not needed, because the existing WTO framework is flexible enough to allow for access to technology. They also argue that a waiver would be ineffective, because manufacturers in developing countries lack the wherewithal to produce the vaccine.

    And yet, drug companies also imply that a WTO waiver would be too effective. What else are we to make of their warnings that it would undermine research incentives, reduce Western companies’ profits, and—when all other claims fail—that it would help China and Russia beat the West geopolitically?

    Obviously, a waiver would make a real difference. That is why drug companies are opposing it so vehemently. Moreover, the “market” confirms this thinking, as evidenced by the sharp decline in the major vaccine-makers’ share prices just after the Biden administration’s announcement that it will engage in waiver negotiations. With a waiver, more vaccines will come online, prices will fall, and so too will profits.

    Still, the industry claims that a waiver would set a terrible precedent, so it is worth considering each of its claims in turn.

    Big Pharma’s Big Lies

    After years of passionate campaigning and millions of deaths in the HIV/AIDS epidemic, WTO countries agreed on the need for compulsory IP licensing (when governments allow domestic firms to produce a patented pharmaceutical product without the patent owner’s consent) to ensure access to medicines. But drug companies never gave up on doing everything possible to undermine this principle. It is partly because of the pharmaceutical industry’s tight-fistedness that we need a waiver in the first place. Had the prevailing pharmaceutical IP regime been more accommodating, the production of vaccines and therapeutics already would have been ramped up.

    The argument that developing countries lack the skills to manufacture Covid vaccines based on new technologies is bogus. When US and European vaccine makers have agreed to partnerships with foreign producers, like the Serum Institute of India (the world’s largest vaccine producer) and Aspen Pharmacare in South Africa, these organizations have had no notable manufacturing problems. There are many more firms and organizations around the world with the same potential to help boost the vaccine supply; they just need access to the technology and know-how.

    For its part, the Coalition for Epidemic Preparedness Innovations has identified some 250 companies that could manufacture vaccines. As South Africa’s delegate at the WTO recently noted:

    “Developing countries have advanced scientific and technical capacities… the shortage of production and supply [of vaccines] is caused by the rights holders themselves who enter into restrictive agreements that serve their own narrow monopolistic purposes putting profits before life.”

    While it may have been difficult and expensive to develop the mRNA vaccine technology, that doesn’t mean production of the actual shots is out of reach for other companies around the world. Moderna’s own former director of chemistry, Suhaib Siddiqi, has argued that with enough sharing of technology and know-how, many modern factories should be able to start manufacturing mRNA vaccines within three or four months.

    Drug companies’ fallback position is to claim that a waiver is not needed in light of existing WTO “flexibilities.” They point out that firms in developing countries have not sought compulsory licenses, as if to suggest that they are merely grandstanding. But this supposed lack of interest reflects the fact that Western pharmaceutical companies have done everything they can to create legal thickets of patents, copyrights, and proprietary industrial design and trade secret “exclusivities” that existing flexibilities may never cover. Because mRNA vaccines have more than 100 components worldwide, many with some form of IP protection, coordinating compulsory licenses between countries for this supply chain is almost impossible.

    Moreover, under WTO rules, compulsory licensing for export is even more complex, even though this trade is absolutely essential for increasing the global vaccine supply. The Canadian drug maker Biolyse, for example, is not permitted to produce and export generic versions of the Johnson & Johnson vaccine to developing countries after J&J rejected its request for a voluntary license.

    Another factor in the vaccine supply shortage is fear, both at the corporate and the national level. Many countries worry that the United States and the European Union would cut off aid or impose sanctions if they issued compulsory licenses after decades of threats to do so. With a WTO waiver, however, these governments and companies would be insulated from corporate lawsuits, injunctions, and other challenges.

    The People’s Vaccines

    This brings us to the third argument that the big pharmaceutical companies make: that an IP waiver would reduce profits and discourage future research and development. Like the previous two claims, this one is patently false. A WTO waiver would not abolish national legal requirements that IP holders be paid royalties or other forms of compensation. But by removing the monopolists’ option of simply blocking more production, a waiver would increase incentives for pharmaceutical companies to enter into voluntary arrangements.

    Hence, even with a WTO waiver, the vaccine makers stand to make heaps of money. Covid-19 vaccine revenue for Pfizer and Moderna just in 2021 is projected to reach $15 billion and $18.4 billion, respectively, even though governments financed much of the basic research and provided substantial upfront funds to bring the vaccines to market.

    To be clear: The problem for the pharmaceutical industry is not that drug manufacturers will be deprived of high returns on their investments; it is that they will miss out on monopoly profits, including those from future annual booster shots that doubtless will be sold at high prices in rich countries.

    Finally, when all of its other claims fall through, the industry’s last resort is to argue that a waiver would help China and Russia gain access to a US technology. But this is a canard, because the vaccines are not a US creation in the first place. Cross-country collaborative research into mRNA and its medical applications has been underway for decades. The Hungarian scientist Katalin Karikó made the initial breakthrough in 1978, and the work has been ongoing ever since in Turkey, Thailand, South Africa, India, Brazil, Argentina, Malaysia, Bangladesh, and other countries, including the US National Institutes of Health.

    Moreover, the genie is already out of the bottle. The mRNA technology in the Pfizer-produced vaccine is owned by BioNTech (a German company founded by a Turkish immigrant and his wife), which has already granted the Chinese producer Fosun Pharma a license to manufacture its vaccine. While there are genuine examples of Chinese firms stealing valuable IP, this isn’t one of them. Besides, China is well on its way to developing and producing its own mRNA vaccines. One is in Phase III clinical trials; another can be stored at refrigerator temperature, eliminating the need for cold chain management.

    How the US Could Really Lose

    For those focused on geopolitical issues, the bigger source of concern should be America’s failure to date to engage in constructive Covid-19 diplomacy. The US has been blocking exports of vaccines that it is not even using. Only when a second wave of infections started devastating India did it see fit to release its unused AstraZeneca doses. Meanwhile, Russia and China have not only made their vaccines available; they have engaged in significant technology and knowledge transfer, forging partnerships around the world, and helping to speed up the global vaccination effort.

    With daily infections continuing to reach new highs in some parts of the world, the chance of dangerous new variants emerging poses a growing risk to us all. The world will remember which countries helped, and which countries threw up hurdles, during this critical moment.

    The Covid-19 vaccines have been developed by scientists from all over the world, thanks to basic science supported by numerous governments. It is only proper that the people of the world should reap the benefits. This is a matter of morality and self-interest. We must not let drug companies put profits ahead of lives.

    This post was originally published on Radio Free.

  • After plunging to session lows this week in the wake of the Biden administration’s endorsement of a patent waiver for Covid-19 vaccines, pharmaceutical company stocks rebounded strongly on Thursday after German Chancellor Angela Merkel spoke out against the proposal, further complicating the hopes of reaching consensus support at the World Trade Organization.

    “Yes, Trump is gone, but Merkel wants to continue his inhumane legacy”
    —Andrew Stroehlein, Human Rights Watch

    Merkel told reporters that she believes “production capacities and the high-quality standards” of current coronavirus vaccines are the factors limiting global vaccine supply, “not the patents”—dismissing the role that restrictive intellectual property protections have played in preventing manufacturers around the world from making generic alternatives.

    “The protection of intellectual property is a source of innovation and it must remain so in the future,” Merkel added, echoing a common talking point of the pharmaceutical lobby.

    The German leader’s comments sent shares of BioNTech—Pfizer’s Germany-based vaccine partner and a beneficiary of massive public funding—soaring to session highs on Thursday, an indication that investors believe Merkel’s public comments against the temporary waiver strike a significant blow to the proposal’s chances of approval at the WTO.

    “Yes, Trump is gone, but Merkel wants to continue his inhumane legacy,” Andrew Stroehlein, European media director at Human Rights Watch, tweeted Thursday, referring to the former U.S. president’s opposition to the waiver.

    As Bloomberg reported following Merkel’s remarks on the proposed Trade-Related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights (TRIPS) waiver, “Shanghai Fosun Pharmaceutical Group Co., which has the rights to develop and market BioNTech SE’s shot in China, advanced as much as 7% in Hong Kong after sinking 14% the previous day.”

    “The Covid-19 vaccines have been developed by scientists from all over the world, thanks to basic science supported by numerous governments,” they continued. “It is only proper that the people of the world should reap the benefits.”
    —Joseph Stiglitz, Lori Wallach

    “On Friday, AstraZeneca Plc. rose again in London, gaining 0.4%, while French developer Valneva SE jumped 5.1%. Among U.S.-listed companies, CureVac NV advanced 5.9% in German trading from its closing price in New York, Novavax Inc. rose 2.6%, BioNTech climbed 1.7%, and Pfizer Inc. was little changed.”

    Merkel is hardly the lone remaining opponent of the patent waiver, which was first introduced by India and South Africa in October and has since gained urgency as global coronavirus infections soar to new highs, with the largely unvaccinated populations of developing countries bearing the brunt of the surge.

    While Australia, New Zealand, and France joined the U.S. in supporting the waiver on Thursday, much of the European Union, Canada, and other rich countries remain opposed despite broad public support for the measure.

    According to a survey released earlier this week by a global coalition of public health advocacy groups, 70% of the people of G7 nations want their governments to require pharmaceutical companies to share key vaccine technology and know-how with the rest of the world.

    “This is complete madness,” Stroehlein said of the continued stonewalling by rich countries. “We’re wasting time, when time only gives the virus more opportunities to kill us. By blocking wider vaccine production globally, the E.U., U.K., and a few other laggards are boosting pharma companies’ profits while people are suffering and dying.”

    Jayati Ghosh, an economics professor at the University of Massachusetts Amherst, said in response to Merkel’s comments Thursday that “none of these arguments against the TRIPS waiver stands scrutiny.”

    “It’s time for Germans and other Europeans to put pressure on their governments to support the TRIPS waiver during the pandemic,” Ghosh added.

    Fueled by the U.S. endorsement, new momentum behind the patent waiver comes amid artificially scarce global vaccine supply that is intensifying concerns over the potential emergence and spread of vaccine-resistant variants—a scenario that could prolong the global pandemic and result in countless additional deaths.

    Writing for Project Syndicate on Thursday, Nobel Prize-winning economist Joseph Stiglitz and Public Citizen’s Lori Wallach noted that “vaccine production is currently nowhere close to delivering the 10-15 billion doses needed to stop the spread of the virus”—a shortage the pair attributed to “efforts by vaccine manufacturers to maintain their monopoly control and profits.”

    “As for-profit entities, pharmaceutical corporations are focused primarily on earnings, not global health,” Stiglitz and Wallach wrote. “Their goal is simple: to maintain as much market power as they can for as long as possible in order to maximize profits. Under these circumstances, it is incumbent on governments to intervene more directly in solving the vaccine supply problem.”

    “The Covid-19 vaccines have been developed by scientists from all over the world, thanks to basic science supported by numerous governments,” they continued. “It is only proper that the people of the world should reap the benefits. This is a matter of morality and self-interest. We must not let drug companies put profits ahead of lives.”

    This post was originally published on Radio Free.

  • More than 100 heavily armed Brazilian police officers stormed a sprawling Rio de Janeiro favela Thursday and killed at least two dozen people, a raid that human rights activists, researchers, and journalists described as the deadliest such police atrocity in the city’s history.

    The hourslong operation, purportedly aimed at drug traffickers in the poverty-stricken Jacarezinho favela, ultimately left 25 people dead, including one police officer. Horrific video footage and images posted to social media in the wake of the raid—which was carried out despite a court order against such incursions during the Covid-19 pandemic—show favela residents surveying rooms, hallways, and alleys streaked with blood.

    “It’s extermination—there’s no other way to describe it,” Pedro Paulo Santos Silva, a researcher at Rio’s Center for Studies on Public Security and Citizenship, told The Guardian. “This was a massacre.”

    (Warning: the following footage is disturbing)

    “Really grim moment in Brazil,” Robert Muggah, co-founder of the Igarapé Institute, a Rio-based think tank, said in an interview with the Washington Post. “These shootings are obviously routine in Rio de Janeiro, but this is unprecedented, in that it’s the operation that has generated the largest number of deaths, ever.”

