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The Dalai Lama, the spiritual leader of Tibetan Buddhism, has said he will discuss the details of his reincarnation when he turns 90, next July. The China Tibetan Buddhist Academy — a Chinese government-supported institution — isn’t waiting. This month, in Lanzhou, China, the group held a seminar to promote its views on the matter. The bottom line: whatever spiritual force guides this sacred process must adhere to the strictures of the Chinese Communist Party, or CCP.
If that sounds unholy, that may be the point. China has very practical reasons why it wants a say in who is the next Dalai Lama, given the enormous popularity of the current one and his ability to maintain cohesion among Tibetans across the globe in their fight for greater autonomy for Tibet.
The current Dalai Lama has become an enormously popular figure. Winner of the 1989 Nobel Peace Prize, his international renown has helped maintain a unity among Tibetans in and outside Tibet, despite efforts to negate his influence by the CCP.
The September seminar in Lanzhou re-emphasized the CCP’s policies on reincarnation that must align the system with Xi Jinping thought and party policies.
According to Beijing’s official media, the seminar attendees were Tibetan Buddhism representatives and experts from Tibetan populated areas, including the Tibet Autonomous Region and the provinces of Qinghai, Sichuan and Gansu.
But that quickly triggered a rebuttal from the Tibetan government-in-exile, the institution the current Dalai Lama helped set up in 1959.
“While China recognizes only the Tibet Autonomous Region as the only ‘Tibet,’ they still recruited attendees from other Tibetan populated areas for important issues,” Sikyong Penpa Tsering, the president of the current government, said in response to the seminar.
“No government nor any individual has the right to interfere in the reincarnation of the 14th Dalai Lama,” he added.
Who is the Dalai Lama?
“Lama” means teacher or master, and a lama is essentially a monk who has achieved some renown and taken on a leadership role within a community. There are thought to be hundreds of lamas within Tibetan Buddhism, which incorporates tenets of both traditional Buddhism and shamanistic practices that preceded its creation.
Worshippers consider the Dalai Lama to be the manifestation of Avalokiteshvara (Phakchok Chenri Se-འཕགས་མཆོག་སྤྱན་རས་གཟིགས in Tibetan), the Buddhist source of compassion.
The current Dalai Lama, Tenzin Gyatso, is the 14th in a line that began in 1391. Tibetans believe that when he dies he will be reborn to continue his role as spiritual leader.
Beyond the Dalai Lama’s spiritual significance, thousands of Tibetans who have fled their homeland and were forced to leave behind families view him as a father figure who has provided for their temporal needs as well — security, education, health care — through an exile government he helped create in Dharamsala.
How is a new Dalai Lama selected?
Tibetan Buddhists believe that when the Dalai Lama dies his spirit will reincarnate in a new body. A search committee traditionally composed of high-ranking monks and lamas is formed to find a child born within a year of the Dalai Lama’s death who exhibits exceptional qualities and behaviors akin to his predecessor. The present Dalai Lama was two years old when he was identified.
The method of discovery includes visions, consultations with oracles and interpretations of omens. One famous clue involves observing the direction of smoke from the cremation of the previous Dalai Lama. The child must recognize belongings of the previous Dalai Lama, demonstrating a connection to his past life.
Why is choosing the Dalai Lama controversial?
The process of succession affirms the continuity of Tibetan Buddhist leadership and culture, which is why China seeks to have control over the selection. Choosing the 15th Dalai Lama could help solidify authority over Tibet and provinces where ethnic Tibetans live in large numbers. There are thought to be more than 6 million Tibetans in China, compared to 150,000 in exile.
The China Tibetan Buddhist Academy’s meeting this month attempted to promulgate the Chinese government-preferred process, known as the “Golden Urn Selection.” The method is considered a historical custom popularized during the Qing dynasty, but is disputed by the Tibetan way of recognizing the reincarnated lamas.
A previous effort to control the selection of Tibetan leaders has met only minimal success. In 1995, Chinese authorities kidnapped a 6-year-old Panchen Lama, the second most important figure in Tibetan Buddhism, shortly after he was chosen by the Dalai Lama. The Panchen Lama and the Dalai Lama traditionally participate in each other’s reincarnation recognition process, so many experts believe that Beijing will use its own Panchen to choose the next Dalai Lama.
The person they installed as a replacement continues to be viewed with suspicion by many Tibetans inside and outside China.
What has the Dalai Lama said about his reincarnation?
The Dalai Lama himself has suggested several possibilities for his reincarnation, declaring once that “If I die in exile, my reincarnation will be born in exile not in Tibet.” The statement was viewed as a way to emphasize the importance of spiritual freedom.
He has also raised the possibility that the line dies with him; that a woman for the first time will be chosen; and that he may identify his successor before his death.
But despite himself engaging in speculation about the subject, questions about who will succeed him are premature, he says. He foresees living another 20 years.
Edited by Jim Synder and Boer Deng.
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Image by Joshua Kettle.
From August 14 to 18, 2023, I attended a Parliament of the World Religions in Chicago. The gathering drew together more than 7,000 people representing about 100 countries and more than 200 different religious groups. Focused on the theme of “A Call to Conscience: Defending Freedom and Human Rights,” it was a very impressive event.
