8
   

This is Biden's America

 
 
edgarblythe
 
  1  
Wed 2 Mar, 2022 07:27 am
https://scontent.fhou1-2.fna.fbcdn.net/v/t39.30808-6/275167635_518176086338303_927522662353504137_n.jpg?_nc_cat=107&ccb=1-5&_nc_sid=730e14&_nc_ohc=amxipM5NL0gAX_69pbT&_nc_oc=AQk7WWYplbBdtJ8rPH2H_9XLghlnRMcBs2NZep-bW-2QVf1rsEOkuJKWv24zWIUvys0Q50htGV7hgn4skJkoxyYw&_nc_ht=scontent.fhou1-2.fna&oh=00_AT-OenTh3ZHPZsX_65C18V-mccMWaRmE0rxFvOB_OzAiaw&oe=6224062F
0 Replies
 
edgarblythe
 
  1  
Wed 2 Mar, 2022 10:49 am

stella&penelope
@stellapenelope3
· 2h
Replying to @jmarinocolospgs
Who is helping Africans immigrants blocked from transportation out of Ukraine dangerzone, part of the state’s heartless policy of “Ukraine first”?
0 Replies
 
edgarblythe
 
  0  
Wed 2 Mar, 2022 11:32 am
Pelosi distracts viewers during State of Union by jumping out her seat, rubbing her knuckles and grinding her teeth while Biden speaks solemnly about toxic burn pits
Pelosi sat directly behind Biden last night as millions watched his State of the Union address
She distracted viewers with her awkward and erratic behavior throughout
Pelosi, 81, jumped out of her seat and rubbed her knuckles when Biden mentioned soldiers breathing in toxic smoke from burn pits
She also appeared to be rubbing her tongue over her teeth and grimacing
Some asked if she was 'OK' while others remarked that she looked like she was 'on drugs or drunk'
0 Replies
 
edgarblythe
 
  2  
Wed 2 Mar, 2022 01:13 pm
Shaun King
tuh1on59 1f4uhdh7r ·
Let me say it the way I need to say it.
Some of you motherfuckers are dumb as hell.
I’ve spent the past 72 hours of my life helping African students who barely escaped literal BOMBS AND WAR in Ukraine - the same students that you said you were so upset had experienced racism at the border - and a few thousand of you had the nerve to come on this page and basically say, “But Shaun what about me?” You are gross.
1. I have fought for us here in the states for 25 years straight. 25 years. Without pause.
2. You literally have no idea what it means to escape war. You think you do. You don’t. These kids left EVERYTHING THEY OWN behind with nothing but the clothes on their back. Many don’t have a single extra pair of underwear. And have already run out of money, and you want to say, “What about us?” GTFOH.
3. The difference between me and you is that when I see a problem, like the ugly racism these Africans were facing, I immediately ask myself how I could help them. You see it, get outraged, then go back to worrying about yourself. That’s the American way though.
4. When I asked if anybody knew any colleges that could take these African students on free, it’s because they already paid their tuition in Ukraine. Which is being bombed by Russia. And now they are HOMELESS. And they need a university to accept them as transfer students. How dare you see this as a moment to talk about your student loan debt.
5. I’ll end with this. Be better. As a human being. Study the trauma and effects of war. Study what it means to be a refugee. And then read what the Bible and the Quran say about helping refugees. Until I die I will always pause my work when needed to help them. It’s my duty.
0 Replies
 
edgarblythe
 
  1  
Thu 3 Mar, 2022 09:41 am
https://scontent.fhou1-2.fna.fbcdn.net/v/t39.30808-6/275140358_518948862927692_7962872443612984373_n.jpg?_nc_cat=1&ccb=1-5&_nc_sid=730e14&_nc_ohc=bWWaw9ycBf0AX8IJMYp&_nc_ht=scontent.fhou1-2.fna&oh=00_AT8Qkvoczny3Dzu7x4U7JgkmbHdeRb0mQH4kqQuI0Vv6tw&oe=6225BF5D
0 Replies
 
edgarblythe
 
  2  
Thu 3 Mar, 2022 03:39 pm
Shaun King
FgetbraScpuar1cy 7130mnso0r28 ate 12:f42 P74gMd ·
Over 500,000 refugees have now fled Ukraine in just the past few days alone. In a country that is 99% white, it came as a surprise to many of us to learn that tens of thousands of African immigrants were living, working, and being educated there - and were among those attempting to flee to safety.
It was, then, a deep disappointment to see those African immigrants, many with infant children, in freezing cold temperatures, being mistreated and denied an opportunity to flee.
Three days after those first videos emerged, I'll unpack and explain what I know, and tell you why I am hopeful that things will be much better from here on out.
Listen to today’s episode of The Breakdown with Shaun King here: https://smarturl.it/tnsthebreakdown
edgarblythe
 