    Brazilian lawmaker David Miranda, who grew up in Jacarezinho, called the deadly police raid “a tragedy, a slaughter authorized by Cláudio Castro,” Rio’s governor.

    “Jacarezinho is my origin, it is the favela that created me,” said Miranda. “No person born outside the favela can know what that is. Brazilian institutions insist on disrespecting and marginalizing the favela.”

    Journalist Glenn Greenwald, Miranda’s husband, wrote on Twitter that he has “seen probably two dozen videos that are way too horrifying to publish: police enter homes with full force and violence, and then execute people as they lay on the ground, shooting them 10-15 times each in the head.”

    “It’s an atrocity what happened today,” Greenwald added.

    Brazil suffers one of the highest rates of police killings in the world, and the nation is currently led by a far-right president who campaigned on the promise to “give the police carte blanche to kill.” According to Human Rights Watch, Rio law enforcement officers killed 453 people during the first three months of 2021.

    “They say there is no death sentence in Brazil. Except if you live in a favela,” said Marilia Corrêa, a Latin America historian and postdoctoral fellow at the University of Michigan’s Weiser Center for Emerging Democracies. “In this case, the police can just march in, kill dozens of people, and call it a day. This is appalling, revolting, outrageous. They have no right.”

    Jurema Werneck, executive director of Amnesty International Brazil, said in a statement Thursday that “the number of people killed in this police operation is reprehensible, as is the fact that, once again, this massacre took place in a favela.”

    “It’s completely unacceptable that security forces keep committing grave human rights violations such as those that occurred in Jacarezinho today against residents of the favelas, who are mostly Black and live in poverty,” said Werneck. “Even if the victims were suspected of criminal association, which has not been proven, summary executions of this kind are entirely unjustifiable.”

    This post was originally published on Radio Free.

  • After the Biden administration shocked the world by expressing support for waiving intellectual property protections for Covid-19 vaccines, a European Union leader on Thursday suggested that the bloc’s members “are ready to discuss” also dropping their opposition to the proposal—which rich nations have blocked since last year.

    U.S. President Joe Biden and Trade Representative Katherine Tai were praised by public health experts worldwide for the announcement that the administration will now back a Trade Related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights (TRIPS) waiver at the World Trade Organization (WTO), first proposed by India and South Africa.

    Though concerns remain about future WTO negotiations, the Biden administration’s move on Wednesday increased pressure on leaders of other wealthy countries—including Canada, the United Kingdom, and E.U. member states—to urgently follow suit. Then came European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen’s Thursday speech at the European University Institute in Florence.

    Von der Leyen first touted the bloc’s exports of Covid-19 vaccines, then said that “the European Union is also ready to discuss any proposal that addresses the crisis in an effective and pragmatic manner. That is why we are ready to discuss how the U.S. proposal for a waiver on intellectual property protection for Covid-19 vaccines could help achieve that objective.”

    “In the short run, however, we call upon all vaccine-producing countries to allow exports and to avoid measures that disrupt supply chains,” she added.

    Despite the remarks from the head of the bloc’s executive arm, “Germany, the E.U.’s biggest economic power and home to a large pharmaceutical sector, rejected the idea, saying vaccine shortages were due to limited production capacity and quality standards rather than patent protection issues,” Reuters reported Thursday. “Health Minister Jens Spahn said he shared Biden’s goal of providing the whole world with vaccines. But a government spokeswoman said in a statement that ‘the protection of intellectual property is a source of innovation and must remain so in the future.’”

    Others were more open to the possibility, according to Reuters:

    French President Emmanuel Macron said he was “very much in favor” of opening up intellectual property. However, a French government official said vaccine shortages [were] the result of a lack of production capacity and ingredients, not of patents.

    “I would remind you that it is the United States that has not exported a single dose to other countries, and is now talking about lifting the patents,” the official said.

    The United States has shipped a few million vaccine doses it was not using to Mexico and Canada on loan.

    In a Thursday interview with MSNBC‘s Andrea Mitchell, U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken explained that “we wanted, first and foremost, to make sure that we were able to vaccinate the American people. And as you know, we’ve made remarkable progress on that. But we also know that none of us are going to be fully safe until everyone is, that is that around the world we get as many people vaccinated as possible.”

    Noting concerns about virus mutations that could impact even people who are vaccinated against Covid-19, Blinken told Mitchell that the administration is “looking at everything we can do to make available any excess vaccines that we have… And the patent waiver is also one possible means of increasing manufacture and access to vaccines.  We’re looking at other things, too.”

    “But the main thing is we have to speed this up,” the secretary added. “On the current trajectory, if we don’t do more, if the entire world doesn’t do more, the world won’t be vaccinated until 2024. We can speed this up and get that done, I think, in a much shorter time. And if we do, we’re all going to be better off.”

    International justice campaigners advocating for the WTO waiver and other efforts to boost vaccine access in lower-income countries have accused the Global North of “vaccine apartheid,” highlighting that the vast majority of existing and administered doses have been “hoarded” by rich nations.

    Campaigners have also called out Big Pharma, which opposes the waiver. In response to the Biden administration’s announcement, Stephen J. Ubl, president and CEO of the U.S. trade group Pharmaceutical Research and Manufacturers of America (PhRMA), claimed that the waiver decision would “sow confusion between public and private partners, further weaken already strained supply chains, and foster the proliferation of counterfeit vaccines.”

    The waiver developments came as U.S. researchers warned that the pandemic may have killed far more people than the official global tally. The University of Washington’s Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation (IHME) revealed Thursday that “our analysis estimates that by May 3, 2021, the total number of Covid-19 deaths was 6.93 million, a figure that is more than two times higher than the reported number of deaths of 3.24 million.”

    IHME director Chris Murray said that “understanding the true number of Covid-19 deaths not only helps us appreciate the magnitude of this global crisis, but also provides valuable information to policymakers developing response and recovery plans.”

    While the most deaths have been documented in the United States—over 580,000 according to Johns Hopkins University’s global tracker—the U.S. is followed by Brazil and India, which is currently enduring a devastating outbreak.

    This post was originally published on Radio Free.

  • The critical importance of reducing global methane emissions, including those generated by the fossil fuel industry, is more significant than previously understood, according to a report published Thursday by the United Nations Environment Program. 

    “We need international cooperation to urgently reduce methane emissions as much as possible this decade.”
    —Inger Andersen, UNEP

    The new global methane assessment (pdf) concludes that slashing a pollutant that is 84 to 87 times more potent than carbon dioxide over a 20-year period is a crucial step needed to tackle the climate emergency.

    According to the report, cutting methane emissions dramatically is relatively inexpensive and could be accomplished by repairing leaking fossil fuel pipelines, preventing natural gas venting during drilling, capturing gas emitted by landfills, and reducing animal agriculture. 

    “Reducing human-caused methane emissions is one of the most cost-effective strategies to rapidly reduce the rate of warming and contribute significantly to global efforts to limit temperature rise to 1.5°C,” an executive summary of the report states, referring to the more ambitious goal of the Paris climate agreement.

    “Available targeted methane measures, together with additional measures that contribute to priority development goals, can simultaneously reduce human-caused methane emissions by as much as 45%, or 180 million tonnes a year (Mt/yr), by 2030,” the summary continues. “This will avoid nearly 0.3°C of global warming by the 2040s and complement all long-term climate change mitigation efforts.”

    “It would also, each year, prevent 255,000 premature deaths, 775 000 asthma-related hospital visits, 73 billion hours of lost labor from extreme heat, and 26 million tonnes of crop losses globally,” it adds. 

    In a statement announcing the new report, UNEP Executive Director Inger Andersen said that “cutting methane is the strongest lever we have to slow climate change over the next 25 years and complements necessary efforts to reduce carbon dioxide.”

    As Common Dreams reported last month, a study published by the U.S. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration revealed that both carbon and methane emissions rose in 2020 to levels unseen on Earth for more than three million years, despite the temporary reduction in global emissions due to the coronavirus pandemic. 

    “The benefits to society, economies, and the environment are numerous and far outweigh the cost,” Andersen said Thursday. “We need international cooperation to urgently reduce methane emissions as much as possible this decade.”

    “It is absolutely critical that we tackle methane and that we tackle it expeditiously,” she stressed. 

    Environmental groups weighed in on the new report, with Center for Biological Diversity population and sustainability director Stephanie Feldstein noting the impact of animal agriculture on methane emissions.

    “Methane from meat and dairy production has been ignored for far too long even though it’s a leading source of climate pollution,” Feldstein said in a statement. “Americans eat three times the global average of meat. We can’t lower methane emissions with unproven half-measures that cater to the ag industry. We have to reduce meat consumption and production if we’re going to effectively address agricultural methane.”

    This post was originally published on Radio Free.

  • More than 100 national, state, and local advocacy groups will launch a mobilization Saturday to counteract the Republican Party’s systematic dismantling of the United States’ democracy, calling on supporters to help fight for legislation aimed at protecting the right to vote.

    At the John Lewis National Day of Action, groups including Public Citizen, the Leadership Conference on Civil and Human Rights, and Common Cause plan to “ignite public support for restoring the effectiveness of the Voting Rights Act and address one of the greatest obstacles to the passage of civil and voting rights—and one of the last vestiges of slavery—the filibuster!”

    The event will include at least “100 Covid-19 safe votercades in 100 different cities” across the country—presidential-style motorcades of voters aimed at raising awareness “on the urgent need to protect our voting rights and our democracy,” the organizers said.

    The groups urged supporters to “get into good trouble,” by participating in the action, quoting the late voting rights activist Rep. John Lewis (D-Ga.). Lewis was arrested dozens of times for civil disobedience before his death in 2020—notably while marching for African Americans’ voting rights in Alabama in 1965.

    Organizations including When We All Vote joined the call for people all over the country to participate in the day of action in their cities. 

    The day of action aims to mobilize support for civil rights legislation including:

    • The For the People Act (S. 1), which would set national standards to ensure all eligible voters can cast votes “without the threat of voter suppression tactics,” makes voter registration automatic, protects vote-by-mail and early voting, and bolsters election security;
    • The John Lewis Voting Rights Advancement Act (H.R. 4), which would restore parts of the Voting Rights Act that were invalidated by the U.S. Supreme Court in 2013, allowing states to pass voting laws that are racially discriminatory;
    • The Washington, D.C. Admission Act (H.R.) 51, which would establish Washington, D.C. as a state.

    Advocates also want to address the issue of the filibuster, which was used to block civil rights legislation in the Jim Crow era and which Republicans plan to use to block pro-democracy reforms in the current congressional session.

    The day of action comes as Republican legislatures in states across the country are working to dismantle voting protections and suppress the right to vote. Lawmakers in 47 states have introduced 361 voter suppression bills, and at least five restrictive proposals have been signed into law, including Florida’s S.B. 90, which was signed by GOP Gov. Ron DeSantis on Thursday.  

    “Together, we can build a better democracy,” said organizers of the day of action.

    This post was originally published on Radio Free.

  • Three dozen sustainable agriculture and environmental organizations sent a letter Thursday to U.S. President Joe Biden urging him to follow through with his stated commitment to human rights by ending economic sanctions against Cuba and restoring the United States’ diplomatic relationship with the country.

    The coalition represents a diverse set of U.S. grassroots and civil society organizations that include family farmers, farmer associations, agroecologists, environmentalists, academics, and frontline climate justice leaders.

    “Draconian sanctions against Cuba have always been counterproductive.”

    Taking note of Biden’s commitment to climate justice and human rights in domestic and foreign policy, the letter explains how those values are at odds with the current U.S. sanctions on Cuba, which limit the rights of the nation’s people to food security, climate justice, and autonomy.

    “Food, agriculture and the climate crisis all qualify as human rights issues. Therefore, a policy position guided by human rights needs to address how U.S. sanctions towards Cuba severely limit the rights of Cuban citizens to food security, climate justice, and dignity,” reads the letter, which was signed by groups including the Union of Concerned Scientists and Oxfam America.

    Over the past 30 years, Cuba has been recognized for their global leadership in agroecology, innovative policies for climate mitigation/adaptation, and sustainable “re-localized” food systems. Yet the letter explains how the U.S. continues to block Cuba’s ability to mitigate and adapt to the climate crisis and severely limits the development of sustainable food systems.

