Author: Common Dreams

  • A new study by researchers at Harvard University confirmed Wednesday that natural gas and wood as energy sources—billed by proponents as “cleaner” alternatives to coal and oil—are a major threat to public health and are responsible for pollution which causes tens of thousands of premature deaths each year.

    The study, published in the journal Environmental Research Letters, linked 29,000 to 46,000 premature deaths each year to fumes from natural gas, wood, and biomass which are used to electrify and heat buildings and power generators. 

    Although the use of natural gas has been applauded by those who oppose a transition to renewable energy, natural gas in at least 19 states and Washington, D.C. is now responsible for more deaths than coal due to its ties to particulate matter in the environment.

    “Because we’ve been focusing on gas emissions, there’s been a blindness to other air pollutants that are hazardous to health.”
    —Parichehr Salimifard, Harvard University

    As Common Dreams reported last year, industrial soot pollution, also known as PM 2.5, is linked to asthma attacks, bronchitis, strokes, neurological problems, and heart disease. Exposure to such pollution disproportionately affects poor communities, with low-income people of color more likely to be impacted on average than white Americans, according to numerous studies including one published last week in the journal Science Advances

    The Harvard study showed that the sharp reduction in coal-fired power plants in the U.S. in recent years did have a marked effect on premature deaths; in 2008, emissions from the power sector, half of which was then made up of coal plants, were linked to at least 59,000 premature deaths. That number plummeted to 10,000 to 12,000 by 2017. But the health effects of emissions from buildings, caused by natural gas and other so-called “cleaner” energy sources, cannot be dismissed, the study indicated.

    “Its usage still results in significant co-product emissions and corresponding public health impacts,” Eric Daniel Fournier, research director at UCLA’s California Center for Sustainable Communities, told HuffPost of natural gas. “As gas comes to represent a larger fraction of the country’s primary fuel portfolio, it will naturally come to be responsible for a larger proportion of the health impacts from stationary sources, of which electricity production is a major contributor.” 

    Researchers at Harvard, led by Jonathan Buonocore, a scientist at the Center for Climate, Health, and the Global Environment at the university’s T.H. Chan School for Public Health, combined emissions data from the EPA with data from the Energy Information Administration. They then estimated the mortality in counties across the nation from PM 2.5 pollution associated with residential and commercial buildings and other stationary sources.

    Up to two-thirds of the premature deaths the researchers studied were associated with fuel sources other than coal, the researchers found, and emissions from gas, biomass, and wood were the most deadly in buildings and industrial boilers. 

    “What this really points to is if you replace one combustion fuel for another combustion fuel, that is not a pathway to get you to a healthy energy system,” Buonocore told Fast Company. 

    The risk of natural gas emissions causing PM 2.5 pollution is compounded by the climate risks associated with methane, the main ingredient in natural gas which warms the atmosphere more than 80 times as much as carbon does over a 20-year period. 

    Carbon emissions in the U.S. electricity sector fell by 23% over the past two decades as coal plants were put out of commission, but if the natural gas plants built over the last decade are used as frequently as coal-fired plants were for decades, HuffPost reported, “the projected emissions for the U.S. power sector over those generators’ lifespan will decrease climate-changing pollutants by just 12%,” with those reductions “effectively eliminated” should methane emissions continue. 

    “This study highlights the gap there’s been in our climate planning,” Parichehr Salimifard, a co-author of the Harvard study, told HuffPost. “Because we’ve been focusing on gas emissions, there’s been a blindness to other air pollutants that are hazardous to health.”

    This post was originally published on Radio Free.

  • WASHINGTON – Today, the Facebook Oversight Board largely upheld the company’s ban on Donald Trump, while cautioning that it was “not appropriate for Facebook to impose the indeterminate and standardless penalty of indefinite suspension.” Digital rights group Fight for the Future issued the following statement, which can be attributed to the groups director, Evan Greer (she/her):

    “Facebook’s surveillance capitalist business model is fundamentally incompatible with human rights. And its monopoly power is fundamentally incompatible with democracy and freedom of expression. When we focus on these individual, high profile moderation decisions like the Trump ban, we are utterly missing the point. Big Tech’s harms are rooted in their practices of data harvesting and algorithmic manipulation. The vast majority of people who are silenced by Big Tech platform censorship are not former Presidents or celebrities, they are marginalized people, particularly sex workers and politically active Muslims who live outside the U.S. We can go back and forth all day about where the lines should be drawn, but simply demanding more and faster removal of content will not address the very real harms we are seeing. It’s quite telling that Facebook refused to answer several of the Oversight Board’s questions about its algorithms and actual design decisions. We need to strike at the root of the problem: break Big Tech giants, ban surveillance advertising and non-transparent algorithmic manipulation, and fight for policies that address this parasitic business model while preserving the transformative and democratizing power of the Internet as a powerful tool for social movements working for justice and liberation.

    Facebook is actively trying to solidify its monopoly power by pushing for false solutions, like weak privacy legislation that protects their data harvesting business model, and changes to Section 230 that would be devastating for freedom of expression while crushing Facebook’s competition from smaller companies and websites. It’s more important than ever that we look at issues like content moderation and platform power in an intersectional way. The most dangerous thing that could happen right now is if the public accepts the idea that lawmakers should just do “something, anything” about Big Tech. We need thoughtful policies that actually address harms, not more partisan dunking and working of the refs.”

    Fight for the Future opposes reckless changes to Section 230 that could harm marginalized communities and human rights. We support strong Federal data privacy legislation, robust antitrust enforcement, the restoration of net neutrality. We’ve called for an outright ban on surveillance-based advertising, and immediate industry-wide moratorium on non-transparent forms of algorithmic manipulation of content and newsfeeds. We don’t agree that more aggressive content moderation on its own will address the harms of Big Tech, and we fear that without structural changes, more aggressive platform moderation and content removal will disproportionately harm marginalized people and social movements.

    This post was originally published on Radio Free.

  • Much of the world hasn’t been fooled by propaganda about U.S. exceptionalism and superiority, according to a new poll released Wednesday.

    On the contrary, almost half of respondents from 53 countries are worried that Washington threatens their democracy, and nearly two-thirds think economic inequality poses the biggest risk to popular rule.

    Results of the Democracy Perception Index survey (pdf), conducted between February 24 and April 14 by Latana in collaboration with the Alliance of Democracies Foundation, are based on nationally representative interviews with more than 53,000 people.

    According to the survey, “Governments are not living up to the democratic expectations of their citizens.” While a vast majority (81%) of people think that democracy is important, just over half (53%) feel like their country is democratic, and this large gap is growing in countries worldwide.

    The countries with the largest “perceived democratic deficit,” or the difference between how important people say democracy is and how democratic they think their country is, are Poland, Nigeria, and Hungary. The three countries that come closest to fulfilling their citizens’ expectations are Switzerland, Norway, and Vietnam.

    When asked if they think their government usually acts in the interests of most people in their country or of just a small group of people, 49% of respondents said their government mainly serves a minority—up from 43% last year.

    Relatedly, economic inequality is deemed the biggest threat to democracy, by far, with 64% of people worldwide pointing to the growing gap between rich and poor as a trend that undermines political equality.

    Global concerns about foreign election interference and the influence of autocratic leaders, meanwhile, are lower.

    In addition to inequality, people are worried about limits on free speech (53%), unfair or fraudulent elections (49%), and the influence of Google, Amazon, Apple, and Facebook (48%). Fear of the power of Big Tech companies is particularly high in the U.S. (62%), which also has the most critical view of the impact of social media platforms on democracy.

    Although global perceptions of the U.S. have improved since the inauguration of President Joe Biden, almost half (44%) of people around the world remain concerned that Washington poses a bigger threat to democracy in their country than either China (38%) or Russia (28%).

    “The results will make stark reading for the G7 foreign ministers as they hold a final day of talks in London in which they have collectively assumed the role as bulwarks of democratic values determined to confront autocracy,” The Guardian noted Wednesday. The study’s findings “show neither the U.S., nor the G7, can simply assume the mantle of defenders of democracy.”

    This post was originally published on Radio Free.

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

    A Facebook-appointed oversight panel on Wednesday temporarily upheld the platform’s decision to ban former President Donald Trump, who used his page to praise the mob of violent insurrectionists that attacked the U.S. Capitol building in January as Congress attempted to certify President Joe Biden’s electoral victory.

    The Facebook Oversight Board—a group of lawyers, journalists, and activists tasked with reviewing company policies—said the tech giant was justified in barring Trump from its platform over a series of posts on January 6 that perpetuated falsehoods about the 2020 election and hailed those who attacked the U.S. Capitol as “very special.”

    Facebook originally blocked Trump from posting on the platform for 24 hours before imposing an indefinite ban on January 7. Twitter permanently banned Trump days after the insurrection.

    While upholding Facebook’s ban for now, the oversight board said it was “not appropriate for Facebook to impose the indeterminate and standardless penalty of indefinite suspension.”

    “Facebook’s normal penalties include removing the violating content, imposing a time-bound period of suspension, or permanently disabling the page and account,” the panel said. “The board insists that Facebook review this matter to determine and justify a proportionate response that is consistent with the rules that are applied to other users of its platform. Facebook must complete its review of this matter within six months of the date of this decision.”

    Madihha Ahussain of Muslim Advocates, a civil rights organization that supports banning from Facebook permanently, warned in a statement that the board’s decision “leaves the door open for Facebook to let Trump back on the platform in six months—an unacceptable and dangerous outcome.”

    “This decision is not something to celebrate,” Ahussain said. “It is a shameful indictment of Facebook and the Facebook Oversight Board that we just spent several months waiting to see if a man directly responsible for one of the darkest days in modern American history would be allowed to once again spread hate and lies online.”

    Jessica González, co-CEO of Free Press, similarly argued that the panel’s ruling amounts to “a temporary Band-Aid that obscures a much larger problem: the greed-driven incentives that compel Facebook to trade public safety for corporate profit.”

    “Facebook and other platforms must not allow any user to weaponize social media and endanger lives,” said González. “We implore Facebook to permanently ban Trump from the platform, stop the sham of its Oversight Board, and take immediate steps to cease its poisonous business model.”

    This post was originally published on Radio Free.

  • The end must be near, because I agree with Henry Kissinger about something. In fact, “the end” is exactly what I agree with Kissinger about. The former secretary of state, in a video appearance with the equally execrable former Senator Joe Lieberman, had this to say about US/China relations:

    “It’s the biggest problem for America; it’s the biggest problem for the world. Because if we can’t solve that, then the risk is that all over the world a kind of cold war will develop between China and the United States.”

    He’s right that the cold war between China and the United States represents an existential threat to humanity.

    Kissinger added:

    “We have developed the technology of a power that is beyond what anybody imagined even 70 years ago. And now, to the nuclear issue is added the hi-tech issue, which in the field of artificial intelligence, in its essence is based on the fact that man becomes a partner of machines and that machines can develop their own judgment.”

    The Message, Not the Messenger

    Let’s be clear. I think that Kissinger’s purported brilliance is a fantasy. He botched the wars in Indochina so badly that countless more people died, millions more were spent, and we lost anyway. The diplomatic breakthrough with China was driven by financial interests and political opportunism. Worse, his ethics are disgraceful. As I wrote in 2016,

    It was Kissinger who reportedly fed confidential information to then-candidate Richard Nixon—information that was used to sabotage the Vietnam peace talks, extracting a massive toll in human lives just to boost Nixon’s election chances.

    It was Kissinger who delivered the illegal order to bomb Cambodia and Laos. More bomb material rained down on these tiny nations than was used in all of World War II. His actions cost countless lives and gave rise to the mad, massacring Pol Pot regime.

    It was Kissinger who ignored the pleadings of a US diplomat and gave the green light to Pakistani atrocities in what is now Bangladesh, praising Pakistan’s dictator for his “delicacy and tact” while ridiculing those who “bleed” for “the dying Bengalis.”

    “Yahya hasn’t had so much fun since the last Hindu massacre!” Kissinger said of Pakistani dictator Yahya Khan. (The government of Bangladesh reported that 3,000,000 people died in the “fun.”)

    Kissinger supported the violent overthrow of the Chilean government by a right-wing dictator. Kissinger gave the go-ahead to the Indonesian government’s massacre of from 100,000 to 230,000 people in East Timor. (Estimates vary.)

    So, pardon me if I don’t genuflect for Mr. Kissinger the way so many people do on both sides of the aisle here in Washington. But he’s right that the cold war between China and the United States represents an existential threat to humanity.  (I’m all for showing respect to PhD’s by calling them “doctor”—unless they’re Henry Kissinger. Mr. Kissinger better be able to diagnose a case of kidney stones without palpating the patient before I give him an honorific like that.)

    The Cold War is Here

    He’s wrong, however, to put it in the future tense. This cold war isn’t something that could develop sometime in the future. It’s already here. The US is waging an economic, propaganda, and military cold war against China, heightening tensions and increasing the risk of future confrontations. And it’s getting worse. Additional sanctions were imposed on China last year, and a Chinese research organization reported that “the intensity, in terms of the scale, number and duration of the U.S. military activities in the region in 2020 was rarely seen in recent years.”

    Confirmation of that last claim was sought by the Voice of America, which can hardly be accused of being anti-American. “The U.S. Indo-Pacific Command in Hawaii confirms 10 warship passages into the sea last year following 10 in 2019,” the VOA reported. “Just five were logged in each of the two years before 2019.”

    The VOA report continued, “In July, the U.S. Air Force also acknowledged sending a B-52 Stratofortress bomber to join two aircraft carriers in a South China Sea exercise. Command spokespersons would not answer a request for comment on whether 2020 was an unusual year overall.”

    Imagine how the US would react if the Chinese were conducting military exercises off the Atlantic coast. Why, then, with the United States engage in such actions off the shores of China?

    The Fiscal Front

    The answer is almost certainly economic.  To read the Defense Appropriations Act for Fiscal Year 2021 (pdf here) is to come away astounded by the many references to economic, rather than military, issues regarding China. The budget calls for action “to deter China from engaging in industrial espionage and cyber theft,” calls for “a report and strategy on space competition with China,” funds a “Treasury study and strategy on money laundering by the People’s Republic of China,” and calls for “ensuring Chinese debt transparency.”

    That last portion of the bill, Sec. 9722, is especially interesting. It directs the Treasury Secretary to instruct the United States Executive Director at each international financial institution … that it is the policy of the United States  … to secure greater transparency with respect to the terms and conditions of financing provided by the government of the People’s Republic of China to any member state of the respective institution …”

    To a great extent, finance is driving the new cold war with China. China’s Comprehensive Regional Economic Partnership (RCEP) is a massive free trade agreement for the Pacific region that covers 2.2 billion people in 15 countries and nearly one-third (28 to 30 percent) of all global trade. China is increasingly offering loans to developing nations on terms that are more favorable than the IMF’s, especially because they don’t require the kinds of pro-privatization “reforms” that accompany most IMF loans.

    Averting Apocalypse

    It’s not necessary to idealize the Chinese in order to realize this is a crisis in the making. As the sepulchral Mr. Kissinger notes, nuclear weapons pose an existential risk to humanity and the digital threats we now face are unprecedented.  So, why are we racing headfirst into this cold war? The political influence of the arms industry can’t be underestimated. Neither can the power of the economic interests that are most threatened by China’s growth. Underlying all of this is a deep fear that American world dominance is coming to an end and will soon be replaced by an era of Chinese global supremacy.

    That may be so. But is it worth risking an apocalypse to save it? It would make more sense to compete with China on the generosity of our aid, not the power of our weapons, by redirecting some of this military spending to building genuine democracy and economic equality around the world. But then, that would mean we have to do it at home, too.