  0  
Thu 3 Mar, 2022 04:57 pm
Jury finds ex-officer Brett Hankison not guilty on all counts in shooting during Breonna Taylor raid
Lash
 
  -1  
Fri 4 Mar, 2022 06:24 am
@edgarblythe,
Isn’t it astonishing what Shaun King can change? How much media reported the treatment of Africans and other blacks in Ukraine? And in the midst of all the overwhelming positivity for Ukraine during this time, Shaun had the courage to be critical — HE was roundly criticized for saying something negative about Ukraine — and he doubled down.

When you operate solely on the principles of right and wrong, you don’t really care if other people agree or disagree. You just keep telling the truth.

He really changes the world for the better. He should be my point of charitable donation.
0 Replies
 
Lash
 
  -1  
Fri 4 Mar, 2022 06:25 am
@edgarblythe,
edgarblythe wrote:

Jury finds ex-officer Brett Hankison not guilty on all counts in shooting during Breonna Taylor raid

No knock raids must be outlawed.
0 Replies
 
edgarblythe
 
  1  
Fri 4 Mar, 2022 06:46 am
I agree with you about both King and no knock raids. But I don't expect any changes in the order of things.
0 Replies
 
edgarblythe
 
  1  
Fri 4 Mar, 2022 05:47 pm
Shaun King
6 mins ·
I have so much to say about what I’ve seen, heard, and learned about the conditions on the ground in and around Ukraine this week. It’s a human rights nightmare. But REALLY GOOD PEOPLE are making a difference.⁣

First, I’ve had nearly 100 calls, meetings, & conversations with African students & refugees who have either crossed the border out of Ukraine or, in some cases, are still stuck in places like Sumy near the Russian border. We won’t stop until we help them all get to safety.⁣

❤️ Let me give you a bunch of good news that we do have ok?⁣

1. Our staff @GrassrootsLaw has identified, hired, and paid 3 courageous African students who wanted to stay near the border to help as many African refugees as they could. ⁣

2. We created an intake form to help identify and track African refugees so that they don’t get lost or further abused in the crush of over 1.2 million refugees that have fled the war in Ukraine. And we use this process to help these African refugees get to their next destination of choice. ⁣

3. Because of some special relationships coming together, we’ve already started to book international travel for African students and immigrants that have crossed the border into Poland and the first refugees we helped flew out this evening to get back home to safety and many more are flying out in the next 48 hours. ⁣

4. We were only able to do that because my dear friend @mindfulskatergirl quickly helped us develop some very special partnerships on the ground. She has a gift for making these connections & getting people the help they need.⁣

5. Thank you to the amazing crew @globalempowermentmission who are on the ground doing some of the most heroic work I’ve seen in my life. @michaelcapponi is relentless and has a way of just making sure good work gets done. They paid for and booked so much emergency travel. And will be hiring more African student refugees that we identify.⁣

6. @bethennyfrankel and her #bstrong team are also doing amazing work and also breaking through so many logjams to get good work done for people and raising the funds from private donors to make sure refugees get the support they need right away. ⁣
0 Replies
 
edgarblythe
 
  1  
Sat 5 Mar, 2022 08:57 am
Black in the Empire
@blackintheempir
·
41m
Didn't take the Dems long to go from the George Floyd Act to "Tough on Crime"

I've seen this movie before so I stopped buying tickets
0 Replies
 
edgarblythe
 
  1  
Sat 5 Mar, 2022 08:46 pm
0 Replies
 
edgarblythe
 
  1  
Sat 5 Mar, 2022 08:59 pm
Steven Cotterill
@socialiststeve6
·
9h
My wife and I finished graduate school in 2001 with $70,000 debt combined. Since then, we've made $50,000 in payments. Today, we are left with $70,000 of student debt. That's a fucked system.
0 Replies
 
edgarblythe
 
  1  
Sun 6 Mar, 2022 12:12 am
‘There’s Poland, now walk’: Arab students’ ordeal out of Ukraine
Moroccan students recount their experience of discrimination at the hands of Ukrainian soldiers and citizens as they fled the Russian war.

https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2022/3/5/thats-poland-now-walk-arab-students-plight-out-of-ukraine?fbclid=IwAR2j9T_Cbh-35JvvZ0o01lTcZAifwIOZsg2sEfTRVRrQWsLOHdflMlEz65U&sf161665786=1
izzythepush
 
  4  
Sun 6 Mar, 2022 12:56 am
@edgarblythe,
The article in Canary also pointed on the tone of Western reporting, talking about the victims having blonde hair and blue eyes, and expressing outrage that something like this could be happening in Europe, it's not Aleppo where one would expect such things.
0 Replies
 
edgarblythe
 
  1  
Sun 6 Mar, 2022 09:30 am
Today, people around the world are demonstrating against the disastrous Russian invasion of Ukraine, and rallying against potential escalation and expansion of the war by other world powers.