    The letter implores Biden and his administration to reverse the failed Trump policies that inflicted harm on Cubans and their families.

    “Draconian sanctions against Cuba have always been counterproductive,” reads the letter. “This is even more evident now. We are facing a moment when ideology and politics must be put aside in order to urgently come together as a unified global community to confront the common global threats of Covid-19 and the climate crisis. We can only do this together through coordination, cooperation, and solidarity.”

    Outlined in the letter are four key policy recommendations that can be executed immediately by the Biden administration.

    The policies include implementing executive action that returns the regulations controlling trade and travel to Cuba to their status as of January 20th, 2017 and removes Cuba from the State Sponsor of Terrorism List, terminating all sanctions and restrictions against food, medicine, and other humanitarian assistance and international cooperation to Cuba—including restrictions on financial and banking transactions—and restoring a fully functioning U.S. embassy and consular services in Cuba.

    Lastly, the letter requests Biden exercise his executive authority to reject the renewal of the annual determination to impose sanctions under the Trading With the Enemy Act, putting an end to all existing sanctions and removing the six-decade long economic blockade against Cuba—the longest trade embargo in modern history.

    “Instituting the above recommendations are a first step towards realizing a new type of trade relationship with a neighboring nation state,” said the groups. “It would be a bold human-nature-rights centered approach to trade and bilateral relations that responds to the need to repair our relationship with each other and with the ecosystems that sustain our economies and societies.”

    Support for restoring U.S.-Cuba relations has significantly grown in recent years and in March of 2021, 79 members of the U.S. Congress wrote an unprecedented letter to Biden in support of resuming former President Barack Obama’s policy of normalization of relations with Cuba.

    On June 23, the United Nations will consider Cuba’s annual resolution condemning the U.S. blockade. Signatories of the letter encourage the U.S government and the international community to confront the common global threats of Covid-19 and the climate crisis and vote in support of lifting the embargo in Cuba.

    This post was originally published on Radio Free.

  • Warning of the possible “significant intimidating effect” of private recounts like the ongoing GOP-run audit of an Arizona county’s 2020 election ballots, a senior official at the U.S. Justice Department’s civil rights division on Thursday advised the Republican president of the southwestern state’s Senate that such efforts may violate federal voting and civil rights laws. 

    “Such investigative efforts can have a significant intimidating effect on qualified voters that can deter them from seeking to vote in the future.”
    —Pamela S. Karlan, DOJ

    In a letter (pdf) to Sen. Karen Fann (R-1), Principal Deputy Assistant Attorney General Pamela S. Karlan wrote that plans by Cyber Ninjas—the online security firm hired by the Arizona Legislature to perform a hand recount of nearly 2.1 million Maricopa County ballots—to directly contact voters potentially constitutes intimidation. 

    “The information of which we are aware raises concerns regarding at least two issues of potential noncompliance with federal laws,” the letter states.

    “The first issue relates to a number of reports suggesting that the ballots, elections systems, and election materials that are the subject of the Maricopa County audit are no longer under the ultimate control of state and local elections officials, are not being adequately safeguarded by contractors at an insecure facility, and are at risk of being lost, stolen, altered, compromised, or destroyed,” it continues. 

    “The second issue,” the letter says, “relates to the Cyber Ninjas’ statement of work for this audit,” which “indicates that the contractor has been working ‘with a number of individuals’ to ‘identify voter registrations that did not make sense, and then knock on doors to confirm if valid voters actually lived at the stated address.’”

    “This description of the proposed work of the audit raises concerns regarding potential intimidation of voters,” it warns. “Past experience with similar investigative efforts around the country has raised concerns that they can be directed at minority voters, which potentially can implicate the anti-intimidation prohibitions of the Voting Rights Act.”

    “Such investigative efforts can have a significant intimidating effect on qualified voters that can deter them from seeking to vote in the future,” the letter concludes. 

    The Arizona Legislature is paying the Florida-based Cyber Ninjas—which has no elections experience and whose CEO Doug Logan is an advocate of the “Stop the Steal” movement claiming former President Donald Trump won the 2020 election—$150,000 to conduct the Maricopa County audit. 

    President Joe Biden won the county, which includes Phoenix and surrounding cities, by over 45,000 votes. In the race for the U.S. Senate, Democrat Mark Kelly defeated Republican Martha McSally by more than 80,000 votes in Maricopa County. 

    In addition to its CEO’s affinity for Trump, Cyber Ninjas has also raised eyebrows and ire by allowing former Arizona GOP state lawmaker Anthony Kern, a rampant pro-Trump conspiracy theorist and participant in the deadly January 6 attack on the United States Capitol, to help conduct the audit. 

    The auditors—who have fallen far behind schedule—have investigated conspiracy theories during the course of their work, including one that 40,000 bamboo-laced Biden ballots were smuggled into the county from China. 

    The Justice Department letter follows an April request (pdf) by the Brennan Center for Justice—which said it is “very concerned that the auditors are engaged in ongoing and imminent violations of federal voting and election law”—for the DOJ to send federal monitors to oversee the Maricopa recount.

    This post was originally published on Radio Free.

  • Capitalist powers have drained $152 trillion from the Global South since 1960, according to new peer-reviewed research quantifying the reproduction of inequality on the world scale.

    In an Al Jazeera essay written Thursday, three social scientists—Jason Hickel, an economic anthropologist at the University of London; Dylan Sullivan, a graduate student in political economy at the University of Sydney; and Huzaifa Zoomkawala, an independent scholar based in Pakistan—explained how they arrived at the $152 trillion figure, a finding they first documented in a recent paper on “plunder in the post-colonial era” published in the journal New Political Economy.

    “Democratize the institutions of global economic governance, so that poor countries have a fairer say in setting the terms of trade and finance.”
    —Hickel, Sullivan, and Zoomkawala

    According to the trio, the U.S., Canada, Australia, New Zealand, Israel, Japan, South Korea, and the rich economies of Europe appropriate $2.2 trillion worth of resources and labor—embodied in raw materials as well as high-tech commodities like smartphones, laptops, and cars that are increasingly manufactured abroad—per year from developing countries in Africa, Asia, and Latin America.

    “That amount of money would be enough to end extreme poverty, globally, 15 times over,” wrote Hickel, Sullivan, and Zoomkawala. “Over the whole period from 1960 to today, the drain totaled $62 trillion in real terms. If this value had been retained by the South and contributed to Southern growth, tracking with the South’s growth rates over this period, it would be worth $152 trillion today.”

    “Imperial powers finally withdrew most of their flags and armies from the South in the mid-20th century,” the scholars noted, so what explains the persistence of these patterns of exploitation and extraction since then?

    “Over the following decades, economists and historians associated with ‘dependency theory’ argued that the underlying patterns of colonial appropriation remained in place and continued to define the global economy,” wrote Hickel, Sullivan, and Zoomkawala. “Imperialism never ended, they argued—it just changed form. They were right.”

    The authors pointed to other recent research demonstrating how global economic inequality is reproduced through unequal exchange. As the net importers of materials, energy, land, and labor embodied in the international flow of commodities, high-income nations gain a trade surplus, while lower-income nations face trade deficits.

    As Hickel, Sullivan, and Zoomkawala explained:

    This flow of net appropriation occurs because prices are systematically lower in the South than in the North. For instance, wages paid to Southern workers are on average one-fifth the level of Northern wages. This means that for every unit of embodied labor and resources that the South imports from the North, they have to export many more units to pay for it.

    Economists Samir Amin and Arghiri Emmanuel described this as a ‘hidden transfer of value’ from the South, which sustains high levels of income and consumption in the North. The drain takes place subtly and almost invisibly, without the overt violence of colonial occupation and therefore without provoking protest and moral outrage.

    The trio found that “the drain increased dramatically during the 1980s and 1990s, as neoliberal structural adjustment programs were imposed across the Global South.”

    According to the researchers, the appropriation of wealth from impoverished nations has become so significant that, for the past couple of decades, it has “outstripped the rate of economic growth” in the Global North.

    In the Global South, meanwhile, “the losses outstrip foreign aid transfers by a wide margin. For every dollar of aid the South receives, they lose $14 in drain through unequal exchange alone, not counting other kinds of losses like illicit financial outflows and profit repatriation,” the authors noted.

    “The discourse of aid obscures a darker reality of plunder,” wrote Hickel, Sullivan, and Zoomkawala. “Poor countries are developing rich countries, not the other way around.”

    As the researchers explained:

    Rich countries have a monopoly on decision-making in the World Bank and IMF, they hold most of the bargaining power in the World Trade Organization, they use their power as creditors to dictate economic policy in debtor nations, and they control 97% of the world’s patents. Northern states and corporations leverage this power to cheapen the prices of labor and resources in the Global South, which allows them to achieve a net appropriation through trade.

    During the 1980s and 1990s, IMF structural adjustment programs cut public sector wages and employment, while rolling back labor rights and other protective regulations, all of which cheapened labor and resources. Today, poor countries are structurally dependent on foreign investment and have no choice but to compete with one another to offer cheap labor and resources in order to please the barons of international finance. This ensures a steady flow of disposable gadgets and fast fashion to affluent Northern consumers, but at extraordinary cost to human lives and ecosystems in the South.

    There are potential solutions, the social scientists noted.

    One way to fix this problem would be to “democratize the institutions of global economic governance, so that poor countries have a fairer say in setting the terms of trade and finance,” wrote Hickel, Sullivan, and Zoomkawla.

    “Another step would be to ensure that poor countries have the right to use tariffs, subsidies, and other industrial policies to build sovereign economic capacity,” they continued. “We could also take steps toward a global living wage system and an international framework for environmental regulations, which would put a floor on labor and resource prices.”

    “All of this would enable the South to capture a fairer share of income from international trade and free its countries to mobilize their resources around ending poverty and meeting human needs,” the scholars added. “But achieving these goals will not be easy; it will require an organized front among social movements toward a fairer world, against those who profit so prodigiously from the status quo.”

    This post was originally published on Radio Free.

  • This is a developing news story… Check back for possible updates…

    Former Maldives president and climate champion Mohamed Nasheed was injured Thursday in a suspected bomb attack as he was getting into his car in the nation’s capital of Malé.

    Nasheed, who became Maldives’ first democratically elected president in 2008 and is currently the nation’s parliament speaker, was reportedly rushed to a local hospital for treatment following the attack. Authorities have not yet offered details on Nasheed’s condition.

    While an investigation is ongoing, one Maldives official suggested the blast may have been caused by an “improvised explosive device, possibly rigged up to a parked motorcycle.”

    “Cowardly attacks like these have no place in our society,” said Maldives Foreign Minister Abdulla Shahid. “My thoughts and prayers are with President Nasheed and others injured in this attack, as well as their families.”

    News of Nasheed’s injury prompted well wishes from activists in honor of his passionate work on behalf of climate justice during and after his presidency, which ended in a coup in 2012.

    Bill McKibben, co-founder of U.S.-based advocacy group 350.org, tweeted, “Praying for Mohamed Nasheed, former [president] of the Maldives and a true climate hero, who was the victim of a bombing attack today in Male. He’s in the hospital in serious condition.”

    This post was originally published on Radio Free.

  • Digital rights and anti-domestic violence groups are pushing lawmakers to pass legislation to protect survivors from stalking and harassment, but advocates are facing a powerful lobbying group for the wireless industry, which aims to weaken the bill.

    As The Guardian reported Thursday, the Safe Connections Act, introduced by Sen. Brian Schatz (D-Hawaii) in January, aims to ensure companies like Verizon, T-Mobile, and Sprint allow survivors to remove themselves from family cell phone plans and end their wireless contracts in order to stop their abusers from accessing information about them.

    Companies would be required to let a survivor out of their plan and contract within 48 hours after the person requests to be released and provides police reports or an affidavit describing the abuse. Survivors would be permitted to keep their phone number and to be released from their contract even if they owed back payments on the account. 

    Cell phone companies would also be required to remove domestic abuse hotlines from their call and text records, to protect their privacy should their abusers see the records.