    At 97, Kissinger is still spouting the rhetoric of the last cold war. As he promotes diplomacy, he is also arguing for increased defense spending. “when you have constant negotiations, which is what I believe is necessary,” he said, “the public then thinks there is no strategic problem and then you may weaken yourself by neglecting defense … You then invite other countries to assert their mounting comparative strength.”

    What comparative strength? China’s 2021 military budget is an estimated $209.16 billion US at current exchange rates. The US military budget for the same year is $741 billion, or roughly 3.5 times larger. (it’s true that the Chinese have probably not been entirely forthcoming about their military expenditures; but then, neither has the United States.)

    If Kissinger the Hawk is still wrong about military spending, he’s not wrong about the gravity of the threat we’re facing. If we don’t face reality, we may well face a nuclear apocalypse. I don’t intend to rehabilitate the memory of a war criminal, but with the fate of the planet at stake, I’ll take help from anyone I can—even Henry Kissinger.

    This post was originally published on Radio Free.

  • WASHINGTON – Today, the Facebook-created and Facebook-funded Oversight Board ruled that the platform should continue its suspension of Donald Trump’s Facebook and Instagram accounts.  The Oversight Board told Facebook that it must complete its review of its decision to suspend Trump within six months of today’s date. Facebook had suspended these accounts indefinitely following his use of the platforms as a megaphone for spreading hateful rhetoric and election disinformation — inciting the deadly Jan. 6 insurrection at the U.S. Capitol. Two weeks following the insurrection, Facebook referred the Trump decision to the Oversight Board for a binding decision. Its Trump case description made no mention of the former president’s history of inciting racist violence and active potential to catalyze further harm to communities of color, religious minorities, and other groups confronting oppression.

    The Oversight Board has only narrow authority to review individual pieces of content that Facebook removes and then deems “appealable.” The board renders decisions based on limited information. The board can also review other cases referred to it solely by Facebook.

    Said Jessica J. González, co-CEO of Free Press and co-founder of the Change the Terms coalition:

    “While today’s Oversight Board decision to uphold Donald Trump’s suspension from Facebook is welcome, it’s a temporary Band-Aid that obscures a much larger problem: the greed-driven incentives that compel Facebook to trade public safety for corporate profit. Today’s ruling doesn’t end Facebook’s practice of allowing political leaders to break the rules, sow violence and undermine democracies. The company’s hate-and-lie-for-profit business model prevents it from taking any meaningful action against the scores of white supremacists who still use its services. The Oversight Board cannot be trusted to issue independent decisions in future cases as it’s part of the same toxic apparatus and limited by the structural rot at the core of Facebook.

    “If the board had lifted Trump’s suspension on Facebook and Instagram, the ex-president could be expected to continue his pattern of inciting hate against Black and Brown people, Asian Americans, immigrants, Muslim Americans, women and many other groups. Hate and lies spread by Trump gave rise to deadly attacks at the U.S. Capitol, assaults on the El Paso and Charlottesville communities, and record levels of hate crimes. Facebook and other platforms must not allow any user to weaponize social media and endanger lives.

    “We implore Facebook to permanently ban Trump from the platform, stop the sham of its Oversight Board and take immediate steps to cease its poisonous business model. It must invest in stronger policies and enforcement mechanisms to stop the multilingual spread of hate and disinformation on its platforms across the world. Until U.S. and global governmental intervention reins in Facebook, the company will continue to profit off of inflammatory political rhetoric, advertising and disinformation that targets diverse communities and undermines democracies.”

    Research from Media Matters for America found that roughly one-quarter of Trump’s 6,081 Facebook posts in 2020 contained extremist rhetoric or misinformation, which was shared and liked more than 927 million times. Research from Zignal Labs found that election misinformation declined by 73% the week that Trump was deplatformed.

    Click here to read public comments to Facebook from Free Press and the Change the Terms coalition. These comments document Facebook harms and outline responsible next steps the company must take to protect its users and our democracy.

    This post was originally published on Radio Free.

  • WASHINGTON – Today, Facebook’s Oversight Board announced its decision to uphold the ban imposed on Donald Trump after the deadly riots in the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021. The following is a statement from Madihha Ahussain, Muslim Advocates’ special counsel for anti-Muslim bigotry: 

    “This decision is not something to celebrate. It is a shameful indictment of Facebook and the Facebook Oversight Board that we just spent several months waiting to see if a man directly responsible for one of the darkest days in modern American history would be allowed to once again spread hate and lies online. Further, we are extremely concerned that the Board’s decision leaves the door open for Facebook to let Trump back on the platform in six months—an unacceptable and dangerous outcome. Letting Donald Trump back on Facebook will hurt Muslims. Donald Trump has used Facebook to spread hate and conspiracies about Muslims and immigrants and to amplify anti-Muslim white nationalists. His posts have caused Ilhan Omar and Rashida Tlaib to receive death threats. This cannot happen again.

    On Facebook, Trump spread a false conspiracy theory about the presidential election and directed people to attend the January 6 event at the U.S. Capitol, which turned into a violent insurrection resulting in five deaths and dozens of injuries. Since then, Trump has continued to spread lies about the election and still commands support from the same groups involved in the insurrection. Permanently banning him from the platform was obviously the right thing to do to keep the public safe and it is extremely worrying that the Oversight Board would even question that.”

    This post was originally published on Radio Free.

  • After 21 months in the Hawaiian Islands, the historic anti-nuclear sailboat Golden Rule has departed from Honolulu, Hawai’i for the West Coast of the U.S. The Golden Rule first sailed from California to Hawai’i 63 years ago, in 1958, on her way to interfere with U.S. atmospheric nuclear testing in the Marshall Islands, the site of 67 U.S. nuclear bomb blasts from 1952 to 1958.  Under orders from the Atomic Energy Commission, U.S. Coast Guard stopped the boat from leaving Honolulu. The arrest and jailing of Golden Rule’s captain Albert Bigelow, a retired World War II Navy Commander, and his crew of Quaker peace activists garnered international media attention and increased opposition to nuclear testing and nuclear weapons. 

    Atmospheric nuclear testing was stopped by the U.S., the UK and the Soviet Union in 1963 with the signing of the Partial Test Ban Treaty. Golden Rule crew member George Willoughby was among a delegation of Quaker peace activists that met with President Kennedy before he signed this historic treaty, banning nuclear bomb testing in the atmosphere, underwater, or in space (but allowing it to continue underground).

    In July 2019, Veterans For Peace, who owns and manages the Golden Rule, sailed the 34-foot ketch from San Diego to Hawai’i, with the intention of proceeding on to the Marshall Islands, the original destination of the 1958 crew.  But once again, the Golden Rule’s voyage to the Marshall Islands was stymied, this time by COVID-19. Because of the global pandemic, the Marshall Islands, already beset by outbreaks of measles and dengue fever, remains closed to international boats. 

    While in Hawai’i, the Golden Rule team met with members of the Marshall Islands community who live in Hawaii, who shared stories of the severe medical problems and forced relocation of residents of several islands that were blown up or severely contaminated with radiation from the U.S. nuclear tests. Twenty-three nuclear tests were conducted by the U.S. on Bikini Atoll, and 44 on or near Enewetak Atoll.  The largest nuclear weapon ever detonated by the United States, the Castle BRAVO test on March 1, 1954, yielded 15 megatons and contaminated the inhabited atolls of Rongelap, Rongerik and Utirik with deadly radioactive fallout.

    During the 21 months that the Golden Rule was in Hawai’i, project manager Helen Jaccard and others spoke in over 100 events in communities in all the Hawaiian Islands, except for Ni’ihau, concerning the dangers of nuclear weapons and the growing danger of nuclear war. With its red (tan bark) sails emblazoned with a large peace sign and the logo of Veterans For Peace, the Golden Rule has become a familiar sight to many in the Hawaiian islands.

    “We are sailing for a nuclear-free world and a peaceful, sustainable future,” said Golden Rule Helen Jaccard.  “What better way to bring a message of peace and sustainability than this beautiful sailboat with its storied history. It puts a smile on people’s faces!”

    “We are grateful to the many friends we have made in Hawai’i, who have shown us how their islands have been damaged by U.S. bases, military exercises and ongoing bombing,” said Gerry Condon, former president of Veterans For Peace, and chairperson of its Golden Rule Committee.  “We stand in solidarity with native Hawaiians who are practicing their traditional culture and defending the natural environment.”

    Captain Kiko Johnston-Kitazawa of Hilo, Big Island, Hawaii, will lead the 4-person crew, including Captain Malinda Anderson of Kona, Big Island, Hawai’i;  Michelle Kanoelehua Marsonette of Albany, Oregon;  and Nolan Anderson of Seattle, Washington.  They will be at sea for approximately 30 days and nights, arriving in the San Francisco Bay around the first week in June.

    In the fall of 2021, the Golden Rule will embark on another ambitious voyage for nuclear disarmament and peace. The historic vessel will sail the “Great Loop,” beginning in Minneapolis, proceeding down the Mississippi River to St. Louis, to the Gulf Coast, around Florida, up the East Coast, through the Great Lakes and down the rivers of middle of the U.S. back to the Gulf. The one-year-plus voyage will see the Golden Rule stopping for events in dozens of communities along the route, often where nuclear weapons manufacturers and nuclear power plants are located.

    We are sailing for a nuclear-free world and a peaceful, sustainable future.

    This post was originally published on Radio Free.

  • Human Rights Watch is the best-known and arguably the most influential among Washington elites of any of the many human rights organizations in the United States. So when HRW issues an unsparing, 200-plus page legal and factual report concluding that Israeli government authorities are guilty of the crime of apartheid, it is a very big deal.

    The key findings are that it is Israel’s “intent to maintain the domination of Jewish Israelis over Palestinians across Israel and the Occupied Palestinian Territory. In the OPT, including East Jerusalem, that intent has been coupled with systematic oppression of Palestinians and inhumane acts committed against them. When these three elements occur together, they amount to the crime of apartheid.”

    The language is legalistic and at times seems designed to deliberately muddle the actual charge HRW is making. But stripping away the obfuscation, the take-away is this:  Human Rights Watch now acknowledges that Israel’s policies are designed to maintain Jewish domination over Palestinians across all the territory it controls, from the river to the sea. And Israel is guilty of the crime of apartheid.

    Human Rights Watch is hardly the first institution to identify Israeli suppression of Palestinian lives and rights as a violation of the International Covenant Against the Crime of Apartheid. Its report is far from the most clear and powerful in its conclusions.  (The internationally respected Israeli human rights organization B’tselem, which for many years had also resisted calling Israeli violations “apartheid,” issued its own report in January, titled unequivocally “A Regime of Jewish Supremacy from the River to the Sea: This Is Apartheid,” which identifies the entire structure of Israeli control as constituting apartheid, not only in the OPT.)  HRW’s own examples and narratives clearly reflect (and indeed frequently cite) the work of Palestinian, South African, and other allied human rights advocates and organizations over the last two decades or more. Books and articles have been written, Palestinian rights organizations have mobilized, UN conferences have been convened, US Congressmembers and influential Palestinian and other academics as well as faith leaders from Archbishop Desmond Tutu to the Poor People’s Campaign co-chair Rev. William Barber II have all spoken out to condemn Israeli apartheid.

    When Human Rights Watch, by far the human rights organization with the most direct access to power in Washington, says that Israel is guilty of the crime of apartheid, that action not only reflects the discourse shift fought for and won by so many who have gone before, it also pushes that shift even farther.

    So why is this latest report from HRW so very important? Precisely because its publication reflects (and pushes further) the gains that the global movement for Palestinian rights has made in transforming the public discourse regarding the Palestinian-Israeli conflict.

    The reason that activists and public scholars and others have worked so hard to build recognition that Israeli actions equal apartheid, is to reach the goal of mainstreaming that understanding.  When Bishop Tutu said “Israel has created an apartheid reality within its borders and through its occupation,” it was still too easy for US officials, congresspeople, media people in powerful venues to ignore his statement. As Palestinian and other academics began to use that definition routinely to describe Israeli policies, it moved the debate, but not enough. When more and more African-American and other progressive intellectuals, and UN officials, started to use the term, it got to be a little harder to ignore. And since Congresswoman Betty McCollum and Rev. Barber spoke out to identify and condemn Israeli apartheid, it has become harder still.

    So when Human Rights Watch, by far the human rights organization with the most direct access to power in Washington, says that Israel is guilty of the crime of apartheid, that action not only reflects the discourse shift fought for and won by so many who have gone before, it also pushes that shift even farther. It is precisely because the word apartheid is so charged, and so powerful that HRW and others have been reluctant to say the word, to tell the obvious. And it is precisely because the Palestinian-led and broader movements for Palestinian rights have accomplished so much in changing that discourse, that an organization like HRW is now willing to join the expanding chorus. Whether they admit it or not, there can be little doubt that much of HRW’s decision to issue this report now was based on the recognition that not only is it no longer political suicide to call Israeli apartheid what it is, but that we are now at a tipping point whereby failing to call out apartheid risks losing credibility for a human rights organization.

    That’s huge. The report reflects the power of decades of work in defense of Palestinian rights. It hasn’t ever been easy, and it won’t be easy now. It surprised no one that White House press secretary Jen Psaki, asked about the report, responded that it “is not the view of this administration.” But the report will make it much more difficult for reluctant mainstream Democrats to ignore Palestinian rights, and much easier for progressive Democrats, looking for evidence of broadening support for those rights, to take a stand. It will significantly strengthen our work to change US policy: winning support for the Palestinian Children and Families Act in Congress, moving forward on conditioning and eventually ending military aid to Israel, and mobilizing BDS campaigns against the kinds of corporations HRW calls on to stop supporting Israeli apartheid. 

    I remember discussions almost twenty years ago within the US Campaign for Palestinian Rights, about launching a major campaign to popularize the apartheid framework. All of us took for granted that Israeli apartheid was the right description. The disagreement was over timing—would using the term then be a diversion, too much time spent debating the accuracy of the word?  Or would it amplify the urgency of ending Washington’s support for Israel’s oppression of the Palestinian people?  The discourse has indeed shifted, and now Human Rights Watch itself recognizes the need to move with history and publicly recognize apartheid for what it is.

    It’s a huge victory for our movement.

    Apartheid & More

    Human Rights Watch recognizes the “discriminatory intent by Israeli authorities to maintain systematic domination by Jewish Israelis over Palestinians” in the OPT and inside Israel. It then goes on to charge Israel with the additional crime of persecution, “based on the discriminatory intent behind Israel’s treatment of Palestinians and the grave abuses carried out in the OPT.” Like apartheid, persecution is a crime against humanity according to the Rome Statute, the treaty that created the International Criminal Court.

    The bulk of the report is devoted to a deep dive into the breadth and depth of Israeli violations of Palestinian rights, stories of Palestinian lives torn apart, community dispossession and loss of land, homes, and rights. It includes Israeli laws and statements of top officials proving the state’s intentions. Describing Israeli crimes committed both within Israel’s pre-1967 borders and the OPT, HRW states unequivocally that the Israeli government “grants Jewish Israelis privileges denied to Palestinians and deprives Palestinians of fundamental rights on account of their being Palestinian”—rejecting the pretext of so-called “security” concerns.

    The report goes on to critique a long list of violations of Palestinian rights involving land, residency and more, in the occupied territory, inside Israel, and affecting Palestinian refugees. Targeting the refugees’ right to return to their homeland as an inextricable component of Israel’s crimes against humanity is particularly important. HRW has affirmed the Palestinian right of return before.  But it’s new for the 43-year-old organization to highlight the connected violations of all three parts of the forcibly fragmented Palestinian people: those living under military occupation, those living as second- or third-class citizens inside Israel, and the millions of refugees in camps across the region and scattered around the world. 

    The report’s legal conclusions are followed by recommendations of actions—by Israel, the international community, the United Nations, Palestinian authorities, and by the United States.