The current invasion is raising a dilemma for progressives in the U.S. who are sympathetic to the plight of the people of Ukraine, who believe that the invasion is abhorrent and unacceptable, and who want to stop Russia’s actions, but who question the notion that the U.S. can intervene in a way that is ultimately good and not harmful.

In particular, we are faced with the question of whether to support economic sanctions against Russia. Those of us who are grappling with the question are right to be skeptical.

If there were ever a hope for narrow sanctions targeting President Vladimir Putin and other individuals in the Russian oligarchy that would spare ordinary people of Russia, the possibility of such an approach has quickly evaporated. In the immediate days after the invasion began, the U.S. coordinated with the European Union, Japan and Canada to sanction Russia’s Central Bank and exclude Russia’s banks from SWIFT, the world’s primary inter-bank communication and currency exchange system. The result has been a crash of the Russian ruble. Individuals are lining up at ATMs and banks in Russia’s cities as they lose access to cash and see their savings threatened overnight.

Of course, those who have the fewest resources to survive in Russia — not the most powerful — will be hurt the most.

This was entirely predictable. As London-based financier and campaigner against Putin’s government Bill Browder told NPR about blocking Russia from SWIFT, “This is what was done against Iran. And it basically knocks them — any country that’s disconnected — back to the Dark Ages economically.”

The impact on Iran that Browder so casually refers to has been disastrous. Ostensibly meant to target the country’s regime for nefarious activities, U.S. sanctions have resulted in such isolation for the Iranian economy that the currency has crashed. The sanctions have especially impacted Iranian health care, severely undermining the country’s ability to respond to the COVID-19 pandemic, and producing shortages of medicines and medical supplies, particularly for people with rare illnesses. In other words, it is the most vulnerable who have suffered the most.

The experience of U.S. sanctions’ impacts around the world is important, especially because Washington and other Western capitals hold up sanctions as an alternative to war. We should understand them instead, however, as a weapon of war. Their devastating impact results in widespread suffering that may be quieter or less visible to most in the U.S. than an invasion or airstrikes are, but that is no less deadly.

Moreover, the U.S. has tended to combine a policy of sanctions with military operations — particularly in Iraq and Iran. The U.S. invaded Iraq in 1991 and imposed economic sanctions, and then invaded the country again in 2003. The U.S. bombed Iraq intermittently between the invasions while maintaining the sanctions — which led to the malnourishment of hundreds of thousands of children, promoted infectious disease outbreaks and disproportionately impacted people with disabilities in Iraq. And when Donald Trump unleashed his “maximum pressure” sanctions on Iran, he did so while stationing aircraft carriers off of Iran’s coast and repeatedly threatening airstrikes.

The fact is that sanctions against Iraq in the past, Iran today, and perhaps Russia now, were designed to inflict harm on those countries’ populations with the objective of “regime change.” The sanitized term refers to actions of a government to change who is in power in another country. The U.S. uses economic sanctions to produce a level of misery in the places they target in order to foment unrest. Not only is this profoundly anti-democratic, it is also historically ineffective. The U.S. has maintained economic sanctions on Cuba, for example, since 1960 following the 1959 victory of the Revolution in that country. The government that came to power through the Cuban Revolution remains to this day, but generations of Cubans have suffered because of the U.S. embargo.

It is likely that economic sanctions will punish ordinary people in Russia for the horrendous actions of their leader. But there is an additional danger with a broader and more lasting impact: that the U.S. and its allies will take the opportunity of using sanctions in response to Putin’s invasion to re-legitimize the use of sanctions in general. If the policy of sanctions gets a new lease on life, the U.S. will continue to deploy it against countries — and most will have fewer resources than Russia does to mitigate the effects.

As those who want a more just world, it makes sense that we may feel pushed to support U.S. sanctions against Russia in the hope that it will force some restraint on Putin’s aggression. Unfortunately, the historic and current examples of U.S. sanctions regimes — and the sorts of sanctions that we are already seeing take shape in Western responses to Moscow’s invasion and their impacts — compel us to take a stance that is fundamentally critical of Washington’s use of sanctions rather than hopeful that they will benefit the people of Ukraine and the cause of peace.