The first time that many religious representatives met with each other was at the World Parliament of Religions in Chicago in 1893. Three of the goals of that gathering were to show “what and how many important truths the various Religions hold and teach in common,” to discover “what light Religion has to throw on the great problems of the present age,” and “to bring the nations of the earth into a more friendly fellowship, in the hope of securing permanent international peace.”
The president of that Parliament proclaimed: “Henceforth the religions of the world will make war, not on each other, but on the giant evils that afflict humanity.” But after two world wars, the Holocaust and other genocides, the Cold War with massive nuclear proliferation, and more than 80 wars since the end of the Second World War, many people representing many different religions realized the need for modern Parliaments in order to address our current global problems.
As a result, in 1993 many religious leaders in Chicago organized the first modern Parliament. The other modern Parliaments were then held in Cape Town, South Africa in 1999, in Barcelona, Spain in 2004, in Melbourne, Australia in 2009, in Salt Lake City, Utah in 2015, in Toronto, Canada in 2018, virtually in 2021, and most recently back in Chicago this year. I have been fortunate to participate in all these events.
The modern Parliaments are religious conventions that are open to anyone who is committed to learning about other religions and dialoging with people from other religions. Each day of the Parliament involves meetings, presentations, and panels about the beliefs and practices of different religions or about humanity’s most pressing problems: violence, human rights atrocities, poverty, racism, gender inequality, war and genocide, nuclear weapons, and environment degradation due to global warming. Leaders of various groups within Judaism, Christianity, Islam, the Baha’i Faith, Zoroastrianism, Hinduism, Buddhism, Sikhism, Jainism, Confucianism, Taoism, and other religious groups gave speeches in the plenary sessions about how they think these global problems can be solved.
At the 2023 Parliament, there were more than 100 sessions or presentations each day, as well as many opportunities to attend different religious services. Many dances and songs performed by various religious groups were also part of this global experience. Every day a large group of Sikhs offered a free meal of traditional Indian food to large groups of participants. Everyone who chose to attend these langars was asked to follow the Sikh custom of removing one’s shoes and covering one’s head with a turban or a cloth.
There was a major emphasis at this latest Parliament on the Declaration of a Global Ethic. It was written by a group of scholars from different religions for the 1993 Parliament. The Global Ethic emphasizes a commitment to a culture of nonviolence and respect for life, solidarity and a just economic order, tolerance and a life of truthfulness, equal rights and partnership between men and women, and sustainability and care for the Earth.
These principles reflect the ancient commandments taught in some way by all of the major religions: “You shall not murder/kill, steal, lie, or commit adultery.” According to the Global Ethic, people from every religion or no religion can agree on universal ethical values such as nonviolent conflict resolution, honesty, human rights, labor rights, working against corruption in government and economics, working for justice, and protecting the environment.
Another document that was emphasized at recent Parliaments is the Charter for Compassion. This Charter is based on the Golden Rule that has been taught by all of the major religions in various formulations.
The Charter calls upon all to restore compassion to the center of morality and religion, to reject any interpretation of scripture that breeds hatred or violence, to teach accurate and respectful information about other religions, to appreciate cultural and religious diversity, and to cultivate empathy for the sufferings of others, even those regarded as enemies. Because of the modern Parliaments and other influential leaders and organizations, many cities around the world have declared themselves to be Compassion Cities.
Several sessions at the 2023 Parliament emphasized the need for a democratic world federation. One was led by Sovaida Ma’ani Ewing, a representative of the Baha’i Faith. She argued that war, climate change, mismanagement of natural resources, proliferation of nuclear weapons, and financial upheavals can best be solved by establishing collective decision-making institutions that can evolve into a democratic world federation of nation-states.
Many modern philosophers and religious leaders have realized that there will be no peace among the nations without peace among the religions. Furthermore, there will be no peace among the religions without dialogue among the religions.
I am convinced that the Parliaments of the World’s Religions are important forums for promoting world citizenship, compassion, and a global ethic for the global community. The world’s religions have a responsibility to build a secure foundation for these values so that a democratic system of enforceable world law can outlaw war and solve our global problems.
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At least two women in Georgia have died since the state’s six-week abortion ban went into effect after the Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade. Candi Miller and Amber Thurman, both Black women and mothers to young children, died after they were unable to access care for rare but typically treatable complications caused by medication abortion. We hear more from ProPublica editor Ziva Branstetter, whose publication reported on the preventable deaths of Miller and Thurman, and from reproductive justice advocate Monica Simpson. “We are in a maternal healthcare crisis in our state,” says Simpson, the executive director of SisterSong, an organization that works throughout the southern United States on behalf of communities of color, which disproportionately suffer the impacts of restrictions on abortion care.
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Trigger Warning: Violence
In the last week of August, two horrific hate crimes against Muslims — the lynching of 25-year-old Sabir Malik in Haryana and the brutal assault on 72-year-old Haji Ashraf in a train in Maharashtra — sent shock waves across the country. However, many of the mainstream TV news channels, which air fiery debates on communal issues on a regular basis, either chose to ignore them completely in their prime-time segments or barely mentioned them.
While Republic TV chose not to report any of the hate crimes, let alone host prime-time debates on them, channels like NDTV, Aaj Tak and Times Now barely mentioned the incidents, but did not consider them important enough to be discussed on prime-time shows hosted by ‘star’ anchors. India Today and Zee News, in sharp contrast, hosted prime-time debates and reported on the hate crimes in depth.