    The recommendations to Israel are sweeping. They start with “[d]ismantle all forms of systematic oppression and discrimination that privilege Jewish Israelis at the expense of Palestinians and otherwise systematically violate Palestinian rights in order to ensure the dominance of Jewish Israelis, and end the persecution of Palestinians, including by ending discriminatory policies and practices in such realms as citizenship and nationality processes, protection of civil rights, freedom of movement, allocation of land and resources, access to water, electricity, and other services, and granting of building permits.”

    HRW urges implementation of specific rights long denied to Palestinian citizens of Israel (such as repealing the 2018 Nation-State law that states only Jews, no other citizens, have the right of self-determination in Israel).  And it calls on Israel to “recognize and honor the right of Palestinians who fled or were expelled from their homes in 1948 and their descendants to enter Israel and reside in the areas where they or their families once lived.”

    HRW calls on all governments to impose sanctions, “including travel bans and asset freezes” against those responsible for Israel’s crimes against humanity, and to condition arms sales and military aid on Israel taking steps to end its crimes.

    It calls on the International Criminal Court to investigate and prosecute individuals involved in the crimes of apartheid and persecution in Israel and the OPT.  And on the United Nations to “investigate systematic discrimination and repression based on group identity in the OPT and Israel,” as well as to appoint a global envoy to “advocate for their end and identify steps that states and judicial institutions should take to prosecute” crimes of apartheid.

    HRW calls on all governments to impose sanctions, “including travel bans and asset freezes” against those responsible for Israel’s crimes against humanity, and to condition arms sales and military aid on Israel taking steps to end its crimes. It also calls for individual governments to bring charges against Israeli officials based on universal jurisdiction. 

    And in a move that will strengthen the global BDS movement, it urges corporations to “cease business activities that directly contribute” to Israeli crimes. In a clear reference to companies such as US-based Caterpillar, long targeted for boycotts because its D-9 bulldozers are routinely used by the Israeli military for precisely this purpose, it specifies “equipment used in the unlawful demolition of Palestinian homes” as the example of activities directly contributing to apartheid and persecution.

    In perhaps the most important section, HRW sets out a long list of actions the US government should take. Beyond issuing statements of concern and greater transparency, it calls on the White House and Congress to condition military aid on Israeli authorities taking “concrete and verifiable steps towards ending their commission of the crimes of apartheid and persecution.”  They also call for applying to Israel existing US laws restricting  military aid to human rights violators—laws from which Congress and presidents have long exempted Israel.

    Human Rights Watch titled their report “A Threshold Crossed: Israeli Authorities and the Crimes of Apartheid and Persecution.” The title may have referred to their finding that Israel’s policies are no longer in danger of “becoming” apartheid because that threshold has been crossed, and that Israel’s 1967 occupation can no longer be considered temporary. But the other threshold they’ve crossed is in the recognition that history has moved forward. The time has come, the discourse has been transformed, and their own credibility now depends on this new recognition of what many—including HRW’s own staff—have known for years. Human Rights Watch itself is over the threshold now, and it’s the movement for Palestinian rights that has made that crossing not only possible but necessary.

    This post was originally published on Radio Free.

  • Over the course of the past few decades, the political pendulum has shifted dramatically to the right virtually throughout the entire world.

    Indeed, since the onset of neoliberal era, virtually all political parties in representative democracies moved to the right: conservative parties embraced free-market capitalist policies in spite of their disintegrating impact on social order and traditional values, social democratic parties abandoned any pretense of commitment to the class struggle and came to depend totally on capitalism, and communist parties became historically obsolete. 

    Worse still, political parties and movements of the far-right gained ground in most countries around the world, and populist authoritarianism has emerged as a serious contender for the mess—poverty, declining wages, huge economic inequalities, massive unemployment, and social decomposition—created by the policies of neoliberal capitalism. In this context, extreme nationalist rhetoric and xenophobic sentiments, which apparently never go out of fashion, but do thrive under deteriorating economic and social conditions, have also emerged as key elements in today’s political universe.   

    In the light of the above realities, one may be tempted to conclude that the Right has won in the historic clash of ideologies. But this would be a mistake, an overestimation on the one hand of the ability of the system in place to overcome its inherent contradictions and underestimation of the other of the role of the historical forces of change.

    All of the above-mentioned conditions that are prevalent in today’s capitalist societies are nothing sort of social diseases which, if left untreated, will dehumanize the body politic and ultimately destroy civil society.

    If anything, the future actually belongs to the Left.

    Firstly, all of the above-mentioned conditions that are prevalent in today’s capitalist societies are nothing sort of social diseases which, if left untreated, will dehumanize the body politic and ultimately destroy civil society. Poverty, insecurity, systemic racism, massive economic inequalities, and social decomposition are not natural phenomena. They are the consequences of particular policies dictated by the needs and whims of a privileged few who have hijacked the state and use it as a vehicle to maintain the status quo and reproduce conditions favoring overwhelmingly capital over labor and nature.

    But they are not permanent conditions, nor should one should believe for a moment that they point to the direction of the movement of history. Humanity has always rejected economic exploitation and social injustice, and the conditions today are in fact quite ripe for a massive rejection of neoliberal capitalism. Neoliberalism has proven to be a total disaster and is actually being challenged on several fronts. Only lack of unity among progressive forces on the future order and the weakening of subjective agencies of action on the national and international level, both the result of the economic and political counterrevolutions that took place in the 1980s, stand on the way from dealing a final blow to its rotten socio-economic order.

    Secondly, capitalism itself is not a permanent state of affairs. It is a system that arose from specific historical circumstances, with only five hundred years of history so far, and has already undergone spectacular transformations—from merchant capitalism to industrial capitalism, and in our own time to hyper-capitalism. It will eventually be replaced by a different method of production and social organization.

    Thirdly, while humans are social animals, capitalism itself is an anti-social system, pitting one individual against another, and the environment against the economy. Capitalism regards wealth and profit-making as the very meaning of life and sees competition as the very essence of human relations. In so doing, it turns a blind eye to human capacity for cooperation, solidarity, altruism, commitment to a vision of a social order based on equality, justice, and peace, and even self-sacrifice.

    Fourthly, the very history of capitalism is indeed replete with widespread opposition to its ideology, values, and practices, and the system has been forced on numerous occasions in the course of its history to abandon and/or reform some of its most brutal manners and make  concessions to working people.

    The rise of authoritarian populism in many parts of the world has its roots in the economic policies of neoliberalism, which are completely insensitive to the social complexities governing human societies.

    Finally, we should not overlook the fact that the rise of authoritarian populism in many parts of the world has its roots in the economic policies of neoliberalism, which are completely insensitive to the social complexities governing human societies. People left behind the capitalist rat race, or feeling economically insecure and witnessing a steep drop in their standard of living while the rich get richer, have turned out of fear or desperation to allegedly anti-establishment and far-right politicians who run campaigns based on the politics of fear and hate and make promises of return to a golden era. But such trends are quite transient, as history has shown, and while they are utterly disturbing and unquestionably menacing, they should cause no despair. The political pendulum can easily swing in the opposite direction.

    History is on the side of the Left. Capitalism, especially in its neoliberal variant, is capable of only heightening the contradictions that it generates. The progressive forces are anything but defeated. In fact, the politics of progressive social change are spreading rapidly in many parts of the world in the age of the pandemic. In the US, Joe Biden has adopted a far more progressive economic and social policy agenda than anyone had anticipated, thanks to pressure from activists. The winds of change are also blowing in Germany as the Greens are on a sure path to government, and bent on bringing about major economic changes.

    Of course, the direction of history is not a given. The realization of the end of neoliberal capitalism requires concrete public awareness of its deadly contradictions, massive political participation through transformative agencies of social change, and a vision of the future political, economic, and social order.

    In the past, the Left was able to realize all of the above conditions and not only fight against capitalist onslaught but score some impressive victories. Sometimes through revolution, more often through reform.

    It can do so again. The future has yet to be written; but, as long as the barbarism of neoliberal capitalism defines the present, the future can only belong to the Left.

    This post was originally published on Radio Free.

  • Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen said Tuesday that tax dodging could cost the federal government around $7 trillion over a decade, an estimate that comes as progressive lawmakers and President Joe Biden are calling for increased IRS funding to crack down on wealthy tax cheats.

    During an event hosted by The Atlantic, Yellen called the $7 trillion gap between what the federal government is collecting and what is owed under the current tax code “really shocking and distressing.” Yellen’s estimate resembles the conclusion a 2019 paper (pdf) that found, “Between 2020 and 2029, the IRS will fail to collect nearly $7.5 trillion of taxes it is due.”

    “We can start closing this gap next week. Pass my Stop CHEATERS Act and audit the ultra-rich.”
    —Rep. Ro Khanna

    “We’re trying to make meaningful steps to close that gap,” said Yellen.

    As part of his recently unveiled American Families Plan, Biden proposed boosting IRS funding by $80 billion over the next decade to bolster enforcement efforts following years of Republican-led budget cuts that have left the agency without adequate resources and staffing to audit the wealthiest Americans. The White House believes the new IRS funding would increase federal revenue by a net $700 billion over 10 years.

    According to a study released in March by IRS researchers and academics, the richest 1% of U.S. households don’t report around 21% of their income and account for roughly 36% of all unpaid federal income tax.

    “From a policy perspective, our results highlight that there is substantial evasion at the top which requires administrative resources to detect and deter,” the study’s authors wrote.

    Progressive members of Congress seized upon Yellen’s comments as further evidence for the need to confront tax avoidance by the rich in addition to implementing a wealth tax and other measures to rein in out-of-control inequality.

    “We can start closing this gap next week. Pass my Stop CHEATERS Act and audit the ultra-rich,” tweeted Rep. Ro Khanna (D-Calif.), referring to his bill that calls for $100 billion in additional funding for the IRS and stricter reporting requirements to stem tax dodging by the rich and large corporations.

    “Imagine what we could do for people with $7 trillion,” added Rep. Pramila Jayapal (D-Wash.), chair of the Congressional Progressive Caucus. “That’s infrastructure, child care, paid leave, free college, climate action, and other investments in our communities.”

    As the Brookings Institution noted earlier this year, canceling all federal student loan debt would cost around $1.6 trillion, while forgiving up to $50,000 per borrower—an idea proposed by Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.), Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.), and other Democratic lawmakers—would cost about $1 trillion. Making public colleges and universities tuition-free would cost $800 billion over ten years.

    This post was originally published on Radio Free.

  • In what Palestinian observers and advocates call a glaring example of settler colonialism in action, a video circulating on social media this week shows a Palestinian woman confronting an Israeli man who admits he is trying to steal her family’s home in occupied East Jerusalem. 

    “They are just sitting in our home, tormenting us, harassing us, doing everything they can… as part of an effort to completely annihilate the presence of Palestinians from Jerusalem.”
    —Mohammed al-Kurd,
    East Jerusalem

    According to Al Jazeera, Palestinian activist Tamer Maqalda recorded the footage of the exchange between Mona al-Kurd and a man with a North American accent named Jacob, whom al-Kurd knows because his family has already stolen half of her home. 

    “Jacob, you know that this is not your house,” al-Kurd tells the man in her backyard, who replies: “What’s the problem? Why are you yelling at me?” 

    “I didn’t do this,” the man insists. “It’s easy to yell at me, but I didn’t do this.” 

    Al-Kurd then pleads, “You are stealing my house!” 

    Jacob replies: “And if I don’t steal it, someone else is going to steal it.” 

    Al-Kurd then protests that “no one is allowed to steal it.” 

    According to Al Jazeera, half of the al-Kurd family home was seized by Israeli settlers in 2009. Mona’s twin brother Mohammed previously told the outlet that the family has been sharing the property with “squatters with Brooklyn accents” in a situation he described as “insufferable, intolerable, [and] terrible.” 

    “They are just sitting in our home, tormenting us, harassing us, doing everything they can to not only force us to leave the second half of our home but also harassing our neighbors into leaving their homes as part of an effort to completely annihilate the presence of Palestinians from Jerusalem,” Mohammed said. 

    Al-Kurd’s home is located in the Sheikh Jarrah neighborhood of East Jerusalem, which has been illegally occupied by Israeli forces since 1967, and where Israeli settlers have been seizing Palestinian homes with state support. Last March, an Israeli court in the occupied city ordered half a dozen families including the Al-Kurds to leave their homes so that Jewish settler colonists could take possession of them. 

    Dozens of other Palestinian families in the neighborhood live under the constant threat of eviction. 

    “The inherently unjust system of Israel’s colonial courts is not considering questioning the illegal settlers’ ownership and has already decided on the families’ dispossession,” a statement from the affected Palestinian families said, according to Al Jazeera

    The video’s publication follows an April 27 report from the U.S.-based group Human Rights Watch that accuses Israel of “crimes against humanity” including apartheid and persecution. It also follows the publication of videos showing rampaging mobs of far-right Israelis attacking Palestinian people and property in East Jerusalem. 

    The modern state of Israel was founded largely through the theft of Palestinian land and the ethnic cleansing of more than 700,000 Arabs from their homes in 1948 and 1949. Over 400 Arab villages were destroyed or abandoned, their residents—some of whom still hold the keys to their stolen homes—were never allowed to return, despite a United Nations resolution guaranteeing the right of return. 

    Israeli war hero and Cabinet minister Moshe Dayan acknowledged in a 1969 speech that:

    We came to this country, which was already populated by Arabs, and we are establishing… a Jewish state here. Jewish villages were built in place of Arab villages. You do not even know the names of these Arab villages, and I do not blame you, because those geography books no longer exist. Not only do the books not exist, the Arab villages are not there either… There is not one place built in this country that did not have a former Arab population.

    Hundreds of thousands more Palestinians were ethnically cleansed from their homes during Israel’s seizure of the West Bank, Gaza, and East Jerusalem in the 1967 Six Day War. 

    This post was originally published on Radio Free.

  • LONDON – A supermajority of people in G7 countries believe that governments should ensure pharmaceutical companies share the formulas and technology to their vaccines, according to new polling from the People’s Vaccine Alliance.

    The public believes that pharmaceutical companies should be fairly compensated for developing vaccines, but should be prevented from holding a monopoly on the jabs.

    It comes as G7 foreign and development ministers meet in London, the group’s first in-person meeting in two years, and the general council of the World Trade Organisation (WTO) meets today online, while India’s death toll climbs.

    Across G7 nations, an average of 70% of people want the government to ensure vaccine know-how is shared, according to analysis by the People’s Vaccine Alliance. Support for government intervention is highest in Italy, where 82% of respondents were in favour, followed by Canada, where 76% agree.

    74% in the United Kingdom want the government to prevent Big Pharma monopolies, despite Prime Minister Boris Johnson attributing the country’s successful vaccine rollout to “greed and capitalism”.

    UK support for intervention cuts across political boundaries, backed by 73% of Conservative voters, 83% of Labour and 79% of Liberal Democrats, as well as 83% of Remain and 72% of Leave voters in the EU referendum.

    In the United States, where President Joe Biden has voiced his “hope and expectation” for sharing vaccine know-how, 69% of the public support the measure, including 89% of Biden and 65% of Trump voters in 2020. In Japan, 58% of the public want similar action.

    European Union member-nations were also strongly in favour, with support from 70% in Germany and 63% in France.

    Heidi Chow, Senior Campaigns and Policy Manager at Global Justice Now, said:

    “The public doesn’t want big pharma to hold monopolies on vaccines that were developed largely with public money. These vaccines are a global public good that should be available to everyone, everywhere. That much is obvious to the public across G7 nations, but political leaders are burying their heads in the sand while people die around them.”

    Despite widespread support for sharing vaccine know-how, G7 governments have continued to support pharmaceutical monopolies on Covid-19 jabs.

