Monday, May 31, 2021

Kyle On Whether People Should Withhold Support From The Squad Until They Fight For Popular Policies

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oLPmrqtWmDY




Israel’s political parties to form alliances to oust Netanyahu

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=raEuSrFdVBM




China eases population growth restriction policy

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WgaARH1h80c




Undercover Journalist Shows GOP Recount Coming To A State Near YOU

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=a8ZTYA5zOYg




Amazon Covid Tester Dies, Family Given Two-Month Counseling Coupon

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TaBZ9e2eJho




Why Strengthening Supplemental Security Income Must Be Part Of Building Back Better

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Vgu-GQJCwRg




Cenk Uygur and Ana Kasparian SLANDER Aaron Mate, Get ROASTED by Jimmy Dore & Roger Waters

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=B0-5QGeawzc




Remembering Tulsa, Biden Propaganda, Voter Suppression, Hunter Drones, China vs. CNN

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5eyvv8NAkoE




Tulsa Race Massacre LIES Spread for 100 Years

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eW4SBgiSHho




Trump Will Be INDICTED For Tax Fraud Or Bank Fraud - Roger Stone

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7j2yozMxaI0




OOPS: Bernie Praises Biden For Policies He DROPPED

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hAhTFkpUn6c




Massive protests against Jair Bolsonaro in Brasil

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=id7SMVNOHOw




January 6th Investigation BLOCKED By GOP

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=c53h26y4S64




Documentary Exposing Private Military Contractors Wiped From The Internet

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BhODxRRneL8




Colombia: Police brutality against protesters continues

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZFT7NhpPcOc




Bill Maher DEFENDS Apartheid!

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Qnpaw5fDAPE




Venezuela: 500,000 new doses of Sputnik V vaccine from Russia

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2NVqv0L0mf0




Syria Is a Sovereign Country, Don't Forget About That

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5mvbrmMb2Zw




China urges the U.S to stop politicizing Covid-19 origin-tracing

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yQ-FXmfouWQ




Charles Koch is Bankrolling the Push to End Pandemic-Related Eviction Restrictions

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=z6aNe3jvN0E




Laura Ingraham Wants Fox’s Viewers to Be VERY Afraid of Something She Made Up

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZQlWqns63WU




Noam Chomsky on the Future of Marxism & Anarchism - Economic Update with Richard Wolff

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bnT21unqwbw




Fox News Terrified "Activist" Gets On The Board of Exxon Mobile

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JZVn26mE8J4




Democracy Now Called Out By Own Viewers

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1BL8DsWmBug




The Young Turks "DISGUSTING" Says Rock Legend Roger Waters

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eztdgGYcOrY




Sunday, May 30, 2021

No Progressive Unity? Cornel West on the Squad Splitting Opposition to Funding Capitol Police

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qskziY_FUdQ




The Truth About Anti-Semitism

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2sCwa8m331A




SCARY Propaganda Can Only Be Fought With Independent Media

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NhtFpjmLRS4




David Sirota: INSIDE Koch Network’s Bid To Become America’s Landlord

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7YPf0uiuPFM




CNN Is Wondering When Progressives Will Do Something Against Biden

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JfNhsCEQfbw




Obama's Labor Secretary Joins Union Busters

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MnCXKrPkwTo




Saturday, May 29, 2021

UNHINGED: Cenk Uygur & Ana Kasparian SLANDER Real Journalists

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=c66mS4XD-As




Former DNC Chair Tom Perez Already Working For Anti-Union Law Firm

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fDSlmwRVolk




Thousands protest against Brasil's president

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SSUYtvp-w_k




World's Richest Man Gets Bail Out From Government

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=t_isS8BVt8s




Biden Admin Will Continue to "Talk About" $15 Minimum Wage

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YcEdmyA6tJ8




How & Why Mighty Industries Decline - Michael Hillard on Economic Update

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hQu_tGkLXZ4




The Possibility of Biden Becoming like FDR - Richard Wolff

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lH0BJ4433j0




5 Things You Might Not Know About Memorial Day

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NXsU3WNFYqE




TYT Smears Aaron Mate

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=l3gdL_RqVZg




#NeverForget: 35 Republicans Voted against Investigating the Capitol Insurrection!