On August 27, 25-year-old Sabir Malik, a Muslim migrant worker from West Bengal, was allegedly beaten to death in Haryana’s Charkhi Dadri district by members of a self-proclaimed ‘cow-vigilante’ group on the suspicion of cooking and consuming beef. Eight people, including two minors, were arrested for the assault. The incident gained widespread attention after a horrifying video of the lynching went viral on social media.
स्थान: #Haryana
BIG BREAKING: बेहद ही खतरनाक और विचलित करने वाला हादसा
मानवीयता किस कदर दम तोड़ चुकी है
हरियाणा चरखी दादरी मे गोमांस पकाने के शक में साविर मालिक की पीट-पीटकर हत्या कर दी गई
हत्या करने वाले अभिषेक, मोहित, रविंदर, कमलजीत और साहिल नामी गौरक्षा दल के ठेकेदार… pic.twitter.com/SnA9g8rwSx
— Today Maharashtra (@todaymaharasht) August 31, 2024
In the video, some men are seen beating Sabir with thick wooden sticks, while others attempt to intervene. According to reports, the attackers subsequently took Malik to another location and continued to beat him up, ultimately leading to his death. Malik, who lived in a shanty near Bandhra village, earned a living by collecting waste and empty bottles. He and his friend Asserudin were lured to a shop near the bus stand by a group of young men under the pretence of selling scrap materials. When they arrived, they were ambushed with sticks. Asserudin managed to escape, but Malik was abducted by the vigilantes, taken away on a motorbike, and beaten to death. His lifeless body was later found near his shanty.
News reports quoted Charkhi Dadri DSP Bharat Bhushan saying: “All eight accused, including two juveniles, are associated with Gau Raksha Dal. They had informed the police about their suspicions, and we were investigating when the killing took place”. This suggests that despite police involvement in the matter, the eight individuals of a self-proclaimed ‘gau raksha’ group acted on their suspicions, which led to Sabir’s death. Commenting on the said incident, Haryana chief minister Nayab Singh Saini said: “Mob lynching is not a right thing. But there is great respect for cows and at times, people of the village react when such an input comes. But I stress that such incidents of lynching are unfortunate and should not happen.”
A day after Sabir’s alleged murder, on August 28, 72-year-old Ashraf Ali Syed Hussain, who had boarded the Dhule-CSMT Express and was on his way to visit his daughter in Kalyan, Maharashtra was heckled and assaulted by a group of men, on the suspicion of carrying beef (cow meat). The assailants were reportedly on their way to a police recruitment exam. Ashraf claimed he was carrying buffalo meat which was not illegal in Maharashtra. A few days later, videos of the attack went viral on social media, showing the men slapping and kicking the elderly man while hurling abuses at him. The assault left Ashraf with a bloodshot eye and bruises.
Haji Ashraf Munyar from a village in Jalgaon District travelling in a train to Kalyan to meet his daughter was abused and badly beaten up by goons in a train near Igatpuri alleging him of carrying beef. pic.twitter.com/uOr3vlqBqB
— Mohammed Zubair (@zoo_bear) August 30, 2024
Haji Ashraf’s son Ashpak told The Hindu, “They punched him repeatedly in the face, chest, stomach, and private parts, and made threats to kill him, and rape the women in his family.” He also alleged that the group even attempted to throw his father off the moving train. Ashpak learned about the assault through a friend who sent him the video on WhatsApp, as Haji Ashraf did not mention the incident when he arrived at his daughter’s home. Ashpak added that his father had been unable to sleep, humiliated and deeply shaken by the incident.
On August 31, after the video gained attention, Maharashtra police tracked Ashraf and convinced him to file an FIR. That same day, three suspects — Akash Ahwad, Nilesh Ahire, and Jayesh Mohite — were arrested and charged under the following bailable sections of the Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita (BNS):189(2) (unlawful assembly), 191(2) (rioting), 190 (unlawful assembly in prosecution of common object), 126(2) (wrongful restraint), 115(2) (causing hurt), 324(4)(5) (mischief causing loss or damage), 351(2)(3)(criminal intimidation), and 352 (intentional insult with intent to provoke breach of peace). It is important to note that the initial FIR did not include hate crime charges. The next day, the trio was produced at a Kalyan court and were granted bail.
The same day, Nationalist Congress Party leader and MLA Jitendra Awhad stepped in and questioned why hate crime and robbery charges had not been included in the FIR. On September 2, senior police inspector Archana Dusane of GRP filed an appeal to amend the FIR with Sections 302 (intentionally uttering words to deliberately wound the religious sentiments of another person) and 311(Robbery, or dacoity, with attempt to cause death or grievous hurt). The court granted the appeal, leading to the cancellation of the suspects’ bail. However, the three men went into hiding and are currently absconding.
On September 3, the Thane GRP arrested a fourth suspect, 19-year-old Suresh Jadhav, a Navi Mumbai resident and hotel cashier, for his alleged role in the assault.