    More than 100 countries, led by India and South Africa, have supported a temporary waiver of Intellectual Property rights on Covid-19 vaccines at the WTO, but the proposal has been blocked by countries including the US, UK, Japan, Canada, and the EU. The Biden administration has confirmed it is reconsidering American opposition to the waiver.

    Pharmaceutical companies have so far refused to share their vaccine know-how with the world. No company with a successful vaccine has joined the World Health Organisation’s Covid-19 Technology Access Pool (C-TAP), which was established to facilitate sharing blueprints for vaccines and treatments.

    Saoirse Fitzpatrick, STOPAIDS Advocacy Manager said:

    “The horrific situation in India should shake G7 leaders to their core. Now is not the time for an ideological defence of intellectual property rules. Bilateral deals with pharmaceutical companies have not worked. Governments need to step in and force pharmaceutical companies to share their intellectual property and vaccine know-how with the world.”

    As G7 chair, the UK has proposed a Pandemic Preparedness Plan, to be discussed by ministers this week, which ignores the issue of monopolies and intellectual property. Pharmaceutical corporations such as Pfizer are on the team preparing the proposal, but developing country governments and vaccine producers have not been asked to join.

    Steve Cockburn, Head of Economic and Social Justice at Amnesty International, said:

    “G7 governments have clear human rights obligations to put the lives of millions of people across the world ahead of the interests of the pharmaceutical companies that they have funded. It would be a gross failure of leadership to continue blocking the sharing of life-saving technologies, and would only serve to prolong the immense pain and suffering caused by this pandemic.”

    Last month, 175 former world leaders and Nobel laureates, including Gordon Brown, Ellen Johnson Sirleaf and Francoise Hollande wrote to President Biden to support the temporary waiving of intellectual property rights for Covid-19 vaccines.

    150 faith leaders, including Rowan Williams, the former archbishop of Canterbury, Thabo Makgoba, the Anglican archbishop of Cape Town, and Cardinal Peter Turkson of the Roman Catholic Church have called for G7 leaders to treat Covid-19 as a “global common good.0.

    Anna Marriott, Health Policy Manager at Oxfam, said:

    “People are dying by the thousands in low and middle income countries while rich nations have jumped the vaccine queue. G7 leaders need to face up to reality. We don’t have enough vaccines for everyone and the biggest barrier to increasing supply is that a few profit hungry pharmaceutical corporations keep the rights to produce them under the lock and key. It’s time to waive the intellectual property rules, ramp up production and put people’s lives before profits. It’s time for a People’s Vaccine.”

    Two-thirds of world-leading epidemiologists surveyed warned that the continued spread of the virus could allow vaccine-resistant strains of Covid-19 to render our current vaccines ineffective within a year. Independent SAGE, who provide independent public health advice in the United Kingdom, have called for a patent waiver to address supply issues.

    Moderna, Pfizer/BioNtech, Johnson & Johnson, Novovax and Oxford/AstraZeneca received billions in public funding and guaranteed pre-orders, including $12 billion from the US government alone. An estimated 97% of funding for the Oxford/AstraZeneca vaccine came from public sources.

    The companies have paid out a combined $26 billion in dividends and stock buybacks to their shareholders this year, enough to vaccinate at least 1.3 billion people, equivalent to the population of Africa.

    ENDS

    The People’s Vaccine Alliance has analysed polling from across G7 countries conducted by YouGov, Leger360, and Nippon Research Center.

    When asked if they support the statement ‘Governments should compensate fairly for any COVID-19 vaccine developed by a pharmaceutical company but ensure they don’t have a monopoly by sharing these formulas and technology with other approved companies’, views reflected by public in each country were:

    YouGov UK polling

    Sample Size: 1788 UK Adults

    Fieldwork: 23rd – 24th February 2021

    74% supported the statement. 73% of Conservative voters, 82% of Labour, 79% of Liberal Democrat. 83% of Remain voters and 72% of Leave voters.

    YouGov France polling

    Sample Size: 1010 adults in France

    Fieldwork: 24th – 25th February 2021

    63% support the statement

    YouGov Germany polling

    Sample Size: 2039 adults in Germany

    Fieldwork: 24th – 26th February 2021

    70% support the statement

    YouGov US polling

    Sample Size: 1351 adults in the US

    Fieldwork: 23rd – 24th February 2021

    69% support the statement. 82% of Biden voters and 65% of Trump voters in 2020.

    YouGov Italy polling:

    Sample size: 1019 adults in Italy

    Fieldwork 4th – 5th March 2021

    82% support the statement

    Leger360 Canada polling:

    Sample size: 1526 Canadian adults

    Fieldwork 5th – 7th March 2021

    76% support the statement

    Nippon Research Center Japan polling:

    Sample size: 1,278

    Fieldwork:17 March 2021

    58% supported the statement

    This post was originally published on Radio Free.

  • Dozens of Nobel laureates on Tuesday demanded that the U.S. Department of Justice intervene immediately to stop the prosecution of human rights attorney Steven Donziger by a corporate law firm with ties to Chevron, which has relentlessly demonized Donziger since his legal team first won a multibillion dollar judgement against the oil giant in 2011 for polluting the Ecuadorian Amazon.

    “If the Department of Justice refuses to intervene in the prosecution of Steven Donziger, it would not only be a gross miscarriage of justice, it would also be an abandonment of their commitment to climate action.”
    —Jody Williams, 1997 Nobel Peace Prize Winner

    “We believe that a high-level review will reveal that the case clearly is a violation of Mr. Donziger’s rights and the rights of the affected communities in Ecuador,” wrote the Nobel laureates in a letter addressed to U.S. Attorney General Merrick Garland.

    Donziger, whose federal trial without a jury is scheduled to start Monday, has endured 635 days of house arrest on a misdemeanor charge that carries a maximum sentence of six months if convicted.

    His imprisonment began shortly after U.S. District Judge Lewis A. Kaplan of the Southern District of New York, a former corporate lawyer with investments in Chevron, held Donziger in contempt of court in July 2019 for refusing to disclose privileged client information to the fossil fuel company.

    Tuesday’s letter from the 68 Nobel prize winners representing every discipline was written in support of an April 27 letter from Democratic Reps. Jim McGovern (Mass.), Cori Bush (Mo.), Rashida Tlaib (Mich.), Jamaal Bowman (N.Y.), Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (N.Y.), and Jamie Raskin (Md.). Last week, those U.S. lawmakers also urged Garland to order an immediate DOJ review of Donziger’s case, as Common Dreams reported.

    In their letter, the Nobel laureates wrote:

    We have a deep and abiding interest in peace and justice, in upholding our international system for the protection of human rights, and in protecting the environment. We do not believe that fairness and justice will be served unless the Department of Justice reviews the judicial procedures involved in this unorthodox case, reasserts main jurisdiction over the case, and conducts a review of the baseless charges against him.

    Owing to the work of the Donziger-led legal team, which represented more than 30,000 Indigenous people and farmworkers harmed by over three decades of oil drilling in Ecuador, Chevron was found guilty of deliberately dumping more than 16 billion gallons of toxic wastewater and other hazardous pollutants in the delicate Amazonian ecosystem—resulting in a “rainforest Chernobyl” that has caused widespread suffering throughout the local population.

    Although the ruling was upheld by three Ecuadorian courts, Chevron moved its operations out of the country to avoid paying for cleanup, alleged that the $9.5 billion settlement had been fraudulently obtained, and began what the House Democrats described last week as an “unjust legal assault” on Donziger.

    While the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Southern District of New York chose not to prosecute Donziger’s misdemeanor contempt of court charge, Kaplan hand-picked a right-wing colleague, Judge Loretta Preska, to hear the case.

    Kaplan and Preska, a leader in the Chevron-funded Federalist Society, then selected Rita Glavin, an attorney at Seward & Kissel LLP, to act as a special prosecutor even though her law partner was a former member of Chevron’s board of directors and Chevron had been one of the firm’s clients.

    Noting that justice is called into question “when a U.S. corporation is able to wrest the power from the government to prosecute the lawyer who helped to hold it accountable for human rights abuses, abetted by judges with their own conflicts of interest,” the Nobel laureates called on the DOJ “to right these wrongs.”

    The Nobel laureates and Members of Congress have joined more than a dozen human rights organizations in denouncing the unprecedented legal attacks on Donziger and urging Garland to take action.

    In a statement, 1997 Nobel Peace Prize winner Jody Williams said that “a nation that wants to lead on climate issues can’t let multinational oil corporations pervert the democratic process and silence its critics.”

    “If the Department of Justice refuses to intervene in the prosecution of Steven Donziger,” she added, “it would not only be a gross miscarriage of justice, it would also be an abandonment of their commitment to climate action.”

    This post was originally published on Radio Free.

  • After a coalition of digital rights and other groups launched a campaign on Monday aimed at thwarting Facebook’s planned privacy rollback on its popular WhatsApp messaging application, competitor Signal—which does not collect user data—on Tuesday began trolling the social media giant and its ubiquitous data collection in a tongue-in-cheek ad illustrating the intrusiveness of the practice. 

    “The way most of the internet works today would be considered intolerable if translated into comprehensible real world analogs, but it endures because it is invisible.”
    —Jun Harada, Signal

    Amid a viral messaging campaign that has included the revelation that Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg “leads by example” by using the encrypted app, Signal created a multi-variant targeted ad that Jun Harada, the company’s head of growth and communication, said is “designed to show you the personal data that Facebook collects about you and sells access to.”

     Alas, Facebook—which Signal says blocked the ad—”was not that into the idea,” Harada wrote in a blog post, adding that the social media titan “is more than willing to sell visibility into people’s lives, unless it’s to tell people about how their data is being used.”

    “Being transparent about how ads use people’s data is apparently enough to get banned; in Facebook’s world, the only acceptable usage is to hide what you’re doing from your audience,” Harada continued. “So, here are some examples of the targeted ads that you’ll never see on Instagram. Yours would have been so you.”

    “Companies like Facebook aren’t building technology for you, they’re building technology for your data,” wrote Harada. “They collect everything they can from FB, Instagram, and WhatsApp in order to sell visibility into people and their lives.” 

    “This isn’t exactly a secret, but the full picture is hazy to most—dimly concealed within complex, opaquely rendered systems and fine print designed to be scrolled past,” he added. “The way most of the internet works today would be considered intolerable if translated into comprehensible real world analogs, but it endures because it is invisible.”

    Signal’s popularity was already soaring before the WhatsApp privacy rollback. According to Business of Apps, the number of Signal users skyrocketed from around half a million at the end of 2019 to about 40 million this January. 

    This post was originally published on Radio Free.

  • With U.S. President Joe Biden still under fire for proposing a $753 billion national defense budget for the next fiscal year—the bulk of which would go to the Pentagon—a report published Tuesday exposes the “huge sums paid to the CEOs and other top executives of the nation’s five largest weapons contractors” in 2020.

    The new Center for International Policy (CIP) issue brief—entitled Executive Excess: CEO Compensation in the Arms Industry, 2020 (pdf)—was authored by William D. Hartung and Leila Riazi, who began by acknowledging the current president’s recent proposal, which has been widely rejected by progressives.

    “These enormous sums for the Pentagon are often justified as necessary to meet the needs of military personnel,” Hartung and Riazi note, “but in fact, roughly half of the Pentagon’s budget is spent on corporations like Lockheed Martin, Boeing, General Dynamics, Raytheon Technologies, and Northrop Grumman, as well as the hundreds of thousands of private contractors employed by the department.”

    The brief points out that those top five weapons firms received over $150 billion in Pentagon contracts during Fiscal Year 2020—and “not all of these funds are well spent.”

    “Cost overruns and performance problems, expenditures on weapons systems that are not relevant to current security challenges, and investments in weapons that actually make the world a more dangerous place all detract from, rather than enhance, America’s security,” the report says. “There is also widespread waste and excess overhead within the Pentagon, which is the only major federal agency that has never successfully passed an audit.”

    Hartung and Riazi highlight executive compensation as “one indicator of Pentagon waste,” noting that in 2020 alone, the CEOs of those top five contractors collectively raked in $105.4 million.

    “When other major executives at these firms are taken into account—those holding the top positions at each firm whose salaries are required to be publicly disclosed—total executive compensation at the major contractors comes out to $276.5 million for 2020,” the report says. “Total compensation for major executives of the top five contractors exceeded $1 billion in total for the four years from 2017 to 2020.”

    The brief contrasts the wealth of weapons contractor executives with the pay of U.S. service members, noting that “average annual CEO compensation for the top five contractors is over $21 million per year, compared to roughly $39,000 in pay and basic benefits for a first-year military enlistee, a ratio of over 500 to one.”

    “A general of the highest rank earns well over $200,000 per year,” the report adds, “still only about one one-hundredth of average CEO pay at the top five contractors.”

    The report also highlights the substantial share of each company’s revenue that comes from Pentagon contracts—emphasizing that it means portions of “the salaries they pay their executives are subsidized by taxpayers.”

    According to the brief:

    For four of the top five contractors, defense revenues accounted for three-quarters or more of their business in 2019, the last year for which full figures are available for this measure, which includes sales to both the U.S. governments and foreign governments. When just sales to the U.S. government are taken into account the figures range from roughly 37.5% for Boeing, which makes commercial aircraft, to 84% for Northrop Grumman, with figures available as of 2020.

    Hartung and Riazi also detail how many jobs could be created if the $276.5 million in compensation for executives at those five contractors was instead invested in education, green energy, healthcare, or infrastructure.

    Though it represents a small portion of overall U.S. military spending, such an investment could create 2,710 new jobs in infrastructure or green energy, 3,954 in healthcare, or 4,203 in education, the brief says.

    “Exorbitant compensation for executives of the top Pentagon contractors, subsidized by the taxpayer, is just one example of excessive overhead at these firms,” said Hartung, director of CIP’s Arms and Security Project, in an emailed statement. “Congress and the administration should take a closer look at these costs with an eye towards reducing them and freeing up funds for other needed purposes.”

    As Common Dreams reported after Biden unveiled his spending proposal last month, a diverse coalition of progressive advocacy groups has made a similar demand.

    “It is crystal clear that the status quo is failing to keep our communities at home and abroad safe,” the coalition said, adding that “there are numerous proposals on how to rein in the gargantuan Pentagon budget while increasing national and global security.”

    “We are eager to work with Congress and the Biden administration to support these or other long-overdue efforts to scale back Pentagon spending,” the coalition said. “The American people know that producing more weapons, greenlighting corporate contracts, and propping up endless war slush funds will not make us safer.”

    This post was originally published on Radio Free.

  • As calls mount from public health experts and advocates for a “People’s Vaccine” in order to combat the continued spread of the coronavirus, particularly in developing nations, Pfizer on Tuesday announced that it enjoyed record profits in the first quarter of 2021, owing largely to the vaccine it manufactured with German company BioNTech—the vast majority of which has been sold to wealthy countries.

    The company reported $3.5 billion in revenue from the vaccine in the first three months of this year, and estimated that profits from the vaccine account for 20% of its revenue—suggesting pretax vaccine profits of $900 million. By the end of this year, Pfizer expects the vaccine to garner $26 billion in total revenue, the company said.

    “Despite all the talk about COVAX, [Pfizer has] been far more interested in bilateral deals, because that’s where they make their money.”
    —Richard Kozul-Wright, United Nations Conference on Trade and Development

    Out of the 2.5 billion vaccine doses that Pfizer plans to produce this year, the company has pledged to send up to 40 million doses—less than 2% of its inventory—to COVAX, the global facility that supplies vaccines to poor countries. As Common Dreams reported Monday, the pharmaceutical company Moderna plans to send just 34 million doses to COVAX in the fourth quarter of this year, a fraction of the 800 million to one billion doses it expects to produce by the end of the year.

    While the pandemic has proved profitable for Pfizer, recent reporting has shown that industry lobbyists have been working hard to push U.S. lawmakers away from supporting the patent waiver push at the World Trade Organization (WTO).

