Category: Opinion

  • ANALYSIS: By Nicole George, The University of Queensland

    New Caledonia’s capital city, Nouméa, has endured widespread violent rioting over the past three days. This crisis intensified rapidly, taking local authorities by surprise.

    Peaceful protests had been occurring across the country in the preceding weeks as the French National Assembly in Paris deliberated on a constitutional amendment that would increase the territory’s electoral roll.

    As the date for the vote — last Tuesday — grew closer, however, protests became more obstructive and by Monday night had spiralled into uncontrolled violence.

    Since then, countless public buildings, business locations and private dwellings have been subjected to arson. Blockades erected by protesters prevent movement around greater Nouméa.

    Four people have died. Security reinforcements have been deployed, the city is under nightly curfew, and a state of emergency has been declared. Citizens in many areas of Nouméa are now also establishing their own neighbourhood protection militias.

    To understand how this situation has spiralled so quickly, it’s important to consider the complex currents of political and socioeconomic alienation at play.

    The political dispute
    At one level, the crisis is political, reflecting contention over a constitutional vote taken in Paris that will expand citizens’ voting rights. The change adds roughly 25,000 voters to the electoral role in New Caledonia by extending voting rights to French people who have lived on the island for 10 years.

    This reform makes clear the political power that France continues to exercise over the territory.

    The death toll has now increased to four.

    The current changes have proven divisive because they undo provisions in the 1998 Noumea Accord, particularly the restriction of voting rights. The accord was designed to “rebalance” political inequalities so the interests of Indigenous Kanaks and the descendants of French settlers would be equally recognised.

    This helped to consolidate peace between these groups after a long period of conflict in the 1980s, known locally as “les événements”.

    A loyalist group of elected representatives in New Caledonia’s Parliament reject the contemporary significance of “rebalancing” (in French “rééquilibrage”) with regard to the electoral status of Kanak people. They argue after three referendums on the question of New Caledonian independence — held between 2018 and 2021 — all of which produced a majority no vote, the time for electoral reform is well overdue.

    This position is made clear by Nicolas Metzdorf. A key rightwing loyalist, he defined the constitutional amendment, which was passed by the National Assembly in Paris on Tuesday, as a vote for democracy and “universalism”.

    Yet this view is roundly rejected by Kanak pro-independence leaders who say these amendments undermine the political status of Indigenous Kanak people, who constitute a minority of the voting population. These leaders also refuse to accept that the decolonisation agenda has been concluded, as loyalists assert.

    Instead, they dispute the outcome of the final 2021 referendum which, they argue, was forced on the territory by French authorities too soon after the outbreak of the covid pandemic. This disregarded the fact that Kanak communities bore disproportionate impacts of the pandemic and were unable to fully mobilise before the vote.

    Demands that the referendum be delayed were rejected, and many Kanak people abstained as a result.

    In this context, the disputed electoral reforms decided in Paris this week are seen by pro-independence camps as yet another political prescription imposed on Kanak people. A leading figure of one Indigenous Kanak women’s organisation described the vote to me as a solution that pushes “Kanak people into the gutter”, one that would have “us living on our knees”.

    Beyond the politics
    Many political commentators are likening the violence observed in recent days to the political violence of les événements of the 1980s, which exacted a heavy toll on the country. Yet this is disputed by local women leaders with whom I am in conversation, who have encouraged me to look beyond the central political factors in analysing this crisis.

    Some female leaders reject the view this violence is simply an echo of past political grievances. They point to the highly visible wealth disparities in the country.

    These fuel resentment and the profound racial inequalities that deprive Kanak youths of opportunity and contribute to their alienation.

    Women have also told me they are concerned about the unpredictability of the current situation. In the 1980s, violent campaigns were coordinated by Kanak leaders, they tell me. They were organised. They were controlled.

    In contrast, today it is the youth taking the lead and using violence because they feel they have no other choice. There is no coordination. They are acting through frustration and because they feel they have “no other means” to be recognised.

    There is also frustration with political leaders on all sides. Late on Wednesday, Kanak pro-independence political leaders held a press conference. They echoed their loyalist political opponents in condemning the violence and issuing calls for dialogue.

    The leaders made specific calls to the “youths” engaged in the violence to respect the importance of a political process and warned against a logic of vengeance.

    The women civil society leaders I have been speaking to were frustrated by the weakness of this messaging. The women say political leaders on all sides have failed to address the realities faced by Kanak youths.

    They argue if dialogue remains simply focused on the political roots of the dispute, and only involves the same elites that have dominated the debate so far, little will be understood and little will be resolved.

    Likewise, they lament the heaviness of the current “command and control” state security response. It contradicts the calls for dialogue and makes little room for civil society participation of any sort.

    These approaches put a lid on grievances, but they do not resolve them. Women leaders observing the current situation are anguished and heartbroken for their country and its people. They say if the crisis is to be resolved sustainably, the solutions cannot be imposed and the words cannot be empty.

    Instead, they call for the space to be heard and to contribute to a resolution. Until that time they live with anxiety and uncertainty, waiting for the fires to subside, and the smoke currently hanging over a wounded Nouméa to clear.The Conversation

    Dr Nicole George is associate professor in Peace and Conflict Studies, The University of Queensland. This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons licence. Read the original article.

    This post was originally published on Asia Pacific Report.

  • After weeks of hearing the awful changes the Tories have got planned, the Labour Party took to the podium today to announce their pre-election pledges. While there was a lot of talk about Labour’s six pledges for change, there was notably one thing missing – none of the many many speakers mentioned unemployed people and especially not unemployed disabled people. 

    Keir Starmer has said many times he will be the complete opposite of Rishi Sunak and this appears most notably for me to be the case when talking about disabled people and the challenges we face.

    Whilst Sunak and his wet wipe army seem to view us as public enemy number one, disabled people are apparently completely insignificant to Labour.

    A Labour six pledges roadshow about everything but welfare

    In the over an hour-and-a-half roadshow of how a Labour government will transform the lives of working people, those at the bottom rung of the ladder who can’t work weren’t mentioned once.

    Angela Rayner got the show on the road by saying

    People want change and Labour are the only ones who can deliver that. 

    She then set out many different types of people whose back Labour have got. Missing from this, of course, was disabled people and those who couldn’t work.

    Rayner then touted the old chestnut “making work pay for working people”, a phrase which completely ignores anyone who can’t work or might need more support into work.

    Next up came Rachel Reeves, who spoke about tough spending rules and that actually, by being stable and not messing around too much “stability is change”. Which was swiftly followed by a quick run-through of the reforms (changes) Labour will set out. 

    There were reforms on employment rights, reforms on, bizarrely, planning but nothing on reforming the DWP. Of course, we don’t want the cruel reforms that the Tories are putting forward, but a bit of reassurance that Labour would make applying for benefits fairer would’ve been nice.

    Even Miliband couldn’t save the day

    Next, she introduced some people who supported Labour to talk them up. Firstly an ex-Tory donor housebuilder who spoke lavishly about how Labour would build more houses, but there was nothing on easing the social housing backlog.

    They also showed the CEO of Boots talking about the importance of the High Street. I dunno about you, but I’m sure disabled people would love a high street pharmacy where they can access the consultation room and don’t have to get jabs over a bin.

    I need to confess something here- Ed Miliband is my guilty pleasure. I was deep in the Milifandom, I met him at Labour conference a few years ago and was enthralled. That’s why it pained me that Eddie babes also ignored disabled people.

    His focus on green energy is of course good and needed, but there wasn’t anything on people who can’t afford bills who are losing their government support. Ed, like others, mentioned working people, but those who are struggling most with astronomical energy bills are disabled and unemployed people.

    In the crime section, we had nothing on about the rise in disability hate crime, in the schools bit we likewise saw nothing on SEND provision or working to make school life easier for disabled kids.

    We reach the end of the build-up to Starmer Time and I realise we’ve heard nothing on welfare, the cost of living, or carers support.

    Stop! Starmer time!

    When Starmer takes to the stage it’s obvious the persona he’s trying to portray. Sleeves rolled up, no tie, lots of open-handed gestures, talking to the crowd. It’s straight out of the Man of the People handbook. 

    Starmer talks about the human cost of the past 14 years, but by this he apparently means people who are struggling to buy houses or some bizarre analogy about a woman who showed him her bad eye in a service station.

    He doesn’t mean the actual human cost – the untold thousands of disabled people who have died due to Tory cuts and cruelty.

    Overall Starmer’s speech focused on working families and giving them hope, but there was no hope thrown the way of disabled people, especially those who couldn’t work. He closed by saying: 

     This is a message we can take to every doorstep across the country.

    So I hope you’re all prepared to ask them about poverty and disability provision when they come knocking on your doorstep.

    Labour: just as dangerous as the Tories

    In my opinion, this announcement will appeal to the people who are sick of the Tories but who will never fear not being able to put food on their table. It was appeasing and surface-deep, with nothing for those of us who are struggling to stay above the surface.

    Where the Tories have made unemployed disabled people the punching bag, Labour are acting like we don’t exist. And that’s just as dangerous.

    Featured image via Guardian News – YouTube

    By Rachel Charlton-Dailey

    This post was originally published on Canary.

  • Asia Pacific Report

    An open letter to The New Zealand Herald has challenged a full page Zionist advertisement this week for failing to acknowledge the “terrible injustices” suffered by the Palestinian people in Israel’s seven-month genocidal war on Gaza.

    In the latest of several international reports that have condemned genocide against the people of Gaza while the International Court of Justice continues to investigate Israel for a plausible case for genocide, a human rights legal network of US universities has concluded that “Israel has committed genocidal acts of killing” and sought to “bring about the physical destruction of Palestinians in Gaza”.

    The University Network for Human Rights, along with the International Human Rights Clinic at Boston University School of Law, the International Human Rights Clinic at Cornell Law School, the Centre for Human Rights at the University of Pretoria, and the Lowenstein Human Rights Project at Yale Law School, conducted a legal analysis and the 100-page damning report, “Genocide in Gaza: Analysis of International Law and its Application to Israel’s Military Actions since October 7, 2023.”

    The Israeli military have killed more than 35,000 people — mostly women and children — and more than 78,000 people and the UN General Assembly voted by an overwhelming 134-9 votes to back Palestinian statehood on May 11.

    The full page Zionist advertisement in The New Zealand Herald this week
    The full page Zionist advertisement in The New Zealand Herald this week, 14 May 2024. Image: NZH screenshot APR

    In the full page Zionist advertisement in The New Zealand Herald on Tuesday, senior pastor Nigel Woodley of the Flaxmere Christian Fellowship Church in Hastings claimed “the current painful war is another episode in Israel’s history for survival” with no acknowledgement of the massive human cost on Palestinians.

    The open letter by Reverend Chris Sullivan in response — dated the same day but not published by The Herald — says:

    An advertisement in the Herald supports the creation of the State of Israel.

    For the same reasons we should also support the creation of a Palestinian state; don’t Palestinians also deserve their own nation state?

    Just as we decry Hitler’s Holocaust, so too must we raise our voices against the killing of 35,000 people in Gaza (most of them innocent civilians), the destruction of 70 percent of the housing, and imminent famine.

    It is disingenuous to focus solely on the Arab invasions of Israel, without looking at their cause — the killing and ethnic cleansing of Palestinians which accompanied the creation of the modern state of Israel.

    It is never too late for both sides to turn away from violence and war and build a lasting peace, based on mutual respect and a just solution to the terrible injustices the Palestinian people have suffered.

    Rev Chris Sullivan
    Auckland

    This post was originally published on Asia Pacific Report.

  • The following is a comment piece from the Peace and Justice Project

    Wednesday 15 May marks 76 years since the Nakba – literally meaning ‘the catastrophe’ – when 750,000 Palestinians were ethnically cleansed from their native land. This period also saw dozens of massacres, including at Deir Yassin in which over 100 villagers were killed by Israeli paramilitaries.

    The Nakba made stateless refugees of much of the Palestinian people, with the rest living under occupation. In the words of Edward Said, Palestinians “had their lives broken, their spirits drained, their composure destroyed forever in the context of seemingly unending, serial dislocation.”  This is why we must continue fighting for a free Palestine and for the right of return for refugees.

    As Israel’s ongoing destruction of Gaza makes painfully clear, the Nakba never ended – and continues to this day.

    In Gaza, Israel forces have killed over 36,000 people including 14,500 children. The situation is beyond unbearable, with an Israeli assault on Rafah, which now houses the majority of the Strip’s population, expanding. Watch Jeremy Corbyn’s latest Double Down News video on the situation in Gaza:

    Its vital that we continue marching for Palestine: to call on our government to demand an immediate ceasefire and suspend arms export licenses to Israel and demand our cultural institutions cut ties with the financiers of war.

    Please join us at the next National Demonstration this Saturday. Here are the details you need:

    Date: Saturday 18 May
    Time: Assemble 12pm
    Location: BBC Portland Place, W1A:

    We continue to be inspired by people organising in their communities, by students occupying campuses, by Artists Supporting Palestine, and by protesters shutting down arms factories. Our solidarity lives on – we will never give up on the Palestinian people.

    Featured image via Double Down News – YouTube

    By The Canary

    This post was originally published on Canary.

  • COMMENTARY: By Antoinette Lattouf

    Sorry Palestinian women and children. It seems Australia’s leading women’s media company has more pressing issues to cover than the seemingly endless human rights atrocities committed against you.

    It’s been seven months of almost complete silence from Mamamia and their most popular writers and podcast hosts.

    I’ve respected and appreciated their work in the past, which is why it’s truly disheartening to see.

    Mamamia Out Loud has found time and scope to speak about me personally in two recent episodes (both sadly devoid of context and riddled with inaccuracies) yet can’t seem to find the words to report on or reflect on the man made famine in Gaza.

    The murdered and orphaned children. The women having c-sections with no anaesthesia. The haunting screams from mothers hugging their lifeless babies bodies for the last time.

    Faux feminism? Or is it all still “too complex”? I can’t answer that, except to say it’s dispiriting and disappointing to witness given Mamamia’s tagline.

    What we’re talking about
    Because Gaza is what millions of Australian women “are actually talking about”. It’s what’s waking countless Australian women up at night. It’s what’s making Australian women tremble in tears watching children’s body parts dug out from beneath the rubble.

    Mamamia’s audience is being let down, they deserve better.

    As for the innocent women and girls of Palestine — tragically “let down” doesn’t even begin to describe it. They deserve so much more.

    I’m utterly heartbroken witnessing such disregard for their lives.

    So I fixed the Mamamia headline in the above photo.

    Antoinette Lattouf is an Australian-Lebanese journalist, host, author and diversity advocate. She has worked with a range of mainstream media, and as a social commentator for various online and broadcast publications. This commentary was first published on her Facebook page.

    This post was originally published on Asia Pacific Report.

  • The EU has ramped up its assault on refugee rights with its latest sweep of borderisation policies. On Tuesday 14 May, the bloc gave the final greenlight for a broad overhaul of its migration and asylum policies. However, the new EU ‘Migration Pact’ is simply another extension of its racist “fortress Europe” project. Crucially, its colonial undertones were unmistakable amidst platitudes to “help people fleeing persecution”.

    EU Migration Pact

    Across a suite of ten legislative acts, the EU has reformed its framework for asylum and migration. A majority of EU countries backed these, ensuring its passage despite opposition from Hungary and Poland. The overhaul comes into effect from 2026.

    It establishes new border centres that will detain migrants while their asylum requests are vetted. Notably, the new policies will effectively accelerate deportations. Partly, it will do so through new border procedures that categorise asylum seekers. Border officials will use this new system to make quick assessments on applications.

    European politician clamoured to hail the new policies. In one breath German interior minister Nancy Faeser said the reform will help people fleeing persecution, while in the other she said that it will make:

    clear that those who do not need this protection cannot come to Germany or must leave Germany much more quickly

    Unsurprisingly then, migrant and human rights organisations have consistently slammed the EU’s new slapdash approach to asylum applications and migration in general.

    Amnesty EU called the new EU Migration Pact out on X:

    In other words, the new policies will sure up Europe’s racist borders. Meanwhile, more borderisation will put migrant lives at risk. As Amnesty previously highlighted in April:

    For people escaping conflict, persecution, or economic insecurity, these reforms will mean less protection and a greater risk of facing human rights violations across Europe – including illegal and violent pushbacks, arbitrary detention, and discriminatory policing.