Both the incidents involving Sabir Malik and Haji Ashraf gained significant traction on social media, leading to widespread coverage on digital and print media, as well as some YouTube news channels. The Times of India, for example, front-paged both the reports on its September 1 Delhi edition:
However, when we went through the bulletins by major television news channels from August 27 onward, we found that both the stories were notably absent from the prime-time shows on Republic World, Republic Bharat, NDTV, Times Now, Times Now Navbharat, Aaj Tak and ABP News. A few of them remained completely silent on both the hate crimes.
Sabir Malik Lynching: Zero Shows, Haji Ashraf Assault: Zero Shows
Republic World’s digital outlet published a report on August 31 on the assault on Haji Ashraf, and on September 1, the outlet published a report on Sabir Malik’s death. We reviewed both the English (Republic World) and Hindi (Republic Bharat) channels of Arnab Goswami’s Republic Media but found no coverage on either of the two channels of either incident from August 27 (the date of Sabir Malik’s death) up until the time of writing of this report. Goswami, we found, was busy ‘destroying secular hypocrites’.
On August 31, as the video of the assault on Haji Ashraf spread across social media and was picked up by various media outlets, Arnab Goswami hosted his prime-time show, ‘The Debate with Arnab’. The nearly 30-minute episode was titled: “1984 Sikh Riots: Arnab Destroys Secularism Hypocrites | Rahul and Kejriwal in Radio Silence.” In the days that followed, Republic World’s prime-time segments continued to focus primarily on the R G Kar rape-murder in Kolkata and other issues in states governed by parties from the INDIA alliance and comments made by Opposition leaders.
Below are a few screenshots that show what the prime-time at Republic World aired between August 30 and September 4.
Click to view slideshow.Likewise, there wasn’t a single video on Republic Bharat’s YouTube channel covering the assaults on Haji Ashraf or Sabir Malik. The Hindi channel focused mostly on the R G Kar rape-murder in Kolkata and ‘bulldozer action’ in Uttar Pradesh, a wolf attack in Bahraich, and astrology videos.
Click to view slideshow.Sabir Malik Lynching: Zero shows; Haji Ashraf Assault: Only Posted the Viral Video
The reports of Sabir Malik’s lynching and Haji Ashraf’s assault did not make it to NDTV’s prime-time slots. Although NDTV did share the viral video showing the assault on 72-year-old Haji Ashraf, the channel did not hold any discussion or debate on the matter. Sabir Malik’s death, on the other hand, received no coverage on the channel at all.
Below are a few screenshots that show what NDTV’s reportage looked like in the week after Sabir Malik and Haji Ashraf’s cases went viral.
Click to view slideshow.Sabir Malik and Haji Ashraf: Reported, Nothing on Prime Time
In the case of Aaj Tak, both incidents (1, 2) were reported by the channel. On the other hand, the channel’s prime-time shows, two of which are hosted by ‘star’ anchors Sudhir Chaudhary and Anjana Om Kashyap, had no mention of either of the two incidents. In the weeks following the incidents, prime-time shows focussed mostly on the Uttar Pradesh elections, Bulldozer ‘justice’ and the Kolkata rape-murder case.
Click to view slideshow.On September 7, an exclusive interview of Haryana chief minister Nayab Singh Saini by Anjana Om Kashyap was posted on Aaj Tak’s YouTube channel. In the 49-minute long interview, not once was the Haryana CM asked about the lynching incident of Sabir Malik. The focus of the interview remained on the upcoming assembly elections.
Sabir Malik: 5 Videos; Haji Ashraf: Zero Shows
Times Now extensively covered the lynching of Sabir Malik and reports on the incident featured on its prime-time show The NewsHour hosted by Priya Bahal on September 1. However, the channel remained silent on the Haji Ashraf case. Meanwhile, its Hindi counterpart, Times Now Navbharat, reported the Sabir Malik lynching, although the story didn’t make it into prime-time discussions. The Haji Ashraf case went entirely unreported. The only video report on Haji Ashraf’s case that we could find on a channel affiliated with Times Now was on Times Now Marathi.
On September 1, the same day Times Now Navbharat reported on Sabir Malik’s death, the channel’s ‘star’ anchor, Sushant Sinha, in his show ‘News ki Pathshala’ heavily praised communal statements made by Uttar Pradesh chief minister Yogi Adityanath, Assam’s Himanta Biswa Sarma, and Madhya Pradesh’s Mohan Yadav. Sushant asked, “Can a ‘vote bank’ government take such decisive actions? It’s inevitable that those engaging in ‘vote bank’ politics — the so-called secular bloc — will now be agitated”. As the show began, a graphic appeared labelling the three BJP leaders as ‘Warriors of Hindutva’.
Below are a few screenshots from Times Now Navbharat’s YouTube page which show what stories made it to the channel’s prime-time shows.
Click to view slideshow.Sabir Malik Lynching: Reported; Haji Ashraf Assault: Reported
ABP News reported on the death of Malik and the incident was also discussed on one of the channel’s prime-time shows called ‘Seedha Sawaal’ hosted by Sandeep Chaudhary on August 31. Haji Ashraf’s story was also reported by the channel in a video called: “Top News: Watch all the major headlines in a quick format | Gujarat Flood | Weather | Haryana Mob Lynching”. However, the assault on Ashraf did not make it to prime-time discussions.