    Although Pfizer announced its plan to send doses to COVAX with great fanfare, claiming in January it hopes to ensure “developing countries have the same access as the rest of the world,” the doses both companies plan to send to the facility amount to “a drop in the ocean,” Clare Wenham, a health policy expert at the London School of Economics, told the New York Times Tuesday. 

    On Twitter, antitrust expert Hal Singer noted that providing just a fraction of the vaccine doses available to poor countries goes against the advice of the World Health Organization (WHO), which has warned that “solidarity is the only way out” of the global public health emergency.

    Pfizer has not disclosed the prices it’s charging for its vaccine, but as the Times reported, “the fact that Pfizer appears to have earned something like $900 million in pretax profits from its vaccine—coupled with its comparatively small sales to poor countries—suggests that profits have trumped other considerations.”

    “Despite all the talk about COVAX, they have been far more interested in bilateral deals, because that’s where they make their money,” Richard Kozul-Wright of the United Nations Conference on Trade and Development told the Times. 

    Pfizer announced its quarterly profits amid mounting concerns about uncontrolled Covid-19 outbreaks in India, Laos, Nepal, and other developing countries, and intensifying calls for the WTO to lift patent protections for the vaccines to allow developing countries to produce their own generic versions. 

    India reported Tuesday it had passed 20 million coronavirus infections, with cases skyrocketing by more than two million in the past week—an outbreak that’s exacerbated by shortages of hospital beds, medical supplies, and vaccine doses.

    As Common Dreams reported Tuesday, nations throughout Southeast Asia and bordering India have begun reporting surges in Covid-19 cases—suggesting that providing the Global South with vaccine doses—and the willingness of companies like Pfizer to put aside their profit motives—is a matter of public health for the rest of the world.   

    Advocates including Lara Dovifat, a campaign adviser for MSF Access Campaign, part of the humanitarian group Doctors Without Borders, noted that while Pfizer is reporting major profits for its shareholders, company developed its vaccine with public funds.

    “Pfizer frequently points out that it opted not to take federal funds proffered by the Trump administration under Operation Warp Speed, the initiative that promoted the rapid development of Covid-19 vaccines,” reported the Times. “But BioNTech received substantial support from the German government in developing their joint vaccine. And taxpayer-funded research aided both companies: The National Institutes of Health patented technology that helped make so-called messenger RNA vaccines possible. BioNTech has a licensing agreement with the N.I.H., and Pfizer is piggybacking on that license.”

    By refusing to support a suspension of patents in the midst of a global crisis, the Debt Collective said on social media, Pfizer indicates it is “willing to kill millions to protect the patents that make them billions.”

    This post was originally published on Radio Free.

  • WASHINGTON – Today, a resounding 98% of investors voted for a shareholder resolution at General Electric’s annual meeting, according to preliminary numbers. The resolution asks GE to report on whether and how it plans to achieve net-zero greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions across its businesses and products by 2050 in alignment with the Paris Climate Agreement’s 1.5°C goal. The resolution was filed and presented by shareholder representative As You Sow on behalf of Amalgamated Bank.

    GE’s board supported the resolution, a commendable and unusual move, demonstrating that the company has begun to focus on its full climate impact and is willing to report on its greenhouse gas emission reduction plans. Last year, GE announced its goal of carbon neutrality by 2030, but only for the company’s direct operations and facilities (Scope 1 and 2 emissions). Meeting the ask of the resolution will give shareholders a better understanding of the company’s plans to address its full climate footprint – including indirect emissions from GE’s products (Scope 3) which currently account for a major portion of the company’s total emissions. GE stated it will discuss its approach to emissions reductions in its sustainability report later this year.

    “We congratulate the GE Board for recognizing that the company and its shareholders are allies, not opponents, in reducing the systemic risk of climate change,” said Paul Rissman, Co-Founder of Rights Co-Lab, who advised As You Sow on its CA100+ resolutions. “Let’s continue to work together to achieve meaningful decarbonization, at both company and societal levels.”

    The resolution was flagged as a key proposal by the Climate Action 100+ investor initiative, which represents over 500 investors with more than $54 trillion in assets. The CA100+ recently released its Net-Zero Company Benchmark, requesting specific climate-related disclosures from the largest carbon-emitting companies, including GE, to track progress made on Paris-aligned goals. As You Sow’s resolution points directly to the benchmark and its clear metrics for assessing climate action.

    “While General Electric has done a lot to look at the efficiency and carbon impact of specific products, it has been slow to address its scope three emissions and address how its high carbon client base fits in to a low-carbon economy,” said Ivan Frishberg, director of impact policy at Amalgamated Bank. “We hope that the momentum from this resolution helps move the company to fully account for its full emissions inventory and align its business with the ongoing transition to a net-zero economy.”

    Votes will take place in June on other flagged CA 100+ Benchmark resolutions with Caterpillar and General Motors on Benchmark elements including setting emissions reduction targets and aligning targets with executive remuneration. Both companies are in the group of highest global emitters of greenhouse gasses and were evaluated in the recent Benchmark assessment, but in contrast to GE, the companies are not supporting the resolutions. There is keen interest to see how investors will respond to these resolutions, given the strong support from shareowners on the GE proposal. Similar Benchmark resolutions were withdrawn earlier this year when Valero and United Airlines agreed to undertake the requested action.

    “We are encouraged to see the strong support for this resolution from GE and from shareholders. It underscores that shareholder concern about climate-related risks and disclosure is growing and must be addressed,” stated Lila Holzman, senior energy program manager of As You Sow. “We hope to see all companies embrace alignment with the Net-Zero Company Benchmark this proxy season and beyond.”

    Rounding out the vote at GE, shareholders also voted 57.7% against the executive compensation plan.

    To learn more about As You Sow’s work on climate change, click here.

    This post was originally published on Radio Free.

  • The coronavirus doesn’t discriminate—it has devastated families and communities all over the world, with more than three million deaths since the pandemic began.

    Now, the U.S. and other rich countries are starting to see the light at the end of the tunnel. But no one will be safe from COVID until there is global vaccine access.

    In other parts of the world, the situation is still dire. My two grown sons and I traveled to Ethiopia and Somaliland in January to see friends and family, and to bring a suitcase full of masks and gloves for people there who do not have access to personal protective equipment. We hope to return soon to bring more.

    Coming from the United States, it was especially hard to see how devastating the pandemic is in Ethiopia, my home country. Not only do people there not have PPE or access to a vaccine, they don’t have treatments for COVID-19, or any way of quarantining sick people.

    COVID is spreading through many countries like wildfire. And because of the inequities that so often leave most of the world’s population behind, many people in low- and middle-income countries like Ethiopia, Somalia, South Africa and India will likely not get vaccinated until at least 2022, or—for the poorest countries—2024.

    We have the knowledge and technology to help everyone—not just people in rich countries—with vaccines, treatment and testing. But there is a supply problem. Today annual COVID vaccine production capacity is 3.5 billion doses—we need 10-15 billion.

    It should be obvious that we need to make getting vaccines to people all over the world a priority. But the very industry that produces those life-saving vaccines is holding us back, because an arcane World Trade Organization rule—the Agreement on Trade-Related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights—requires WTO countries to give monopoly protections for medicines, diagnostic tests and the technologies used to produce them. Led by South Africa and India, a coalition of more than 100 WTO member countries is calling for a temporary waiver on that monopoly, so developing countries could produce their own vaccines and treatments.

    WTO is meeting on May 5 to discuss the TRIPS waiver, and U.S. support is crucial. But the Trump administration and a handful of other countries had opposed the waiver, and President Joe Biden has not yet stepped up to change that.

    It’s not because this is an unpopular idea: the director general of the World Health Organization supports the TRIPS waiver; as do health and human rights groups including Doctors Without Borders, Partners In Health, Amnesty International, Oxfam, Doctors for America and the American Medical Student Association. Sixty former heads of state and 100 Nobel Prize winners have urged Biden to back the waiver, as have 2 million Americans.

    I and many other Mainers have relatives and friends in countries around the world, and we can’t disconnect from those people. But when it comes to this pandemic, we’re all connected—and not just by our common humanity. None of us are safe until we’ve reached a worldwide critical mass of vaccination.

    President Biden and his advisors are deciding right now whether to do the right thing and the best way for us to urge him to do so (as Mainers, Americans, and human beings) is to ask the members of our congressional delegation to tell him they support the TRIPS waiver. Unless we come together and fix this broken system, people all over the world will die as huge pharmaceutical companies profit. Let’s not let that happen.

    This post was originally published on Radio Free.

  • The Guantánamo conundrum never seems to end.

    Twelve years ago, I had other expectations. I envisioned a writing project that I had no doubt would be part of my future: an account of Guantánamo’s last 100 days. I expected to narrate in reverse, the episodes in a book I had just published, The Least Worst Place: Guantánamo’s First 100 Days, about—well, the title makes it all too obvious—the initial days at that grim offshore prison. They began on January 11, 2002, as the first hooded prisoners of the American war on terror were ushered off a plane at that American military base on the island of Cuba.

    Needless to say, I never did write that book. Sadly enough, in the intervening years, there were few signs on the horizon of an imminent closing of that U.S. military prison. Weeks before my book was published in February 2009, President Barack Obama did, in fact, promise to close Guantánamo by the end of his first year in the White House. That hope began to unravel with remarkable speed. By the end of his presidency, his administration had, in fact, managed to release 197 of the prisoners held there without charges—many, including Mohamedou Ould Slahi, the subject of the film The Mauritanian, had also been tortured—but 41 remained, including the five men accused but not yet tried for plotting the 9/11 attacks. Forty remain there to this very day.

    Nearly 20 years after it began, the war in Afghanistan that launched this country’s Global War on Terror and the indefinite detention of prisoners in that facility offshore of American justice is now actually slated to end. President Biden recently insisted that it is indeed “time to end America’s longest war” and announced that all American troops would be withdrawn from that country by September 11th, the 20th anniversary of al-Qaeda’s attack on the United States.

    It makes sense, of course, that the conclusion of those hostilities would indeed be tied to the closure of the now-notorious Guantánamo Bay detention facility. Unfortunately, for reasons that go back to the very origins of the war on terror, ending the Afghan part of this country’s “forever wars” may not presage the release of those “forever prisoners,” as New York Times reporter Carol Rosenberg so aptly labeled them years ago.

    Biden and Guantánamo

    Just as President Biden has a history, dating back to his years as Obama’s vice-president, of wanting to curtail the American presence in Afghanistan, so he called years ago for the closure of Guantánamo. As early as June 2005, then-Senator Biden expressed his desire to shut that facility, seeing it as a stain on this country’s reputation abroad.

    At the time, he proposed that an independent commission take a look at Guantánamo Bay and make recommendations as to its future. “But,” he said then, “I think we should end up shutting it down, moving those prisoners. Those that we have reason to keep, keep. And those we don’t, let go.” Sixteen years later, he has indeed put in motion an interagency review to look into that detention facility’s closing. Hopefully, once he receives its report, his administration can indeed begin to shut the notorious island prison down. (And this time, it could even work.)

    It’s true that, in 2021, the idea of shutting the gates on Guantánamo has garnered some unprecedented mainstream support. As part of his confirmation process, Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin, for instance, signaled his support for its closure. And Congress, long unwilling to lend a hand, has offered some support as well. On April 16th, 24 Democratic senators signed a letter to the president calling that facility a “symbol of lawlessness and human rights abuses” that “continues to harm U.S. national security” and demanding that it be shut.

    As those senators wrote,

    “For nearly two decades, the offshore prison has damaged America’s reputation, fueled anti-Muslim bigotry, and weakened the United States’ ability to counter terrorism and fight for human rights and the rule of law around the world. In addition to the $540 million in wasted taxpayer dollars each year to maintain and operate the facility, the prison also comes at the price of justice for the victims of 9/11 and their families, who are still waiting for trials to begin.”

    Admittedly, the number of signatories on that letter raises many questions, including why there aren’t more (and why there isn’t a single Republican among them). Is it just a matter of refusing to give up old habits or does it reflect a lack of desire to address an issue long out of the headlines? Where, for example, was Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer’s name, not to mention those other 25 missing Democratic senatorial signatures?

    And there’s another disappointment lurking in its text. While those senators correctly demanded a reversal of the Trump administration’s “erroneous and troubling legal positions” regarding the application of international and domestic law to Guantánamo, they failed to expand upon the larger context of that forever nightmare of imprisonment, lawlessness, and cruelty that affected the war-on-terror prisoners at Guantánamo as well as at the CIA’s “black sites” around the world.

    Still, that stance by those two-dozen senators is significant, since Congress has, in the past, taken such weak positions on closing the prison. As such, it provides some hope for the future.

    For the rest of Congress and the rest of us, when thinking about finally putting Guantánamo in the history books, it’s important to remember just what a vast deviation it proved to be from the law, justice, and the norms of this society. It’s also worth thinking about the American “detainees” there in the context of what normally happens when wars end.

    Prisoners of War

    Defying custom and law, the American war in Afghanistan broke through norms like a battering ram through a gossamer wall. Guantánamo was created in just that context, a one-of-a-kind institution for this country. Now, so many years later, it’s poised to break through yet another norm.

    Usually, at the end of hostilities, battlefield detainees are let go. As Geneva Convention III, the law governing the detention and treatment of prisoners of war, asserts: “Prisoners of war shall be released and repatriated without delay after the cessation of active hostilities.”

    That custom of releasing prisoners has, in practice, pertained not only to those held on or near the battlefield but even to those detained far from the conflict. Before the Geneva Conventions were created, the custom of releasing such prisoners was already in place in the United States. Notably, during World War II, the U.S. held 425,000 mostly German prisoners in more than 500 camps in this country. When the war ended, however, they were released and the vast majority of them were returned to their home countries.

    When it comes to the closure of Guantánamo, however, we can’t count on such an ending. Two war-on-terror realities stand in the way of linking the coming end of hostilities in Afghanistan to the shutting down of that prison. First, the Authorization for the Use of Military Force that Congress passed right after the 9/11 attacks was not geographically defined or limited to the war in Afghanistan. It focused on but was not confined to two groups, the Taliban and al-Qaeda, as well as anyone else who had contributed to the attacks of 9/11. As such, it was used as well to authorize military engagements—and the capture of prisoners—outside Afghanistan. Since 2001, in fact, it has been cited to authorize the use of force in Pakistan, Yemen, Somalia and elsewhere.Of the 780 prisoners held at Guantánamo Bay at one time or another, more than a third came from Afghanistan; the remaining two-thirds were from 48 other countries.

    A second potential loophole exists when it comes to the release of prisoners as that war ends. The administration of George W. Bush rejected the very notion that those held at Guantánamo were prisoners of war, no matter how or where they had been captured. As non-state actors, according to that administration, they were exempted from prisoner of war status, which is why they were deliberately labeled “detainees.”

    Little wonder then that, despite Secretary of Defense Austin’s position on Guantánamo, as the New York Times recently reported, Pentagon spokesman John Kirby “argued that there was no direct link between its future and the coming end to what he called the ‘mission’ in Afghanistan.”

    In fact, even if that congressional authorization for war and the opening of Guantánamo on which it was based never were solely linked to the conflict in Afghanistan, it’s time, almost two decades later, to put an end to that quagmire of a prison camp and the staggering exceptions that it’s woven into this country’s laws and norms since 2002.

    A “Forever Prison”?

    The closing of Guantánamo would finally signal an end to the otherwise endless proliferation of exceptions to the laws of war as well as to U.S. domestic and military legal codes. As early as June 2004, Supreme Court Justice Sandra Day O’Connor flagged the possibility that a system of indefinite detention at Guantánamo could create a permanent state of endless legal exceptionalism.