    “Final nail in the coffin for human rights”

    The Europe-wide umbrella organisation the Platform for Undocumented Migrants (PICUM) also criticised the EU’s move:

    PICUM has previously articulated the multitude of ways the new EU Migration Pact will endanger migrant rights. Alongside pushing up deportations, the policies will exarcerbate racial profiling, limit access to legal representation, and remove vital safeguards.

    The UK’s Migrant Rights Network – a member of PICUM – has warned this will:

    expand the digital surveillance at Europe’s borders and further embed the mass criminalisation of migrants.

    Specifically, it explained that in practice, this will mean:

    the use of intrusive technology including surveillance and drones, in addition to the mass collection of people’s data which will be exchanged between police forces across the EU. Notably, this includes changes in the Eurodac Regulation. Eurodac is an EU database that stores the fingerprints of “international protection applicants” and migrants who have arrived irregularly.

    This will mandate the systematic collection of migrants’ biometric data including facial images which will be retained in massive databases for up to 10 years. This data can be exchanged at every step of the migration process and made accessible to police forces across the European Union for tracking and identity checks purposes.

    This means biometric identification systems will also be used to track people’s movements.

    Colonial borders

    In parallel with the sweeping reforms, the EU is stepping up its colonial ideology. Specifically, it has been negotiating deals with countries of transit and origin aimed at curbing the number of arrivals. Of course, this entails outsourcing the EU’s borders.

    In recent months, it has inked agreements with Tunisia, Mauritania and Egypt.

    Meanwhile, Italy has also struck its own accord with Albania. This will allow it to send migrants rescued in Italian waters to the country while their asylum requests are processed.

    Furthermore, a group of countries spearheaded by Denmark and the Czech Republic are laying the groundwork for a similar approach. They have been coordinating a letter to the European Commission pushing for the bloc to transfer migrants picked up at sea to countries outside the EU.

    However, Migration Policy Institute Europe Camille Le Coz said that there were “many questions” about how any such initiatives could work.

    Under EU law, immigrants can only be sent to a country outside the bloc where they could have applied for asylum, provided they have a sufficient link with that country.

    That rules out – for now – any programmes such as the UK’s abhorrent Rwanda scheme. Therefore, Le Coz said that it still needs “to be clarified” how proposals for any EU outsourcing deals would work.

    EU Migration Pact: racist apparatus

    Unsurprisingly then, entrenching its hard borders is EU’s answer to people seeking safety and community in Europe. Specifically, the EU originally launched work to reform its migration legislation off the back of the so-called 2015 “refugee crisis”.

    Now, this has culminated in a slate of racist legislation that will put migrants at greater risk of harm. Of course, outsourcing borders and criminalising migrants is entirely on brand with the colonial “fortress Europe” rhetoric.

    Invariably, this has become the intrinsic racist apparatus of colonial nations dodging responsibility for driving violence and displacement across the globe in pursuit of continued capitalist plunder. To the politicians in the halls of power, migrant lives continue to be expendable.

    Additional reporting via Agence France-Presse

    Feature image via Youtube – Channel 4 News

    By Hannah Sharland

    This post was originally published on Canary.

  • When the politics of New Labour finally died it left behind a legacy of inequality, insecurity, slogans, spin over substance or solutions, growing privatisation, failed military interventions, and a social security system that stigmatised single mothers, disabled people, refugees, and the poor and vulnerable as ‘scroungers’.

    Skip to the present day and the neoliberal capture of the Labour Party has given a whole new lease of life to the New Labour relics and their utterly failed dogmas.

    Anti-Tory sentiment is the only thing Starmer has going for him

    Labour is undoubtedly a right-wing political party.

    This isn’t a dig, or even intended to be offensive to the torpid Labour leader, or his supporters that *still* haven’t quite worked out that the only reason their messiah is polling so well is because 80% of the country detest the Tories (blue) with every single fibre of their being.

    The recent local elections weren’t pro-Labour elections, they were anti-Tory ones, and voting for Labour was made just that bit easier by Starmer’s four-year-long impression of a respectable Conservative.

    Britain is traditionally a conservative country. Labour is a right-wing political party that has been infiltrated by Blairite globalists. It’s not beyond the realms of possibility the two might just get along.

    When Tory MPs, Tory councillors, Tory voters, and even Tory donors are giving their constituencies, wards, votes, and millions to Keir Starmer’s Labour Party you know it is utterly indistinguishable from the very enemy it was created to oppose.

    After fourteen years of Tory disasters — austerity, Brexit, and Covid, to name but a few — it wouldn’t be unreasonable to ask Starmer why he is planning to employ Tory policies to deal with the numerous Tory crises he is likely to inherit.

    Labour: the party of literal Tories

    The Labour Party of Attlee, Bevan, Benn and Corbyn is now the Labour Party of Starmer, Streeting, Reeves and erm… Natalie Elphicke, the Tory reject with a thing for ‘stopping the boats’.

    Elphicke — a genuinely nasty piece of work that has built and trashed her reputation upon demonising refugees and aid charities — should feel at home in Starmer’s “changed” Labour Party.

    One Tory MP said of the defection: “I didn’t realise there was any room to her right.” Don’t they realise that the hierarchy of racism that is burning through the soul of the Labour Party has made the duopoly barely distinguishable?

    There’s plenty of room to Elphicke’s right in Labour.

    Come forth Suella, a place in Starmer’s cabinet awaits, once we hand over 100% of the power and the keys to Downing Street because they have been supported by less than a third of those eligible to vote.

    If the subservient and sadly apathetic British were ever to realise the power of the people is considerably greater than the people in power we might actually get somewhere.

    But the British people seem to enjoy being lied to by the elite. They thought Boris Johnson was worth an 80-seat-majority, despite being fully aware of the fact that he is a racist, divisive liar.

    ‘Things Can Only Get’… Umm…

    And it will be no different when the crimson conservative Starmer — he of the ten pledges and countless U-turns — wanders down SW1A 2AA  for the first time as prime minister.

    But this time it won’t be to the ‘Things Can Only Get Better’ song that carries the storyteller Starmer through the famous black door because things are only going to get much worse.

    Imagine a carousel at a fairground. On each beautifully decorated horse sits a fully bought and paid for member of the unscrupulous British ruling class in the guise of a politician.

    Some of the horses are painted in blue, some are painted in red, and if you look carefully enough you might see one or two painted in an orange/yellow colour.

    But each malevolent, self-serving individual that is going round and round on the carousel is from the same right-wing, Israel-centric stock that’s ideological foundations are rooted in the enrichment of the elite at the expense of the poor, disabled people, minorities and working classes.

    As soon as a rider falls off the carousel the British establishment have another rider that is ready to take up the reigns, and the colour of the horse that they are riding quite simply doesn’t matter one single iota to them because the replacement rider, Keir Starmer, is a safe pair of hands for the rich and powerful.

    Starmer: morally repugnant, feeble and unimaginative

    You’ve seen what happens when the wealth of the elite is in danger. At one end of the scale you’ve got Liz Truss. As soon as she started wiping billions off their hoards of cash through sheer incompetence she was out on her ear.

    And then at the other end you’ve got Jeremy Corbyn. A very different type of threat to the one posed by Truss, of course, but after the unexpected success of Corbyn at the 2017 general election there wasn’t a chance in hell the establishment were going to risk him winning the next time around, and that was the end of that.

    Everything now points to the Tory, Keir Starmer, winning the next general election. It might not be the whopping majority being touted by Starmer’s people, but it should be a decent-sized majority that will give Starmer the power he needs to carry on where the Tories left off.

    If you plan to vote for smug Starmer’s feeble and unimaginative fraud of an opposition, don’t be too surprised when they turn out to be just as feeble and unimaginative in power.

    An acquiescent punditocracy and their billionaire string-pullers are preparing for a Labour government. They know the game is up for the Tories, but they also know this morally repugnant incarnation of the Labour Party — funded by big business and the pro-Israel lobby — is no threat to the status quo.

    Sure, the Tories are finished.

    There’s no way back from the dead for them, so celebrate that moment while you can because once the dust has settled the incoming Labour government, armed with no more than spin and slogans, really won’t feel much different to where we are now.

    Featured image via Rachael Swindon

    By Rachael Swindon

    This post was originally published on Canary.

  • As expected after an embarrassing time at the polls, the Tories were back to take it out on disabled people this week. The human wet wipe, the DWP’s Mel Stride, has been gurning in the press again about how his “plan is working”. This time, he was launching the WorkWell programme.

    The human wet wipe: dealing in miracles

    The initiative apparently aims to help people recover from long-term sickness, cos ole Stridey Boy deals in miracles now as well as bullshit. 

    He told Sky News:

    “what I want to do is get in there early and bring together both healthcare support and critically also work coach support so that we can keep people in work rather than out of work… as part of their recovery” 

    He once again cited mental health, because long-term depression is something that can definitely be cured by forcing someone into work. He also weirdly said GPs can refer people to the service, which is funny because last week he didn’t trust them to determine whether someone was sick enough to get a fit note.

    But as is often the case, the blustering on TV didn’t even tell us half the story, and was nowhere near as funny as when Wet Wipe (WW) launched it on Twitter.

    The DWP stealing my jokes. Whatever next?

    In cringe the likes we haven’t seen since Pursglove donned his stabvest, we saw WW practising for his new role of Uber driver.

    “Join me on the road for the next generation of welfare reforms” he shouted.

    Hang on – this sounds familiar… “we’ll be making a few stops along the way” No surely not?

    The DWP are stealing my jokes???

    The reason it sounded so familiar was that last week I started my column with “all aboard the hating disabled people bus” – little did I know that the DWP were going to take inspiration from it. 

    The thing is though, Stride has clearly never taken a bus in his life, so instead it becomes a zippy little black car, but the message is the same. 

    In my piece, I said we’d already had stops along the way such as “Doctor’s can’t be trusted to write sicknotes” lane and sure enough WW is going “full throttle” towards what appears to be a fitnotes layby.

    WorkWell. A contradiction in terms if ever there was one.

    So what is WorkWell? Basically as far as I can tell it’s a scheme ran by the DWP where instead of supporting disabled people who can’t work they’ll pass you around to other services.

    Instead of giving people the Universal Credit they need to survive and allowing them to focus on their health, the DWP is going to cure their chronic conditions – with a life-changing four whole physio sessions and a meeting with a counsellor.

    But that’s not all! You’ll also get referred to Citizens Advice for financial advice where you can ask questions as ‘how do I pay my bills when the government aren’t supporting me to look after my health or helping me get back into work’. 

    But wait! There’s more!

    You’ll also be socially prescribed a support group for loneliness where you can all discuss how you have no money to feed yourself and the government wants you dead.

    Of course, this is once again just another example of how out of touch the government are. They’re investing £64m into WorkWell but there’s no mention of extra funding for the NHS or local services to support them with the influx of disabled people accessing their services.

    Mel Stride: the cruellest of them all

    The announcement was so popular that despite being viewed over 225 THOUSAND times, the tweet has just 69 likes. Surely they can’t still think the public supports them?

    The government wants us to believe they don’t know that people don’t recover from disabilities and chronic conditions with four sessions of therapy. In reality, it’s much more sinister than that.

    The DWP know how much damage they are doing to disabled people and the community, DDPOs and even the bloody UN have been telling them for long enough

    But we don’t matter to them. Disabled people are subhuman to Tories and they would prefer we were all dead. And old wet wipe Mel Stride, well he’s the cruellest of them all. 

    The man deserves a life as miserable as what he’s reducing disabled people to, but I’ll settle for him crying in a sports hall when he loses his parliamentary seat.

    Featured image via the Canary

    By Rachel Charlton-Dailey

    This post was originally published on Canary.

  • On Sunday 12 May, Catalan elections will be held to choose the government of Catalonia. Yet already Spain’s president Sánchez is trying to manipulate voters to avoid any victory by pro-independence Puigdemont and his allies.

    Catalan elections: independence parties were already on the rise

    Four years ago, Catalan pro-independence parties won with 52% of the votes and 55% of the seats. A Catalan pro-independence government of ERC and JUNTS was formed with the support of the CUP. But different strategies in the face of constant Spanish judicial repression meant that ERC was left alone in the government.

    In these Catalan elections, the situation is totally different, because the result of the last Spanish elections has forced the PSOE to make a pact with JUNTS so that its seven votes would contribute to the investiture of President Pedro Sánchez.

    This has forced him to accept an amnesty law with which, soon, all those persecuted by the “lawfare” (judicial warfare using fraudulently the law) of the Spanish justice system will be free of any accusation.

    Among them, the Catalan president Carles Puigdemont, who in 2017 organised the referendum on self-determination, was illegally deposed by the Spanish government and had to go into exile in Belgium to avoid being unjustly imprisoned.

    Puigdemont is back

    At the beginning of this election campaign, the PSC (the Catalan PSOE) was leading the polls because the majority of the non-independence vote is concentrated in this party. A little further behind were the two big pro-independence parties, ERC and JUNTS.

    But then Puigdemont announced that he was standing as a candidate and that he would return triumphantly to Spain for the investiture with the protection of the amnesty he has managed to wrest from Spain. Then voting intentions began to shift towards JUNTS and closer and closer to the PSC.

    The thing is that Puigdemont is the number one enemy of Spanish nationalism and arouses great fear in Spain, because he represents insubordination to the state and has not been able to be subdued. This is why, at the start of the election campaign, Pedro Sánchez surprised everyone with a reckless and disturbing juggling act.

    Sánchez: manipulating the voters

    Without warning, he published a letter on social media announcing that he was very upset with the extreme right because his wife was accused of corruption. And he announced that he was giving himself five days to reflect on whether he should leave the presidency.

    Sánchez had always denied the claims of the pro-independence movement that they had been victims of “lawfare”, with the mantra that Spain is a state governed by the rule of law. But now he has acknowledged that, in Spain, judicial dirty war is being practised.

    The country was left on the edge of the precipice, waiting for the president’s decision.

    After five days he affirmed that he would continue and, taking advantage of the state of shock, tried to call on his followers to vote in the Catalan elections with the justification of demonstrating to the extreme right that Pedro Sánchez has the support of the people.

    With this manipulative strategy, Sánchez managed to increase the PSC’s voting intentions and stay ahead of Puigdemont.

    Catalan elections will be a litmus test

    But as the elections approach, it seems that this trend of PSC growth has stalled and, on the other hand, the pro-independence electorate is concentrating its vote on Puigdemont.

    We shall see who ends up winning.

    In any case, even if Puigdemont does not come out on top, it is possible that he will be the only one to obtain a majority to be invested as president of Catalonia.

    In this case: how will Spain react to a person it has persecuted so viscerally? Will it respect the will expressed at the ballot box or will it give free rein to its repressive nationalism?

    Featured image via Albert Salamé

    By Jordi Oriola Folch

    This post was originally published on Canary.

  • In the past couple of weeks, the Department for Work and Pensions (DWP) boss Mel Stride has lied not once, but twice about disabled people’s benefits – specifically, PIP. Naturally, the DWP boss that the Canary’s Rachel Charlton-Dailey has aptly branded a “human wet wipe” now refuses to apologise. Of course, it’s just another day in the life of ableist Tory scapegoat politics.

    DWP boss lying through his teeth

    First, in an interview with the BBC on 29 April, Stride claimed that those accessing the disability benefit Personal Independence Payment (PIP) get “thousands of pounds a month”.

    However, people were quick to point out across X that the claim was verifiably bullshit. In fact, the highest amount people can actually receive on PIP is a measly £798.63 a month.

    On top of this, the DWP gives many claimants much less than this, as a poster on X highlighted:

     

    Yet, why would a Tory hell-bent on demonising disabled people concern himself over a small thing like the facts?

    What’s more, people on X slammed his hypocrisy when the duplicitous secretary himself claims thousands on MP expenses:

    More to the point, PIP is about making the cost of living equitable – or in other words, attempting to somewhat level the playing field for disabled people financially. Disability activist Paula Peters underscored this:

    Ultimately, Stride wasn’t worried about the truth. Benefits costing the taxpayer “thousands a month”? His goal is visibly to whip up hatred towards disabled people.

    So why stop there?

    Well naturally, he didn’t.

    Spinning a web of untruths

    Stride followed up this bare-faced lie with another. Disability News Service (DNS) picked up that during the same interview, he:

    also told the BBC on Tuesday that PIP was “a benefit that has not been reviewed for over a decade”.