Unlike its Hindi counterpart Aaj Tak, India Today covered the incidents involving Sabir Malik and Haji Ashraf, including an in-depth prime-time discussion on their show ‘News Today with Rajdeep Sardesai’ on September 2.
The India Today discussion focused on the proliferation of hate that was responsible for such crimes. “What will it take to stop the hate? the hate speeches, the mob lynchings. Is law not enough to curb.. attacks on minorities?…” Sardesai asked even as visuals from the attacks on Sabir Malik and Haji Ashraf played on the screen.
Hindi news channel Zee News also covered both cases of Sabir Malik and Haji Ashraf in detail and also held debates (1, 2, 3).
The lynching incident of Sabir Malik was discussed in one of the prime-time shows of the channel called ‘Taal Thok Ke’. The anchor of the bulletin, Anant Tyagi, highlighted the fact that a life had been lost but the chief minister of Haryana was tacitly backing the cow vigilantes behind the alleged crime by saying, “It is connected to matters of faith… such things happen in villages… It (the lynching) should not have happened, but who could stop them?”
The description of the bulletin uploaded on Zee News’s YouTube channel says, “जब हरियाणा के मुख्यमंत्री नायब सैनी से इस बारे में सवाल पूछा गया तो उन्होंने हमलावरों का बचाव करते हुए कहा कि गोमांस लोगों की भावनाओं से जुड़ी हैं और ऐसे में भीड़ को कौन रोक सकता है।” [When Haryana Chief Minister Nayab Saini was asked a question about this, he defended the attackers and said that beef is related to people’s sentiments and in such a situation who can stop the mob.]
However, Haji Ashraf’s case did not make it to the prime-time slots.
The post Hate crimes in Haryana, Maharashtra a no-show on Republic; how did the other mainstream news channels fare? appeared first on Alt News.
This content originally appeared on Alt News and was authored by Oishani Bhattacharya.
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Hello everyone, and welcome back to State of Emergency. I’m Jake, and today we’re going to be talking about how a politician’s disaster response can influence voter attitudes and election outcomes.
In July 2022, a storm dropped more than 14 inches of rain on Kentucky, sending flash floods rolling through the mountainous counties in the eastern part of the state. The waters killed more than 40 people, sweeping some away on powerful currents, and dangerous landslides destroyed almost 9,000 homes. The region’s rural counties bore the brunt of the damage, adding to their already roiling housing crisis and high poverty rates.
The state’s Democratic governor, Andy Beshear, spent weeks touring hard-hit areas and comforting flood victims, earning him the title “consoler in chief.” He also pulled out all the stops to ensure the recovery was as fast as possible: He fought the Federal Emergency Management Agency, or FEMA, to increase its aid payments to victims, reallocated $200 million from the state’s budget reserve to help towns rebuild, set up a state-run charitable fund to raise millions more in private donations, and acquired land on high ground to build new housing developments.
The following year, Beshear was up for reelection in his red state, where Donald Trump had won by more than 25 percentage points and where Republicans hold supermajorities in both legislative chambers. Not only did he win another term, he improved on his margins in the first election. Beshear’s electoral success in Appalachia led to speculation that Vice President Kamala Harris would choose him as her running mate.
There were a number of reasons for his victory, including public anger over the state’s stringent abortion laws, but Beshear made big gains in the rural counties that had suffered the most during the 2022 disaster. The residents of those communities were still rebuilding from the floods, but they trusted Beshear to help them recover.
“People didn’t just hear about Andy coming to Breathitt County, he actually came and he actually brought help when he came every time,” said Jeff Noble, the county judge for Breathitt County, in an interview with a local news station last year. Trump won more than 75 percent of the vote in the county in 2020.
“…the lesson is clear: Voters value an authentic disaster response from their politicians, so much so that it can override other political values.”
Big disasters often thrust politicians into the media limelight, allowing them to pose for photo ops with victims and make solemn recovery vows at press conferences. Chris Christie, the Republican governor of New Jersey, saw his approval ratings skyrocket in the aftermath of 2012’s Superstorm Sandy, when he famously embraced then-President Barack Obama on an airport tarmac in Atlantic City. During the early days of the coronavirus pandemic, New York’s then-governor Andrew Cuomo became a household name for his daily virus briefings. A study of elections in Italy found that earthquakes “significantly increase … incumbent mayors’ chance of being reelected and their vote share,” in large part thanks to “higher visibility in the media.”
It’s impossible to say with certainty whether Beshear’s post-flood political success in the eastern part of the state came about because he delivered genuine material aid to the region, or whether it was just the result of higher media visibility. To be sure, the recovery has not been smooth, and it is far from over. As Grist and Blue Ridge Public Radio’s own Katie Myers has reported, many residents still feel lost and abandoned as they navigate a post-flood housing shortage. Even so, the lesson is clear: Voters value an authentic disaster response from their politicians, so much so that it can override other political values. In a hyper-partisan election environment, and one where climate change is making disasters more severe, it’s a point worth remembering.
You can read more Grist reporting about the recovery from the 2022 floods here and here.