    She wrote an opinion that month in a habeas corpus case for the release of a Guantánamo detainee, the dual U.S.-Saudi citizen Yaser Hamdi, warning that the prospect of turning that military prison into a never-ending exception to wartime detention and its laws posed dangers all its own. As she put it, “We understand Congress’ grant of authority for the use of ‘necessary and appropriate force’ to include the authority to detain for the duration of the relevant conflict, and our understanding is based on longstanding law-of-war principles.” She also acknowledged that, “If the practical circumstances of a given conflict are entirely unlike those of the conflicts that informed the development of the law of war, that [the] understanding [of release upon the end of hostilities] may unravel. But,” she concluded, “that is not the situation we face as of this date.”

    Sadly enough, 17 years later, it turns out that the detention authority may be poised to outlive the use of force. Guantánamo has become an American institution at the cost of $13 million per prisoner annually. The system of offshore injustice has, by now, become part and parcel of the American system of justice—our very own “forever prison.”

    The difficulty of closing Guantánamo has shown that once you move outside the laws and norms of this country in a significant way, the return to normalcy becomes ever more problematic—and the longer the exception, the harder such a restoration will be. Remember that, before his presidency was over, George W. Bush went on record acknowledging his preference for closing Guantánamo. Obama made it a goal of his presidency from the outset. Biden, with less fanfare and the lessons of their failures in mind, faces the challenge of finally closing America’s forever prison.

    With all that in mind, let me offer you a positive twist on this seemingly never-ending situation. I won’t be surprised if, in fact, President Biden actually does manage to close Guantánamo. He may not do so as a result of the withdrawal of all American forces from Afghanistan, but because he seems to have a genuine urge to shut the books on the war on terror, or at least the chapter of it initiated on 9/11.

    And if he were also to shut down that prison, in the spirit of that letter from the Democratic senators, it would be because of Guantánamo’s gross violations of American laws and norms. While the letter did not go so far as to name the larger war-on-terror sins of the past, it did at least draw attention directly to the wrongfulness of indefinite detention as a system created expressly to evade the law—and one that brought ill-repute to the United States globally.

    That closure should certainly happen under President Biden. After all, any other course is not only legally unacceptable, but risks perpetuating the idea that this country continues to distrust the principles of law, human rights, and due process—indeed, the very fundamentals of a democratic system.

    This post was originally published on Radio Free.

  • In order to “crush the virus” across the globe, more than half of the House Democratic caucus Tuesday called on President Joe Biden to immediately end U.S. opposition to a proposed Covid-19 vaccine patent waiver at the World Trade Organization.

    Led by Rep. Jan Schakowsky (D-Ill.) and signed by 110 House Democrats, the letter (pdf) from the lawmakers states that temporarily suspending elements of the WTO’s Trade-Related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights (TRIPS) agreement is “vital to ensuring sufficient volume of and equitable access to Covid-19 vaccines and therapeutics around the world.”

    “Your administration has an incredible opportunity to reverse the damage done by the Trump administration to our nation’s global reputation and restore America’s public health leadership on the world stage.”
    —Letter

    “The TRIPS waiver is also essential to ensure all global economies, including the United States’ economy, can recover from the pandemic and thrive,” the letter continues. “Simply put, we must make vaccines, testing, and treatments available everywhere if we are going to crush the virus anywhere.”

    The House Democrats’ letter to Biden comes just 24 hours before WTO member nations are set to convene Wednesday and Thursday to consider the patent waiver as global coronavirus cases soar to new highs, fueled largely by a devastating explosion of infections in India and other developing countries that have struggled to vaccinate their populations.

    Members of the Biden administration are reportedly divided over whether the U.S. should support the waiver. One anonymous administration official involved in the internal discussions told the Washington Post last week that “the people whose job it is to protect the property of U.S. businesses are up in arms that it’s a bad idea.”

    “The people whose job is to defeat the pandemic,” the official added, “are much more receptive to it.”

    Proponents of the patent waiver—a broad coalition that includes more than 100 countries, former world leaders, Nobel Prize-winning economists, and hundreds of civil society groups—argue that it is a necessary step toward ending pharmaceutical companies’ monopoly control over vaccine production and ramping up manufacturing to meet global needs.

    “This temporary TRIPS waiver is key for countries to manufacture necessary supplies of Covid-19 treatments and vaccines,” House Democrats argue in their letter. “The temporary TRIPS waiver would allow countries and manufacturers to directly access and share technologies to produce vaccines and therapeutics without causing trade sanctions or international disputes.”

    The pharmaceutical industry has been aggressively lobbying lawmakers in the U.S. and other rich nations to maintain their opposition to the patent waiver, which requires consensus support at the WTO to take effect. As HuffPost reported late Monday, “none of the nine House Democrats among Congress’ top 25 recipients of donations from pharmaceutical industry PACs in the 2020 election cycle have signed” the new letter.

    But the letter was signed by an ideologically diverse group of House Democrats, including conservative Reps. Jared Golden (D-Maine.) and Elissa Slotkin (D-Mich.) as well as progressive Reps. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-N.Y.), Barbara Lee (D-Calif.), Cori Bush (D-Mo.), Ilhan Omar (D-Minn.), Pramila Jayapal (D-Wash.), and Rashida Tlaib (D-Mich.).

    House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) has not signed on to the letter, and zero congressional Republicans have backed the waiver.

    “As Covid-19 ravages the globe, we know that any vaccine or therapeutic pharmaceutical corporations develop with public money is 100% ineffective for those that cannot access it,” the letter reads. “We need to make public policy choices, both in the U.S. and at the WTO, that put lives first.”

    “Your administration has an incredible opportunity to reverse the damage done by the Trump administration to our nation’s global reputation and restore America’s public health leadership on the world stage,” the letter concludes. “To bring the pandemic to its quickest end and save the lives of Americans and people around the world, we ask that you reverse the Trump position and announce U.S. support for the WTO TRIPS waiver.”

    Read the full letter:

    Dear Mr. President:

    We write to convey the urgent need for the United States to support the temporary waiver of some Trade-Related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights (TRIPS) rules proposed by India and South Africa at the World Trade Organization (WTO), during the COVID-19 emergency. From a global public health perspective, this waiver is vital to ensuring sufficient volume of and equitable access to Covid-19 vaccines and therapeutics around the world. The TRIPS waiver is also essential to ensure all global economies, including the United States’ economy, can recover from the pandemic and thrive. Simply put, we must make vaccines, testing, and treatments available everywhere if we are going to crush the virus anywhere.

    The TRIPS waiver proposed by India and South Africa in October 2020 would temporarily lift certain intellectual property barriers and allow countries to locally manufacture Covid-19 diagnostics, treatments, and vaccines, thereby increasing timely global access. The waiver is supported by more than 100 nations. The Trump administration led opposition to the waiver and, with a handful of other WTO signatories, has blocked its adoption.

    Recently, the scope of the waiver has drawn concern from labor unions and others for unintended impacts it could have on unrelated copyright and other intellectual property that provide the basis for ongoing collectively bargained wage payments and corresponding contributions to health plans and retirement plans for workers throughout the country. This would be an unacceptable outcome and underscores the need for U.S. engagement on the waiver to ensure that there are no unintended consequences. Our goal is straightforward—to speed up the pace of global vaccinations, help the global economy reopen, promote vaccine justice, and increase preparedness for the next pandemic.

    Unless countries cooperate and share medical technology, there simply will not be sufficient supply of vaccines, diagnostics, and treatments for many countries—particularly developing countries—to effectively fight Covid-19. Some countries may not have access to widespread Covid-19 vaccination until as late as 2024 without large increases in production. This not only would cause additional, unnecessary loss of life, but it would also imperil the vaccination efforts now underway. Emerging Covid-19 variants show more resistance to vaccines and are more infectious. They spotlight why time is of the essence:further delay in developing immunity around the world will only lead to faster and stronger mutations. Our globalized economy cannot recover if only parts of the world are vaccinated. In the end, the TRIPS waiver will help us all.

    This temporary TRIPS waiver is key for countries to manufacture necessary supplies of Covid-19 treatments and vaccines. The current flexibilities included in TRIPS are ill-suited to an urgent, global crisis. TRIPS allows countries to negotiate compulsory licenses, a flexibility that was reaffirmed in the Doha Declaration. However, compulsory licenses must be negotiated by each WTO member country and for each patent or other protection applying to each individual product. This country-by-country and product-by-product approach is unworkable given the speed and global scope of access necessary to combat a global pandemic. Additionally, the 2020 Special 301 Report makes it clear that the United States applies diplomatic power to discourage developing countries from using compulsory licenses. The temporary TRIPS waiver would allow countries and manufacturers to directly access and share technologies to produce vaccines and therapeutics without causing trade sanctions or international disputes.

    Initiatives by the WHO to expand access to Covid-19 vaccines and treatments have also proven woefully inadequate. The Covid-19 Vaccines Global Access (COVAX) initiative promises two billion vaccine doses to developing countries by the end of 2021. Even if COVAX could obtain these vaccines, that amount would cover doses for just 20% of the populations of all participating countries. Moreover, the COVAX initiative does not include treatments. This is not sufficient to end the pandemic worldwide.

    Expanding vaccine access to developing nations is not only a moral obligation, it is economically effective. Recent data show that nationalistic vaccine policies will cost the world an estimated$1.2 trillion per year. In fact, wealthier nations have already purchased more than 53% of the supply of the most promising vaccines. As countries worldwide compete for limited supplies,developing nations will have to pay monopoly prices for access. This harsh reality is already unfolding before our eyes with reports of South Africa paying more than double the price paid by the European Union for the AstraZeneca vaccine.

    On the other hand, for each dollar wealthy nations invest in getting vaccines to the poorest countries, they will receive approximately $4.80 in return. Congress has paid industry giants billions of taxpayer dollars to expedite research and development of Covid-19 vaccines and therapeutics. The American people deserve the best possible return on that investment, not corporate monopolies that restrict access and threaten to extend the length of the pandemic.

    Further, in the United States, Congress has appropriated billions of dollars of emergency relief for the travel, tourism, and hospitality industries and is planning billions more. The airline industry alone has received $40B in relief over the course of the pandemic and an additional $14B is being considered. These industries will remain in crisis and reliant on billions more in government help until the pandemic eases. The faster we can bring this emergency to an end, the faster these industries can recover. The TRIPS waiver is key to the end of the pandemic and the beginning of a strong American recovery.

    As Covid-19 ravages the globe, we know that any vaccine or therapeutic pharmaceutical corporations develop with public money is 100% ineffective for those that cannot access it. We need to make public policy choices, both in the U.S. and at the WTO, that put lives first.

    Your administration has an incredible opportunity to reverse the damage done by the Trump administration to our nation’s global reputation and restore America’s public health leadership on the world stage. To bring the pandemic to its quickest end and save the lives of Americans and people around the world, we ask that you reverse the Trump position and announce U.S. support for the WTO TRIPS waiver.

    This post was originally published on Radio Free.

  • WASHINGTON – Today, Color Of Change, the nation’s largest online racial justice organization, released the Jim Crow Filibuster, a new website dedicated to detailing the long history of the filibuster being used to disempower and oppress Black communities. This site is a part of Color Of Change’s campaign to end the filibuster, which will include digital ad buys in states where Senators have not yet committed to filibuster reform. The organization’s campaign cites the filibuster as a tool to delay progress for Black people, and most recently to block urgent reforms including the For The People Act, the John R. Lewis Voting Rights Advancement Act, and other essential legislation to ensure Black voices, votes, and lives are valued. 

    “174 years after the filibuster was used in an attempt to establish Oregon as a slave state, every generation has seen the tool utilized to halt voting rights, civil rights, immigration reform, and other laws that enable Black people to use our political power to make change,” said Scott Roberts, Senior Director, Criminal Justice + Democracy Campaigns at Color Of Change. “In the past year, Black voters overcame voter suppression tactics, misinformation, and a pandemic to ensure the election of a Democratic president and a Democratically-controlled Congress. But now, we risk losing this short window of opportunity due to a tactic that permits a single senator to silence the voices and needs of millions. It has to end. It has to end now.” 

    From John C. Calhoun’s attempt to block Oregon’s designation as a “free state” without slavery in 1848, to the decades-delay in ending the poll tax, to the fact that the U.S. still does not have a federal anti-lynching law — it is clear the filibuster has delayed progress and eroded public trust. Now, progress on racial equity, climate change, and dozens of other top priorities are threatened by a parliamentary rule stripping the majority of its power. In protest, Rep. Cori Bush and more than 90 House Democrats signed a letter urging Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer to end the filibuster without delay.

    Color Of Change has long viewed the filibuster—a relic of Jim Crow—as a threat to Black progress and has mounted several campaigns to expose the racist history of the filibuster. Earlier this year, Color Of Change launched a petition against the racist Jim Crow filibuster, which threatens critical voting rights legislation and a proposal that would grant Washington, D.C. full statehood. Color Of Change President Rashad Robinson also penned an op-ed detailing the tool’s racist past and its potential to block legislation on gun safety, health care, and voting rights.

    This post was originally published on Radio Free.

  • On Monday many observed World Press Freedom Day, a chance for people everywhere to assess the global health of a free press and the future of journalism.

    As the world marked the occasion, the world’s largest tech companies, including Amazon, Facebook and Google, reported their quarterly earnings. The news for them is very, very good: Their streak of trillion-dollar earnings in 2020 is expected to continue to grow through 2021.

    But what’s good news for these tech giants is bad news for most traditional news outlets around the world.

    Quality local journalism has gotten lost in the reshuffle of the advertising economy.

    The New York Times reports that U.S. tech giants are “making bonkers dollars” because of the coronavirus, not in spite of it. The effects of the pandemic have been very different for the world’s newsrooms, which have seen an uptick in layoffs and closures since the beginning of 2020 due to the economic downturn and the continuing decline of advertising in newsprint.

    The global ad market now revolves around a new core: the algorithmically targeted placements offered by the likes of Facebook and Google. In comparison to traditional media advertising, this technology is a far more economical way to put products (or ideas) before people who are most likely to buy (or support) them.

    Quality local journalism has gotten lost in the reshuffle of the advertising economy. These digital-advertising platforms don’t need to employ reporters or produce news content to reach their intended audiences. The latest numbers reflect this change: eMarketer projects that global ad-spending will top $695 billion in 2021, and that more than 56 percent of that will be payments to online advertisers that typically don’t produce local-news content.

    To understand what this means, It’s useful to think of U.S. tech companies as extraction industries that take advertising revenues out of local-news economies.

    Lawmakers around the world have responded by crafting policies to “make Big Tech pay” for the damage it’s doing to legacy news production.

    The News Media Bargaining Code in Australia and the Journalism Competition and Preservation Act in the United States are examples of this response. In effect, these policies seek to force tech platforms into payment negotiations with large outlets in exchange for linking to their content.

    Earlier this year, Rupert Murdoch’s News Corp. leveraged the mere threat of these rules to secure a three-year deal with Google that would provide access to the publisher’s empire of news content in exchange for “significant payments” from the search giant.

    But is facilitating payment negotiations between new and old media giants really the answer?

    The reality is that the market-driven model that once fueled traditional news production isn’t sustainable in a world where attention has become the main commodity.

    Any policy solution that merely props up the media’s old model is simply prolonging the life of a commercial news system that never really served all of the people.

    “More than simply placing regulatory patches on broken commercial systems, we must intervene at media’s very foundations,” argues media scholar Victor Pickard. He calls for regulatory support of “a positive program that provides robust, diverse, and reliable news and information to all communities—and these communities should be centrally involved in governing and making their own media.”

    Any policy solution must be built on the fundamental belief that public-interest journalism is a social good, that it is essential infrastructure for democracy, and that governments must play a central role in funding this infrastructure if they hope to see democracy thrive.