    This was also untrue. There were two high-profile independent reviews of PIP, with the first published in 2014 and the second reporting in 2017, just seven years ago.

    So once again, Stride was caught out spinning his web of untruths. Ostensibly, the only thing with more holes than his BBC interview was the social security safety net he’s been carping on about.

    His fallacious comments to the BBC come amid the DWP’s rancid plans to scrap PIP for a voucher scheme.

    For more on why that’s an astoundingly terrible and vile idea, you can read the Charlton-Dailey’s scathing take-down here. But in short, it’s the Tory’s latest diabolical proposal to punch down on disabled people.

    Pitching to his ableist voter base

    Predictably, Stride has made no apologies for his falsehoods. As DNS reported:

    When approached about the two comments, DWP only responded to the first one, claiming that Stride “misspoke” and had meant to say “thousands of pounds a year”, which he said during other interviews that morning.

    The department refused to explain why he had wrongly claimed there had been no review of PIP for over a decade, and refused to say if Stride would apologise for either statement.

    Naturally, these weren’t his first offences. DNS also pointed out that:

    It took him just six days after he was appointed in 2022 to claim wrongly that there were 2.5 million people who were “long term sick” and “economically inactive” and who wanted to work.

    In fact, the Office for National Statistics figures he was quoting did say there were 2.49 million working-age people who were economically inactive and described themselves as “long term sick” in the latest quarter of that year (June to August 2022), but those figures also showed that only 581,000 (23 per cent) of this group wanted a job.

    So essentially, Stride has been a serial liar on television interviews since he took up the role. He could walk back these missteps, but ultimately of course, the damage is done.

    At the end of the day, his lies and glaring lack of apology either suggests the latest DWP incarnation of evil shitfuckery doesn’t know his brief.

    Or, more likely, he’s deliberately dishing out deceit to drum up support from the Tories’ racist, ableist, classist gammon voter base.

    My money – including every paltry penny of my PIP – is on the latter.

    Featured image via Sky News – YouTube

    By Hannah Sharland

    This post was originally published on Canary.

  • As the Canary previously reported, last December Neil Goodwin did a one-man protest outside the Carriage Gates of the Houses of Parliament, in his mime character of Charlie X – in horror at Israel’s atrocities in Gaza.

    He was arrested, bizarrely as Bella Ciao, the Italian anti-fascist classic, belted out from a nearby protest sound system, to be beautifully recorded on the arresting officer’s body cam:

    Up before the beak

    Then, on Wednesday 1 May – workers solidarity day and of course the ancient festival of Beltane – Neil went before the beak.

    He had one witness: impeccably besuited, silver-haired videographer Paul, who bears an uncanny likeness to the late and beloved journalist Paul Foot.

    Charged with obstruction and failure to obey a lawful instruction under the oxymoronically named Police Reform and Social Responsibility Act, Neil stood his ground, metaphorically coz he can’t walk.

    Beltane mayhem wafted through the stifling court. ‘Your name’s not on the list, proceed to court 3.’ ‘Your name’s not on the list because it’s a different court.’ ‘Oh you can’t get in the other court in a wheelchair. So the judge, the clerk, the cop, and the CPS will all come to you.’ Neil is a magic man.

    The British government: complicit with Israel

    The judge was strict, with a shimmer of kindness.

    The CPS prosecutor gamely made his case, though with some weird swerves:

    Why didn’t you go to the Israeli embassy?

    Neil:

    It’s scary there, and the disabled facilities at Westminster are pretty good. My protest was also against the British Government for failing to call a ceasefire and for facilitating arms exports.

    The tech failed, so the CPS had to show their footage of Neil’s arrest twice on laptop, once to the cop and once to the judge.

    Bella Ciao reverberated through the room. I could barely contain my chuckle at this beautiful juxtaposition.

    ‘What has Guernica got to do with this? Why have you got a picture of your grandparents?’ demanded the judge. Bombs, Nazis, war crimes, the Blitz, refugees, horrors of war, Neil got it all in there.

    Neil’s closing argument (self representing with the excellent assistance of a Green and Black Cross McKenzie Friend, a lovely woman called Ruth) a powerful and tearful testimony of murdered and maimed children which compelled him to act.

    Synchronicity

    To target the British government on a Wednesday during Prime Minister’s Questions to achieve maximum newsworthiness – hoping to draw press and public attention to war crimes being committed in Gaza with the compliance and cooperation of the UK state.

    Adjourned for lunch, we stepped and wheeled out of the court, to find Palestinian flags waving in the wind, held aloft by two women. Neil whipped out his home made Palestine/Guernica placard and joined the photo opportunity.

    After some confusion, it became apparent they were there to show solidarity with another woman, a young student, charged with criminal damage against war profiteers Lockheed Martin, as part of a Palestine Action group. Of course it transpired that the lovely Ruth of Green and Black Cross was also to attend this trial in support.

    What amazing synchronicity we all agreed.

    Hastily scoffing hot paninis we returned for the Judgement.

    A heartfelt act of solidarity

    Barely begun, our new comrades unexpectedly joined us in the public gallery as their case was inexplicably adjourned.

    Her honour continued, she agreed with the law, the instruction was lawful, case lost we thought.

    She laboured on through the various aspects of the defence, demolishing every one. Until the last, lawful excuse and proportionality. Was it proportionate to find Neil guilty of a criminal offence? We waited for the hammer to fall.

    And then:

    The CPS and the Police have failed to prove that there was any detrimental impact to anybody, therefore, the case is dismissed.

    Hushed, astonished, and gleeful glances exchanged, we could barely believe it.

    Neil, cheeky Charlie Chappy that he is, pipes up:

    Judge, can you please say the words not guilty?

    The judge obliges:

    As I have just explained, the lack of evidence leads me to say the case is dismissed [a little smirk, the aforementioned shimmer is shining now] in other words you are NOT GUILTY! And by the way, no need for receipts, we’ll send you a cheque for your travel expenses.

    Unfuckingbelievably, this happened on Mayday 2024.

    We posed again for photos outside, whilst we all understand this is a little victory in the face of such atrocities, it is a victory nonetheless. A glimmer of hope for good people of conscience who stand up, and a heartfelt act of solidarity from us, the little people – because what else can we do?

    Featured image via Saskia Kent

    By Saskia Kent

    This post was originally published on Canary.

  • The pariah state of Israel is planning to launch a full-scale ground invasion of Rafah. This could well be its most disturbing and violent act of aggression since the beginning of the Gaza genocide.

    Israel: monsters supported by monsters

    Even little desperate-to-be-relevant Britain, forever devoted to the Zionist ideology, warned of the “potentially devastating consequences for the civilian population of an expanded Israeli military operation in Rafah”, should the genocidal maniac Netanyahu pursue this desperately dangerous course of action.

    But what Britain must realise is the very real fact that it has not just supported Israel’s 210-day-long campaign of ethnic cleansing and genocide, but also the 76 years of ethnic cleansing and genocide that preceded it.

    A few platitudes and the most tremulous of criticisms from the Foreign Office simply isn’t going to wash away the blood of 14,000 Palestinian children from Britain’s moral conscience, as eroded as it may already be.

    The British political elite — fronted by Zionists, for the benefit of Zionism —  and its unswerving and often sycophantic support for the United States of Israel, have comfortably secured their place in history.

    The best the Conservative/Labour duopoly can hope for is being remembered as the monsters who looked away and allowed this unspeakable evil of Gaza to continue.

    Rafah: on the brink

    Around 1.7 million people are currently living in Rafah. Many are living under no more than a piece of canvas while Israeli bombs continue to pound the surrounding area with zero fucks given for international law.

    People lack food, sanitation, water, adequate shelter, and healthcare and have had their suffering compounded by a heatwave, which has seen temperatures exceed an unbearable 40 degrees Celsius (104 degrees Fahrenheit).

    Just seven years ago, Rafah was home to 171,000 people. Now, an area around half of the size of Luton has seen its population increase ten-fold because of the genocide. This would be unsustainable in ‘normal’ times.

    Who in their right mind would think sending in one of the best-equipped military forces in the world into the tent city of Rafah — Gaza’s last place of refuge — to obliterate anyone and anything that moves would be anything other than one of the gravest acts of evil that we have ever witnessed?

    By any means necessary

    Gaza’s fate beyond any Israeli assault on Rafah still remains unknown. The ultra-Zionist extremists claim they have thousands of colonial settlers ready to move into Gaza and build new settlements on top of the children’s graveyard created by Netanyahu and his TikTok terrorist military.

    They must be stopped by any means necessary. Diplomatic or militarily, they must be stopped from completing the Israeli ethnic cleansing project.

    The 75,000 tonnes of bombs that have devastated and destroyed Gaza over the last six months has caused a massive 37 million tonnes of debris and rubble. This will take at least 14 years to clear.

    Gaza has more rubble on the ground than Ukraine and to put that in perspective, the Ukrainian front line is 600 miles long and Gaza is 25 miles long. Where is the outrage of the Zelensky fan club, or does this 21st century Nazism strike a chord with them?

    While the costs to rebuild Gaza will be north of $20 billion, it’s still nowhere near the £37 billion the Tories gifted to Dido Harding and scamming Serco to run Britain’s hugely embarrassing and not-fit-for-purpose Covid-19 test and trace system for two years.

    US students daring to give a voice to the voiceless

    I spent a bit of time today catching up with the videos of fascist US police officers beating the living shit out of university students that had gathered at the Gaza solidarity encampments.

    If only America put just as much effort into restraining the colonial outpost of Israel — the perfect child that it has fathered for the past 25 years — as it has done into pepper spraying and brutalising young American students for having the temerity to give a voice to the voiceless.

    If the Zionist fart sucker, Donald Trump, describes the scenes of utter carnage and brutality as “beautiful”, you know the American authorities have gone way too far when shooting students with often-deadly rubber bullets is an easier option than holding Israel accountable for its grotesque genocide.

    Is it not quite staggering how the American political elite and the Zionist-dominated global media are more outraged by these anti-genocide protests than they are by the actual genocide itself?

    The IHRA definition has always been catastrophic

    You can’t even get a state contract in 37 states of America unless you are willing to pledge allegiance to Israel. What kind of madness is this?

    Israel is a racist endeavour, and no amount of crying over the IHRA definition of antisemitism will ever change that. Why would anyone pledge allegiance to a far-right, genocidal bunch of extremist god botherers?

    The IHRA definition has always posed catastrophic risks for the human rights of the Palestinian people, and for the right to freedom of expression globally. Time and time again it has been instrumentalised to suppress entirely legitimate criticism of the extremist Israeli government’s policies by falsely labeling it antisemitic.

    No amount of “but Corbyn”, or “you’re a Khamas-loving antisemite” will be able to even begin to cover up the mass murder and the colonial ethnic cleansing project. The grotesque weaponisation of the evil of antisemitism will no longer be tolerated. We will not be lectured by victim-card-waving virulent racists with a thing for killing babies.

    Where has that solemn lesson gone?

    The merciless brutality of the Israeli aggression has opened up millions of eyes around the world to the heartbreaking man-made suffering of the Palestinian people.

    The horrors of the 20th century were supposed to serve as a solemn lesson to humanity of just how far unbridled evil can and will go when the world fails to confront it head on.

    Thousands upon thousands of dead Palestinians cannot cry out for justice. It is a duty of the living to do so for them, and by god, we will, because the history of liberty is a history of resistance.

    On a personal note, thank you for all of your kind messages about my new weekly column for the Canary. Your support and advice is always appreciated.

    But I do need to tell you… we have got something ABSOLUTELY HUGE coming your way, sooner rather than later, and you will read it here first, exclusively for the Canary.

    Featured image via Rachael Swindon

    By Rachael Swindon

    This post was originally published on Canary.

  • By David Robie, convenor of Pacific Media Watch

    Along with the devastating death toll – now almost 35,000 people, hundreds of aid workers and hundreds of medical staff have been killed in the genocidal Israeli war on Gaza — journalists have also paid a terrible price.

    By far the worst of any war.

    In Vietnam, 63 journalists were killed in two decades.

    The Second World War was worse, with 67 journalists killed in seven years.

    But now in the war on Gaza, we have had 143 journalists killed in seven months.

    That’s the death toll according to Al Jazeera and the Gaza Media Office. (Western media freedom monitoring usually cite a lower figure, around the 100 plus mark, but I the higher figure is more accurate).

    And these journalists — sometimes their whole families as well – have been deliberately targeted by the Israeli “Offensive” Force – I call it “offensive” rather than what it claims to be, defensive (IDF).

    Kill off journalists
    Assassination by design. Clearly the Israeli policy has been to kill off the journalists, silence the messengers, whenever they can.

    Try to stifle the truth getting out about their war crimes, their crimes against humanity.

    But it has failed. Just like the humanity of the people of Gaza has inspired the world, so have the journalists.

    Their commitment to truth and justice and to telling the world their horrendous story has been an exemplary tale of bravery and courage in the face of unspeakable horror.

    But there has been a glimmer of hope in spite of the gloom. On Friday — on World Press Freedom Day, May 3 — UNESCO, the United Nations cultural agency, awarded all Palestinian journalists covering the war in Gaza the annual Guillermo Cano Award for media freedom.

    This award is named in honour of Guillermo Cano Isaza, a Colombian investigative journalist who was assassinated in front of the offices of his newspaper El Espectador in Bogotá, Colombia on 17 December 1986.

    Announcing the Gaza award in the capital of Chile, Santiago, in an incredibly emotional ceremony, Mauricio Weibel, chair of the international jury of media professionals, declared:

    “In these times of darkness and hopelessness, we wish to share a strong message of solidarity and recognition to those Palestinian journalists who are covering this crisis in such dramatic circumstances.

    “As humanity, we have a huge debt to their courage and commitment to freedom of expression.”

    Ultimate price
    For those of us who watch Al Jazeera every day to keep up with developments in Palestine and around the world — and thank goodness we have had that on Freeview to balance the pathetic New Zealand media coverage — I would like to acknowledge some of their journalists who have paid the ultimate price.

    First, I would like to acknowledge the assassination of American-Palestinian Shireen Abu Akleh, who was murdered by Israeli military sniper while reporting on an army raid on the Jenin refugee camp in the West Bank on 11 May 2022.

    Al Jazeera journalist Shireen Abu Akleh
    Al Jazeera journalist Shireen Abu Akleh . . . killed by an Israeli sniper in 2022 with impunity. Image:

    A year later there was still no justice, and the Paris-based media freedom watchdog Reporters Without Borders issued a protest, saying:

    “The systematic Israeli impunity is outrageous and cannot continue.”

    Well it did, right until the war on Gaza began five months later.

    But I am citing this here and now because Shireen’s sacrifice has been a personal influence on me, and inspired me to take a closer look into Israel’s history of impunity over the killing of journalists — and just about every other crime. (It has violated 62 United Nations resolutions without consequences).

    I have this photo of her on display in my office, thanks to the Palestinian Youth Aotearoa, and she constantly reminds me of the cruelty and lies of the Israeli regime.

    Now moving to the present war, last December, Al Jazeera’s Gaza bureau chief Wael Dahdouh was wounded in an Israeli strike in which his colleague and Al Jazeera Arabic’s cameraman Samer Abudaqa was killed, while they were reporting in southern Gaza.

    Dahdouh’s wife Amna, son Mahmoud, daughter Sham and grandson Adam were previously killed in an attack in October after an Israeli air raid hit the home they were sheltering in at the Nuseirat refugee camp.

    Then the veteran journalist’s eldest son, Hamza Dahdouh, also an Al Jazeera journalist, was killed in January by an Israeli missile attack in Khan Younis, southern Gaza.

    News media reports said he was in a vehicle near al-Mawasi, an Israel-designated safe area, with journalist Mustafa Thuraya, who was also killed in the attack.

    According to reports from Al Jazeera correspondents, their vehicle was targeted as they were trying to interview civilians displaced by previous bombings.

    In February, Mohamed Yaghi, a freelance photojournalist who worked with multiple media outlets, including Al Jazeera, was also killed in an Israeli air strike in Deir el-Balah, central Gaza.

    Al Jazeera’s Gaza offices in a multistoreyed building were bombed two years ago, just as many Palestinian media offices have been systematically destroyed by the Israelis in the current war.