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zmxbjPDhgEY




Israel’s Brutality on Palestine Continues

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cUduP2swg0U




Biden Betrays Promise For Student Debt Relief

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Rp62RO2B01Y




COVID Lab Leak Theory SUDDENLY Not Muzzled

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NBt6VW-8L0I




Judge Charged With Trying To Hit BLM Protesters With Car

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BTbtiZtlqNY




Friday, May 28, 2021

The Economy Is In Trouble: Savers vs Spenders (w/ Prof. Richard Wolff)

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qz8-998024M




Ask Prof Wolff: Media Bias & Capitalism

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0B02cq6kFEA




Scammers Just Tried To Ambush Hard Lens Media Hosts

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=H8BkCBCRobk




Richard Wolff On Defunding The Military-Industrial Complex

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GFidgNfaWFY




Thursday, May 27, 2021

Squad Finally Strategized Votes -- To Fund The Police!?!?

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JfhIT_zelwE




Kids in Cages, We Were Targeted By Scammers, Bank of America in Trouble, Food Supply Under Attack

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ihh3lacQMfA




COVID Lab Leak Theory Not For Kooks, Dems Buy In

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_FerCVOSS30




What Your Taxes Pay For in Israel


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-nLZRmKXmmc


 






The Senate Wants to Give Jeff Bezos’ Space Company $10 Billion For No Reason

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ICL0p4YuvQI








US Government Gives Bezos A $10 Billion Participation Award

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ICcrG1TeuwQ




Abby Martin Wins Freedom Of Speech Lawsuit

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Bjx6ue4xbHE




It's Official. There Is No Neo Liberal Fake Way To Be FDR. Biden Failed.

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nUjL1NIwhsA




Democrats Use George Floyd's Family as a Prop as They Water Down Police Reform

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=C8i90XS-TIo




Make Amazon Pay All Workers

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XZpC-LCPWGw




How Many People Have Been Killed By U.S Police Since George Floyd?

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CX2p2D2c34o




Mark Ruffalo Caves To Israel On Palestine.

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cvYriBBufzE




Ben Norton Update, George Floyd Abby Martin vs. Georgia, Manchin Sinema and Morning Joe

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oIEVeGoVdxA




Fact Checkers Take A Beating On Lab Leak Theory

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=y6D8bQs-E8A




'OF COURSE Israel Ethnically Cleansed Palestinians!' - Israeli Anthropologist Corrects Debra Messing

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DBMDKvcqi-I




Police Reform Finally? & $15 an Hour Doesn't Cut It

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=v1Y1T_I_vlM




The candidate we're backing to send Marjorie Taylor Greene PACKING

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jqlJnNMF2M0




China has quadrupled US growth with no US aid

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-DOAu260mFs




Ten Years Ago: Unemployment [10th Anniversary of Economic Update with Richard Wolff]

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MXApFcaruHQ




Wednesday, May 26, 2021

How Equating Antizionism With Antisemitism Lets The U.S .Off The Hook

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DTzcJhOLkkQ




Centrist Dems BALK At Tax Hikes On The Rich

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0Hn-ByhY01k




Krystal and Saagar: Biden Decides To REPEAT Obama’s FAILURES

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yBR8Qe4fqSU




Briahna Joy Gray: Biden FLAGRANTLY REJECTS His Own Campaign Promises

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yN_eBWIGFwI




Krystal Ball: Biden ABANDONS Public Option At WORST Possible Time

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tIeQFUUXMRY




Ask Prof Wolff: Marx's Flaws

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1U10SiCYw2U




Tuesday, May 25, 2021

Democrats 'Must Be Trying to Lose': Progressives Fume After Report Says Biden Budget Excludes Key Promises






"If the aim is to avoid a midterm massacre, why would you do this?" asked one political critic.



by
Kenny Stancil, staff writer



https://www.commondreams.org/news/2021/05/24/democrats-must-be-trying-lose-progressives-fume-after-report-says-biden-budget




Progressives are fuming in response to reports that President Joe Biden's forthcoming official budget proposal will not include a public option, drug pricing reform, student debt cancellation, or an estate tax increase.