    Free Press believes that creating a diverse and thriving news sector in the United States can be achieved by imposing a tax on online-advertising revenues that fuel the platforms and the attention economy.

    The resulting revenue would be placed in a Public Interest Media Endowment and used to fund the kinds of local, independent and noncommercial news that’s gone missing from too many communities. For example, a 2-percent ad tax on the 2020 U.S. advertising revenues of the 10 largest platforms would yield more than $2 billion for the endowment—that’s more than four times the annual funding the U.S. government provides for public media.

    This is just one approach that can be modified by other nations facing the journalism crisis. There are many others: Lawmakers in Canada and the United States have proposed the use of tax credits to help fund local journalism. Such proposals are evidence that lawmakers are getting serious about the issue — but these plans won’t deliver the levels of support needed to rescue local news.

    Any policy solution must be built on the fundamental belief that public-interest journalism is a social good, that it is essential infrastructure for democracy, and that governments must play a central role in funding this infrastructure if they hope to see democracy thrive.

    As we recognize press freedom worldwide, we should take action to ensure that it gets the support it needs to survive.

    This post was originally published on Radio Free.

  • Economic justice advocates expressed outrage and called for a crackdown on tax evasion on Tuesday after Amazon’s latest filings in Luxembourg revealed that the online giant paid $0 in corporate taxes to European countries last year despite reporting record-high sales of nearly $53 billion amid the Covid-19 pandemic.

    “Amazon’s revenues have soared under the pandemic while our high streets struggle,” said Margaret Hodge, a parliamentarian from the British Labour Party and long-time critic of tax dodging. “It seems that Amazon’s relentless campaign of appalling tax avoidance continues.”

    The Guardian reported that accounts for Amazon EU Sarl, a Luxembourg-based entity that sells products to hundreds of millions of households throughout Europe and the United Kingdom, showed that the company’s sales income rose from $38.5 billion in 2019 to $52.9 billion in 2020. And yet, even after a $14.4 billion increase in revenue, Amazon’s so-called Luxembourg unit claimed $1.4 billion in losses and therefore paid $0 in corporate taxes.

    As a matter of fact, the Luxembourg unit—which manages sales in the U.K., France, Germany, Italy, the Netherlands, Poland, Spain, and Sweden—received $67.3 million in tax credits “it can use to offset any future tax bills should it turn a profit,” The Guardian noted, adding that Amazon has $3.2 billion “worth of carried forward losses stored up, which can be used against any tax payable on future profits.”

    “These figures are mind-blowing, even for Amazon,” said Paul Monaghan, chief executive of the Fair Tax Foundation. “We are seeing exponentially accelerated market domination across the globe on the back of income that continues to be largely untaxed—allowing it to unfairly undercut local businesses that take a more responsible approach.”

    “The bulk of Amazon’s U.K. income is booked offshore, in the enormously loss-making Luxembourg subsidiary, which means that not only are they not making a meaningful tax contribution now, but are unlikely to do so for years to come given the enormous carried forward losses they have now built up there,” Monaghan added.

    The Amazon EU Sarl accounts filed in Luxembourg in 2020 “do not break down how much money Amazon made from sales in each European country,” The Guardian reported, but “Amazon’s U.S. accounts show that its U.K. income soared by 51% last year to a record $26.5 billion.”

    While Amazon celebrated the growth in revenue collected from home-bound U.K. customers in 2020, the company did not divulge the total amount of taxes it paid in the country. In 2019, however, when Amazon brought in $17.5 billion in U.K. sales, the company paid just $352 million in taxes.

    Last week, Amazon—whose founder and outgoing chief executive Jeff Bezos has amassed a personal fortune of approximately $200 billion—reported its largest ever quarterly profit of $1.8 billion on global sales of $109 billion.

    A company spokesperson said Tuesday that “Amazon pays all the taxes required in every country where we operate.”

    “Corporate tax is based on profits, not revenues, and our profits have remained low given our heavy investments and the fact that retail is a highly competitive, low margin business,” said the spokesperson, who claimed that Amazon has “invested well over” $93.7 billion in Europe since 2010.

    Hodge, however, said that Amazon “continues to shift its profits to tax havens like Luxembourg to avoid paying its fair share of tax.”

    Many of the world’s biggest corporations have established headquarters in Luxembourg, home to just over 600,000 people and a major player in the offshore financial industry.

    “Amazon is not alone in creating complex corporate structures to avoid tax,” The Guardian noted. “The big six U.S. tech firms—Amazon, Facebook, Google, Netflix, Apple, and Microsoft—have been accused of avoiding $100 billion of global tax over the past decade, according to a report by the campaign group the Fair Tax Foundation. All have said that they pay the correct amounts of tax.”

    According to the Fair Tax Foundation, Amazon paid only $3.4 billion in income taxes last decade despite worldwide revenues of $961 billion and profits of $26.8 billion—meaning the company’s effective tax rate was 12.7% during a period when, for the most part, the corporate tax rate in the U.S. had been 35%.

    As Hodge noted, “These big digital companies all rely on our public services, our infrastructure, and our educated and healthy workforce. But unlike smaller businesses and hard-working taxpayers, the tech giants fail to pay fairly into the common pot for the common good.”

    For years, the U.S. resisted the “global treaties that reformers argued were needed to ensure that powerful multinational companies pay their fair share of taxes,” The Guardian reported. But last month, the Biden administration proposed far-reaching tax reforms, including a global minimum tax aimed at preventing multinational corporations from shifting profits offshore to slash their bills.

    Under U.S. President Joe Biden’s proposal, “large technology companies and corporations would be forced to pay taxes to national governments based on the sales they generate in each country, irrespective of where they are based,” The Guardian noted. “A global tax floor would also be agreed. The U.S. has suggested a rate of 21%, although this is higher than in several jurisdictions—including Ireland, Hungary, and the Caribbean—and could be a stumbling block.”

    While Germany and France have already backed the plan, other countries, including the U.K., have yet to do so.

    “President Biden has proposed a new, fairer system for taxing large corporations and digital companies,” said Hodge, “but the U.K. has not come out in support of the reforms.”

    “The silence is deafening,” she added. “The government must act and help to grasp this once-in-a-generation opportunity to banish corporate tax avoidance to a thing of the past.”

    This post was originally published on Radio Free.

  • Nations’ updated climate targets put the planet on track for 2.4˚C of warming by 2100 and reveal “there is still a long way to go” to meet the Paris climate agreement’s goal, an analysis released Tuesday finds.

    The projection from the Climate Action Tracker (CAT)—a collaboration of Climate Analytics and NewClimate Institute—includes nationally determined contributions (NDCs) announced at U.S. President Biden’s Leaders Summit on Climate last month and other targets announced since September. NDCs refer to each nation’s pledge to reduce emissions under the Paris agreement.

    End of century warming could be kept to 2.0°C under an “optimistic targets” scenario in which countries follow through on full implementation of the announced net-zero targets. The analysis states that 131 countries, including the U.S. and China, have now either adopted or pledged such a target.

    The estimated increase in warming reflecting updated pledges represents an improvement; CAT projected in November 2.6˚C of warming. Yet there’s still a clear gap between the organization’s newly projected level of warming and the Paris agreement’s aspirational goal of limiting planetary warming to 1.5˚C by the end of the century, and that should serve as a call to action, researchers said.

    “It is clear the Paris agreement is driving change, spurring governments into adopting stronger targets, but there is still some way to go, especially given that most governments don’t yet have policies in place to meet their pledges,” Bill Hare, CEO of Climate Analytics, said in a statement.

    “Our warming estimate from current policies is 2.9˚C,” said Hare, “still nearly twice what it should be, and governments must urgently step up their action.”

    Among the signs of progress singled out in the new publication were commitments announced by some world leaders at Biden’s climate summit. From the analysis:

    The U.S., Japan, and Canada announced new 2030 nationally determined contribution (NDC) targets. The U.S. target of 50-52% below 2005 levels is a significant step forward, but falls short of the 57-63% below 2005 levels needed to be compatible with the Paris agreement’s 1.5°C temperature limit. The Japanese target of 46% below 2013 levels fell short of expectations that the country would announce halving emissions in 2030, let alone adopt the more than 60% needed to be Paris compatible. Canada would only improve its CAT rating if it ditched the less ambitious end of its newly announced target range of 40-45% below 2005 levels by 2030.

    There is more cause for concern:

    Brazil’s President [Jair] Bolsonaro brought forward the country’s climate neutrality goal by 10 years from 2060 to 2050. However, the commitment is dubious [given that] changes in Brazil’s 2030 baseline as part of its NDC update last December effectively weakened its NDC target. Likewise, Australia promised to reach to net-zero emissions, at an unspecified date depending upon technology development, but failed to announce stronger 2030 targets. While the leaders of India, Indonesia, Mexico, Russia, Saudi Arabia, and Turkey all spoke, none announced stronger NDCs.

    Researchers welcomed a narrowing of the 2030 emissions gap by around 11-14%. The biggest contributors to that decline, according to the analysis, were the U.S, the European Union, China, and Japan.

    There is also clear evidence that climate policies CAT has been tracking over the past  decade are moving in the right direction. The report found “the national policies implementation has improved over time, driven by new pledges and in particular falling prices of renewable energy. Our temperature effect of climate policies has also decreased by 0.7°C (from 3.6°C to 2.9°C).”

    — ClimateActionTracker (@climateactiontr) May 4, 2021

    Despite indications of progress, the 1.5˚C threshold is far off, CAT warns.

    “The fact that current global warming is now at 1.2°C above pre-industrial levels only serves to reinforce the urgency of further NDC updates. Moreover, governments have yet to adopt sufficient policies to actually meet the targets they have set. In September 2020, we estimated that currently implemented policies, including the effect of the pandemic, will lead to a temperature rise of 2.9°C by the end of the century.”

    The analysis suggests a number of actions including for countries to either update their emissions targets or sumbit targets that are 1.5°C-aligned. Countries must scale up actions in terms of climate policies and implementation. An additional step is for richer nations to boost climate finance, because “many developing countries will only be able to meet ambitious 1.5°C compatible pathways with significant support from developed countries.”

    According to Niklas Höhne of NewClimate Institute, “The wave towards net-zero greenhouse gas emissions is unstoppable.”

    “The long-term intentions are good,” said Höhne. “But only if all governments flip into emergency mode and propose and implement more short-term action, global emissions can still be halved in the next 10 years as required by the Paris agreement.”

    This post was originally published on Radio Free.

  • As millions of us get vaccinated against SARS-CoV-2, we will get a first-hand glimpse of what a single-payer, Medicare-for-All approach to health care might mean, at least at the federal level. At the national level, the development and distribution of the vaccines have features of a single-payer approach to health care that set the program apart from business as usual in our private market-oriented health care system.  

    The vaccine is being treated as a public good, not a private commodity, and its priority process is determined by medical need, not by ability to pay.

    Vaccines are not usually profitable for pharmaceutical companies. It was therefore necessary for the federal government to subsidize the development and distribution of the Covid19 vaccines, mainly through Operation Warp Speed. As a result of these subsidies, none of us have to pay to receive the vaccine. Moreover, there are no documentation requirements to show eligibility and no disputes with insurance companies before or after vaccination. According to guidelines from the Centers for Medicaid and Medicare Services (CMS), Vaccine doses purchased with U.S. taxpayer dollars will be given to the American people at no cost.” Additionally, providers may not seek any reimbursement, including through balance billing, from a vaccine recipient.” We will all be covered automatically with no out-of-pocket costs. 

    The national vaccination program has all the features of a single-payer health care system including no copays, no premiums, no insurance company blocking payment, and universal, affordable healthcare for all. The vaccine is being treated as a public good, not a private commodity, and its priority process is determined by medical need, not by ability to pay. Notably, given all this, the vaccine rollout has drawn no allegations of “socialized medicine” by those opposed to government-financed health care.

    One cannot deny that administering the vaccine is a massive undertaking and undoubtedly it had a rocky start, but it has improved dramatically over the past few months. The question remains: will our first-hand experience of the federal response to the pandemic (delayed though it was) dispel the usual objections to single-payer health care? Or will most Americans conclude that the public health crisis caused by this pandemic is a one-off exception?  Since we all need access to medical care at some point—whether because of a pandemic, a variant in our genetic code, getting hit by a bus, or being struck by cancer or heart disease—it is clearly short-sighted to regard it as an exception.

    Much depends on how many of us get vaccinated and experience the desired community protection and sense of solidarity underlying a universal health care model. If the outcome is positive, increased political momentum for a single-payer health system may be one of the most important results of this horrific pandemic. We’re all in this together, and what we’re learning is that government is not the problem; it’s the solution.

    This post was originally published on Radio Free.

  • Advocacy groups and progressives in Congress on Tuesday applauded the Biden administration’s appointment of Richard Cordray to oversee federal student loans and financial aid, expressing hope that the former head of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau will encourage the White House to offer much-needed relief to the country’s 45 million student borrowers. 

    Education Secretary Miguel Cardona announced Monday that Cordray will serve as chief operating officer of Federal Student Aid, overseeing student loan servicing companies and the regulation of universities that receive federal student aid. 

    Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.), an ally of Cordray who formed the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB), was among those who applauded the appointment.

    “I’m very glad he’ll be protecting student borrowers and bringing much-needed accountability to the federal student loan program,” Warren said of Cordray.

    At CFPB, Cordray demonstrated a commitment to public service by working to rein in the payday lending industry, cutting lenders’ revenue by two-thirds, according to the agency. During his tenure, the bureau returned nearly $12 billion to 29 million American consumers.

    Cordray also oversaw the bureau when it brought several legal actions against for-profit education institutions and filed a major lawsuit against Navient, one of the largest federal student loan servicers. 

    His appointment comes amid calls from Warren, Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.), and other lawmakers who are demanding that President Joe Biden cancel up to $50,000 per borrower in student debt—without relying on the approval of Congress—under Section 432(a) of the Higher Education Act of 1965. 

    Cardona said Monday that the Education and Justice Departments are examining the possibility of canceling student debt, and Cordray declined to say whether student loan cancelation will take place with him at the helm of the Office of Federal Student Aid, but advocates expressed hope that his appointment is a “major win for progressives” on the issue.

    “Cordray understands the challenges that student borrowers face, and unlike [former Education Secretary Betsy] DeVos, we are confident he will fight on behalf of borrowers rather than making their lives even more difficult,” said Maria Langholz, spokesperson for the Demand Progress Education Fund. “In this role he must not only undo the disastrous legacy of DeVos but play a key role in making massive student debt forgiveness a reality.”

    Cordray now holds “the single most important job in the executive branch for canceling student debt,” said Jeff Hauser, executive director of the Revolving Door Project. “We expect Cordray to take these needed reforms seriously given his excellent history at the CFPB.”

    “That said, we won’t hesitate to be critical if needed,” he added.

    Other issues Cordray is likely to work on at the Education Department include reforming targeted loan forgiveness programs aimed at public service workers, borrowers with disabilities, and people who have been defrauded by colleges; and managing the department’s decision to restart monthly federal student loan and interest payments following a pause that has been in place since March 2020, in light of the pandemic. The pause is currently scheduled to last until September 30. 

    This post was originally published on Radio Free.

  • March 2021 marked the end of a long and, in many ways, dreadful year: at least 2.7 million deaths and 122 million people infected from the COVID-19 pandemic. It was also a year of tremendous economic pain, brought upon by national lockdowns, business and border closures, and disruptions to global supply chains. 

    Most of the world is still in the midst of the pandemic and far from recovering from the virus. Some of us are still adapting to a new world of work, communicating virtually, linked by our screens to the outside world.  And that is only for those of us fortunate enough to work from home: far more cannot do so and many remain on the front lines, risking their lives to keep the wheels of civilization turning; while others still have been forced to migrate away from their homes and life as they knew it.