    Last month, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu branded Al Jazeera as a “terrorist channel”. Why? Because it broadcasts the truth about Israel’s genocidal war and Netanyahu threatened to ban the channel from Israel under a new law to control foreign media.

    Today, a month after that threat, Netanyahu has today followed up after his cabinet voted unanimously to order Al Jazeera to close down operations in Israel, which will curb the channel’s reporting on the daily Israeli harassment and raids on the Palestinians of the Occupied West Bank.

    And this is the country that proclaims itself to be the “only democracy” in the Middle East.

    Many of the surviving Gaza journalists are very young with limited professional experience.
    They have had to learn fast, a baptism by fire.

    I would like to round off with a quote from one of these young journalists, Hind Khoudary, a 28-year-old reporter for Al Jazeera since day one of the war, who used to sign on her social media reports for the day “I’m still alive”:

    “I am a daughter, a sister to eight brothers, and a wife.

    “Choosing to stay here is a choice to witness and report on the unbearable reality my city endures. Forced from my home, alongside countless Palestinians, we strive for the basics – clean food and water – without transportation or electricity.

    “I am not a superhero; I am shattered from the inside. The loss of relatives, friends, and colleagues weighs heavy on my soul. Israeli forces ravaged my city, reducing homes to rubble. [Thousands of] civilians still lie beneath the remnants.

    “My heart is aching, and my spirit is fragile. Since October 7, journalists have been targets; Israel seeks to stifle our voices.

    “I miss my family.

    “But surrender is not an option. I will continue to report, to breathe life into the stories of my people until my last breath. Please, do not let the world forget Palestine. We are weary, and your voice is our strength.

    “Remember our voices, remember our faces.”

    Pacific Media Watch convenor Dr David Robie delivering a speech on media freedom
    Pacific Media Watch convenor Dr David Robie delivering a speech on media freedom at the Palestinian rally at Auckland today. Image: Del Abcede/Pacific Media Watch

    This article is adapted from a media freedom speech by Pacific Media Watch convenor Dr David Robie at the Palestine rally today calling for an immediate ceasefire in the Gaza war.

    This post was originally published on Asia Pacific Report.

  • The compromised former top boss of the Australian civil service has the lick and smell of belligerence.  Begrudgingly conceding error and when in office, a bully and meddler in party politics, an incessant advocate of threats visible and invisible, Mike Pezzulo switches into a warmonger’s gear with ease.

    The former secretary of the Department of Home Affairs was sacked last November after revelations that he had used WhatsApp to communicate with abandon with former New South Wales Liberal Party deputy director Scott Briggs.  Those messages, unearthed in a joint investigation by The Age, The Sydney Morning Herald and 60 Minutes, confirmed what many already knew: Pezzullo’s voracious appetite for meddling in the party politics of the Coalition government while denigrating fellow public servants and a number of politicians.

    In August 2018, for instance, Pezzullo offered Briggs his gamey views ahead of the Liberal Party revolt that would see the overthrow of Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull.  “I don’t want to interfere but you won’t be surprised to hear that in the event of Scomo [Scott Morrison] getting up I would like to see [Peter] Dutton come back to HA [Home Affairs].  No reason for him to stay on the backbench that I can see.”

    An inquiry into his conduct led by Lynelle Briggs found Pezzullo in breach of the Public Service Code of Conduct on various grounds.  14 breaches were identified from five broader allegations, including failures to maintain confidentiality regarding sensitive government information, maintain an apolitical stance, and disclosing a conflict of interest. Most fundamentally, he had misused his office and standing to benefit or advantage himself.

    Last month heralded his return to the public arena, tinged by a sense of desperation that he wants to be taken seriously again.  On the ABC’s 7.30 program, he admitted to making “mistakes” and accepted “the finding that no matter how rough and tumble there is in a place like Canberra, that the gaining of influence and the personal advantage to be gained by way of certain channels of communication, whether it’s to the prime minister or anyone else, crosses the line in terms of conduct.”  Showing the mildest contrition, Pezzullo claimed he had “paid a price.”  Hardly.

    With such preliminaries out of the way, he could return to one of his favourite pass-times: warning about the Yellow-Red threat emanating from Australia’s north.  He accepted that the prospect of a war with China was “actually quite low [but] the consequences would be significant and indeed catastrophic.”  A meaningless percentage of such an eventuality was plucked out of thin air: 10 per cent.  Notwithstanding that statistic of potential conflict, it was “meaningful enough to plan for and indeed to be concerned about.”

    Focus, he insisted, should be directed to the dangers of cyber and cognitive warfare. Cyber and critical infrastructure were “vulnerable” to malware threats that could burgeon in the event of a conflict.  Concerns held by FBI director Christopher Wray were cited (unsurprising – Pezzullo habitually fawns before the US national security state): “that there is malware implanted in both US and allied networks, which is specifically designed to be activated in the lead up to, or at the outset of, a conflict.”

    Dusted off, this Manchurian candidate vision of the world, with its hibernating potency, has been repurposed as a threat against the critical infrastructure.  “Director Wray has talked about the low blows that would be visited on the population at large … taking down hospitals, electricity grids, and the like.”

    Close attention should be paid to the disfiguring way Pezzullo uses history.  When he was Canberra’s most powerful (un)civil servant, he liberally offered gobbets of historical readings that were hopelessly out of context.  Pezzulo has that charming sub-literate Wikipedia knowledge of the world that makes him tolerable in the company of other sub-literates.  As Home Secretary, he was not shy in spouting febrile nonsense about such topics as, “The prospect of Great Power War” that he claimed would “approach, but not reach, a level of probability”, or the use of chemical, biological, radiological or nuclear weapons by actors that were not “readily identifiable”.

    Such views were expressed in an address to the Australian Strategic Policy Institute in 2019, alongside those fears that have become boringly recycled for endless consumption: “the deliberate subversion of our democratic institutions and our social cohesion”; “the world’s ungoverned and dangerous territories”; “radical extremist Islamist terrorism”; and “transnational, serious and organised crime” of the “globalised” variety.

    His 2021 ANZAC Day address made no secret of his lust for conflict, masquerading, as ever, under the cover of peaceful intentions.  “Today, as free nations again hear the beating drums and watch worryingly the militarisation of issues that we had, until recent years, thought unlikely to be catalysts for war, let us continue to search unceasingly for the chance for peace while bracing again, yet again, for the curse of war”.  The speech was notable for mangling the legacies of two US generals: Douglas MacArthur and Dwight D. Eisenhower.  Fascinatingly enough, Pezzullo omits mentioning the sacking of MacArthur by President Henry S. Truman for exceeding his brief in wishing to bomb China during the Korean War, with atomic weapons, if need be.

    As long as Sinophobic nonsense growls and barks in Canberra, most of it under the close, cultivating eyes of US-funded think tanks, political converts to empire and the Pentagon itself, this demagogic eunuch will have an audience.

    The post Pezzullo: The Warmonger Who Won’t Go Away first appeared on Dissident Voice.

    This post was originally published on Dissident Voice.

  • I go on trial at Westminster Magistrate’s Court on May Day, having been nicked protesting the genocide in Gaza, blocking the entrance to parliament dressed as Charlie Chaplin.

    This is what I hope to tell the judge.

    Gaza protest: Why I did what I did

    I had been feeling increasingly distressed by the tragic events unfolding in Gaza. Israel, with one of the most sophisticated arsenals and surveillance systems in the world, had launched a sustained attack against one of the poorest and most densely populated places on Earth, indiscriminately firing on defenceless and innocent people, many of whom were children.

    Cutting off all water and electricity from 2 million people as a form of collective punishment. Using disturbing language to describe the Palestinians, such as likening them to, ‘human animals’. Ordering more than a million people, 80% of the population, to evacuate their homes within 24-hours before a barrage of near ceaseless bombing would begin.

    A million people on the move in one day. Too many with just the clothes on their backs and a couple of carrier bags. Ordered to walk to one spot, Rafah, nearly 20 miles from Gaza City, where apparently it would be safe.

    Hope and sanity seemed to be draining from the world, so I welcomed the ceasefire vote in parliament. But MPs voted 293 to 125 to reject the call. With the vast majority of MPs not even bothering to show up.

    The final straw for me was seeing a video on LBC, three days before my Gaza protest. Headed, ‘They’re bombing the bit they told people to go to,’ a reference to Rafah. They were actually bombing the safe haven.

    Amnesty International said that at least 95 civilians, nearly half of them children, had been killed in four rocket strikes.

    This was not Israel defending itself or trying to rescue hostages. LBC’s James O’Brien said it well, ‘You can’t call it anything other than a massacre now. And you can’t justify it, frankly, on any level, unless you are prepared to accept the untold killing of innocent people, in the spurious pursuit of the guilty,’ he said, spurring me into action.

    Mime activism: What I did

    I arrived at Westminster on Wednesday 6 December, around the time PMQs would have been finishing up. The busiest time for both Parliament and the media who report on it. I positioned my mobility scooter outside the Carriage Entrance. My plan was to attract a swarm of police officers and elevate my protest to news-worthy-ness, and I’d do it dressed as Charlie Chaplin, with the hat and tails and full make-up:

    For 18 years, I have inhabited a character that I have called Charlie X, a form of mime activism based on Chaplin’s the Little Tramp.

    I held aloft a placard showing a powerful image of a young Israeli boy, and Palestinian girl tending a sapling, that was growing amidst the rubble. I’d added the words ‘Peace’.. ‘Shalom’ in Hebrew, and ‘Salaam’ in Arabic:

    Disabled solidarity with music and art

    40% of Gaza’s population is aged 14 and below. Save The Children says there’s about 610,000 children, or one for every 2 adults. That’s tens of thousands of babies, tens of thousands of toddlers, tens of thousands of kids of primary school age. Children trying to survive devastating injuries sustained in airstrikes and sniper attacks, their stories painting a harrowing picture of the human consequences of Israel’s prolonged hateful indiscriminate onslaught.

    I’m disabled, but enjoy the support of family, friends and the NHS, so I can’t imagine how difficult it must be for a crippled toddler to survive the extreme trauma of terrible excruciating injuries? An estimated one thousand children in Gaza have become amputees since October 2023, have lost one or more limbs, often operated on without the use of anaesthetic, with no family, and no health service. A child who has to somehow survive their wounds on the streets of Gaza, with 24 bombed hospitals and 400 murdered healthcare professionals.

    On the back of my placard was a little music box that played ‘Hey Jude’, when you turned the handle, it chimes, ‘Take a sad song and make it better.’ There is nowhere sadder than Gaza right now.

    I also held a large sign showing a section of Picasso’s powerful painting ‘Guernica’, depicting the bombing of a Spanish market town in 1937. One of the first acts of genocide committed by the Nazis. Someone had filled it in with Palestine’s national colours, drawing a direct link to the bombing of Gaza:

    Never again: from the Blitz to the Nakba

    In one corner I had added in a Remembrance Day poppy to connect to Britain’s experience of war. My Great Grandparents were bombed out twice during the Second World War. The family archive has this newspaper clipping that says, ‘BOMBED OUT TWICE – Now couple celebrate diamond wedding’

    Their son, my grandfather, was in the fire service, stationed at Lewisham. He never spoke about his wartime experiences, but it must have been extremely tough. He was probably on duty in July ‘44, when Lewisham market, was bombed, destroying a Marks and Spencer’s, killing 59 people, and seriously injuring hundreds of others.

    My father, who was 7, fled London with hundreds of thousands of other kids. Somewhere between 1.5 and 2 million people fled the capital in near panic during this period.

    So, you see, the Blitz is very much part of my family history. It’s in my DNA. It’s partly why I think I have a natural affinity to the plight of the Palestinians today. Like them, my family knew what it felt like to be hated and hunted by a genocidal regime. Like them, my family knew what it felt like to face death at any moment, to lose everything, to have to flee their home, to run for their lives. In Britain we called it ‘The Blitz’. In Gaza they call it Nakba, which means – ‘Catastrophe’.

    Charlie Chaplin getting busted for Gaza

    I felt calm, empowered, exactly where I should be. I was soon approached by a police officer who told me to move, motioning towards the pavement beyond the cordon, saying I was free to carry out my protest ‘over there’. But ‘over there’ I was just another tourist attraction, and they would have no doubt already seen another and better Charlie Chaplin on the South Bank. My version was more ‘Modern Times’ than ‘do the box’. Defiant, political, prone to getting into trouble, wave a red flag, and recite the Speech from the Great Dictator at the top of my lungs. That has always been my version of the little tramp, and it was like the tourists expected to see Charlie Chaplin getting busted on their big day out in London. Hundreds of people from all around the world took pictures, and video, and many showed their approval:

    At one point, an officer asked me if I would be prepared to move out of the way if an ambulance needed to enter parliament in an emergency. I gestured ‘yes’.

    I don’t think that it can be properly said that I was blocking the gates. At no time was I aware of a vehicle needing to enter or leave Parliament. The double gates remained shut the whole time. The width of my scooter is 68cms, and judging by the Body Cam footage of my arrest, you can clearly see that there was still enough room for a vehicle to pass:

    So, you could describe my obstruction as more than minor, but less than major, well targeted in terms of the time and place, and designed to attract media and by extension government attention to an immediate and dire situation, to warn about the moral jeopardy that the UK will find itself in if it continues to turn a blind eye to genocide. And to British companies that are currently facilitating it:

    After my arrest

    In Charring Cross police station, at midnight, a detective came to my cell and offered me a caution to effectively forget the whole thing, and drive away. And after being in a cell for 9 hours, I have to say it was tempting. But I just thought of all those dead and injured Palestinian children being collectively punished for something they had nothing to do with. And so I thought, ‘No, let’s see this through.’ Let’s get my day in court and hopefully get a chance to say what I think needs to be said.

    On the 29th December, about a week before my plea hearing, South Africa reported Israel to the International Court of Justice (ICJ) for the crime of genocide, alleging that Israel’s actions in Gaza amounted to a deliberate policy of extermination against the Palestinian people. And on 26 January, with reportedly 1% of Gaza’s population, some 25,700 people, mostly women and children then killed, the ICJ delivered its interim judgement, with15 of the 17 judges finding plausibility in South Africa’s case.

    I felt vindicated. On the right side of history. My little act of defiance justified. Happy that I hadn’t allowed myself and, by extension, my Charlie X character, to lose our humanity, our ability to act when it matters by taking a stand, and then to stand by those actions. I stand by my actions, my civil disobedience on the grounds of conscience, and am more than willing to vouch for the sincerity of my beliefs, and the world I want to live in, and accept any penalties imposed by law as a price worth paying.

    Featured image and additional images via Christine Ongsieg and videos via Paul

    By Neil Goodwin

    This post was originally published on Canary.

  • Guardian columnist John Harris has a new piece where he laments the UK’s “drift to the right” and the rhetoric on refugees. But imagine if Jeremy Corbyn, who has long stood with refugees, was prime minister. Refugees certainly wouldn’t be facing the Conservative government’s Rwanda bill, which threatens to deport them to Rwanda as a ‘deterrent’.

    Both Harris and the Guardian tirelessly pushed anti-Corbyn narratives while he was Labour leader.

    Guardian: intentionally smearing Corbyn

    In a 2016 article, Harris declared “this is the end” for Labour, characterising the democratic surge of political involvement under Corbyn as a “collapse into spite and bullying”.

    In another piece, Harris said Labour was in a “deep irrelevance”, arguing the party should instead be a pro-EU protest movement.

    Again in a separate 2018 column, Harris argued Labour should focus on Brexit, accusing Corbyn of being “lost in a rose-tinted vision of Labour’s past”.

    By the 2019 election, Labour had adopted a policy of a re-run of the Brexit referendum. This meant the party bled votes to the Tories in key pro-Brexit seats, losing Corbyn the election.

    By contrast in 2017, when Labour respected the referendum result, Corbyn made greater gains than any Labour leader since 1945.

    If the supposedly progressive Guardian had been behind him, perhaps he would’ve won in 2017.

    What a mess we’re in

    Recently, the former Labour leader wrote:

    They know that their Rwanda plan will never work. That’s not the point. Their intention is to whip up hatred, division and fear.

    Refugees do not make arduous and deadly journeys to the UK for fun. They make huge risks to reach our shores. I’ve been to Calais on several occasions, and each time I learn more about the diabolical conditions facing those who are trying to seek a place of safety. Plans to send asylum seekers to Rwanda will not “deter” them from crossing the Channel. It will simply make life even harder for some of the most vulnerable human beings in the world.