    As The Guardian reported, the wireless industry lobbying group CTIA is working to change the language of the bill, making corporations’ compliance voluntary and protecting them from civil litigation should they fail to comply.

    CTIA said in January when Schatz introduced the bill that it looked forward “to continuing to work with these legislators on the shared objective of protecting survivors of domestic violence.”

    Survivors have often been forced to stay on their family plans due to the high cost of ending a contract early and the disruption a changed phone number would cause, according to the Clinic to End Tech Abuse (CETA), Electronic Frontier Foundation, and other groups which urged lawmakers to pass the bill in a letter (pdf) last year.

    An inability to easily leave a family phone plan can put a survivor in danger, the advocates said.

    “Family phone plans can become tools of stalking and other abuse,” the groups wrote to the Senate Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation, which unanimously passed the legislation last week. “Several plans offer ‘parental’ controls or apps that an abuser can use to monitor where a victim’s or child’s phone is—and a history of where the phone has been during the past seven days—as well as what numbers the victim or child has been calling or texting. This information can help the abuser follow, harass, and threaten the victim or other family members. It can also discourage the victim from reaching out to others for help.”

    The Safe Connections Act would provide survivors with “a pathway to safety,” the National Network to End Domestic Violence told The Guardian.

    “The survivor is able to separate their phone line and make plans maybe to separate from the abuser,” Elaina Roberts, the group’s technology safety legal manager, said. “They can reach out to family and friends, or a direct service provider without being monitored or without that being known, so they can plan for their safety.”

    On social media on Thursday, proponents of the Safe Connections Act shared an open letter calling on their representatives in Congress to support the legislation and fight CTIA’s efforts to weaken the legislation.

    “Ignore the seemingly heartless greed of CTIA and wireless companies who try to ignore their involvement in abusive domestic relationships,” the letter reads. “Since these companies won’t do the right thing—because they seem to care more about money than human life—please do what’s right and help protect vulnerable Americans.”

    This post was originally published on Radio Free.

  • WASHINGTON – Ahead of a hearing on May 10 in the case of Steven Donziger, one of the main lawyers representing Ecuadorian victims of oil dumping in a landmark case against Chevron Corporation, Justin Mazzola, the Deputy Director of Research for Amnesty International USA, said:

    “Those working to advance accountability and redress for the grave environmental impacts of corporations’ actions should be supported, not placed under house arrest. Amnesty International is calling on Congress to review the case against Steven Donziger immediately and an end to the targeting and restrictions he has faced.”

    Amnesty International published a joint public statement on May 6 calling on the United States authorities to end the way in which the justice system is being misused to target and harass Steven Donziger. He has been under pre-trial house arrest since August 2019. A group of human rights and environmental organizations, including Amnesty International, believe that the multiple judicial proceedings against him are a form of reprisal stemming from his human rights work.

    Steven Donziger is facing criminal contempt charges over his decision not to comply with a judge’s order to turn over all his electronic devices and access to his accounts to a forensic expert for ultimate review by Chevron, which would have violated the confidentiality of the communications with his clients and would have posed a great risk to their lives.

    The judicial proceedings have been marred by a number of flaws, including an apparent lack of impartiality of the court, a disproportionate interference with his right to liberty imposed as a means of circumventing attorney/client privilege, and a deprivation of liberty that has continued beyond the maximum period foreseen by the charges laid against him.

    The pre-trial detention follows a long-running campaign of intimidation and harassment against him and other human rights defenders by the oil giant Chevron, and the case has become emblematic of the way in which corporations are employing the courts through strategic litigation to silence human rights defenders.

    Steven Donziger’s trial has been re-scheduled for May 10, after having been postponed multiple times during the past year. Despite widespread public interest in the case, the judge presiding over the criminal contempt case has also denied the possibility of following the trial via audio-link, as has been the case in all previous hearings, and the hearing itself will take place in a 12-person courtroom with limited capacity due to COVID-19 regulations, effectively barring independent observers from accessing the court. No justification has been publicly provided as to why audio-link will not be utilized during the trial to ensure the right to a public hearing.

    This post was originally published on Radio Free.

  • Climate and conservation advocacy groups joined business, Indigenous, and local political leaders on Thursday in welcoming a new federal report that details the Biden administration’s vision for conserving at least 30% of U.S. lands and waters by 2030.

    “We need to translate this vision into new and enduring conservation actions on the ground across our country.”
    —Randi Spivak, Center for Biological Diversity

    “It’s a big deal that the Biden administration recognizes we’re in the midst of a wildlife extinction crisis and a climate emergency. This report is an important rallying cry,” said Randi Spivak, public lands director at the Center for Biological Diversity. “There’s no time to waste. We need to translate this vision into new and enduring conservation actions on the ground across our country.”

    In a statement about the administration’s report on what supporters call the 30×30 goal, Natural Resources Defense Council president and chief counsel Mitch Bernard emphasized that “this is a critical opportunity for Americans to come together to build a new, more inclusive model of conservation to save nature, and ultimately ourselves.”

    That message was echoed by Defenders of Wildlife president and CEO Jamie Rappaport Clark, who directed the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service from 1997 to 2001.

    “Science tells us that we need to change course to save species—and ourselves—and that achieving the 30×30 goal is a key part of the solution,” she said, citing estimates that about a million species are at risk due to escalating threats. “The recommendations from the administration recognize that we must engage all interested constituencies to create enduring solutions for climate and biodiversity.”

    Wendy Wendlandt, president of Environment America, said that “from Florida’s manatees to my own California desert tortoises, habitat loss threatens iconic species and the ecosystems they depend on. And from orcas off the Washington coast to right whales in the Atlantic, our marine species are at risk. That’s why Americans from coast to coast support conservation, and why we’re looking forward to working with the administration to do what it takes to preserve our most amazing and important landscapes for centuries to come.”

    Interior Secretary Deb Haaland, Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack, Commerce Secretary Gina Raimondo, and Council on Environmental Quality Chair Brenda Mallory developed the report—entitled Conserving and Restoring America the Beautiful (pdf)—and submitted it to the National Climate Task Force.

    In his January Executive Order on Tackling the Climate Crisis at Home and Abroad, President Joe Biden had directed the four officials and heads of other relevant agencies to work with state, local, tribal, and territorial governments, landowners, fishers, and other stakeholders to achieve the 30×30 goal.

    “The ambition of this goal reflects the urgency of the challenges we face: the need to do more to safeguard the drinking water, clean air, food supplies, and wildlife upon which we all depend; the need to fight climate change with the natural solutions that our forests, agricultural lands, and the ocean provide,” the quartet write in the report.

    Their “central recommendation” is the pursuit of a nationwide, decadelong, locally led, and voluntary conservation push guided by eight core principles.

    Specifically, the report calls for pursuing “a collaborative and inclusive approach,” which includes supporting locally designed efforts and respecting tribal rights, to conserve land and waters “for the benefit of all people.”

    The report also calls for using science as a guide, building on existing tools and strategies, prioritizing job creation and healthy communities, and respecting voluntary stewardship efforts of landowners and fishers.

    The six early priorities the report identifies, based on feedback from the Biden administration’s first 100 days, are:

    • Creating more parks and safe outdoor opportunities in nature-deprived communities;
    • Supporting tribally led conservation and restoration priorities;
    • Expanding collaborative conservation of fish and wildlife habitats and corridors;
    • Increasing access for outdoor recreation;
    • Incentivizing and rewarding the voluntary conservation efforts of fishers, ranchers, farmers, and forest owners; and
    • Creating jobs by investing in restoration and resilience projects and initiatives, including the Civilian Climate Corps.

    “Indigenous people of this continent have successfully managed complex societies and resource dependent economies for 10,000 years,” said Natasha Hayden, an elected tribal representative and owner of a small fishing business in Alaska. “When our communities and businesses are provided a genuine role in policymaking, we can expect to see meaningful results that mirror this legacy for the good of all communities.”

    “The administration’s new process is a major step in the right direction for my tribe, my business, and the perpetual health of the resources we have always depended on,” Hayden added.

    David Levine, president and co-founder of the American Sustainable Business Council, similarly welcomed the report as “an important step forward in protecting our environment, addressing the climate crisis, and helping communities and sustainable businesses thrive.”

    In a statement from the Mountain Pact, which mobilizes local elected officials in over 80 Western U.S. communities, Pitkin County, Colorado Commissioner Francie Jacober said: “I feel like I’ve been holding my breath for something like this since the 1970s. I’m so happy with what the Biden administration is doing. “

    “Across the country, nature is in a state of collapse. We’re facing a mass extinction of plants and animals which impacts how clean our air is, how pure our water is, and how plentiful our food supplies are,” Jacober added. “Every 30 seconds, a football field worth of America’s natural areas disappears to roads, houses, pipelines, and other development. That’s why President Biden’s plan is so critical.”

    Greenpeace USA senior oceans campaigner Arlo Hemphill also applauded the administration for its “climate-focused, justice-centered plan that honors Indigenous peoples and elevates science,” saying that “this visionary report is a critical step that will help slow the loss of nature and ensure that the outdoor world is a more accessible place for all living in the United States.”

    However, Hemphill also called for going further, adding that “despite the virtues of this report as a historic effort for conservation at home, the U.S. still lacks leadership in advancing these principles on the international stage,” and “a truly holistic 30×30 policy would include support for a strong new Global Ocean Treaty that would enable us to extend the work we are doing at home to protect wildlife and fisheries through a network of ocean sanctuaries across international waters.”

    Various federal lawmakers also expressed support for the administration’s 30×30 goal, including Reps. Steny Hoyer (D-Md.), the House majority leader; Chellie Pingree (D-Maine), chair of the House Appropriations Committee; Kathy Castor (D-Fla.), chair of the House Select Committee on the Climate Crisis; and Bruce Westerman (R-Ark.), ranking member of the House Natural Resources Committee.

    Meanwhile, other GOP lawmakers are waging what HuffPost reporter Chris D’Angelo called “a dumb disinformation campaign against Biden’s climate agenda.”

    This post was originally published on Radio Free.

  • This story is part of Covering Climate Now, a global journalism collaboration strengthening coverage of the climate story.

    Growing up in Bangladesh’s sprawling capital of Dhaka, Farzana Faruk Jhumu learned about the country’s six distinct seasons, which bring varying levels of rain. Now 22, Jhumu said it is harder to feel the borders between seasons, which have been blurred by increasingly erratic rainstorms that regularly flood one of the world’s most crowded cities.

    For the four million people living in Dhaka’s slums, heavy rains can mean flooded homes, contaminated water, and mosquito-borne diseases like malaria and dengue fever.

    “Sometimes we make fun that Dhaka is not a city — it is a river,” said Jhumu, an activist with Fridays for Future Bangladesh, a climate advocacy group. “But it’s very tough for some people. Sudden and unpredictable rain is very painful.”

    For the four million people living in Dhaka’s slums, heavy rains can mean flooded homes, contaminated water, and mosquito-borne diseases like malaria and dengue fever. And many of those people came to Dhaka precisely to escape floods, migrating from villages in the Ganges Delta that were swamped by heavy rains and swollen rivers. Dhaka’s Bhola slum is so named because many of its residents come from Bhola Island, which was dubbed “ground zero” for climate migrants more than a decade ago, after floods displaced so many people.

    Since September, more than 10 million people, mostly across Asia and the Pacific, have been displaced by natural disasters, largely climate disasters, according to recently released data from the Internal Displacement Monitoring Center. From tropical cyclones in the South Pacific to mass floods in South Asia, climate disasters have become what aid organizations call a “push factor,” driving many of Asia’s poorest to migrate from rural areas to cities and towns in search of safety, which is never guaranteed.

    “Often, the only option for people here is to migrate to places that are no better than before,” Jhumu said. “For us, climate change is inescapable.”

    In September 2018, heavy rains caused the banks of Bangladesh’s Padma River to collapse. The resulting floods swallowed as many as 100 homes a day in the Shariatpur District, an area south of Dhaka. The event was outlined in a recent report from the International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies that looks at instances of climate-related displacement in Asia.