We are called instead to find and create our own ways of building solidarity with Ukrainians, and be clear in demanding that our sympathies are not manipulated to build up U.S. and North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) militarism — an outcome that will only produce more hardship. In fact, if we want the U.S. to respond to the situation in Eastern Europe, we should demand the demilitarization of the continent by the U.S. and NATO. There is absolutely no justification for Putin’s actions against Ukraine. But it is the case that the U.S. maintains nuclear weapons across the continent and has been adding to the militarization of Eastern Europe in particular in recent years. This includes the opening of a new naval base in Poland where a NATO missile system will be housed. That militarism escalates tensions. Right now, the people of Ukraine are paying the price.

As we find our own voice of protest, we can take tremendous inspiration from the outpouring of dissent in Russian cities against the war and in solidarity with Ukrainians. Our challenge is to build protest across borders that stands in solidarity with those facing the violence of war, and is independent — and defiant of — the governments where we reside.

https://truthout.org/articles/sanctions-may-sound-nonviolent-but-they-quietly-hurt-the-most-vulnerable/?fbclid=IwAR0XuhJxLN2zYTOxCOwNsUcR_j0H2D4BztfP3J-XbgS1RGHa1algfaz-Xqw
Frank Apisa
 
  3  
Sun 6 Mar, 2022 09:43 am
@edgarblythe,
edgarblythe wrote:

Today, people around the world are demonstrating against the disastrous Russian invasion of Ukraine, and rallying against potential escalation and expansion of the war by other world powers.

The current invasion is raising a dilemma for progressives in the U.S. who are sympathetic to the plight of the people of Ukraine, who believe that the invasion is abhorrent and unacceptable, and who want to stop Russia’s actions, but who question the notion that the U.S. can intervene in a way that is ultimately good and not harmful.

In particular, we are faced with the question of whether to support economic sanctions against Russia. Those of us who are grappling with the question are right to be skeptical.

If there were ever a hope for narrow sanctions targeting President Vladimir Putin and other individuals in the Russian oligarchy that would spare ordinary people of Russia, the possibility of such an approach has quickly evaporated. In the immediate days after the invasion began, the U.S. coordinated with the European Union, Japan and Canada to sanction Russia’s Central Bank and exclude Russia’s banks from SWIFT, the world’s primary inter-bank communication and currency exchange system. The result has been a crash of the Russian ruble. Individuals are lining up at ATMs and banks in Russia’s cities as they lose access to cash and see their savings threatened overnight.

Of course, those who have the fewest resources to survive in Russia — not the most powerful — will be hurt the most.

This was entirely predictable. As London-based financier and campaigner against Putin’s government Bill Browder told NPR about blocking Russia from SWIFT, “This is what was done against Iran. And it basically knocks them — any country that’s disconnected — back to the Dark Ages economically.”

The impact on Iran that Browder so casually refers to has been disastrous. Ostensibly meant to target the country’s regime for nefarious activities, U.S. sanctions have resulted in such isolation for the Iranian economy that the currency has crashed. The sanctions have especially impacted Iranian health care, severely undermining the country’s ability to respond to the COVID-19 pandemic, and producing shortages of medicines and medical supplies, particularly for people with rare illnesses. In other words, it is the most vulnerable who have suffered the most.

The experience of U.S. sanctions’ impacts around the world is important, especially because Washington and other Western capitals hold up sanctions as an alternative to war. We should understand them instead, however, as a weapon of war. Their devastating impact results in widespread suffering that may be quieter or less visible to most in the U.S. than an invasion or airstrikes are, but that is no less deadly.

Moreover, the U.S. has tended to combine a policy of sanctions with military operations — particularly in Iraq and Iran. The U.S. invaded Iraq in 1991 and imposed economic sanctions, and then invaded the country again in 2003. The U.S. bombed Iraq intermittently between the invasions while maintaining the sanctions — which led to the malnourishment of hundreds of thousands of children, promoted infectious disease outbreaks and disproportionately impacted people with disabilities in Iraq. And when Donald Trump unleashed his “maximum pressure” sanctions on Iran, he did so while stationing aircraft carriers off of Iran’s coast and repeatedly threatening airstrikes.