    He continued:

    Instead of demonising refugees, the government should address the roots of their plight: war, human rights abuses and persecution.

    The Guardian remains a useful resource, but the outlet and its columnists are clearly not serious about real progressive political change.

    Otherwise, they would have got behind Corbyn. Now we’ve been stuck with more years of Tory rule, which Harris ironically laments.

    Featured image via Esther Vargas – Flickr and Official Jeremy Corbyn Channel – YouTube

    By James Wright

    This post was originally published on Canary.

  • All aboard the hating disabled people bus for our next batshit destination! Having just left ‘doctors can’t be trusted to write sicknotes’ lane and careening past the UN report at breakneck speed so as not to allow us time to digest it, we arrive at our next stop – that’s right, it’s ‘give people on PIP vouchers‘!

    Yep, the latest in the Tory’s horrific announcements about disability benefits is that they plan to scrap PIP payments and replace them with a system which will involve answering a wizard’s riddle to get any money.

    Okay, that’s not strictly true, but the actual plan isn’t any more serious. What Rishi actually wants to do is replace Personal Independence Payment with vouchers. I did warn you.

    Vouchers for disabled people?! Come off it!

    This is such a horrible idea I can’t even fully articulate how cruel it would be. For starters, it strips away the ‘independence’ part of PIP as it takes away our financial autonomy.

    Vouchers would limit where we spend our cash. Would they be accepted in all shops? How much would the vouchers be for? Will they just be things to help support us – like care and mobility aides – or will they also be for food and bills?

    Will taxis accept them? What about carers and people we hire to help us like cleaners? Can I pay my prescription charges exemption certificate in vouchers?

    Okay now you’re taking the piss

    The other option the government is ‘exploring’ is submitting receipts to claim money back.

    This is even more absurd because it almost insinuates that the DWP runs effectively enough as it is, never mind when swamped with millions of expenses requests a month.

    There’s also one very obvious fact, though apparently its not obvious to the Tories. So I’ll spell it out here.

    You can’t buy things to claim the money back if you don’t have any money in the first place

    What this plan will do is make disabled people take out loans and enter into buy now, pay later schemes. It’ll push us further into debt – and you can guarantee you won’t get reimbursed plus the interest.

    By proposing we send the government receipts to claim money back, they’re treating our everyday essentials and commodities as expenses.

    Though I guess to a man who’s worth £700 million they are. 

    Not the millionaire PMs problem

    Sunak never has to worry about whether he can afford to turn the heating on or where his next meal is coming from.

    The man will never be in debt in his life. He will never know the humiliation of having to use vouchers and coupons for food and electricity.

    Oh, the inaccuracy

    So of course the media has been full of regurgitated and unchallenged inaccurate rubbish, mainly that PIP is an out of work benefit. This is not true. Many on PIP work and as a result are the taxpayers you claim we’re stealing from.

    Human wet wipe and DWP minister Mel Stride was on BBC Breakfast this morning once again demonising us. During this, he said PIP was a ‘very blunt’ benefit. This is only correct if he’s talking about the rigid assessment criteria and traumatising assessments.

    The best part of what the human equivalent to farting and blaming it on the dog said though was this:

    You get a fixed amount every month, irrespective in many ways of your condition. In some cases that may be a condition that needs something like a grab rail to get into the bath and various other appliances of that kind.

    Which are relatively inexpensive, you might even be able to get them from your local authority or local NHS and yet the PIP thousands of pounds a month.

    So lets break this snippet of bullshit down

    1. PIP is only ‘irrespective of conditions’ in the sense that it doesn’t take into account the nature of many conditions and the assessments focus on if you can feed and dress yourself.
    2. Grab rails don’t mean anything when we can’t afford specialist food or to have the heating on more.
    3. Local authorities and the NHS are already stretched, they don’t have the funding.
    4. PIP is a maximum of £798.63 a month, but many get much less.

    As I said in my column previously it’s a huge problem that these lies are being allowed to be continuously spread – and worse regurgitated by the media. 

    The government and the corporate media have spent months demonising conditions like autism, ADHD, and anxiety and it was all building up to this. Because you can’t just straight out announce you’re cutting disabled people’s support. But you can spend months making them out to be liars and a drain on society so that the public will think they don’t deserve the support.

    The thing is I don’t think the aim is to cut PIP, because those fuckers know they’ve got to win an election first. 

    What vouchers for disabled people is actually about

    We don’t know what you will be able to claim vouchers for or expenses on, but I can tell you what you absolutely won’t be able to claim for: anything nice. The little things we treat ourselves to get through this awful reality the government has forced us into. 

    This “plan” is an attempt to appease the sad little losers who clog up my mentions telling me to get a job and stop ripping off taxpayers anytime I get my nails done. It’s the 72% who think people on benefits shouldn’t be able to have a takeaway once a week. 

    The people who are constantly wanging on about how we’ll only spend it on booze and iPhones and helicopters (but not helicopters) anyway – whilst MPs piss away thousands of taxpayers money on just that (and nearly helicopters) – with the almost side-by-side announcement that Lord Hamface Cameron has just bagged himself a £42m private jet).

    Why don’t we make MPs and former PMs live on vouchers instead? 

    So what can we do about it?

    Well first off, if you can, take part in the consultation on all this bullshit. It’s open til the 22nd July

    Then obviously if you’re in England we have local elections on Thursday, this is our chance to send a clear message that we want them to fuck off.

    Other than that, keep fighting back, check in on your friends and treat yourself to something you know will piss off the DWP.

    Featured image via the Canary

    By Rachel Charlton-Dailey

    This post was originally published on Canary.

  • It has been 200 days and 76 years.

    That’s 200 days without clean water, food, electricity, life-saving medicines, a bathroom, privacy, or just simply a place of sanctuary that you are able to call home.

    That’s 200 days of unbridled mass slaughter, starvation, dehydration, displacement, torture, mass arrests, and 200 days of relentless dehumanisation.

    It has been 200 days of genocide, enabled and paid for by Western elites and brutally executed by the coloniser-in-chief, Benjamin Netanyahu.

    200 days of genocide in numbers

    United Nations human rights chief Volker Turk said a child in Gaza is killed or wounded “every 10 minutes”. A staggering 72% of Israel’s victims have been women and children.

    At least 7,000 people are still missing. Israel is using thermobaric bombs to quite literally vapourise Palestinian civilians.

    At least 75,000 tonnes of explosives have been dropped on Gaza by Israeli forces. Civilians have been intentionally targeted and Israel wants to build new settlements on the children’s graveyard that is Gaza.

    At least 30% of children in Gaza are suffering from acute malnutrition and at least two adults or four children for every 10,000 people are dying every day from outright starvation or a combination of malnutrition and disease.

    At least 180 UNRWA staff have been killed by Israel, from October to March, and at least 196 humanitarian aid workers have been killed by the occupation since 7 October.

    At least 350 healthcare professionals have been killed since 7 October with at least 520 wounded. Tlaleng Mofokeng, the UN special rapporteur on the right to health, says the numbers were “grossly underreported”.

    Israel’s ‘right to self-defence’? Fuck off.

    At least 34,262 Palestinians have been killed by the racist colonial state of Israel since 7 October. This is at least 171 humans murdered every single fucking day by a nuclear-armed military that claims to be the most moral in the world whilst in reality they are committing the most heinous of crimes against humanity in our lifetimes.

    That’s roughly where we are following 200 days of genocide and ethnic cleansing, yet the deranged extremists in the Knesset want MORE dead children, MORE enforced displacement, and MORE devastation and destruction wreaked upon the innocent Palestinian population.

    I hate to say it, but if you are still blaming Hamas for the actions of the Israeli war machine, and if you are still banging on about Israel’s right to “self-defence”, despite the mounting evidence that clearly illustrates the most brutal of genocides, you’re an absolute cunt.

    I mean, wouldn’t it be a tad hypocritical to suggest Israel has every right to defend itself, but Palestine doesn’t? An occupied state has every fucking right to fight back and resist, both morally and legally, whether you approve of their methods or not.

    Netanyahu: everything is now antisemitic

    You might’ve noticed the beautiful chaos that has engulfed campuses across the US as pro-Palestinian student protests spread to universities across the length and breadth of the country.

    The protests began at Columbia University in New York City where students set up the Gaza Solidarity Encampment, on 17 April.

    Hundreds of anti-genocide, pro-humanity students have been arrested by typically heavy-handed American cops that see any other skin colour than white as a threat to their American ‘values’.

    Netanyahu responded to the mass protests by declaring everyone and everything is antisemitic and is reminiscent of what happened at German universities in the 1930’s.

    This is the same child killer Netanyahu that has ordered the destruction of every university in Gaza.

    The Islamic University of Gaza, Al-Azhar University, Al-Quds Open University, University College of Applied Sciences, University of Palestine, Al-Israa University, University of Gaza, Al-Aqsa University, Palestine Technical College, Palestine College of Nursing, and the College of Applied Sciences have all been bombed by the Tel Aviv terrorists.

    Yet this fucking abomination of a failed human wants to clamp down on entirely legitimate protests at universities across the United States?

    Harsh? I don’t think so.

    This isn’t just a war on Gaza, nor is it a war on the children of Gaza, but it is a full-throttled assault on humanity itself, and this genocide of the Palestinian people would have been impossible without the backing of the Western imperialists.

    The despot hijacker of Judaism, Netanyahu, could go to the burning pits of hell and back a million times over and it still wouldn’t even begin to compensate for the devastation he has unleashed upon the Middle East.

    Harsh? I don’t fucking think so.

    Harsh is telling a civilian population to flee to a safe zone whilst shooting them on their way and bombing them when they arrive.

    Harsh is being starved to death when truck upon truck laden with humanitarian aid is just a stone’s throw away from you, but extremist colonial settlers refuse to allow the aid through.

    Harsh is being detained by the Israeli military without charge or trial and being physically, sexually and psychologically abused on a daily basis. Torture is rife, dogs are used to bite children. Men, women and children are urinated on by deranged Israeli soldiers.

    Harsh is the horrifying discovery of mass graves at Al-Shifa and Nasser hospitals in Gaza.. Hundreds of bodies have been exhumed, some decapitated, many tortured, others missing their limbs or organs. Patients were executed with their hands tied.

    Shining a light on power in places of darkness

    How on earth are we supposed to co-exist with these fucking barbaric Israeli arseholes? The apocalyptic scenes from Al-Shifa and Nasser hospitals over the past week or so are worse than anything you will ever see in a horror movie.

    I’ll finish up this week by mentioning a new report from former US officials and human rights experts expressing ‘grave concerns’ with the Biden administration’s weapons transfers to Israel.

    You will do well to find any mention of it through traditional media outlets, but that’s the joy of independent media such as The Canary.

    We are happy to shine a light on power in places of darkness. We have no shareholders to satisfy and we never answer to pro-Israel Zionists or the forces of evil that enable them. We don’t do “off-limits”.

    The hushed up report, submitted to the US government on 19 April said the authors found:

    a clear pattern of violations of international law, failures to apply civilian harm mitigation best practices, and restrictions of humanitarian assistance, by the Government of Israel and the IDF, often utilizing US provided arms.

    Remember: Israel submitted a written assurance to the US government back in March saying that it was using American-supplied weapons per international humanitarian law.

    76 years of occupation

    The panel of experts — whose objective was to inform the US Departments of State and Defence of its findings as they prepare a final assessment for Congress slated for 8 May — said it reviewed thousands of reports of Israeli violations of international law, noting an Israeli strike on 9 October on Jabalia refugee camp that destroyed several multi-story buildings and killed at least 39 people, which the UN said appeared to have no specific military objective.

    The damning report goes on to say:

    The Task Force concludes that the incidents… are just the most easily identifiable among a clear pattern of violations of international law, failures to apply civilian harm mitigation best practices, and restrictions of humanitarian assistance, by the Government of Israel.

    In short, Joe Biden is up to his fucking eyeballs in the blood of the Palestinian people, and the diminished responsibility line just isn’t going to cut it when history passes its judgement on Biden’s complicity in genocide.

    The mounting evidence before the Biden administration now pales only in comparison to the humanitarian crisis afflicting Palestinians in Gaza.

    It has been 200 days of live-streamed genocide and 76 years of occupation, and the world will never be the same again.

    Featured image via Rachael Swindon

    By Rachael Swindon

    This post was originally published on Canary.

  • A woman holding pepper spray

    For every complex problem there is always an answer that is simple, clear and wrong.

    We often see these answers crop up when dealing with the wicked social issue that is violence in our society.

    There is currently a petition circulating online asking for legislation changes that would allow women to carry pepper spray.

    I absolutely appreciate that in the wake of the crimes in Bondi people are feeling confronted and afraid, which comes with the need for action.

    I can offer assurances to these people. There is a lot of meaningful work happening across the country. For the first time in a decade, we have a government who is genuinely invested in reducing violence against women.

    In 2018 the Australian Party’s Senator Fraser Anning pushed for a bill that would allow pepper spray to be imported into the country and would legalise its use in all states and territories for self-defence. Mr Anning’s motion was rejected due to the complexities of how the legalisation of pepper spray could be more broadly weaponised. That hasn’t changed.

    I am concerned about how this horrific event is being weaponised, even from those with the best of intentions who are hoping to shine a light on gender-based violence.

    In trying to advocate for women’s safety, they are demanding reactive policy with potentially catastrophic outcomes.

    This campaign has not come from the public sector or government despite some false claims that my colleagues and I are fully supportive.

    We are certainly not.

    Reactive response like this lacks a trauma-informed lens. It puts the responsibility of the choices of one individual onto victims and does not address the core issues of male violence.

    I have read completely irresponsible rhetoric in the Daily Mail that has suggested if women had pepper spray the Bondi attacks would have been stopped. Let me be exceptionally clear – there is zero evidence to support this claim.

    The attacker was neutralised with a weapon– not pepper spray- by a senior police officer. This would have been an educated choice based on training and years of experience by the officer who did an exceptional job.

    The issue with the blanket statement ‘pepper spray reduces violence against women’ is that there isn’t evidence to support it.

    The ABS personal safety survey from 2022 demonstrates in the most recent incidents of violence by a male, the perpetrator was more likely to be someone the woman knew (85%) than a stranger (16%). The perpetrator was most commonly an intimate partner (53%), including a cohabiting partner (28%), and boyfriend or date (25%).

    The data tells an important story of how and who women need to be protected from.

    What are we suggesting will happen when a potential victim is armed with pepper spray? What happens when the violence escalates and the perpetrator is also armed with the same weapon?

    If women and non-binary folk can carry pepper spray, so can men. So can gangs. So can everyone.

    Pepper spray is legalised in WA, however the legislation requires a high threshold for people to be able to carry it – as it should.

    There is clear evidence that shows the misuse of pepper spray can cause severe injury and even death.

    In 2022, a 20-year review into people with pepper spray injuries that presented to emergency departments in the United States (where pepper spray is freely available) concluded that patients with pepper spray-related injuries tended to be older children and young adults. Not people protecting themselves from lone wolf attacks.

    In the wake of widespread protests in 2020, it was found that protestors and police were both using pepper spray as well as its far-stronger counterpart, bear spray.

    This study and many others find that the use of pepper spray is not effective in reducing rates of violence.

    The petition does not address the role that men need to have in being a voice in the protection of women. They have to be involved in challenging systems and power structures that entrench the view that women are responsible for the violence that happens to them.

    The simple argument that ‘women need to carry pepper spray’ creates a neat media narrative to avoid having that tough conversation on a national scale.

    Gender-based violence and men’s violence is mostly importantly an issue for men to take the lead on.

    Carrying a concealed weapon simply supports the idea that men don’t have an active role to play in the prevention of violence.

    There is a lot of work happening across the country to address these issues and I would encourage all people who want change to engage with established campaigns and organisations who champion the issue of women’s safety to Parliament in a way the ensures they will really be kept safe.

     

     

    The post Pepper spray won’t solve gendered violence appeared first on BroadAgenda.

    This post was originally published on BroadAgenda.

  • COMMENTARY: By Murray Horton

    New Zealand needs to get tough with Israel. It’s not as if we haven’t done so before.

    When NZ authorities busted a Mossad operation in Auckland 20 years ago, the government didn’t say: “Oh well, Israel has the right to defend itself.”