    Over the past half-century, an area roughly five times the size of Dhaka has been lost to riverbank erosion along to the Padma and Jamuna rivers, according to a 2018 report. Floods have created a migration pipeline from rural areas to the capital’s poorest neighborhoods, where displaced people continue to face floods. The report said that residents of urban slums have been hit especially hard by riverbank erosion.

    “People might imagine that if your income goes up [and allows you to move] from a rural area to a city, that life will be better, yet that’s hardly the situation,” said Harjeet Singh, global climate lead for the international nonprofit ActionAid. “Most migrants end up living in areas prone to floods, or that don’t have basic services, and will once again have a very low quality of life.”

    Across Asia, people displaced by climate disasters continue to be vulnerable to climate-related threats. In April 2020, Tropical Cyclone Harold, a category 5 storm fueled by unusually warm waters in the South Pacific, swept through Tonga, Fiji and Vanuatu. Harold displaced more than one in four people in Vanuatu, many of whom fled to more populated areas in search of shelter, according to the Red Cross and Red Crescent report. Because of widespread damage to evaluation centers, people took to sleeping outdoors on concrete slabs, where they were exposed to the elements. In the days and weeks after the storm, hot, wet conditions fueled a malaria outbreak.

    In the spring of 2018, much of Afghanistan saw its worst drought in a decade. Communities in the north and west that are reliant on farming lost crops and livestock amid the dry spell, depriving growers of needed income while leading to severe food shortages across the country. The drought displaced more than 370,000 people, forcing many to flee to refugee camps on the outskirts of nearby cities in search of safety and work.

    “These are very, very poor communities,” said Nasratullah Elham, an Afghan climate activist who recently moved to the United States. “When a family loses their livestock, they’ve pretty much lost everything.”

    Roughly a year after the drought hit, heavy rains fell on Afghanistan, leading to flash flooding that damaged or destroyed homes in rural areas, as well as refugee camps, displacing some 42,000 people, according to the Red Cross and Red Crescent report. Both drought and floods are becoming more frequent and intense in Afghanistan.

    “When people move to the cities, they usually don’t go back,” Elham said. “But most really can’t afford it and fall into poverty again, so it can be very, very tough.”

    Elham grew up in a village in eastern Afghanistan, near the city of Jalalabad. He said that flash floods were common in the spring in his riverside village, but that floods have become more destructive over time, and that today they wash away entire homes and wheat fields, driving displacement.

    “We might not be the main driver of climate change, but we are kind of the most affected,” Elham said. “We’re in an emergency state.”

    Climate disasters are displacing some 20 million people each year, and more than 80 percent of those displaced come from the Asia Pacific Region, according to the Red Cross and Red Crescent report. That number is expected to grow as temperatures rise.

    Even if countries limit warming to 2 degrees C, slow-onset climate disasters like sea level rise and drought will displace close to 34 million people in South Asian alone by 2050, according to a 2020 report from ActionAid. If countries only do what’s needed to keep warming to a little more than 3 degrees C, some 63 million South Asians could be displaced by mid-century.

    “It’s a critical situation,” Singh said. “Unless we act, these numbers will go up dramatically.”

    This post was originally published on Radio Free.

  • Anti-war activism met corporate gaslighting Wednesday as General Dynamics CEO Phebe Novakovic refused to acknowledge the deadly consequences of her firm’s arms sales to Saudi Arabia and other nations after CodePink co-founder Medea Benjamin interrupted a company shareholder meeting. 

    “If you have a model… where you need wars in order to make money, I think there’s something fundamentally wrong with the company and you ought to have some more moral reflection about how you earn your billions of dollars.”
    —Medea Benjamin, CodePink 

    Benjamin attended the annual meeting in Reston, Virginia and calmly confronted Novakovic about her company’s weapons sales to countries including Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, Bahrain, and Egypt. She specifically mentioned a March 25, 2016 Saudi-led airstrike that hit a crowded marketplace in the Yemeni village of Mastaba, killing scores of civilians. 

    “How is it morally responsible to be engaged in a war in Yemen where now as a result of that war, every 75 seconds a child dies from war and hunger?” Benjamin asked. “My heart goes out to the children of Yemen and I was wondering if you think about them as well, because while they are dying, people in this company are making profits off of them.” 

    Novakovic replied by accusing Benjamin of spreading “potentially libelous and incorrect information” that is “born from a lack of knowledge.” 

    “I think that’s one of the things we should talk about, because the internet is full of misinformation, including the incident you cited at the marketplace,” the CEO said. “I am going to presume that you don’t know the facts, and we are perfectly willing to share them with you.” 

    The facts, as determined by Human Rights Watch and reported by the New York Times and others, are that a General Dynamics MK-84 2,000-pound bomb was dropped on the Mastaba market, and that 97 civilians—25 of them children—were identified as victims. Another 10 bodies were burned beyond recognition.

    Benjamin pressed Novakovic on General Dynamics’ sales to Saudi Arabia: “The Saudi regime is evil, and you provide them with weapons. Is there anything moral about supplying Saudi Arabia with weapons?” 

    Novakovic retorted that “we can define and we can debate who is evil and who is not but we do support the policy of the U.S. and I happen to believe… the policy of the U.S. is just and fair.” 

    There is virtually universal agreement among rights advocates that Saudi Arabia is ruled by one of the world’s most repressive regimes, and that the country’s human rights record is among the world’s worst.

    Benjamin also took aim at what many peace activists call the inherently immoral nature of the military-industrial complex, including the revolving door between the Pentagon and the private sector, as she faced a General Dynamics board whose members include former Defense Secretary James Mattis. 

    “If you have a model where you need global conflict, where you need wars in order to make money, I think there’s something fundamentally wrong with the company and you ought to have some more moral reflection about how you earn your billions of dollars,” Benjamin asserted. 

    Novakovic replied that “our role is to support the U.S. military and U.S. national security policy and the preservation of peace and liberty.”

    “I believe that and I believe that passionately,” she said. “We hope for peace, we pray for peace, we work for peace.”

    General Dynamics was founded in 1952. The United States has been at war or engaged in military occupation or other foreign interventions nearly every single year (pdf) since then, while selling or giving hundreds of billions of dollars worth of weaponry and other equipment to dozens of countries. 

    “The worst thing for your company would be if peace breaks out in the Middle East.”
    —Benjamin

    As the United States continues to spend more on its military than the next 10 countries combined—$778 billion in 2020—executives at arms companies continue to enjoy stupendous salaries and bonuses. Benjamin took Novakovic to task for “personally making $21 million a year through a business model that thrives on conflict, death, and destruction.”

    “The worst thing for your company would be if peace breaks out in the Middle East,” Benjamin said, a reference to Raytheon Technologies CEO Greg Hayes’ recent reassurance to investors that the Biden administration’s temporary hold on the sale of nearly half a billion dollars’ worth of bombs to Saudi Arabia wouldn’t threaten profits. 

    “Look,” said Hayes, “peace is not going to break out in the Middle East anytime soon. I think it remains an area where we’ll continue to see solid growth.”

    This post was originally published on Radio Free.

  • WASHINGTON – In support, Jamie Rappaport Clark, president and CEO of Defenders of Wildlife, issued the following statement: 

    “We applaud today’s action by the Biden administration to advance the conservation of  at least 30% of our lands and waters by 2030,” said Jamie Rappaport Clark, president and CEO, Defenders of Wildlife.

    “As a result of escalating threats, including climate change and habitat destruction, 1 million species around the world may face extinction. Science tells us that we need to change course to save species‒and ourselves‒and that achieving the 30×30 goal is a key part of the solution. The recommendations from the administration recognize that we must engage all interested constituencies to create enduring solutions for climate and biodiversity. We are excited to support this growing local, national and global effort.”

    This post was originally published on Radio Free.

  • TUCSON, Ariz. – Arizona conservation groups today welcomed the Biden administration’s plan to conserve at least 30% of the nation’s lands and waters by 2030 and urged state and local officials to commit to the urgent work of protecting biodiversity, slowing the wildlife extinction crisis and addressing the climate emergency.

    The plan, required under President Biden’s January executive order, outlines ways to measure progress and support local efforts. It also encourages local communities to help identify what lands should be protected and what steps should be taken to safeguard critical wildlife habitats, connectivity corridors, climate refuges and waterways.

    “This report is a good start, but it’s critical to ensure that at least 30% of our wild places in the U.S. and in Arizona are fully protected,” said Joe Trudeau, Southwest conservation advocate at the Center for Biological Diversity. “Arizona has a remarkable opportunity to lead the way because of our state’s diverse natural and cultural landscapes. From biodiversity hotspots like the streams along the Mogollon Rim to migrating birds in our urban greenways, wildlife habitats need stronger protection if we’re to have any chance of leaving a livable planet to our grandchildren.”

    Arizona groups recently launched a 30×30 task force to begin establishing key conservation areas, partners and priorities. Arizona’s deserts, mountains and rivers harbor a vast diversity of wildlife and provide habitat for dozens of rare species that need greater protection.

    “Only in Arizona do you find overlapping ranges of jaguars, ocelots, Mexican gray wolves, mountain lions, black bears and bobcats,” said Rob Peters, senior representative in Defenders of Wildlife’s Southwest office. “Yet our public lands and private lands are being assaulted by uncurbed mining, development and a useless border wall. These areas are ground zero for destruction and top priority for enhanced conservation.”

    “Ensuring wildlife connectivity between protected areas — from Arizona’s borderlands to the Grand Canyon — is a conservation priority essential to sustain native biodiversity and reduce the risk of extinction, especially in the current era of rapid climate change,” said Kim Crumbo, wildlands coordinator for the Rewilding Institute.

    “While large landscape conservation designations are a big piece of achieving Arizona’s 30×30 goals, there are important roles to be played by conservation easements benefiting private landowners, as well as community parks, open spaces and active restoration projects,” said Mike Quigley, Arizona state director of The Wilderness Society. “There is a role for everyone, and everyone will be welcomed.”

    The plan emphasizes investing in parks, improving recreation access and supporting local conservation efforts. Save the Dells, a community group fighting to preserve the iconic Granite Dells in Prescott, is one Arizona example.

    “Preserving this spectacular natural wonder on the edge of one of Arizona’s fastest-growing cities is a prime example of why 30×30 is so critically important,” said Amber Fields, chair of Save the Dells. “Without efforts like ours, urban sprawl will continue to gobble up Arizona’s precious land and water. We can’t let that happen and we invite everyone to join this effort for the sake of future generations.”

    The president’s order requires federal officials to support local, state, private and tribal conservation and restoration efforts and work to improve access to nature for low-income communities and communities of color.

    “Sierra Club is eager to work on this program to protect lands and waters throughout the U.S. including here in Arizona,” said Sandy Bahr, director of Sierra Club’s Grand Canyon (Arizona) Chapter. “This effort must be grounded in equity and justice, recognizing the leadership and knowledge of Indigenous people and diverse communities relative to the lands and waters that may be considered for protection and ensuring that these communities are part of 30×30 from the beginning.”

    Conserving at least 30% of Arizona’s natural areas will protect jobs, health and social stability by helping reduce global warming and preventing the degradation of ecosystems and species extinctions. Meeting the goal will require preventing more habitat loss, increasing levels of protection, and prioritizing biodiversity protection and carbon storage. On publicly owned national forests and Bureau of Land Management lands, this should include creating new wildlife refuges, wilderness areas, parks and monuments.

    Three quarters of the planet’s lands and two thirds of its ocean have been heavily altered by humans. Habitat loss and degradation remains the largest driver of extinction in the United States and around the world. The United States loses a football field’s worth of natural area every 30 seconds to human development, with serious effects on wildlife, fresh water and clean air.

    A 2019 intergovernmental report said more than 1 million plant and animal species are faced with extinction. Species are dying out at tens to 1,000 times higher than the natural rate. For example, there are fewer than 400 North Atlantic right whales left and just 14 red wolves known in the wild in North Carolina. In the Southeast extinction looms for 28% of the region’s fishes, 48% of crayfishes and nearly 70% of freshwater mussels.

    This post was originally published on Radio Free.