The fact is that sanctions against Iraq in the past, Iran today, and perhaps Russia now, were designed to inflict harm on those countries’ populations with the objective of “regime change.” The sanitized term refers to actions of a government to change who is in power in another country. The U.S. uses economic sanctions to produce a level of misery in the places they target in order to foment unrest. Not only is this profoundly anti-democratic, it is also historically ineffective. The U.S. has maintained economic sanctions on Cuba, for example, since 1960 following the 1959 victory of the Revolution in that country. The government that came to power through the Cuban Revolution remains to this day, but generations of Cubans have suffered because of the U.S. embargo.

It is likely that economic sanctions will punish ordinary people in Russia for the horrendous actions of their leader. But there is an additional danger with a broader and more lasting impact: that the U.S. and its allies will take the opportunity of using sanctions in response to Putin’s invasion to re-legitimize the use of sanctions in general. If the policy of sanctions gets a new lease on life, the U.S. will continue to deploy it against countries — and most will have fewer resources than Russia does to mitigate the effects.

As those who want a more just world, it makes sense that we may feel pushed to support U.S. sanctions against Russia in the hope that it will force some restraint on Putin’s aggression. Unfortunately, the historic and current examples of U.S. sanctions regimes — and the sorts of sanctions that we are already seeing take shape in Western responses to Moscow’s invasion and their impacts — compel us to take a stance that is fundamentally critical of Washington’s use of sanctions rather than hopeful that they will benefit the people of Ukraine and the cause of peace.

We are called instead to find and create our own ways of building solidarity with Ukrainians, and be clear in demanding that our sympathies are not manipulated to build up U.S. and North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) militarism — an outcome that will only produce more hardship. In fact, if we want the U.S. to respond to the situation in Eastern Europe, we should demand the demilitarization of the continent by the U.S. and NATO. There is absolutely no justification for Putin’s actions against Ukraine. But it is the case that the U.S. maintains nuclear weapons across the continent and has been adding to the militarization of Eastern Europe in particular in recent years. This includes the opening of a new naval base in Poland where a NATO missile system will be housed. That militarism escalates tensions. Right now, the people of Ukraine are paying the price.

As we find our own voice of protest, we can take tremendous inspiration from the outpouring of dissent in Russian cities against the war and in solidarity with Ukrainians. Our challenge is to build protest across borders that stands in solidarity with those facing the violence of war, and is independent — and defiant of — the governments where we reside.

https://truthout.org/articles/sanctions-may-sound-nonviolent-but-they-quietly-hurt-the-most-vulnerable/?fbclid=IwAR0XuhJxLN2zYTOxCOwNsUcR_j0H2D4BztfP3J-XbgS1RGHa1algfaz-Xqw


All true...but leading to "there are times when one must choose between the lesser of two evils."

Right now...today...the options open seem (at least to me) to all have an element of "lack of morality" (what I consider "moral")...so I must choose the lesser of the evils regarding impositions of sanctions.

I am of the opinion that EVERY option open to us has a significant element of "regime change." If I were Putin or one of his cronies...I would be disgusted by that option...and would issue as many threats in opposition to it as possible. (Which is what he is doing.)

Be nice to have a perfect world.

We are not even close.

We cannot even make needed changes in American political culture.

The impact on innocent civilians by the war disgusts me. I choose to fight it on whatever fronts are available to us...which means I (and many others) choose the sanctions even though we are just as disgusted by the impact of those sanctions on innocent civilians in Russia.

I hope the people of Russia can understand why we do.
0 Replies
 
edgarblythe
 
  1  
Sun 6 Mar, 2022 10:05 am
I always get short-pinioned by the "perfect world" pejorative. But it does not dissuade me from looking for solutions that are humanitarian in a world that increasingly bulldozes the term.
Frank Apisa
 
  4  
Sun 6 Mar, 2022 11:45 am
@edgarblythe,
edgarblythe wrote:

I always get short-pinioned by the "perfect world" pejorative. But it does not dissuade me from looking for solutions that are humanitarian in a world that increasingly bulldozes the term.


I want to preserve what civility we have re-established between us, Edgar. I was not doing a put-down...in any sense. Please do not take it that way.

I merely was stating my position that on the matter of whether to impose sanctions or not...is nuanced...as I hope it is for everyone. Insofar as "sanctions" are part of plans to thwart the kind of thing Putin in now engaging in...there is no "correct" answer to the issue.

We ought all to keep in mind that Hitler started with supposed reunification efforts of the Germans living in Czechoslovakia. World War II was the result. A frequent trope insists that the world should have moved against Hitler right then.

There are some suggesting Putin should be stopped right now.

EVERY option that makes sense...is a miserable one.
0 Replies
 
 

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