    No, it arrested, prosecuted, convicted, imprisoned and deported the Israeli agents, plus made them pay a big sum of damages. And it refused to restore normal diplomatic relations with Israel until Israel apologised to NZ. Which Israel did.

    Today’s government needs to treat Israel the same way it treats other aggressors, like Russia, with the likes of sanctions.

    And the government needs to designate Zionism as an inherently racist, terrorist ideology.

    Everyone knows that the Gaza War would stop in five minutes if the US stopped arming Israel to the teeth and allowing it to commit genocide with impunity.

    Israel is the mass murderer; the US is the enabler of mass murder.

    New Zealand is part of the US Empire. The most useful thing we could do is to sever our ties to that empire, something we bravely started in the 1980s with the nuclear-free policy. Also, do these things:

    • Develop a genuinely independent foreign policy;
    • Get out of US wars, like the one in the Red Sea and Yemen;
    • Get out of the Five Eyes spy alliance;
    • Close the Waihopai spy base and the GCSB, the NZ agency which runs it;
    • Kick out Rocket Lab, NZ’s newest American military base;
    • Stop the process of getting entangled with NATO; and
    • Stay out of AUKUS, which is simply building an alliance to fight a war with China.

    I never thought I’d find myself on the same side of an issue as Don Brash and Richard Prebble but even they have strongly opposed AUKUS.

    Zionism is the enemy of the Palestinian people.

    US imperialism is the enemy of the Palestinian people and the New Zealand people.

    Murray Horton is secretary/organiser of the Anti-Bases Campaign (ABC) and gave this speech last Saturday to a Palestinian solidarity rally at the Bridge of Remembrance, Christchurch.

    This post was originally published on Asia Pacific Report.

  • In today’s America there is no need for a contract for millions of my fellow working stiffs. With many states like mine (Florida) having “Right to work laws,” unions are few and far between. Duh, like not even 10% of private sector workers are unionized. So, you work for a boss on hourly, weekly, or on commission (as this writer still does for over 40 years) you can be replaced or as the Brits say “redundanized” just like that! And they complain, the Fat Cats who own industry, about slow motion or uncaring employees. Well, like with the guy who put in our laminate floors told me several years ago: “At the place I work, with three of us wood craftsmen, the owner just bought himself, his wife and his two children new BMWs. Yet, never a thought to give us raises or a nice bonus at Christmas.”

    Let’s not just obsess over the shitty work climate for blue and white collar working stiffs. No, check this out: I used my smart TV and found many “Free Channels” meaning no cost to watch. I got into a three season series and was really hooked on the storyline etc. Well, with this channel, TUBI, they have more commercials than I have ever experienced. The way things are set up if you try to leave the show you may lose where you are in it, so I had to sit through the ****. Most of the commercials were geared for young millennials (20s to early 30s) or the Medicare age folks like myself. I could not believe commercials pushing “Up to $500 cash NOW with no hassles.” Then you have the ones like Credit Karma whereupon the guy wants to rent this apartment and his credit score is low. So, with Credit Karma you see the guy signing for the “way too costly for my budget” apartment as the For Rent sign is taken down. God bless finance capitalism! How about this one, again geared for that 20 to 30+ age group. It’s so easy to buy a new car or sell your old one. With the app in hand this young woman bought the car online… having never test driven it. No bargaining on the price, and who cares, this is modern America! The other young woman is bragging about selling her car online, and how much she got for it. Again, no bargaining. Obviously, those transactions were through some corporation that has the analytics down to a science… for them!

    Twelve years ago, I decided to go back to doing stand-up comedy after a hiatus of 40 years. There was a comedy contest at some club in St Augustine, about 50 miles away. I signed up by computer and wrote a nice bit for myself. It was primary election season, so I focused on that and my other major peeve: Dental charges for most Americans with no dental insurance. When I arrived at the club, we contestants met with the MC. He was a regular comic at the place, maybe early 30s. Nice guy. I drew the short stick so I had to go on first. He told me that he would warm the audience up and then introduce me. The rule was to go for 8 minutes. I sat offstage by the bar to observe him. He spent his entire warm up time of 10 minutes with Fart, Tit and Dick jokes. They were laughing hysterically while I was sighing. “I’m dead!” Before he introduced me I did a quick study of the audience. Thirty five people, mostly two tops, a few fours. Their ages varied from mid twenties all the way up to the lady sitting by herself who looked my age.  I started out with the Republican primary contenders. “It’s funny folks but if you think about it anyone can kind of look like someone else. Look at the Republicans running for president in 2012. You have Newt Gingrich who looks like a pedophile Bishop.” [Only the lady right below me is really laughing.] “Then you have Rick Santorum, Senator from PA, who looks like he belongs under a car changing the oil with Gomer and Goober.” [Silence] “Or Sarah Palin, who looks like a very attractive Drag Queen.” [Oh boy, tough crowd]. So I changed gears and did my dental bit. “How many of you folks have dental insurance, raise your hands.” Two thirds of the audience raised hands… are these people from earth? I went on anyway. “With the way things are nowadays here is how a first visit to a dentist will look like. You’re in the chair, he probes your mouth with his assistant taking notes. “OK # 17, $2200- root canal and crown. # 6 and #7 both have cavities, $600 total. # 21 $1100” [The lady below is laughing through it all, while with the other 34 people a silence there’s that can kill.] My mouth became as dry as a desert and I prayed the 8 minutes would come… and they did! I walked right out and drove home and never looked back.

    During the Vietnam debacle in the 60s and early 70s many of us college students and young working stiffs got out and protested. Even before and after the Bush/Cheney illegal (and immoral) invasion of Iraq, we had many young folks joining us on the street corner. Perhaps not as many as when we had the military draft, but still enough to give us some hope. Well, since that time, where in the hell are the majority of our young Americans? Nowhere to be found, except in the bars and clubs doing what we all did at some time: partying. The difference is that my generation of young Americans who saw through the **** found time to both protest and party. Not anymore. The empire now owns us. As far as those senior citizens like yours truly, well, too many of my fellow baby boomers are more concerned about their next Social Security check, investments, and personal health care. No room for the people of Gaza or the dead-end job workers throughout this nation. No room for the blatant racism, homophobia, etc.

    Finally, this Military Industrial Empire actually loves it when working stiffs and retired working stiffs are divided by issues their embedded media and politicos embellish. We have finally become, for certain, the permanent consumer society we always were, especially after WW2. Those commercials reflect just how far down the rabbit hole we landed. When the choices continue to be presented to us of who should rule us, between a Clinton and Bush Sr., a Gore or a Bush Jr., and Obama or a McCain, a Hillary or a Trump, and then (twice, mind you) a Biden or a Trump, we are lost as a culture. And they laugh at the other “Banana Republics”.

    The post The Empire Owns Us first appeared on Dissident Voice.

    This post was originally published on Dissident Voice.

  • Why are Western diplomats scornful and apoplectic with rage towards Iran while failing to denounce Israel’s deadly strike on the Iranian consulate in Syria? I don’t think it’s a particularly controversial question, do you?

    Am I understanding this correctly?

    Let me get this right: Israeli bombs are fine, but Iranian bombs aren’t? It’s okay to target innocent civilians in Gaza, but not European colonialists in Tel Aviv? And Israel, the perpetual aggressor, has a right to self-defence, but Iran has to suck it up and accept Israel can attack them whenever they feel like it?

    Britain, Germany, and the United States hide their interior wickedness under the appearance of virtue. Hypocrisy is not a way for the crestfallen West to find its way back to the moral high ground. There is no way back now, and I can think of at least 34,000 reasons why.

    We can pretend we are moral, and we can certainly say we are moral, but this is not the same as acting morally.

    Honestly, the people trying to tell you that Britain has acted morally during the last six months will be the same fucking headbangers that will tell you Fred West was a bit of a bastard, but his patio laying skills were second-to-none, if it scores them just one minuscule political point.

    It is absolutely beyond me how Britain — now just a bit-part player on the global scene — or any other state sponsor of genocide can condemn a relatively unspectacular missile launch from Tehran while not having a single fucking word to say about the barbaric Israeli drone strike on a playground that executed 11 innocent Palestinian children, this past week.

    Israel’s killing of Palestinian children versus Iran’s unspectacular missile launch

    These children, already physically and mentally shattered by 6 months of genocide and many years of illegal occupation, were playing in a playground that was built for Gazan children to find some temporary respite from the slaughter that follows them.

    I cannot stress enough how vitally important it is for you to wake up every single day and not just wholeheartedly believe, but insist we want to live in a world where helpless innocent children aren’t targeted, maimed and murdered by a fucking drone strike.

    How many Hamas resistance fighters were hiding in this playground? None.

    How many senior Western diplomats had the moral testicles to call out this brazen act of Israeli genocide? None.

    The galling hypocrisy of the Western elite has dragged this preach-but-never-practice and utterly mythical rules-based world order to the point of no return. Gaza has become the eternal grave of the Western-led world order.

    The pariah state provocateur

    Israel, the pariah state provocateur, is poking and prodding in a desperate attempt to force other countries into an entirely different narrative other than the genocide it is conducting in Gaza.

    34,000 dead. 76,000 injured. Millions displaced. Gaza is under a state of siege and starvation with humanitarian aid being used as a tool for political blackmail. Israeli quadcopters are playing recordings of distressed babies in an attempt to lure out worried civilians, so the Israeli monsters can execute them.

    Humanitarian aid workers, doctors, nurses, journalists, men, women, children and babies — all murdered in their thousands because Israel can and will continue to do so without as much as a sanction from an impotent international community because of the power of the colonialists veto.

    That’s the fucking narrative right there.

    Israel’s TikTok colonialism

    Colonialism on steroids for the 21st century. An army that proudly displays its evils on TikTok with zero fucks given for international law.

    The Israeli campaign to “bring them home” is probably in your face as much as it is mine. Ask any senior British minister or shadow minister for their opinion of the ongoing genocide in Gaza and they will always caveat every answer with some scripted crap about releasing the hostages.

    No civilian deserves to be caught up in Israel’s ethnic cleaning and genocide of Gaza.

    If this statement applies to the several dozen Israeli hostages being held by the Palestinian resistance it must equally apply to the 3,660 Palestinian hostages held under Israel’s administrative detention — a remnant of the British Mandate era — without being charged or allowed to stand trial.

    Palestinian Prisoner’s Day: where was the ‘rules-based order’?

    These detainees — including many women and children — are held by the Israeli terrorist forces for renewable periods of time based on ‘secret evidence’ that neither the detainee or their legal representative is allowed to see.

    Israel and its fanatical extremist supporters cannot lecture me or anyone else about releasing hostages until they are demanding the release of every single Palestinian hostage being held under administrative detention by the Israeli savages.

    Wednesday April 17th marked Palestinian Prisoner’s Day. This is an annual event that is dedicated to the thousands of Palestinian prisoners in Israel.

    Campaigners use the day to call for the human rights of Palestinian prisoners to be upheld and for those who have been detained without charge to be released.

    Four in 10 Palestinian men have spent time in an Israeli prison. If you want a comparison just look towards the United States, a country with the world’s largest prison population where one in 200 people is in jail.

    Israel’s cult of Zionism

    From its earliest days, Zionism – a cult that claims a divine predestination leading them to regard themselves as God’s chosen people – was deeply imbued with the same racist attitudes of other European settler-colonial movements.

    Some of the most important people on the face of the planet, both past and present, have always believed Zionism should be entirely immune from criticism, and this has allowed it to flourish into the extremist, vicious tool of imperialism that it has become today.

    Has anyone even considered the very simple fact that under the Fourth Geneva Convention, it is against international law for an occupying power to transfer an occupied people from the occupied territory? Anyone?

    It states:

    The Occupying Power shall not deport or transfer parts of its own civilian population into the territory it occupies.” It also prohibits the “individual or mass forcible transfers, as well as deportations of protected persons from occupied territory.

    That’s thousands of Palestinians being illegally detained, often without charges or a trial, subjected to horrifying torture, brutal beatings, rape, and often forced to make entirely fabricated confessions under duress.

    Yet the Western elite want you to believe its this entirely legitimate resistance, armed with (by way of comparison) no more than a few beefed-up peashooters, who deserve to have tax-dollar-funded bombs dropped on their children as they sleep in a fucking flooded filthy tent.

    A reputation irreparably damaged

    I know we lost our national moral consciences some time ago, long before Israel’s genocide in Gaza, and when that went, the myth of Western humanity was lost at the same time. But at what point did we completely lose our marbles?

    It is now impossible to mention the name “Israel” without automatically thinking of the atrocities they have committed in the name of “self-defence”.

    Israel’s reputation on the world stage has been irreparably damaged, and not a moment too soon, and if reports are to be believed, Israel is seriously considering the prospect of arrest warrants being issued by the International Criminal Court for Benjamin Netanyahu and other Israeli leaders for alleged violations of international law in Gaza.

    Just for once, I think I’ll end on that positive possibility, and if I rant on for much longer the editor of the Canary might not want me back next Sunday.

    Featured image via Rachael Swindon

    By Rachael Swindon

    This post was originally published on Canary.

  • Pacific Media Watch

    Australians are being urged to stay united following the horrific events in Sydney last week, reports the ABC’s Saturday Extra programme.

    Five women and one man were killed in a mass stabbing at Bondi Junction last Saturday by a man with a history of mental illness, and a nine-month-old baby baby was among the eight people wounded.

    The attacker was shot by a police officer and died at the scene.

    Two days later at a church in Wakeley, a suburb in Western Sydney, controversial Assyrian Orthodox preacher Bishop Mar Mari Emmanuel suffered lacerations to his head when he was attacked during a sermon that was being live-streamed. Nobody was killed.

    Three other unrelated knife attacks took place in Sydney this week. Only the Wakely church attack was officially described as a “terror” attack although there had been widespread media speculation.

    Those attacks coupled with anger and division caused by the war on Gaza as well as the polarising impact of the Voice referendum last year and Australians are seeing their sense of community and social cohesion challenged.

    The ABC has spoken to a panel of analysts about the solutions to staying united and their comments were broadcast yesterday.

    The panel included Khairiah A Rahman, an intercultural communications commentator from Auckland University of Technology who is also secretary of the Asia Pacific Media Network (APMN) and a member of Muslim Media Watch.

    The programme highlighted New Zealand’s experience in March 2019 when an Australian gunman entered two mosques in Christchurch and killed 51 people while they were praying.

    Asked what her message had been to the New Zealand government through the Royal Commission established to look into the mass killing, Rahman replied:

    “Overall, social cohesion when we think about it has got to do with the responsibility of all people and groups at all levels of society. So we can’t actually leave it to the government or the leaders, the Muslim leaders.

    “At the end of the day, the media also had a hand in all of this and my research had to do with media representation of Islam and Muslims prior to the attack. One of the things I found was unfair reporting, so pretty much what you have experienced in your media reporting of Bondi.

    “The route that extremists take from hate to mass murder is a proven one, and you need to report fairly and stay calm in a society.”

    Interviewees:

    Dr Jamal Rifi, Lebanese Muslim Community leader, Sydney

    Tim Southphommasane, Australia’s former race discrimination officer

    Khairiah A Rahman, intercultural communications researcher, Auckland University of Technology

    Producer: Linda LoPresti

    This post was originally published on Asia Pacific Report.

  • With regular maintenance stuff lasts longer, but eventually, in spite of every effort, things break down: the washing machine stops washing, the car won’t start, the mobile phone refuses to connect to the internet.

    Socio-economic-political systems also collapse; shaped by an ideology of some kind, they are, like all ‘isms’, limited, and divisive. Looking at The State of the World it is clear that the systems that govern our lives and the modes of living they support are breaking down, fragmenting. The signs are many and varied.

    Autocratic regimes are on the rise and many democratic governments, influenced by right wing extremism, are adopting policies and attitudes more usually associated with autocracies.

    The values and moral codes that have been in place for generations, some unspoken, culturally shared and absorbed, others formally enshrined in international law, are being ignored, discarded or distorted. The ‘Rules Based International Order’, so-called, is made up of a range of laws or conventions, which underpin geo-political engagement:  The UN Charter, the UN Declaration of Human Rights, Geneva Conventions and UN General Assembly Resolutions among other texts.

    Self righteous hypocritical western politicians routinely refer to the Rule of Law or International Humanitarian Law, particularly when criticising their enemies (Russia, Iran, China etc), not so much when they or their allies act illegally. The double standards of western governments knows no limits and is a major cause of global destabilisation.