  • WASHINGTON – In an important step forward for America’s public lands and waters, the Department of Interior published a report Thursday setting out the process to protect 30 percent of U.S. lands, waters and oceans by 2030. This report follows the national commitment set out by President Joe Biden in January with his Executive Order on Tackling the Climate Crisis at Home and Abroad

    This effort comes as America is losing two football fields worth of land to development every minute. In the face of biodiversity loss and climate change, setting aside natural areas for conservation can safeguard habitat for threatened species as well as protect sources of clean water for Americans.

    In addition, scientists say only 13 percent of the global ocean can be classified as wilderness. From oil spills to warming waters, our seas are facing existential threats. Ocean habitats, such as the Florida Reef, are suffering. Long-standing marine protected areas can help restore vulnerable ecosystems, safeguard endangered species, and build resilience to climate impacts and natural disasters. 

    The report lays out several principles, including a focus on conserving “America’s lands and waters for the benefit of all people” and using “science as a guide.” As part of the plan, the Department of Interior will also create an “American Conservation and Stewardship Atlas” to keep track of protected areas. Early recommendations include enhancing the National Wildlife Refuge System, establishing new marine sanctuaries and expanding outdoor recreation opportunities.

    Wendy Wendlandt, president of Environment America, issued the following statement: 

    “By laying out the principles necessary to safeguard more nature, President Biden and Secretary Haaland are ensuring that future generations can appreciate the soaring mountains, rushing rivers and stunning beaches that make this country so special. From Florida’s manatees to my own California desert tortoises, habitat loss threatens iconic species and the ecosystems they depend on. And from orcas off the Washington coast to right whales in the Atlantic, our marine species are at risk. That’s why Americans from coast to coast support conservation, and why we’re looking forward to working with the administration to do what it takes to preserve our most amazing and important landscapes for centuries to come.”

    This post was originally published on Radio Free.

  • WASHINGTON – On Thursday, the New York Attorney General’s office announced that its multi-year investigation found that the nation’s largest broadband companies funded a secret multimillion-dollar campaign to influence the Federal Communications Commission’s 2017 repeal of Net Neutrality rules and Title II classification of broadband internet-access service.

    The scheme resulted in millions of fake comments filed at the agency, as well as 500,000 fabricated letters to Congress, to give the false appearance of public support for the Trump FCC’s eventual repeal of open-internet protections.

    Free Press Co-CEO Craig Aaron made the following statement:

    “The New York Attorney General’s Office has exposed a massive fraud financed by the nation’s biggest phone and cable companies to drown out authentic public support for Net Neutrality. Knowing the vast majority of people in the United States wanted to preserve the Obama-era open-internet rules, industry lobbyists hired shady operators to trick people into supporting their positions. These lobbyists also filed fake comments using names of the deceased. They spent millions to try to obscure the public’s overwhelming support for real Net Neutrality and, in the process, destroyed a democratic process that was designed for genuine public input. This is outrageous and illegal.

    “We applaud Attorney General Letitia James for investigating and exposing this scam, holding the scammers accountable and tracking these fraudulent activities back to those who financed them: the nation’s biggest broadband providers and their high-priced lobbyists, including a former chairman of the FCC. While the attorney general’s investigators didn’t find that the phone and cable companies had knowledge of the fraud being perpetrated, they did show that the industry intended to disrupt the public-comment process and drown out Net Neutrality supporters.

    “The Biden FCC has the opportunity and responsibility to restore Net Neutrality and the authority the agency needs to regulate the nation’s biggest cable and phone companies. This investigation shows how low the industry will stoop to undermine even the most basic and benign safeguards. Agency leadership has a responsibility to root out such astroturfing efforts, restore public trust and access to the commenting system, and ensure that these companies can’t continue to manipulate the policymaking process.”

    This post was originally published on Radio Free.

  • The European Union’s top court ruled Thursday in favor of the European Commission’s partial ban on three pesticides hazardous to bees, much to the chagrin of Bayer—the German pharmaceutical and biotech company that merged with agrochemical giant Monsanto in 2018.

    Bayer attempted to overturn the ban and undermine the E.U.’s “precautionary principle” for the protection of environmental and human health, but the European Court of Justice dismissed the corporation’s appeal and backed a lower court’s 2018 decision to uphold restrictions on the use of some pesticides on certain crops. In 2013, the Commission banned the use of imidacloprid, clothianidin, and thiamethoxam—three bee-killing neonicotinoid pesticides—on maize, rapseed, and some cereals.

    “The Court of Justice has reaffirmed that protecting nature and people’s health takes precedence over the narrow economic interests of powerful multinationals and that the precautionary principle is a cornerstone of E.U. law,” Greenpeace E.U. legal strategist Andrea Carta said in response to the top court’s ratification of the ban.

    “This means the E.U. has a responsibility and the power to ensure the safety of all pesticides, chemicals, GM crops, and other dangerous products and substances,” said Carta.

    While hailing the “landmark decision,” Greenpeace E.U. warned that it “does not mean an end to threats to bees and other pollinators in the E.U.”

    “E.U. courts have again ruled that bees and other essential insects should be protected from dangerous pesticides, but governments continue to dish out exemptions and hold up attempts to put in place effective safety testing,” said Carta. “This ruling shows they must adopt rigorous testing rules without further delay.”

    According to Reuters, 206 emergency authorizations were granted for the use of the neonicotinoids in the E.U. between 2013 and 2019, and the ban did not prevent the use of the toxic substances on other crops, such as sugar beet. “E.U. auditors last year said this pesticide use, while legal, was thought to be responsible for honeybee losses,” the news outlet reported.

    In addition, Greenpeace E.U. pointed out, “Research also indicates that several other pesticides currently used in the E.U. are a threat to bees and other pollinating insects, including four more neonicotinoids not covered by the 2013 ban.”

    Reuters noted that the Commission, in an effort to protect bees, has proposed targets to reduce the E.U.’s use of pesticides by 50% and to cut fertilizer use by 20% by 2030.

    This post was originally published on Radio Free.

  • If you’re reading this article, you’re probably not one of the millions of people living without broadband access in America. People living without broadband access— who are disproportionately non-white people, low income, or rural—do not have access to equal opportunities in education, employment, banking, and other important components of connection and social mobility. That was the case before the pandemic, and it’s even worse now.

    The digital divide is what separates those without broadband from those with it, and it encompasses all the broader social inequalities associated with an increasingly digitized world. Along with discrimination in housing, banking, employment, and other areas of life, it is both a result of and contributes to systemic inequalities faced by people who are Black, Latinx, Indigenous, and other underserved groups.

    What is broadband and why do we need it?

    Broadband is the term used to describe high-speed, reliable internet—the kind of internet that allows us to stream movies, take part in Zoom calls, and connect with our social networks. Since 2015, the Federal Communications Commission has defined broadband as a minimum of 25 megabits per second (Mbps) download and 3 Mbps upload. But while internet upload and download speeds have changed significantly over the years, the FCC has not updated its definition. That makes it difficult to get an accurate picture of how many people are living without access to the internet that’s usable given today’s higher technology demands.

    Over the past year, schools, workplaces, health care providers, and many other basic services and functions have moved online, allowing for life to continue during lockdown. The numbers reflect this societal shift: Data use on home networks was 47 percent greater in March 2020 than the year before. But as broadband has become even more integral to our everyday lives, not all communities have had equal access. For communities living without broadband, the pandemic has only exposed and exacerbated the digital divide.

    How does broadband contribute to systemic equality?

    Due to systemic inequities in education and employment, people who are Black or Latinx have lower average incomes than white people, and for many of these households, a broadband subscription—at an average rate of $68 per month—may simply be unaffordable.

    The deepest rift in the digital divide is when it comes to race: Black and Latinx adults are almost twice as likely as white adults to lack broadband access. Due to systemic inequities in education and employment, people who are Black or Latinx have lower average incomes than white people, and for many of these households, a broadband subscription—at an average rate of $68 per month—may simply be unaffordable.

    Check out the chart below for a rough monthly expense estimate for a family of four (two adults and two minors) living in Washington, D.C, a historically majority-Black city. At about $6,515 per month, the estimated monthly expenses amount to over $2,000 more than the median individual monthly income, according to U.S. Census Bureau data from 2019. Even in a household with two income earners, there is almost no room for any unexpected expenses.

    Adults living without broadband face significant barriers in accessing employment, education, and other necessities—but children are also impacted. Access at home is an important factor in a student’s success, and is associated with higher grades and homework completion. This need was amplified by the pandemic. Many of the millions of Black and Latinx children who live in households without broadband access have not been able to attend virtual classes, potentially falling behind their classmates by an entire school year or more.

    Children without broadband also miss out on developing digital skills that are necessary in today’s job market. As a result of the digital divide, more than half of Black and Latinx people could be under-prepared for 86 percent of jobs by 2045, according to Deutsche Bank. These digital skills are also crucial to innovation and entrepreneurship. Black-owned businesses have increased 37 percent from 2007 to 2012. The 2019 American Express State of Women-Owned Businesses Report shows that Black women-owned businesses are the fastest growing at 21 percent of all women-owned businesses but only have an average annual earning of $24,000. Limited broadband access compounds the numerous systemic inequity barriers to Black-owned and Black-women owned business growth.

    The systemic inequity posed by limited broadband dovetails with a science policy concept called “public value failure.” Public value failures describe the failure of a society to provide a public value, such as rights, benefits, or privileges of citizens provided by governments and policies. There are nine public value failure categories, which cover the political, economic and social aspects of this theory: mechanism for values articulation and aggregation; legitimate monopolies; imperfect public information; distribution of benefits; provider availability; time horizon; sustainability vs. conservation; and ensuring subsistence, human dignity, and progressive opportunity.

    Public value failures describe the failure of a society to provide a public value, such as rights, benefits, or privileges of citizens provided by governments and policies.

    Focusing on all of these public failures simultaneously won’t lead to substantive and sustainable change. So, we tackle what we can. Broadband access falls most fully into the distribution of benefits and provider availability categories, with arguably a large dose of the progressive opportunity category as well. All of our classrooms—regardless of a person’s socio-economic status, urban/rural location, or in-person/remote delivery—require broadband access to hear an instructor’s lecture, see a helpful tutorial, and practice the new skill. Identifying and improving in these areas hinges on building better equity in education, particularly in data skills attainment.

    How do we bridge the digital divide?

    There are steps the government can and must take to expand broadband access to Black, Latinx, Indigenous, and other underserved communities. In Congress, new legislation introduced by Rep. Jim Clyburn, the Accessible, Affordable Internet for All Act, would help sustain equitable broadband access by providing an additional $6 billion in funds for the Emergency Broadband Benefit, an FCC program created to help households struggling to afford broadband during the pandemic. The legislation would also improve data collection and transparency on broadband access, expand digital inclusion and equity efforts, preempt state laws that prevent municipalities from expanding broadband access, and prioritize infrastructure deployment to unserved areas, such as Tribal lands.

    At the executive level, President Biden has already taken important steps by including broadband in his American Jobs Plan, but he can do more. Biden must also nominate a new FCC commissioner who supports broadband access and will restore net neutrality protections, and work with Congress to enact sustainable solutions to close the digital divide.

    This post was originally published on Radio Free.

  • Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis on Thursday barred local media outlets from covering his signing of S.B. 90, the latest state-level voter suppression law which makes voting by mail—which millions of Floridians have done for years—more difficult and discourages voters from waiting in long lines at the polls.

    The Republican governor, a close ally of former President Donald Trump, gave Fox News exclusive access to the bill signing, drawing condemnation from rights advocates and at least one local reporter who learned Thursday morning that he would not be able to cover the event.

    “We were a pool camera, assigned to feed this event to affiliates nationwide. Now, the only camera will be Fox News,” tweeted CBS 12 reporter Jay O’Brien. “It’s not just us. Not a single reporter is being let in. This in a ‘sunshine’ state that prides itself on open government.” 

    Rep. Anna V. Eskamani, a Democrat who represents District 47, was appalled.

    Journalist and voting rights expert Ari Berman said DeSantis’s decision to bar all media outlets other than Fox, which joined Trump last year in claiming that allowing expanded voting by mail in the 2020 election would lead to rampant fraud, was “extremely telling.”

    “Democracy [is] literally dying in the dark,” Berman added.