    Climate change, biodiversity loss, and pollution put us at risk of irreversibly changing our relationship with the natural world and vastly degrading human well-being. As governments struggle to redress the dire public health and deeply unsettling economic consequences of the pandemic, we have witnessed unprecedented fiscal and monetary efforts to stabilize and recover from the effects of the lockdown. Since March 2020, the top 50 economies alone have announced nearly USD 17 trillion in spending—and this excludes an additional estimated USD six trillion in central bank purchases. That is more than 20 percent of the global GDP in 2019.  

    Spending at such a colossal scale presents an opportunity not simply to rebuild the global economy, but to do so better. The world is not only facing a health crisis but an environmental one as well. Climate change, biodiversity loss, and pollution put us at risk of irreversibly changing our relationship with the natural world and vastly degrading human well-being. Extreme weather events such as heatwaves, floods, and wildfires are displacing millions and wreak worldwide havoc. Air pollution kills seven million people worldwide every year. In fact, the next deadly virus might be unleashed by the destruction of forests and by our broken food systems. That is why building better also means building greener. 

    Accordingly, world leaders have pledged to a green recovery. This includes the USA, the European Unionthe UKJapanIndiaChina, and the 54 African Ministers of the Environment.  

    As money is brought forward from the future to cover current costs and restart the economy at a scale not seen since the world wars, is the world-building back better and greener? Will economies—as a result of this massive spending—be any closer to the goals embodied in the 2030 agenda; or to the agreements reached in Paris in 2015 to stabilize and reduce CO2 emissions? The short answer is: not yet.  

    The Global Recovery Observatory, co-led by the Oxford Smith School of Enterprise and Environment and the UN Environment Programme (UNEP), shines a light on efforts to put economic recovery onto solid, green ground. The Observatory tracks over 3,500 policy moves since March 2020 by country and by sector of the economy. 

    We can, and we must, do better than this if we are to fulfill the 2030 Agenda and the Sustainable Development Goals.

    A recent report published by UNEP and the University of Oxford examines the patterns of rescue and recovery spending by leading economies and unearths some remarkable findings. Total green recovery spending constitutes a fraction of the total—less than 20% to be precise. Only USD 341 billion announced spending can be marked as green. To put this figure in perspective, each year global spending on fossil fuel subsidies averages more than USD 350 bn. Or in other words, in the wake of a once-in-a-generation pandemic and economic crisis, spending on green recoveries is less than an average year’s worth of subsidies on fossil fuels.  

    We can, and we must, do better than this if we are to fulfill the 2030 Agenda and the Sustainable Development Goals. High income and advanced economies have a special role to play. As the UNEP-Oxford report shows, advanced economies outspent emerging and developing countries by a factor of 17 to 1. This will only widen and increase existing inequalities, as a generation of progress in alleviating poverty is undone by the effects of the pandemic and lockdown. Economies of low-income countries in the global south are crippled by debt. Debt relief would be imperative for them to shift to clean energy and transport and invest in building upgrades, natural capital (ecosystem regeneration initiatives and reforestation), and research. 

    And given the interconnected state of the world—where environmental and climate and health issues are not contained by national borders—we all share an interest in seeing solutions that increase human well-being and capacities everywhere. This includes our basic life support systems: a stable climate, healthy ecosystems, and clean air and water. 

    By looking at the past, we can see into the future. One year from the onset of the pandemic, a window for transformational spending and investment remains open—with sums still being brought forward at a scale unthinkable since the Great Depression.   

    Governments’ pledges for a green recovery are popular because people everywhere understand business cannot go on as usual. Through the Observatory, we will see whether those pledges are translated into actual spending that creates jobs, reduces inequalities, and restores a balance with nature.

    This post was originally published on Radio Free.

  • As children of the 90s and early aughts, millennials came of age beset by problems both too large to ignore and too expensive to fix: debilitating student debt, worsening climate change, skyrocketing inequality.  

    Promised a world of steady abundance—Fukuyama’s end of history, the zenith of global capitalism—we were met instead with an unshakeable austerity.

    When we looked to our government to address these problems, political leaders of both parties clutched nervously at their purse strings. “How will you pay for it?” we were asked again and again, less a question than a rhetorical veto. Promised a world of steady abundance—Fukuyama’s end of history, the zenith of global capitalism—we were met instead with an unshakeable austerity. Yes, global ecosystems were careening toward collapse. Yes, the wealth gap was eroding the foundations of our democracy. Yes, our infrastructure was obsolescing, our schools were underfunded, and our medical system kept churning out bankruptcies. But the real threat, we were told, was a hypothetical run of inflation. 

    This inflation never quite seemed to materialize, but its specter haunted our politics, tying our hands, promising vague but calamitous fallout if we ever so much as implied that our government might spend money to solve problems. But we didn’t have to worry: the market would take care of everything. “When?” we asked, watching the carbon accumulate, the executive compensation packages balloon. 

    “Soon,” we were told. “Any day now.”

    As our generation came into political consciousness, what had seemed like a fail-safe promise began to look more like a pretty raw deal. The market, it appeared, was not coming to save us. Fossil fuels maintained their grip on our present, even as they foreclosed on our future. Our economy, in other words, was eating itself. And according to its most prominent architects, it simply couldn’t afford to stop.

    So we began gravitating toward leaders like Bernie Sanders: the lonely few who for decades, and in opposition to the consensus, had called for redistributing wealth away from corporate coffers and into ambitious public works. Larry Summers—perhaps the foremost evangelist of the austere consensus—referred to this as “the politics of envy.” As if what we wanted was a third yacht, a membership in Elon Musk’s pay-to-play Mars colony. But we weren’t envious of those things. The fortunes celebrated by the consensus—the triumphant heights of the neoliberal order–seemed to us grotesque and indefensible. Our demands were far humbler, though they appeared radical in the glare of the consensus.

    We wanted jobs that could support a family. We wanted time to spend with that family. We wanted the ability to go on vacation, to take a break, to take care of young children and aging parents. We wanted, one day, to buy a home. And—entitled as we were—we preferred that all of this be made available on a planet that wasn’t hurtling toward catastrophe.

    This is the attitude young people have been waiting for our leaders to adopt. There’s only one problem. Biden’s plan falls short by exactly the margin Deese says it shouldn’t.

    After decades of being sidelined and gaslit, it appears that our demands are starting to be heard. Last week, President Biden released his American Jobs Plan, an eight year, $2 trillion investment program to rebuild our infrastructure, tackle the climate crisis, and redress racial and economic inequity. Late last month, Brian Deese, the Director of the National Economic Council, expounded on the administration’s decision to “go big” and “be bold.” “It’s a difference,” he said, “between trimming your own sails, saying, I think what the country needs is X but I’m only going to call for 0.3 X, and saying, it turns out that that X that the country needs is something that is actually broadly supported across the country.”

    This is the attitude young people have been waiting for our leaders to adopt. There’s only one problem. Biden’s plan falls short by exactly the margin Deese says it shouldn’t. At a time when most experts cite $1 trillion per year as the investment needed to decarbonize the U.S. economy, the American Jobs Plan is a 0.3 X proposal. However laudable in scope, it simply doesn’t match the scale of the challenges it seeks to address. 

    Luckily for us, there’s no reason it can’t. Stephanie Kelton and the economists at the Groundwork Collaborative have demonstrated that, as far as fiscal policy goes, Biden has ample room to run. With the right industrial and trade policies to complement, our government could absolutely pursue the investment levels the planet requires. 

    If the President wants to cite a more venerable precedent, he can look to John Maynard Keynes, who concluded—after living through two World Wars and the Great Depression—that governments can and should spend what is necessary to solve the crises at hand. And with climate change, the crisis at hand has both a deadline and a threshold. Joe Biden could well spend a hefty sum, but if it’s not enough to transform our economy in time to avert runaway climate change, then his plan will be remembered foremost for its futility. 

    The ball is now Congress’s court, and thankfully progressives leaders are stepping up. Last Monday, Senator Ed Markey joined Representatives Debbie Dingell, Nanette Barragán, Yvette Clarke, and many others to formally introduce the THRIVE Act, perhaps the most exciting legislation to gain traction in my lifetime. The THRIVE Act would invest $1 trillion a year for ten years, putting 15 million people to work building renewable energy, retrofitting buildings, restoring ecosystems, farming sustainably, and caring for children, the elderly, and the sick. In the process it would cut climate pollution in half by 2030, strengthen labor standards nationwide, and close our country’s unconscionable racial wealth gap. The acronym says it all: Transform, Heal, and Renew by Investing in a Vibrant Economy. 

    The THRIVE Agenda—the policy approach developed by grassroots movements that undergirds the soon-to-be-introduced Act—has already garnered the support of over 100 Members of Congress, including Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer. This represents nothing less than a sea change: a new consensus to supplant the old. It is generous where the former was stingy. Visionary where the former was myopic. And it is finally clear-eyed about the immensity of the climate crisis. It does not try to wish it away, relegating it to a mere “externality”, a minor glitch in an otherwise flawless system. 

    The neoliberal cohort will no doubt call our dreams of stable work and a sustainable future “idealistic,” demanding fealty to the status quo. Let them wring their hands as they fade out of relevance.

    If Biden genuinely wants to serve as a “bridge” to a new “generation of leaders”—as he stated repeatedly during his campaign–then he must leave behind outmoded deficit politics and embrace the THRIVE Act. The Baby Boomer guardians of the old consensus often make the argument that the deficit will crush my generation under its weight. The big irony is that it’s this precise fear that is in fact doing the crushing. To his credit, the President has begun to untether himself from the deficit hawks’ doctrinaire paralysis. But if he wants to rise to the moment, he’ll need to fully commit. 

    Should Biden throw his weight behind the THRIVE Act, he stands to reap a massive political windfall. The passage of FDR’s New Deal, for instance, cohered a political coalition that lasted decades. Crucially, though, it excluded many women, and almost all people of color. The THRIVE Act reverses that immoral flaw, directing at least 50% of investment to Black, Brown, and Indigenous communities; working-class communities; and communities on the frontlines of environmental injustice. Its passage would birth a coalition led by union workers and tribal nations, new voters and young parents, Black churches and immigrant families. It might even win the allegiance of those working class Republicans who care more about affording a doctor than they do about Dr. Seuss.

    But forging this coalition will require winning a contest of ideas. Not just between austerity and abundance, but between those of us who can dream of a radically better future and those whose imaginations remain stuck on the untenable present. In the months ahead, the neoliberal cohort will no doubt call our dreams of stable work and a sustainable future “idealistic,” demanding fealty to the status quo. Let them wring their hands as they fade out of relevance. The rest of us will be too busy anyway, building the future we know we deserve. 

    This post was originally published on Radio Free.

  • As rich countries that have hoarded vaccine doses and technology for months begin to accelerate their reopenings as coronavirus case counts level off or decline, India, Brazil, Nepal, Thailand, and other developing nations are in the grip of deadly and uncontrolled Covid-19 surges that experts fear could prolong the global pandemic and endanger the entire world.

    “The world needs between 10 and 15 billion vaccine doses, but so far the big producers that enjoy patent protection have produced only about 1.4 billion doses this year.”
    —Robert Kuttner, The American Prospect

    On Tuesday, India became the second nation after the United States to surpass the 20 million-case mark, with the South Asian country reporting at least 357,000 new infections and 3,449 deaths over just the past 24 hours—the latest figures from a wave that is overwhelming strained hospitals and leaving facilities with fatal shortages of oxygen and other critical supplies.

    While India’s current coronavirus surge is the worst in the world, it is not the only nation experiencing alarming increases in case totals and deaths—trends potentially fueled by more contagious variants that are running rampant among largely unvaccinated populations. India, which is facing a severe shortage of vaccines that could persist for months, has fully inoculated just over 2% of its roughly 1.3 billion residents.

    As Bloomberg reported Tuesday morning, in addition to India, “nations ranging from Laos to Thailand in Southeast Asia, and those bordering India such as Bhutan and Nepal, have been reporting significant surges in infections in the past few weeks.”

    The outlet continued:

    In Laos last week, the health minister sought medical equipment, supplies and treatment, as cases jumped more than 200-fold in a month. Nepal is seeing hospitals quickly filling up and running out of oxygen supplies. Health facilities are under pressure in Thailand, where 98% of new cases are from a more infectious strain of the pathogen, while some island nations in the Pacific Ocean are facing their first Covid waves.

    Although nowhere close to India’s population or flare-up in scope, the reported spikes in these handful of nations have been far steeper, signaling the potential dangers of an uncontrolled spread. The resurgence—and first-time outbreaks in some places that largely avoided the scourge last year—heightens the urgency of delivering vaccine supplies to poorer, less influential countries and averting a protracted pandemic.

    On Wednesday and Thursday, member nations of the World Trade Organization (WTO) are set to meet to discuss India and South Africa’s patent waiver proposal, which proponents say would help enable generic manufacturers to replicate vaccine formulas and ramp up global production.

    “India is in crisis. President Biden’s decision to send supplies and vaccine doses to India is a necessary one. But we must also eliminate vaccine patents—and work to expand vaccine production and availability globally.”
    —Rep. Cori Bush

    But rich countries such as the U.S., United Kingdom, and European Union members have thus far blocked the waiver, keeping global production under the control of the pharmaceutical industry and entrenching massive inequities in vaccine access. According to one recent estimate, the U.S. could have 300 million extra vaccine doses by the end of July as some developing countries struggle to obtain and administer a single shot.

    While rich countries have pledged to donate vaccine doses and ship raw materials to India and other developing nations in dire need, progressive civil society organizations, public health experts, and some U.S. lawmakers argue that vaccine charity and voluntary bilateral deals are not sufficient to address supply shortages that could leave people in low-income countries without access to shots until 2024.

    “India is in crisis,” Rep. Cori Bush (D-Mo.) tweeted Monday. “President Biden’s decision to send supplies and vaccine doses to India is a necessary one. But we must also eliminate vaccine patents—and work to expand vaccine production and availability globally. We must work to save lives everywhere.”

    The American Prospect‘s Robert Kuttner noted Tuesday that “the world needs between 10 and 15 billion vaccine doses, but so far the big producers that enjoy patent protection have produced only about 1.4 billion doses this year.”

    “Only with the intellectual-property waiver and the mobilization of worldwide production capacity, some of it ironically in India, can the supply meet the demand and the human need,” Kuttner argued.

    Jayati Ghosh, an economics professor at the University of Massachusetts Amherst who previously taught at India’s Jawaharlal Nehru University, said in an appearance on Democracy Now! late last week that “the catastrophe in India…is actually a man-made catastrophe, because it really reflects a government that had become casual, irresponsible, and, in fact, actively engaged in superspreader events”—a reference to far-right Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s recent political rallies.

    “I think we haven’t seen the worst of it yet,” warned Ghosh. “It is beyond horror, what is happening. I have friends and colleagues who have died for lack of oxygen. It’s unbelievable, what is happening. Yet, this is not yet the worst. Obviously, what needs to be done as soon as possible is vaccinate as many people as can be done.”

    Ghosh went on to argue that in order to address the “artificial shortage” of vaccine doses around the world, WTO member nations must temporarily suspend vaccine-related intellectual property protections at the WTO and end the pharmaceutical industry’s monopoly control over manufacturing.

    “There is enough production capacity for vaccines in the world today to vaccinate 60% of the population by the end of this year, the global population, if we waive the intellectual property rights and transfer the knowledge for making these vaccines to all the different producers in different parts of the world who are willing to make it,” said Ghosh.

    “It’s actually not just a moral imperative—of course, it is—but it is sensible,” she added. “If you do not contain this virus, you’re going to get these new mutant variants that were talked about, and you will have to have the whole process over again in your own countries. So it’s in the interests of rich country populations to suspend these patents right now.”

    This post was originally published on Radio Free.