    As systems, structures and animating principles disintegrate, extremism and intolerance grow, polarities intensify, the threat of armed conflict and fragmentation expands; fear and uncertainty increases.

    And while the underlying causes remain unchecked, the everyday consequences of disintegration deepen and become more pronounced: the environmental emergency, armed conflict/war, poverty/hunger, displacement of people, social alienation and economic inequality, are some of the major effects. Interconnected complex issues resulting from behaviour and attitudes flowing from The Ideology of Greed, which underpins the socio-political systems and the institutions of control; creaking outdated models that are incapable of creating solutions to the crises, no matter how much they are manipulated.

    Take climate change for example, clearly the greatest challenge facing humanity. Climate change is the consequence of the fossil fuel economy and endless consumerism; overwhelmingly rich western nations consumerism. Along with the wider environmental emergency, climate change is caused by behavior flowing from a reductive view of life that prizes individual happiness above all else; happiness, which is, in fact, nothing more than pleasure, that can be achieved, the advocates preach, through the accumulation of things or experiences.

    This deeply materialistic approach to life, which, far from bringing happiness, actually guarantees discontent, is integral to the socio-economic system. Constant consumption is demanded, and it is consumption, with its insatiable sucking in of energy (and people) and churning out of waste, that is fuelling climate change, has polluted the air, water and soil, and contributed to the creation of societies rife with unhealthy unhappy people.

    Curbing climate change, reducing waste and curtailing pollution requires an economy of sufficiency not excess as we have now. An economy, rooted in social justice and environmental responsibility. A dramatic reduction in consumption is essential – in rich nations at least – and a shift to ethical business practices. All of which is incompatible within the suffocating web of Neo-Liberalism.

    If reducing climate change and saving the planet is not reason enough to change the socio-economic-political order, how about ending war?

    In order for peace to be realised, social justice and freedom must prevail; this means ending all forms of exploitation and discrimination, inequality and injustice. Such sane measures are impossible within a system wedded to money, to competition and greed, and unthinkable while short-term self-interest is the driving factor behind the actions of governments, corporations and many individuals.

    Peace also requires that the Military Industrial Complex and all military alliances, including Nato, be dismantled, again unimaginable within the confines of the current economic order.

    As everything breaks down and frays, including the nervous systems and mental health of many people, the inadequacies of the present structures become increasingly apparent. This includes the existing forms of parliamentary democracy, which is non-representative, particularly within societies that are increasingly diverse.

    If the slide into further chaos, including the possibility of a major war and complete environmental collapse is to be avoided, fundamental change is desperately needed. Both structural change and a change in values and attitudes, which will lead to changes in behaviour. Systemic changes designed with the aim of achieving universally championed principles: peace, social justice, real democracy and freedom.

    People throughout the world are desperate for such changes, the men and women in power, less so. Their resistance comes from the recognition that such a shift would inevitably result in the privilege and power they currently enjoy being swept aside.

    The choice before us is clear: maintain the status quo, continue along the existing path, which is narrowing to a point of greater extremism, intolerance and conflict and suffer, or unite, reject all forms of division and re-imagine society.

    Humanity has faced such choices many times over long ages, has routinely made the wrong decisions and we are living with the disastrous effects. But now, at this moment in time, the consequences of our collective decisions are far reaching in a way that was not the case in the recent or distant past.

    These are extremely uncertain dangerous times. Transitional times for sure, but transitioning to what, to a more extreme, dystopian version of the present, or transitional towards a more just peaceful world?

    The post Disintegration and Choice first appeared on Dissident Voice.

    This post was originally published on Dissident Voice.

  • Something I struggle to contend with is being a disabled journalist. Don’t get me wrong, I love what I do – but there’s no denying that the media does not speak well about disabled people and benefits claimants.

    That’s putting it fucking kindly. To put it unkindly: the media perpetuates dangerous stereotypes of disabled people. They continuously regurgitate Tory bile for clicks and newspaper sales with no care for how it affects real people. As I wrote last week, the media is how most people form opinions, so to only give one side and not challenge it is dangerous.

    It’s further dispiriting knowing how hard I and other journalists work to get real stories and views into the press and seeing our pitches completely ignored.

    Case in point: when I was offered my place in the Deaf and Disabled Peoples’ Organisations (DDPOs) coalition going to the UN Committee on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities (UNCRPD) to hold the government to account, I pitched that story to every mainstream newspaper and got absolute tumbleweed. But then to instead see them gladly stuff their pages with hate from the DWP is just insulting.

    So onto the week! 

    The sporty men are still at it

    Last week saw, to give him his official title (bestowed by me) Exercise Bore Joe Wicks bullshit about how everyone has ADHD because of junk food. Due to the enormous backlash Wicks had to make an “apology” on Instagram.

    He clarified that what he actually meant is he thinks too many people are misdiagnosed with ADHD and food is a factor. And he doesn’t see how that is so much worse. It’s almost like the man has a book to flog on kids’ healthy eating or something…

    Elsewhere, Lewis Hamilton’s even shitter brother went on Loose Women and let the internalised ableism spew forth. Nicholas sees himself as no longer disabled because he “pushed through” and forced himself to stop using a wheelchair and walk again.

    This is a dangerous enough narrative, but to then go on national TV and be given the space to talk about how your life was sad and hopeless whilst you were in a wheelchair, on a show that has a wheelchair-using panelist is just vile. Nicholas’s view of his disability is honestly the most tragic thing about him, but the media feeding that and calling him inspirational helps nobody, 

    Another week, more DWP bullshit

    On Monday 15 April the news broke that thanks to the Department for Work and Pensions (DWP), unemployed disabled people could be up to £2,800 worse off. This is thanks to the forced rollout of those on old-style benefits being moved to Universal Credit

    However – absolutely coincidentally I’m sure – the night before DWP boss Mel Stride revealed to the press that there had been a spike in people with ADHD claiming PIP and suggesting that it’s influencers’ faults.

    That’s right.

    We all think we have ADHD cos some kids on TikTok said so, it’s not that these incredible people speaking about their experiences mean others have realised they aren’t broken or wrong. 

    A significant line in the Times article about this was that Personal Independence Payment (PIP) is “given regardless of work”. It almost insinuates that those who work shouldn’t be entitled to benefits. It completely ignores that PIP is there to help us manage the extra costs of disability. Though I guess it fits when DWP have been trying to quietly make it means-tested for years. 

    Three Tory scandals yesterday but headlines about “sicknote” skivers

    Thursday 18 April was a fucking banner day for the Tories. Mark Menzies using tens of thousands of Tory funds to pay off “bad people” (and getting a dog pissed – wtf??), Jonathan Nunn accused of horrific domestic violence, and then one of Rishi’s donors having £14m in assets frozen.

    That’s of course while we still have more coming out about who sent their cocks to William Wragg’s blackmailer, and Liz Truss cunting about all over telly with her terrible joke of a book. So what’s the front page of the Telegraph today? That’s right you guessed it! PM Vows to end sicknote culture”.

    Rishi claims he’ll strip GPs of their powers to sign people off the sick and the corporate media has no trouble repeating this without pointing out how dangerous that would be, and also who the fuck else is gonna do it? Oh that’s right: unqualified job centre workers who have to do their job or they’ll be fired.

    It seems Rishi thinks bullying disabled people is more important than holding all his corrupt MPs and donors to account.

    Funny that.

    It’s almost like disabled people who are too scared to stand up for themselves are easier to squash than the rich and powerful. Well, think again dickhead.

    Disabled joy: Girl Unmasked is a Sunday Times bestseller!

    God knows we need disabled joy this week and I’m so glad that this one features one of my close friends. The incredible Emily Katy is such a force for good in this world. Having been through the ringer as a teenager, sent to a psyche ward instead of supported with her autism, Emily is now raising awareness of how much we need to protect and support autistic young women. 

    That’s why it’s the best news ever that her incredible book Girl Unmasked was a Sunday Times Bestseller! I’m so very lucky to know you Em – and I’m so glad your important message and autistic joy is being spread to the world. 

    And finally… some figures

    Policy in Practice revealed yesterday that last year £22.7bn was saved in unclaimed benefits. That’s a rise of £8bn since I first reported on this issue in 2021. £8.3bn was saved just from unclaimed Universal Credit, which is higher than the £8.2bn they claim was lost in “fraud and error” of all benefits last year.

    Again, I’m sure it’s a pure coincidence the DWP aren’t crowing about this.

    That’s why we need to arm ourselves with this which they cannot fight against: pure stats. Take these figures and shout them from the rooftops.

    Until next time, fuck the Tories and don’t believe everything you read.

    Featured image via the Canary

    By Rachel Charlton-Dailey

    This post was originally published on Canary.

  • COMMENTARY: By Eugene Doyle

    Helen Clark, how I miss you.  The former New Zealand Prime Minister — the safest pair of hands this country has had in living memory — gave a masterclass on the importance of maintaining an independent foreign policy when she spoke at an AUKUS symposium held in Parliament’s old Legislative Chambers yesterday.

    AUKUS (Australia, UK, US) is first and foremost a military alliance aimed at our major trading partner China. It is designed to maintain US primacy in the “Indo-Pacific” region and opponents are sceptical of claims that China represents a threat to New Zealand or Australian security.

    The recent proposal to bring New Zealand into the alliance under “Pillar II”  would represent a shift in our security and alliance settings that could dismantle our country’s independent foreign policy and potentially undo our nuclear free policy.

    Clark’s assessment is that the way the government has approached the proposed alliance lacks transparency.  National made no signal of its intentions during the election campaign and yet the move towards AUKUS seems well planned and choreographed.

    Voters in the last election “were not sensitised to any changes in the policy settings,” Clark says, “and this raises huge issues of transparency.”

    Such a significant shift should first secure a mandate from the electorate.

    A key question the speakers addressed at the symposium was: is AUKUS in the best interest of this country and our region?

    Highly questionable
    “All of these statements made about AUKUS being good for us are highly questionable,” Clark says.  “What is good about joining a ratcheting up of tensions in a region?  Where is the military threat to New Zealand?”

    Clark, PM from 1999-2008, has noticed a serious slippage in our independent position.  She contrasted current policy on the Middle East with the decision, under her leadership, of not joining the US invasion of Iraq in 2003.

    Sceptical of US claims about weapons of mass destruction, New Zealand made clear it wanted no part of it — a stance that has proven correct. Our powerful allies the US, UK and Australia were wrong both on intelligence and the consequences of military action.

    In contrast, New Zealand participating in the current bombardment of Yemen because of the Houthis disruption of Red Sea traffic in response to the Israeli war on Gaza is, says Clark, an indication of this change in fundamental policy stance:

    “New Zealand should have demanded the root causes for the shipping route disruptions be addressed rather than enthusiastically joining the bombing.”

    “There’s no doubt in my mind that if the drift we see in position continues, we will be positioned in a way we haven’t seen for decades –  as a fully-signed-up partner to US strategies in the region.

    “And from that, will flow expectations about what is the appropriate level of defence expenditure for New Zealand and expectations of New Zealand contributing to more and more military activities.”

    Economic security
    Clark addressed another element which should add caution to New Zealand joining an American crusade against China: economic security.

    China now takes 26 percent of our exports — twice what we send to Australia and 2.5 times what we send to the US.  She questioned the wisdom of taking a hostile stance against our biggest trading partner who continues to pose no security threat to this country.

    So what is the alternative to New Zealand siding with the US in its push to contain China and help the US maintain its hegemon status?

    “The alternative path is that New Zealand keeps its head while all around are losing theirs — and that we combine with our South Pacific neighbours to advocate for a region which is at peace,” Clark says, echoing sentiments that go right back to the dawn of New Zealand’s nuclear free Pacific, “so that we always pursue dialogue and engagement over confrontation.”

    Eugene Doyle is a community organiser and activist in Wellington, New Zealand. He received an Absolutely Positively Wellingtonian award in 2023 for community service. His first demonstration was at the age of 12 against the Vietnam War. This article was first published at his public policy website Solidarity and is republished here with permission.

    This post was originally published on Asia Pacific Report.

  • REVIEW: By ‘Alopi Latukefu

    I came to this evening of short films not sure what to expect.

    I have a history with West Papua (here referring to the Indonesian part of the island of New Guinea, which comprises five provinces, one named “West Papua”) from my days fronting the legendary West Papuan band Black Brothers in the early 1990s.

    During that time, I was exposed to stories of struggle and pride in the identity of the people of West Papua. From their declaration of self-determination and self-government and the raising of the Morning Star flag on 1 December 1961, to the so-called “Act of Free Choice” referendum in 1969 which saw the fledgling Melanesian state become part of the larger Indonesian state, to the next 40 years of struggle.

    However, apart from the occasional ABC or SBS news story and the 1963 ethnographic film Dead Birds, I hadn’t seen much footage on West Papua until now.

    The West Papua Mini Film Festival is a touring festival of short films organised by the West Papuan community and their allies and supporters in Australia to raise awareness of the situation in West Papua.

    The four films I saw, at the first screening in Sydney, were:

    My Name is Pengungsi (Refugee)
    Pepera 1969, A Democratic Integration?
    Papuan Hip-Hop: When the Microphone Talks
    Black Pearl and General of the Field

    The first two films were quite harrowing portrayals of internal displacement and coercion in West Papua. My Name is Pengungsi (Refugee) follows the lives and families of two children, both named “refugee”, born and currently being raised in parts of West Papua distant from their families’ places of origin.

    Their displacement is clearly correlated with the increased presence of extractive corporate interests backed in and supported by a military presence.

    In both children’s cases this has been enabled by the gradual breaking up of the region of West Papua into first two, and now five, separate provinces.

    A scene from My Name is Pengungsi (Refugee)


    My Name is Pengungsi (Refugee).   Video trailer: Jubi TV

    The second film, Pepera 1969, A Democratic Integration, deals with the history of oppression and coercion under Indonesian rule and the absurdity of the rubber-stamping process undertaken by Indonesia (the Act of Free Choice, the Indonesian acronym for which is Pepera) which enabled it to annex West Papua under the impotent gaze of the United Nations and the complicit support of countries including the US and Australia.

    The film documents the process leading into decolonisation and West Papua’s short-lived period of self-rule.

    The second two films were insightful celebrations of Papuan identity in the arts, through hip-hop artists like Ukam Maran and the earlier musical group Mambesak, and in sport, with the incredible story of the Persipura football club of Jayapura.

    The latter’s achievements as a football team and subsequent discrimination and suppression in the racially charged Indonesian football league provide an allegory of West Papuan identity.

    In both cases, the strength and resilience of West Papuan identity, and West Papuans’ pride in their ancient ties to land and culture, are palpable.

    A scene from Papua Hip-Hop: When the microphone talks.

    What I liked about the four films was that they presented a montage of West Papua from rural to urban, from the everyday life of internally displaced people to the exciting work of hip-hop artists with their songs of protest; from the big picture and history of West Papua to the smaller microcosm of the Persipura football team and supporters.

    All in all, I was surprised how much I came out of the festival better informed about a place, its history and current developments. And this despite having the privilege of knowing more about West Papua than many Australians.

    For those who don’t know much about West Papua and would like to know more, attending the West Papua Mini Film Festival is a must. It is on at various locations around Australia until 21 April 2024, with details here.

    And to end on a happy note, my evening of film appreciation included meeting one of the festival’s organisers, Victor Mambor. Victor is the nephew of the late Steve Mambor, drummer for the Black Brothers!

    ‘Alopi Latukefu is the director of the Edmund Rice Centre. He previously worked for the Australian Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade. This review was first published on ANU Development Policy Centre’s DevPolicyBlog and is republished here under Creative Commons.

    This post was originally published on Asia Pacific Report.

  • Content warning – this article mentions trauma and addiction.

    Over the past thirty years, LEGO has been used as a therapeutic tool for both children and adults. It seems that many people benefit from this kind of intervention, but how exactly does LEGO help adults heal from trauma? 

    Across numerous social media sites, huge communities of adult Fans of LEGO exist. One group alone which I’m a member of, boasts over 100k members internationally. Adults come together virtually to enjoy and benefit from both building LEGO, and the sense of community.

    Whilst many of the sets are designed for children, some of the newer sets, such as the McLaren & Ayrton Senna set, were created with adults in mind. With an 18+ label, most of them are more complex or designed as display pieces – rather than those children can play with.