    It’s extremely telling that DeSantis claims new Florida voter suppression law intended to boost “election integrity” but barred all media except Fox News from covering bill signing. It was a Fox & Friends “exclusive” pic.twitter.com/NLLPEMcHmj

    — Ari Berman (@AriBerman) May 6, 2021

    Other critics echoed the rebuke.

    Ron DeSantis is signing a bill that makes it hard to vote exclusively on Fox News.

    The GOP doubling down on its commitment to only allowing the US to be a democracy when it produces the outcomes Fox News viewers want. https://t.co/iRUQPpH1uV

    DeSantis proudly told “Fox & Friends” he believes S.B. 90 contains the nation’s “strongest election integrity measures” as he signed the legislation. The law requires votes to reapply for mail-in ballots every two years rather than every four years, as they did under previous guidelines; restricts the use of election drop boxes; and prohibits actions that could assist people waiting to vote—including offering “items” such as water or food.

    The new law is modeled on a voter suppression measure passed in Georgia in March. Lawmakers in Iowa, Utah, and Arkansas have also passed similar laws ahead of the 2022 election, and legislators in 47 states have introduced 361 voter suppression bills, according to the Brennan Center for Justice.  

    As of March 24, legislators have introduced 361 bills with restrictive provisions in 47 states.

    By signing the bill, said the civil rights organization All Voting Is Local-Florida, “DeSantis is continuing a disturbing, nationwide trend of turning lies into legislation.”

    “The truth is during the 2020 election cycle, Floridians refused to choose between their health and the right to vote, casting vote-by-mail ballots in record numbers so they could safely and securely steer the fate of our democracy,” said Brad Ashwell, director of the organization. “SB90 weaponizes lies and uses them as a basis to exact a vendetta against Floridians, assaulting our freedom to vote. There is no integrity in restricting access to the ballot box.”

    Following the signing of S.B. 90, the NAACP Legal Defense and Education Fund filed a federal lawsuit against Florida Secretary of State Laurel M. Lee, on behalf of Common Cause, Disability Rights Florida, and Florida NAACP. The groups denounced DeSantis and the state Republican Party for “using the myth of voter fraud to pass sweeping restrictions on voting.”

    “SB 90 creates barriers between Floridians and their right to vote. By signing this bill, Gov. DeSantis added Florida to the shameful list of states that are moving backward on voting access, rather than forward,” said Sylvia Albert, director of voting and elections for Common Cause. “Every voter in America has the right to have their voice heard, by casting and having their ballot counted—that’s how our government ‘by the people’ is supposed to work.”

    This post was originally published on Radio Free.

  • With last year’s long queues and supply issues at supermarkets, the Covid pandemic has made us all re-examine how we get our groceries and where they come from. But even before Covid-19, the failures of the current system were clear to see. Inadequate access to healthy diets contribute to one in seven deaths in Great Britain. Diet-related chronic disease accounts for £6.1bn of annual NHS spending (around 9%) and generates a wider economic loss of more than £54bn a year (that’s 3% of UK GDP).

    The damage of our food system has risen to such critical levels that estimates suggest that for every £1 UK consumers spend on food, it costs global society the same amount in environmental and social costs from antibiotic resistance to damaged ecosystems.

    At the same time, the way we produce our food relies on industrial production techniques and monocultures. It uses unsustainable amounts of water, depletes wildlife, and pumps greenhouse gases into our atmosphere. The damage of our food system has risen to such critical levels that estimates suggest that for every £1 UK consumers spend on food, it costs global society the same amount in environmental and social costs from antibiotic resistance to damaged ecosystems.

    At NEF, we’ve recently worked with the Soil Association to assess one possible alternative to our broken food system. Growing Communities is a community food distributer in north London which runs a subscription-based vegetable scheme and a weekly farmers market. Customers can collect their weekly veg bags from distribution points, which include local businesses and community venues. Growing Communities only source seasonal, agroecological produce (that means produce which is grown using techniques which work with ecosystems, rather than against them) and they purchase from suppliers close by before looking further afield.

    Growing Communities has been able to compete with large supermarkets for the past 20 years and currently feeds 2,500 people. They’ve also helped establish a network of 27 Better Food Traders with 12,500 customers, to expand their reach. And our research has found that, in addition to being financially viable, their model delivers much greater social and environmental value than our mainstream food system.

    In total, for every £1 spent by Growing Communities’ customers, we estimate that the scheme generates more than £3.70 of social, environmental, and economic value. Of this extra value, £3.46 is generated for the customer and their household. This includes the value of the food they receive, improvements in health and wellbeing, and time saved due to less supermarket shopping. 32p of value is created for the environment, through better farming practices and changes in customer diets which reduce carbon emissions and improve water quality and wildlife health, among other things. Additionally, 13p of value was created for farmers and processors, and 7p for Growing Communities employees.

    It looks like the pandemic has shifted how many of us think about our food. In the UK people are now around four times more likely to search online for ​”veg box” than pre-pandemic. But increased consumer interest isn’t the only reason why a radical rethink our food system ought to be a priority.

    As well as correcting some of the most glaring environmental damages of our current food system, Growing Communities’ model also supports the ​’levelling up’ agenda that the government is looking to define.

    Growing Communities offers very different trading arrangements to farmers compared to supermarkets, promising to buy all of their produce and not to haggle with them on price. As a result, they estimate that more than 50% of the sales price goes to farmers, compared to 14% in the global supermarket system. Not only does this allow producers to adopt farming practices that are better for the planet, but farmers also report meaningful improvements in financial wellbeing and job security. Since working with Growing Communities, farmers reported that their annual turnover increased by an average of £50,000. These are big numbers for small-scale producers. And as farmers hire employees who go on to spend their salaries locally, this economic impact is amplified. 70% of Growing Communities’ supplier spending goes to UK producers and wholesalers—substantially more than the UK as a whole, where just 17% of the fruit and half of the vegetables that we eat are grown in the UK.

    In urban areas, where 84% of UK residents live, Growing Communities’ model can also have an economic impact. Their staff are all paid a living wage, compared to the retail sector in general, where low-paid insecure work dominates. Their neighbourhood-centric approach also means their premises are based near employees’ homes, reducing time and energy used commuting and allowing them more flexibility to care for their children. Other cities, such as Paris, have made this kind of decentralised approach to urban development a policy priority as a way to improve the quality of life of their residents—the most well-known model being the ​”15-minute city”. Growing Communities’ model could be part of UK efforts to do the same.

    With 59% of people agreeing that government should make big or moderate changes in the wake of the pandemic, supporting regenerative models of community-led agriculture like Growing Communities would be one meaningful way of doing so.

    This post was originally published on Radio Free.

  • Many of us have had a recurring nightmare. You know the one. In a fog between sleeping and waking, you’re trying desperately to escape from something awful, some looming threat, but you feel paralyzed. Then, with great relief, you suddenly wake up, covered in sweat. The next night, or the next week, though, that same dream returns.

    For politicians of Joe Biden’s generation that recurring nightmare was Saigon, 1975. Communist tanks ripping through the streets as friendly forces flee. Thousands of terrified Vietnamese allies pounding at the U.S. Embassy’s gates. Helicopters plucking Americans and Vietnamese from rooftops and disgorging them on Navy ships. Sailors on those ships, now filled with refugees, shoving those million-dollar helicopters into the sea. The greatest power on Earth sent into the most dismal of defeats.

    Back then, everyone in official Washington tried to avoid that nightmare. The White House had already negotiated a peace treaty with the North Vietnamese in 1973 to provide a “decent interval” between Washington’s withdrawal and the fall of the South Vietnamese capital. As defeat loomed in April 1975, Congress refused to fund any more fighting. A first-term senator then, Biden himself said, “The United States has no obligation to evacuate one, or 100,001, South Vietnamese.” Yet it happened anyway. Within weeks, Saigon fell and some 135,000 Vietnamese fled, producing scenes of desperation seared into the conscience of a generation.

    Now, as president, by ordering a five-month withdrawal of all U.S. troops from Afghanistan by this September 11th, Biden seems eager to avoid the return of an Afghan version of that very nightmare. Yet that “decent interval” between America’s retreat and the Taliban’s future triumph could well prove indecently short.

    The Taliban’s fighters have already captured much of the countryside, reducing control of the American-backed Afghan government in Kabul, the capital, to less than a third of all rural districts. Since February, those guerrillas have threatened the country’s major provincial capitals—Kandahar, Kunduz, Helmand, and Baghlan—drawing the noose ever tighter around those key government bastions. In many provinces, as the New York Times reported recently, the police presence has already collapsed and the Afghan army seems close behind.

    If such trends continue, the Taliban will soon be primed for an attack on Kabul, where U.S. airpower would prove nearly useless in street-to-street fighting. Unless the Afghan government were to surrender or somehow persuade the Taliban to share power, the fight for Kabul, whenever it finally occurs, could prove to be far bloodier than the fall of Saigon—a twenty-first-century nightmare of mass flight, devastating destruction, and horrific casualties. 

    With America’s nearly 20-year pacification effort there poised at the brink of defeat, isn’t it time to ask the question that everyone in official Washington seeks to avoid: How and why did Washington lose its longest war?

    First, we need to get rid of the simplistic answer, left over from the Vietnam War, that the U.S. somehow didn’t try hard enough. In South Vietnam, a 10-year war, 58,000 American dead, 254,000 South Vietnamese combat deaths, millions of Vietnamese, Laotian, and Cambodian civilian deaths, and a trillion dollars in expenditures seem sufficient in the “we tried” category. Similarly, in Afghanistan, almost 20 years of fighting, 2,442 American war dead, 69,000 Afghan troop losses, and costs of more than $2.2 trillion should spare Washington from any charges of cutting and running.

    The answer to that critical question lies instead at the juncture of global strategy and gritty local realities on the ground in the opium fields of Afghanistan. During the first two decades of what would actually be a 40-year involvement with that country, a precise alignment of the global and the local gave the U.S. two great victories—first, over the Soviet Union in 1989; then, over the Taliban, which governed much of the country in 2001.

    During the nearly 20 years of U.S. occupation that followed, however, Washington mismanaged global, regional, and local politics in ways that doomed its pacification effort to certain defeat. As the countryside slipped out of its control and Taliban guerrillas multiplied after 2004, Washington tried everything—a trillion-dollar aid program, a 100,000 troop “surge,” a multi-billion-dollar drug war—but none of it worked. Even now, in the midst of a retreat in defeat, official Washington has no clear idea why it ultimately lost this 40-year conflict.

    Secret War (Drug War)

    Just four years after the North Vietnamese army rolled into Saigon driving Soviet-made tanks and trucks, Washington decided to even the score by giving Moscow its own Vietnam in Afghanistan. When the Red Army occupied Kabul in December 1979, President Jimmy Carter’s national security advisor, Zbigniew Brzezinski, crafted a grand strategy for a CIA covert war that would inflict a humiliating defeat on the Soviet Union. 

    Building upon an old U.S. alliance with Pakistan, the CIA worked through that country’s Inter Service Intelligence agency (ISI) to deliver millions, then billions of dollars in arms to Afghanistan’s anti-Soviet guerrillas, known as the mujahideen, whose Islamic faith made them formidable fighters. As a master of geopolitics, Brzezinski forged a near-perfect strategic alignment among the U.S., Pakistan, and China for a surrogate conflict against the Soviets. Locked into a bitter rivalry with its neighbor India that erupted in periodic border wars, Pakistan was desperate to please Washington, particularly since, ominously enough, India had only recently tested its first nuclear bomb.

    Throughout the long years of the Cold War, Washington was Pakistan’s main ally, providing ample military aid and tilting its diplomacy to favor that country over India. To shelter beneath the U.S. nuclear umbrella, the Pakistanis were, in turn, willing to risk Moscow’s ire by serving as the springboard for the CIA’s secret war on the Red Army in Afghanistan.

    Beneath that grand strategy, there was a grittier reality taking shape on the ground in that country. While the mujahideen commanders welcomed the CIA’s arms shipments, they also needed funds to sustain their fighters and soon turned to poppy growing and opium trafficking for that. As Washington’s secret war entered its sixth year, a New York Times correspondent travelling through southern Afghanistan discovered a proliferation of poppy fields that was transforming that arid terrain into the world’s main source of illicit narcotics. “We must grow and sell opium to fight our holy war against the Russian nonbelievers,” one rebel leader told the reporter.