Whereas Beshear earned praise for working across party lines to aid flood victims in Kentucky, other governors have drawn criticism for politicizing the disaster process. In the aftermath of July’s Hurricane Beryl, President Joe Biden accused Texas leaders of delaying their request for a disaster declaration, a necessary step before FEMA and other federal agencies can provide emergency aid. The state didn’t get an emergency declaration until more than a day after the storm struck Texas, something that often happens well before a hurricane even makes landfall. The state’s governor, Republican Greg Abbott, was out of the country, and Biden said Lieutenant Governor Dan Patrick had dragged his feet on requesting aid. Patrick called the comments “a complete lie.”
Fracking takes center stage at debate: You might have heard there was a presidential debate last week. Vice President Kamala Harris touched on how climate change is impacting insurance costs, but as my colleague Zoya Teirstein writes, the main climate focus was on fossil fuels.Read more
The hidden factors fueling Francine: Hurricane Francine made landfall in storm-ravaged Louisiana as a Category 1 storm last week, and my Grist colleague Matt Simon has a story on how decades of land subsidence and sea level rise may have led to higher storm surge in coastal areas.Read more
Louisiana governor touts flood defenses: After Francine made landfall, Louisiana’s Republican governor, Jeff Landry, touted the state’s past adaptation efforts, saying that its billions of dollars of spending on levees and land restoration likely reduced storm damages.Read more
Campaigning in extreme heat: Both Republicans and Democrats are struggling to campaign outside in the swing states of Arizona and Nevada as daytime highs exceed 110 degrees Fahrenheit. Bloomberg’s Zahra Hirji followed door-knockers campaigning in a crucial congressional district in the Phoenix suburbs in brutal heat.Read more
Smoked out: Kamala Harris’ running mate Tim Walz had to rearrange his tour of battleground states last week after a rash of wildfires in Nevada forced him to cancel a campaign stop in Reno. A fire near the area has burned more than 6,500 acres.Read more
This story was originally published by Grist with the headline The elected officials making political hay from disasters on Sep 17, 2024.
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We speak with filmmaker Pamala Yates about her new documentary, Borderland: The Line Within, which explores the human impact of restrictive U.S. immigration policies and border militarization. The film tells the stories of asylum seekers fleeing violence in their home countries, activists fighting to protect the rights of undocumented immigrants, and others caught up in what Yates calls “the border-industrial complex, the billions of dollars of our tax money that is being spent to capture, incarcerate and deport immigrants.” She says the immigrants shown in the film are not victims but “leaders” who are “building strength in immigrant communities.” We also speak with Gabriela Castañeda, an immigrant rights organizer with the Movement of Immigrant Leaders in Pennsylvania, or MILPA, whose work is featured in the documentary. She faults both Republicans and Democrats for promoting anti-immigrant policies instead of using those same resources to improve the country. “What’s happening right now is that the immigrants are used as scapegoats. We are blamed for all the problems in the United States,” she says. Borderland continues the work of Yates over four decades and her past films, When the Mountains Tremble, Granito: How to Nail a Dictator and 500 Years: Life in Resistance.
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In every presidential election, office seekers elbow each other to position themselves as favoring tax breaks for the electorate. Kamala Harris raced in quickly with proposals for a tax break for the middle class and a tax deduction of up to $50,000 for new small businesses ─ two debt producing polices. To her credit, the vice president intends to roll back a Trump administration law by raising the corporate tax rate to 28%, a needed revenue-raising policy. The first two tax proposals sound good but aren’t good. Both candidates favor Child tax credits, a worthy policy for a huge class of voters and another example of pandering to the taxpayers.
The Middle Class Tax Cut
No matter how it is sliced, diced, or spiced, this middle class tax cut benefits nobody, harms the nation, and questions Harris’ credibility. The presidential aspirant said in her acceptance speech that she will be a president for all peoples in the nation. Singling out a tax cut for the more fortunate does not match her words. Unexplained is why this special class needs a tax cut.
Tax cuts are usual when demand is low, such as in a recession. The present economy is healthy with plenty, and I do mean plenty, of new Teslas in my middle class neighborhood. Elevated consumer demand is subsiding, noted by the decrease in consumer-inflated prices and increase in stock and housing market asset prices. Money is flowing into assets and a middle class tax cut will accelerate the trend.
Taxes transfer money between the government and the public. Neither method adds or subtracts to the money supply nor allows more or less available spending to the economy ─ the purchasing power stays the same, which means the purchasing of goods and services remain the same, and the GDP remains the same Lowering taxes mainly assists the already employed, and that is not the major priority. Who pays taxes ─ the employed. Who receives tax breaks ─ those who pay taxes. Lowering taxes redistributes federal assistance from needy persons to the employed. Which is preferable, redistributing income so the employed have more to spend or redistributing the income so the underemployed have something to spend?
Stimulating the economy by tax breaks is a psychological phenomenon. The talk, exaggerations, promises, and general optimism of tax breaks fashion a more optimistic public, which supposedly stimulates spending, investment, and courage to carry more debt. Creeping in to the debate is another assumption ─ those who have excess funds will invest and stimulate growth. Not considered is they might invest in speculative ventures that only churn money or might purchase imports, which decreases purchasing power of domestic production.