    What is trauma?

    Trauma is an event or series of events which is distressing and overwhelms our nervous systems ability to cope. In England, one in three adults have experienced one or more traumatic events. 

    People with trauma will use grounding techniques to help them when something triggers them. Specifically, it allows a person to interrupt their nervous system’s response and start feeling safe and present again, rather than trapped in a traumatic memory.

    There are many versions of very similar grounding techniques. Notably, the majority of these involve a person trying to reconnect with the present moment, rather than something traumatic from the past. Additionally, many of them aim to engage different senses, such as physical touch along with forcing the brain to focus on something else as a distraction. Of course, LEGO ticks all of these boxes. 

    Whilst other creative activities tick one or two of these boxes, it seems LEGO is on another level. Using both hands to build and at the same time focusing on making sense of the instructions, is an incredibly grounding combination.

    How is LEGO helping people heal from trauma?

    There are many reports online of people using LEGO to get through various traumatic events. From US Veterans overcoming PTSD, addiction and reducing anxiety, to helping someone through the loss of two children. LEGO has helped many people survive difficult times in their lives.  

    Sofie Furio is a military veteran who was diagnosed with PTSD after spending 24 years in the US Air Force. She told me: 

    I found that by building LEGO, I am reprogramming my brain to work through distractions and frustration that are often triggered as a result of trauma. Building LEGO is something that helps me ground myself. I work on a LEGO set and I practise my breathing. PTSD made me isolate, disconnect and avoid. But LEGO has become the link to interact and regain a meaningful connection with others.

    Nervous system regulation

    To put it simply, nervous system regulation means our ability to move through life’s stresses without getting overwhelmed. 

    During periods of stress, our fight or flight response is activated. A regulated nervous system will quickly return to normal once the threat is over. For people with a history of trauma, this is a much harder task. Trauma creates changes in the brain meaning that sometimes the fight or flight response becomes the default setting.

    This can lead to overstimulation and finding it difficult to calm down. Or, on the other hand they may become disconnected and depressed or even alternate between the two states.  

    In recent years there has been a lot of hype on social media sites such as TikTok surrounding nervous system regulation. But have we been overlooking such a simple tool like LEGO? 

    Unlike many meditation techniques, LEGO allows a form of mindfulness that does not involve sitting completely still. For some people like Hayden, who experienced a traumatic event as an adult, this makes it easier. 

    LEGO gets me to slow down. I really struggle to sit still and be present. But when I’m building LEGO it’s like nothing else exists. I haven’t managed to find that anywhere else.

    A.J, who also has PTSD, shared similar experiences:

    Lego allows me to switch my mind off and gives me a break. Sometimes I use it to help me distract myself. If my brain is too full to think I will just follow the instructions of a set. Other times I feel more creative and will just build and see what comes from it. Either way it helps me de-stress and have some fun.

    The importance of Play

    Play is often how children start to make sense of the world around them. However, often when individuals have experienced trauma at a young age, they miss out on ‘normal’ things such as play. 

    I spoke to Rose, who is healing from multiple traumas and is learning to manage her PTSD symptoms. She told me:

    Childhood trauma casts a dark shadow over the entirety of your childhood… it’s difficult to recall anything that stirs a ‘happy thought’. But LEGO gently and safely unearths those memories that aren’t filled with terror and gives you the power to unlock your inner child.

    Having fun and even playing, enables so many of us to actually feel alive – rather than just keeping our heads above water. 

    I spoke to Dr Jay Watts – Consultant Clinical Psychologist and Psychotherapist: 

    I am a huge fan of LEGO for adults who have been traumatised in childhood, including myself! 

    When we’ve been traumatised, we often miss out on opportunities to play and create safely. These experiences leave many scars, one of which is the struggle to find joy in creativity. We develop our joy in play early in life, partly by seeing it mirrored in others.

    Without that reflection, it’s like a drought to the growth of the soul; it limits our joy in life. We need to be able to play because it’s part of the life force—the antidote to the greying stillness, deadness, and exhaustion that many of us can feel.’

    Psychology has begun to recognise that play is as important to healing from trauma as processing trauma memories and establishing good-enough relationships. We’re reawakening an inner child that’s been too scared, too damaged, or too paralyzed to move, and freeing them historically helps free us a little in the now. 

    Letting our imaginations run riot

    Ultimately, Dr Watts concluded:

    Will LEGO heal our trauma? Well, no, of course not entirely. But LEGO allows us both to let our imaginations run riot and to engage in a precision that demands qualities akin to mindfulness.

    Whilst many different creative activities all seem to have some therapeutic benefits – LEGO seems to provide more than most. And if nothing else, when everything feels chaotic and you can’t get your thoughts in order. You can always get your LEGO in order. Personally, it makes me feel in control. No matter what is going on.

    As Dr Watts highlighted however:

    Were it only less expensive, I would consider it a gift to the world!

    Still, whether you are following an instruction booklet or creating something of your own, you cannot beat the feeling of putting the last piece into place. No matter how old you are, the sense of achievement rivals that of flat pack furniture. But LEGO is way more fun and usually, better to look at. And if it helps people with their trauma, all the better. 

    LEGO is often a metaphor for life. Eventually all the pieces will fit together. No matter how many are currently scattered all over the floor.

    Featured image supplied

    By HG

    This post was originally published on Canary.

  • COMMENTARY: By Myles Thomas

    The announced closure of Television New Zealand’s last primetime current affairs programme seems to be the final nail in the coffin for New Zealand’s television credibility. Coming a day after the announcement of the closure of Newshub, it shows that Kiwis have the worst television and video media in the Western world.

    Let’s compare ourselves with our mates across the ditch. Australia’s ABC TV features a nightly current affairs show called 7.30. The blurb for it reads:

    “Sarah Ferguson presents Australia’s premier daily current affairs program, delivering agenda-setting public affairs journalism and interviews that hold the powerful to account. Plus political analysis from Laura Tingle.”

    Clearly 7.30 is far more serious than our Seven Sharp with its fluffy stories and advertorials. The ABC also screens six weekly current affairs shows and documentaries this week. Shows like Australian Story, Four Corners and Media Watch.

    But Australia has five times as many people as we do so that’s why they can afford it, right?

    Ireland has five million people, like NZ, but they still have primetime current affairs. In fact, the Irish enjoy quite a lot of it. The Irish version of TVNZ is RTÉ and features a nightly current affairs show called Nationwide and three weekly current affairs programmes on serious topics.

    There are several other human interest factual programmes too, on subjects like history, gardening, dance and more. It’s the same in other countries with similar populations such as Norway, Denmark, Finland and so on.

    It’s true that in New Zealand, there’s still the off-peak studio politics programmes like Q+A, and current affairs in te ao Māori are well examined on Whakaata Māori. But what about the rest of NZ?

    Some people might say television is dead, and everything is online now. But nearly all online current affairs videos start out as television programmes. The only exceptions are Newsroom’s video investigations with Melanie Reid, and Stuff Circuit which is now disbanded. And for younger audiences there is Re: which TVNZ is also making cuts to.

    Death of current affairs TV
    The death of New Zealand’s prime-time current affairs television has been a long time coming. At first it was documentaries that dwindled and then disappeared off our screens.

    Other genres that are expensive to produce have also become extinct or rarer than a fairy tern — drama, science programmes, kidult, arts programmes, wildlife documentaries, chat shows. Now we can add consumer affairs and prime-time current affairs to the list.

    But it doesn’t have to be this way. If other countries can do it, why not NZ?

    On Wednesday, the Minister for Media and Communications, Melissa Lee, said “I don’t think I can actually save anything. I’m trying to be who I am, the Minister for Media and Communications.”

    This suggests either a lack of understanding of her role or a lack of ambition. She also let slip that there was no way she could save Newshub.

    The only substantive solution to come from the minister is her promise to review the Broadcasting Act. But that review process was initiated by the Ministry for Culture and Heritage years ago and started under the Labour government.

    Moreover, the Broadcasting Act does little more than lay out the rules for broadcasting complaints, election broadcasting, and establish NZ On Air, the BSA and Te Māngai Pāho.

    Minister just tweaking
    The minister says she is reviewing the Broadcasting Act to create a “more level playing field” and allow media businesses to “innovate”. That doesn’t sound like it will do much for television and video current affairs, which will take much more than just tweaking how NZ On Air and the BSA work.

    Perhaps she intends something much more comprehensive, such as a new funding stream for public media, perhaps through a levy, a compulsory subscription, or even a licence fee.

    Despite her protestations, there are several options available to the minister. To save TVNZ’s Fair Go and Sunday, she could provide TVNZ with an interim cash injection (which is actually what governments often do in disasters) until the comprehensive long-term funding is sorted out.

    To save Newshub she could promise to remove advertising from TVNZ, or partially on weekends only. This would throw Warner Bros Discovery a lifeline in the form of advertisers looking for a television station to advertise on. She does not have to stand by and watch while our media burns.

    Sunday is only with us for a few more weeks. Enjoy it while it lasts.

    Myles Thomas is a trustee for Better Public Media Trust. This article was first published by The New Zealand Herald and is republished with the author’s permission.

    This post was originally published on Asia Pacific Report.

  • Another day, another disturbing Tory scheme to fuck over chronically ill and disabled people. In the UK government’s latest state-of-the-art vanity project to drive up its dire employment rate statistics, the Department for Work and Pensions (DWP) is funnelling millions into the pockets of obscure AI companies. What could possibly go wrong?

    DWP AI “back to work” drive

    On 14 April, the DWP announced it had awarded £1.5m to companies working to “boost occupational health services for small and medium-sized businesses.”

    Tellingly, its press release said that the investment was to:

    to tackle in work sickness and boost economic activity

    In other words, the projects are part of the government’s plans to push sick people into, and keep them in work. For this, it awarded the funding between five companies. These were: Wellics Ltd, Kinseed Limited, Elaros 24/7 Limited, Latus Health Ltd, and Armour Labs Ltd.

    So what ingenious support will these companies be offering? Well, the DWP wasn’t shy in boasting the answer. A significant element of the investment will go towards artificial intelligence (AI) occupational health programmes.

    One such company delivering this AI will be Wellics Ltd. Predictably, the company leans into the warm, fuzzy wellbeing rhetoric. On its website, Wellics explains that its technology:

    provides a comprehensive view of employee well-being by measuring four key areas: sleep, mental well-being, nutrition, and physical activity. This data can be used to identify areas where employees need support and track their progress over time.

    So, employers snooping on employees’ health, and how they are managing it, then? Got it. Of course, this could spell particular trouble for chronically ill people, but it’s right up the toxic Tories street. Notably, it’s entirely in step with a government agenda hell-bent on harassing sick people back to work.

    Dressed up wellbeing guff

    Significantly, one of the awardees – Kinseed – may show what this could mean in practice for one sizeable group of chronically ill people. As the DWP explained, the company:

    is developing a revolutionary cloud-based occupational health platform aimed at offering employers’ powerful new tools to help maintain and improve employee health and wellbeing.

    Their new service “MediWork” is breaking ground with AI and uses data to monitor individual health trends and identifies early warning signs of ill health. It will tailor suggestions to improve workplace wellbeing, and help clinicians do their job more effectively and quickly than before.

    Again, the AI service dresses up in wellbeing language, but, emphasis on the “employers’ powerful new tools”. It suggests the potential for employer control over employee health information. Coupled with the DWP’s garble about “economic inactivity” and supporting a “more productive workforce”, it’s not rocket science to see where that could end. Put another way, it’s for sating the capitalist urge to squeeze every last drop of profit from ill employees.

    Predictably then, the government is already sizing up the role of this AI technology for people with long Covid. Specifically, its press release said AI and new occupational health tech will be:

    at heart of revolution including expansion of remote services, digital health hubs, and Long Covid support.

    Notably, Kinseed offers instructive insight into where this might lead next.

    Graded exercise therapy 101

    According to its website, Kinseed is partnering with the occupational health company Cordell Health to develop this.

    And Cordell’s advice document for long Covid sounds a lot like its advocating for a dangerous treatment that has harmed people living with a related chronic illness:

    Keep as active as possible whilst ensuring that activities are commensurate with levels of energy. Those affected may find it useful to keep a diary in order to track activity and monitor steady improvements over time. Rest is important but resting too much increases the risk of losing muscle mass and delaying recovery.

    This screams graded exercise therapy (GET) 101. Notably, this ‘therapy’ involves a gradual increase in physical activity. Practitioners have prescribed this as the primary treatment for people living with myalgic encephalomyelitis (ME).

    However, the treatment is actively harmful to people living with ME. This is due to the disease’s hallmark feature – post exertional malaise (PEM). PEM causes a disproportionate worsening of multiple debilitating symptoms after physical, mental, social, or emotional exertion.

    Despite this, medical professionals subscribed to the biopsychosocial model of ME have repeatedly pushed the treatment. This is the view that ME is largely psychosomatic in origin – or in short – that the disease is all in the patient’s head.

    Of course, this is palpable bullsh*t and multiple international organisations, national health bodies, and scientists have time and again proven the disease is biophysiological and impacts multiple systems in the body.

    Psychologisation and so-called “scroungers”

    Nonetheless, a vocal pyschologising lobby has monopolised the funding for research and played gatekeeper to the treatment for people living with the disease for many years. For example, until 2021, the UK’s health body the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence had maintained it in its guidelines.

    However, the damage has been done. Many people living with ME have reported the devastating impact GET has had on their health. Given that over 50% of people living with long Covid meet the diagnostic criteria for ME, the treatment is inappropriate – in fact, dangerous – for many patients with the condition.

    Yet, as the Canary has pointed out before, psychologising chronic illnesses has also served as the perfect excuse to deprive sick people of access to benefits. What’s more, Cordell Health’s guidance plays into “deconditioning theory” – another erroneous trope perpetuated by psychologisers of the disease.

    Essentially, this is the notion that people living with ME are making themselves sicker by not exercising. Again, studies have debunked this. In spite of this however, the sham theory fits nicely alongside a toxic government campaign to brand sick and disabled benefit claimants as “scroungers”.

    Weaponizing DWP AI against chronic illness

    At the same time, the Canary’s Steve Topple has highlighted how the NHS has removed long Covid treatment targets. More significantly, this coincided with the NHS England’s appointment of one notorious psychiatrist as an executive director.

    Specifically, psychiatrist Simon Wessely took to the helm in January 2023. The NHS board is the institution’s main decision-making body. Wessely is a prominent, powerful proponent of this psychologising crusade against people living with ME.

    You can read more about Wessely and his alarming influence on ME treatment here. But effectively, the staunch biopsychosocial acolyte holds huge sway over the direction of treatment for people with ME. So, as Topple expressed:

    his psychiatric approach to physical illness, coupled with his new job, may indicate the path the NHS is heading further down – and not just regarding long Covid.

    Now, the DWP looks to be aligning workplaces with this dangerous psychologisation too. Naturally, it has form on this already. Crucially, it was DWP-sponsored medical trials which cemented GET as a core NHS treatment for people with ME. Of course, it didn’t do so out of the goodness of its heart to help people suffering the daily horror of the devastating disease. Now, it sure as hell isn’t sponsoring these new AI programmes to help out chronically ill people either.

    And it wouldn’t be the first time that the DWP has weaponized AI against chronically sick and disabled people. As the Disability News Service reported in February 2022, the department has been using an AI algorithm to select benefit claimants for fraud investigations. Yet campaigners have highlighted that it could be using this to discriminate against disabled claimants.

    Government washing its hands of vulnerable people

    So, what we have is AI spying on sick people in work, and AI spying on sick people not in work. Ultimately, this new DWP AI guff is just the government’s latest dodgy gambit to bring sick and disabled people under the thumb of the exploitative capitalist market.

    Of course, it’s nothing new. As chronically ill and disabled folks, and indeed any marginalised community can tell you, if you’re not ‘productive’ – that is, running yourself into the ground for corporate paymasters – you’re expendable.

    At the end of the day, it looks to be another ploy to push the blame for poverty and sickness onto poor and sick people themselves. Successive governments and their corporate media mouthpieces have long been saying if you’re poor and sick, it’s on you. Now, some corporate AI will make sure you know it too.

    Feature image via YouTube – Department for Work and Pensions

    By Hannah Sharland

    This post was originally published on Canary.