    In fact, caravans carrying CIA arms into Afghanistan often returned to Pakistan loaded with opium—sometimes, reported the New York Times, “with the assent of Pakistani or American intelligence officers who supported the resistance.” During the decade of the CIA’s secret war there, Afghanistan’s annual opium harvest soared from a modest 100 tons to a massive 2,000 tons. To process the raw opium into heroin, illicit laboratories opened in the Afghan-Pakistani borderlands that, by 1984, supplied a staggering 60% of the U.S. market and 80% of the European one. Inside Pakistan, the number of heroin addicts surged from almost none at all in 1979 to nearly 1.5 million by 1985.

    By 1988, there were an estimated 100 to 200 heroin refineries in the area around the Khyber Pass inside Pakistan operating under the purview of the ISI. Further south, an Islamist warlord named Gulbuddin Hekmatyar, the CIA’s favored Afghan “asset,” controlled several heroin refineries that processed much of the opium harvest from the country’s southern provinces. In May 1990, as that secret war was ending, the Washington Post reported that American officials had failed to investigate drug dealing by Hekmatyar and his protectors in Pakistan’s ISI largely “because U.S. narcotics policy in Afghanistan has been subordinated to the war against Soviet influence there.”

    Charles Cogan, director of the CIA’s Afghan operation, later spoke frankly about the Agency’s priorities. “We didn’t really have the resources or the time to devote to an investigation of the drug trade,” he told an interviewer. “I don’t think that we need to apologize for this… There was fallout in term of drugs, yes. But the main objective was accomplished. The Soviets left Afghanistan.”

    There was also another kind of real fallout from that secret war, though Cogan didn’t mention it. While it was hosting the CIA’s covert operation, Pakistan played upon Washington’s dependence and its absorption in its Cold War battle against the Soviets to develop ample fissionable material by 1987 for its own nuclear bomb and, a decade later, to carry out a successful nuclear test that stunned India and sent strategic shockwaves across South Asia. 

    Simultaneously, Pakistan was also turning Afghanistan into a virtual client state. For three years following the Soviet retreat in 1989, the CIA and Pakistan’s ISI continued to collaborate in backing a bid by Hekmatyar to capture Kabul, providing him with enough firepower to shell the capital and slaughter some 50,000 of its residents. When that failed, from the millions of Afghan refugees inside their borders, the Pakistanis alone formed a new force that came to be called the Taliban—sound familiar?—and armed them to seize Kabul successfully in 1996.

    The Invasion of Afghanistan

    In the aftermath of the September 2001 terrorist attacks, when Washington decided to invade Afghanistan, the same alignment of global strategy and gritty local realities assured it another stunning victory, this time over the Taliban who then ruled most of the country. Although its nuclear arms now lessened its dependence on Washington, Pakistan was still willing to serve as a springboard for the CIA’s mobilization of Afghan regional warlords who, in combination with massive U.S. bombing, soon swept the Taliban out of power.

    Although American air power readily smashed its armed forces—seemingly, then, beyond repair—that theocratic regime’s real weakness lay in its gross mismanagement of the country’s opium harvest. After taking power in 1996, the Taliban had first doubled the country’s opium crop to an unprecedented 4,600 tons, sustaining the economy while providing 75% of the world’s heroin. Four years later, however, the regime’s ruling mullahs used their formidable coercive powers to make a bid for international recognition at the U.N. by slashing the country’s opium harvest to a mere 185 tons. That decision would plunge millions of farmers into misery and, in the process, reduce the regime to a hollow shell that shattered with the first American bombs.

    While the U.S. bombing campaign raged through October 2001, the CIA shipped $70 million in bundled bills into Afghanistan to mobilize its old coalition of tribal warlords for the fight against the Taliban. President George W. Bush would later celebrate that expenditure as one of history’s biggest “bargains.”

    Almost from the start of what became a 20-year American occupation, however, the once-perfect alignment of global and local factors started to break apart for Washington. Even as the Taliban retreated in chaos and consternation, those bargain-basement warlords captured the countryside and promptly presided over a revived opium harvest that climbed to 3,600 tons by 2003, or an extraordinary 62% of the country’s gross domestic product (GDP). Four years later, the drug harvest would reach a staggering 8,200 tons—generating 53% of the country’s GDP, 93% of the world’s illicit heroin, and, above all, ample funds for a revival of… yes, you guessed it, the Taliban’s guerrilla army.

    Stunned by the realization that its client regime in Kabul was losing control of the countryside to the once-again opium-funded Taliban, the Bush White House launched a $7-billion drug war that soon sank into a cesspool of corruption and complex tribal politics. By 2009, the Taliban guerrillas were expanding so rapidly that the new Obama administration opted for a “surge” of 100,000 U.S. troops there.

    By attacking the guerrillas but failing to eradicate the opium harvest that funded their deployment every spring, Obama’s surge soon suffered a defeat foretold. Amid a rapid drawdown of those troops to meet the surge’s use-by date of December 2014 (as Obama had promised), the Taliban launched the first of its annual fighting-season offensives that slowly wrested control of significant parts of the countryside from the Afghan military and police.

    By 2017, the opium harvest had climbed to a new record of 9,000 tons, providing about 60% of the funding for the Taliban’s relentless advance. Recognizing the centrality of the drug trade in sustaining the insurgency, the U.S. command dispatched F-22 fighters and B-52 bombers to attack the Taliban’s labs in the country’s heroin heartland. In effect, it was deploying billion-dollar aircraft to destroy what turned out to be 10 mud huts, depriving the Taliban of just $2,800 in tax revenues. To anyone paying attention, the absurd asymmetry of that operation revealed that the U.S. military was being decisively outmaneuvered and defeated by the grittiest of local Afghan realities.

    At the same time, the geopolitical side of the Afghan equation was turning decisively against the American war effort. With Pakistan moving ever closer to China as a counterweight to its rival India and U.S.-China relations becoming hostile, Washington grew increasingly irritated with Islamabad. At a summit meeting in late 2017, President Trump and India’s Prime Minister Modi joined with their Australian and Japanese counterparts to form “the Quad” (known more formally as the Quadrilateral Security Dialogue), an incipient alliance aimed at checking China’s expansion that soon gained substance through joint naval maneuvers in the Indian Ocean.

    Within weeks of that meeting, Trump would trash Washington’s 60-year alliance with Pakistan with a single New Year’s Day tweet claiming that country had repaid years of generous U.S. aid with “nothing but lies & deceit.” Almost immediately, Washington announced suspension of its military aid to Pakistan until Islamabad took “decisive action” against the Taliban and its militant allies.

    With Washington’s delicate alignment of global and local forces now fatally misaligned, both Trump’s capitulation at peace talks with the Taliban in 2020 and Biden’s coming retreat in defeat were preordained. Without access to landlocked Afghanistan from Pakistan, U.S. surveillance drones and fighter-bombers now potentially face a 2,400-mile flight from the nearest bases in the Persian Gulf—too far for effective use of airpower to shape events on the ground (though America’s commanders are already searching desperately for air bases in countries far nearer to Afghanistan to use).

    Lessons of Defeat

    Unlike a simple victory, this defeat offers layers of meaning for those with the patience to plumb its lessons. During a government investigation of what went wrong back in 2015, Douglas Lute, an Army general who directed Afghan war policy for the Bush and Obama administrations, observed: “We were devoid of a fundamental understanding of Afghanistan—we didn’t know what we were doing.” With American troops now shaking the dust of Afghanistan’s arid soil off their boots, future U.S. military operations in that part of the globe are likely to shift offshore as the Navy joins the rest of the Quad’s flotilla in a bid to check China’s advance in the Indian Ocean.

    Beyond the closed circles of official Washington, this dismal outcome has more disturbing lessons. The many Afghans who believed in America’s democratic promises will join a growing line of abandoned allies, stretching back to the Vietnam era and including, more recently, Kurds, Iraqis, and Somalis, among others. Once the full costs of Washington’s withdrawal from Afghanistan become apparent, the debacle may, not surprisingly, discourage potential future allies from trusting Washington’s word or judgment.

    Much as the fall of Saigon made the American people wary of such interventions for more than a decade, so a possible catastrophe in Kabul will likely (one might even say, hopefully) produce a long-term aversion in this country to such future interventions. Just as Saigon, 1975, became the nightmare Americans wished to avoid for at least a decade, so Kabul, 2022, could become an unsettling recurrence that only deepens an American crisis of confidence at home.

    When the Red Army’s last tanks finally crossed the Friendship Bridge and left Afghanistan in February 1989, that defeat helped precipitate the complete collapse of the Soviet Union and the loss of its empire within a mere three years. The impact of the coming U.S. retreat in Afghanistan will undoubtedly be far less dramatic. Still, it will be deeply significant. Such a retreat after so many years, with the enemy if not at the gates, then closing in on them, is a clear sign that imperial Washington has reached the very limits of what even the most powerful military on earth can do.

    Or put another way, there should be no mistake after those nearly 20 years in Afghanistan. Victory is no longer in the American bloodstream (a lesson that Vietnam somehow did not bring home), though drugs are. The loss of the ultimate drug war was a special kind of imperial disaster, giving withdrawal more than one meaning in 2021. So, it won’t be surprising if the departure from that country under such conditions is a signal to allies and enemies alike that Washington hasn’t a hope of ordering the world as it wishes anymore and that its once-formidable global hegemony is truly waning.

    This post was originally published on Radio Free.

  • Joe Biden came into office facing historic, overlapping crises: a pandemic, a recession, racial unrest, and flagging faith in democracy and government.

    He had two choices: Govern from a mythical middle and risking failing to structurally address any one of these overlapping crises, or step boldly into the moment and reassert a role for effective government.

    He deserves credit for surrounding himself with social movement advocates, who have greatly improved his approaches to a range of issues.

    On the pandemic and the economy, Biden largely chose to boldly meet the moment.

    The nearly $2 trillion American Rescue Plan was packed with necessary help for working people and small businesses, including a big new child tax credit, an extension of unemployment relief, and direct payments to most families.

    The law also made bold strides to end the pandemic—including an effective plan for vaccine distribution and COVID-19 health care, with a focus on the most impacted populations. As a result, the administration was able to more than double its goal of administering 100 million vaccinations in the first 100 days, ultimately reaching over 200 million.

    Biden’s proposed American Jobs and Families Plans take the next step: building a more prosperous, equitable, and sustainable economy after the pandemic.

    His American Jobs Plan is a robust 21st century infrastructure plan. It would create millions of well-paying jobs repairing roads and bridges, developing green technology, and expanding broadband, while also protecting the millions of care workers who proved so essential during the pandemic.

    Biden’s American Families Plan, unveiled in his recent address to Congress, represents yet another desperately needed investment in the economic well-being of ordinary families. It includes plans for universal pre-k education, paid family and medical leave, and robust funding for child care and free community college.

    Importantly, Biden is choosing to pay for these plans entirely with taxes on the wealthiest people and corporations, who have unfairly taken advantage of loopholes, regressive tax policies, and outright cheating for decades.

    These are all important steps—many of which Biden has taken under pressure from social movements and anti-poverty advocates. But of course, much remains to push him on.

    For instance, Biden’s child care proposal provides care for kids up to age 5. Why not raise it to 13? His investments in expanding affordable housing are long overdue, but he’ll need to increase funding for vouchers so low-income families can actually live there.

    Biden also needs to live up to his promise to raise the federal minimum wage to at least $15 an hour. And while Biden has said he wants to expand health care and lower drug prices, anything less than Medicare for All—which Biden still opposes—will fall short.

    Meanwhile Biden has yet to come through on other critical domestic issues—like immigration, criminal justice reform, canceling student loan debt, and cutting the bloated Pentagon budget.

    Still, 100-plus days in, Biden deserves praise for going big and bold on long overdue structural overhauls to our economy, as well as for making moves to address systemic inequities. He deserves credit for surrounding himself with social movement advocates, who have greatly improved his approaches to a range of issues.

    Our job is to make sure he understands where he falls short—so we can make maximum use of what may well be a once-in-a generation chance to build a truly equitable society.

    This post was originally published on Radio Free.