GDP has steadily grown, with a few bumps, in the last 80 years, and no relation to lowering of taxes has been shown. A government report: Taxes and the Economy: An Economic Analysis of the Top Tax Rates Since 1945, Thomas L. Hungerford Specialist in Public Finance, September 14, 2012 at concludes:
The top income tax rates have changed considerably since the end of World War II. Throughout the late-1940s and 1950s, the top marginal tax rate was typically above 90%; today it is 35%. Additionally, the top capital gains tax rate was 25% in the 1950s and 1960s, 35% in the 1970s; today it is 15%. The average tax rate faced by the top 0.01% of taxpayers was above 40% until the mid-1980s; today it is below 25%. Tax rates affecting taxpayers at the top of the income distribution are currently at their lowest levels since the end of the second World War. The results of the analysis suggest that changes over the past 65 years in the top marginal tax rate and the top capital gains tax rate do not appear correlated with economic growth. The reduction in the top tax rates appears to be uncorrelated with saving, investment, and productivity growth. The top tax rates appear to have little or no relation to the size of the economic pie. However, the top tax rate reductions appear to be associated with the increasing concentration of income at the top of the income distribution. As measured by IRS data, the share of income accruing to the top 0.1% of U.S. families increased from 4.2% in 1945 to 12.3% by 2007 before falling to 9.2% due to the 2007-2009 recession. At the same time, the average tax rate paid by the top 0.1% fell from over 50% in 1945 to about 25% in 2009. Tax policy could have a relation to how the economic pie is sliced ─ lower top tax rates may be associated with greater income disparities.
Because taxable incomes do not include inflation and these have increased greatly during the last decades, it is difficult to compare tax rates in 2024 with earlier tax rates. Peering through data, they seem just as low as they were in 2014, when the government report was published, or at a near historic post-World War II low. Why go lower?
Tax Deduction of up to $50,000 for New Small Businesses
The principal hindrance to starting a small business is the high interest rate. Tax deductions will not help small businesses that have no access to funds and no profits to tax. The proposal affects a minor portion of the small business community and is subsidized by a major portion of the economy ─ those who can also use tax breaks.
This tax benefit is a policy seeking a problem. Newly created small businesses have exploded in the post-pandemic period. An April, 2024 Treasury Department report relates,
Small businesses created over 70 percent of net new jobs since 2019. In the previous business cycle, small businesses created 64 percent of net new jobs.
Small business optimism is rebounding as inflation falls. Multiple measures of business optimism show substantial increases in recent months. More than 70 percent of small business leaders expect revenues to grow over the next year, the most since the pandemic.
Entrepreneurship continues to surge: the United States is averaging 430,000 new business applications per month in 2024, 50 percent more than in 2019. The subset of applications for businesses most likely to hire employees has also risen to 140,000 per month, 30 percent more than in 2019. Over 19 million businesses have been formed since Biden’s inauguration, and these are not just sole proprietorships or fly-by-night operations. The subset of applications for businesses most likely to hire employees has increased 30 percent from 2019.
The Main Street Alliance(MSA) establishes priorities for small businesses. Its 2025 agenda does not include a suggestion for a tax deduction. The Alliance advocates for “stronger antitrust enforcement, fair tax policies, and expanded access to capital. This includes efforts to revise the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act, support the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) and Department of Justice Antitrust Division, and fight against cuts to critical small business funding from the Small Business Administration (SBA) and other agencies.”
MSA “plans on supporting the continued implementation of the Inflation Reduction Act, paid family and medical leave, investments in child care, and enhanced subsidies for health insurance on the Affordable Care Act exchanges.”
Child Tax Credit
Kamala Harris’ economic plans include a $6,000 tax credit for parents of newborns and a continuation of the pandemic-era Child Tax Credit (CTC). The latter expanded the Child Tax Credits and boosted the benefit to $3,600 for children under six years old and to $3,000 for children from 7 to 17 years of age.
Seems beneficial to subsidize those in need, which are usually growing families. In addition, it is good economics — places funds in hands of those who will spend them for essentials and move them through the economy. The question that Harris has not answered is, “To what level of income will the credits apply?” My recommendation is that credits should also be based on assets and slide off gradually from $60,000 income to $100,000 income. Their effects on inflation need study.
Corporate Tax Rate
Before Trump lowered the maximum corporate tax rate to a flat 21 percent, the 35 percent rate for income greater than $18.3 million, had been relatively constant for 32 years, and economic gyrations had not shown to be due to that rate.
The effective corporate tax rate graph tells another story — corporations have taken advantage of tax breaks and loopholes to reduce their taxes.
The problem is not high corporate tax; the problem is the ability of corporations to avoid paying taxes. If tax breaks and loopholes unique to U.S. corporations, such as accelerated depreciation, using excess tax benefits from stock options to reduce federal and state taxes, and industry specific tax breaks were reduced or eliminated, then the tax rate could also be reduced; the government charges with one legislation and discharges with another legislation. Corporations are responsible for finding loopholes to avoid taxes, and the government is responsible for providing the loopholes.
The posed advantages of a lower corporate tax rate — increased funds for investment translating into increased production, which increases employment and Gross Domestic Product might be true if corporations used the greater part of their profit for increased investment. However, corporations have used the excessive profit for executive bonuses, for stock buybacks, for corporate takeovers, and for augmenting retained earnings. With corporate profits at all-time highs, “S&P 500 Q1 2024 buybacks were $236.8 billion, up 8.1% from Q4 2023’s $219.1 billion and up 9.9% from Q1 2023’s $215.5 billion.”
Left out of the corporate books is responsibility to support infrastructure – transportation, communication, utilities – government research, government loans, credit guarantees, bailouts, assistance to education, job training, subsidies, and other programs that benefit corporations. Shouldn’t corporations repay a fair share of the financial assistance that guarantees their prosperity?
The oft-quoted assertion that high tax rates have been the primary driver for corporations to move facilities to nations that have low tax rates is not proven. Manufacturing close to market and utilization of low labor rates have been the more prominent drivers. Commentators spuriously define the words tax havens, tax deferred, and tax inversions to confuse the public, and promote the mistaken belief that U.S. corporations can change their domicile and easily escape major payments of the corporation’s federal taxes on income earned outside the United States.
Corporations, whose sales contain much intellectual property (Microsoft), are able to shift certain profits on sales, but this cannot easily occur for profits earned from trade or business of defined products manufactured outside the United States. If repatriated, these profits are eventually subjected to U.S. taxes.
The key proposition, which is overlooked, is that government spends all of corporate taxes and all the money circulates in the economy, some invested, some increasing production, some increasing employment, and all adding to or maintaining GDP. Why is this proposition “the key proposition?”
Economics becomes simplified when it is realized that all money is debt. The money supply can only be increased by either banks’ lending money from Reserves and essentially creating money, or by the Federal Reserve engaging in Open Market Operations ─ purchasing government debt that is financed by the Treasury Department. Treasury prints money that appear as IOUs at the Federal Reserve. If money remains dormant as excessive retained earnings or circulates speculatively as stock buybacks, the money, which is debt is not wisely used; it is comparable to borrowing money at 6 percent and then, rather than purchasing a product, investing it at 3 percent. All money in the economy is debt and all the debt is paying interest and being constantly retired and renewed.
This last tidbit is, admittedly, controversial and needs more discussion. It is the essential of the capitalist system, which grows by reinvesting profits ─ capital generating capital ─ and where all the money supply, including profits, that is needed to generate capital is equal to the debt in the system. Positive trade balances play a role, but generally, capitalism only moves forward by increasing debt.
Trump Tariffs
One mystery that has clouded the Biden administration is negligence in canceling the Trump administration’s tariffs on goods from China. During their debate, Trump questioned Harris on why, “if the Dems do not support the tariffs, has the Biden administration kept them?” Harris did not supply an answer.
Tariffs are used to either increase government revenue ─ the principal method before the income taxation system ─ or to protect domestic industries.
Former President Trump proudly declared that his tariffs had harmed the Chinese government. Is the function of a U.S. president to harm another government? He also claimed that foreign companies are paying for tariffs. “Multiple studies suggest this is not the case: the cost of tariffs have been borne almost entirely by American households and American firms, not foreign exporters.”
Protection is difficult to gauge; tariffs may have helped some producers and harmed companies who use the imported goods and now have to pay higher prices for the commodity. The export country, in this case, China, can retaliate and raise taxes on imports from the U.S. and harm American industries.
Have the tariffs protected the steel industry, the principal industry in the tariffs? The answer came in December 2023, when Nippon Steel announced a $14.9 billion takeover deal of U.S. Steel.
Conclusion
In conventional economic theory, the government formulates a budget and taxes the public to pay for the budget. If the tax revenues do not reach the expenditures, then either the government cuts the budget ─ done during Bill Clinton administration ─ or issues debt. What is never done is to have taxes planned to follow budget considerations. The promises by presidential contenders of cutting taxes are promises that have no rational; future budgets will be forced to be planned about tax revenue rather than having tax revenue agree with budget plans, a bad way to run a country.
The post Pandering to the Taxpayers first appeared on Dissident Voice.
This content originally appeared on Dissident Voice and was authored by Dan Lieberman.
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A video of the American athlete Roderick Townsend has been shared in Chinese-language social media posts alongside a claim that he was ineligible to participate in the 2024 Paris Paralympics because he does not have any disabilities.
But the claim is false. According to the International Paralympic Committee, Townsend was born with permanent nerve damage to his right arm and shoulder, making him eligible to compete in the Paralympic Games.
The video of Townsend was shared on X, formerly known as Twitter, on Sep. 7. 2024.
“The U.S. is awesome! … Normal people participate in the Paralympics,” reads the claim in part.
The 20-second video shows Townsend participating in the Men’s high jump T47.
The same video was also shared on Weibo with similar claims that Townsend was ineligible to participate in the Paralympics because he does not have any disabilities.
But the claim is false.
According to the International Paralympic Committee, or IPC, and media reports, Townsend was born with permanent nerve damage to his right arm and shoulder.
The IPC classifies Paralympic events based on both the sport and the specific impairments of the participants, such as vision impairments or the use of a wheelchair.
Athletes compete against others with similar disabilities to ensure a level playing field.
In the T47 high jump event there are no restrictions on lower limb impairments; instead, it focuses on impairments affecting the upper limbs.
Townsend’s first-place victory in the high jump at Paris marked his fourth gold medal at the Paralympics.
He competed in both the long jump and high jump at the previous two Paralympic Games in Rio de Janeiro and Tokyo.
Translated by Shen Ke. Edited by Shen Ke and Taejun Kang.
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