As a candidate, Biden said he would: enact a public option to create a government-run alternative to private insurance plans; reduce the sky-high and life-threatening prices of prescription drugs; cancel up to $10,000 of student loan debt per federal borrower; and raise the estate tax, which affects only the wealthiest 0.2% of U.S. households.Fulfilling these campaign pledges is necessary to improve the lives of working people in the United States, left-leaning critics say, while reneging on them imperils the future electoral success of the Democratic Party by depressing turnout among spurned constituencies and increasing the probability of Republican victories in the 2022 congressional midterms and beyond.

When Biden unveils his official budget proposal on Friday, however, none of those initiatives—which were already considered inadequate by progressives demanding Medicare for All, at least $50,000 of student debt relief, and substantially higher taxes on the super-rich—will be included, according to the Washington Post, which spoke with four unnamed individuals briefed on the matter.

Observers slammed the Biden administration for its about-face, warning that the White House's refusal to follow through on its promises will be the reason why "Democrats get routed in the midterms in 2022."


"Our budget reflects our priorities," Rep. Pramila Jayapal (D-Wash.), chair of the Congressional Progressive Caucus, said in response to the Post's reporting. "Fixing the broken healthcare system has to be a priority. Ending the student debt crisis has to be a priority, too. We need to keep our promises and deliver."

The Biden administration, for its part, defended its decision to backtrack on campaign pledges. The White House's argument is that the budget should "focus on advancing" the public investments proposed in Biden's $2.3 trillion American Jobs Plan and his $1.8 trillion American Families Plan, both of which seek to upgrade the nation's physical and social infrastructure and raise revenue through modest tax hikes on wealthy individuals and corporations.

"The budget won't propose other new initiatives but will put together the full picture of how these proposals would advance economic growth and shared prosperity while also putting our country on a sound fiscal course," said Rob Friedlander, spokesperson for the White House budget office.

According to the Post, "the White House jettisoned months of planning from agency staff" because they feared "their initial plan could fuel criticisms that the administration is pushing new spending programs too aggressively."

Instead of using his budget proposal to push for a public option or endorse progressives' calls to expand and improve Medicare by lowering the eligibility age from 65 to 55; including dental, vision, and hearing aid benefits; and allowing the federal program to negotiate directly with Big Pharma to slash drug prices, Biden will ask Congress to implement policies to reduce the costs of prescription medications and increase health coverage.

Given the popularity of strengthening Medicare, including reforms that result in lower drug prices, some progressive advocates urged the White House to "get in front of" the issue.


Perhaps the strongest denunciations of Biden's retreat from campaign promises focused on his abandonment of a pledge to cancel up to $10,000 in student loan debt per person.

As Current Affairs, a magazine of progressive political commentary, noted on Twitter: "50k of student debt cancellation was the inadequate compromise; 10k of cancellation was Biden's pathetic, outrageous alternative proposal. Now they're offering $0 of cancellation, meaning that on student debt [Biden] might as well be [former President Donald] Trump."

Jacobin's Branko Marcetic, author of Yesterday's Man: The Case Against Joe Biden, asked: "If the aim is to avoid a midterm massacre, why would you do this?"

"The aim should be to get all the constituencies that brought you to power to stay energized, but young people aren't going to turn out at the 2020 numbers without a raging pandemic and Trump on ballot," he said.

In response to Marcetic's question and prediction, Current Affairs editor Nathan Robinson said that the Biden administration's decision defies reason and undermines his party's upcoming electoral prospects.


Elsewhere, Marcetic expressed awe that Biden has been able to succeed "in pursuing his 'nothing will fundamentally change' vow while getting a nonstop stream of rapturous comparisons" to former presidents Franklin Delano Roosevelt and Lyndon Baines Johnson, who oversaw the implementation of far-reaching New Deal and Great Society programs, respectively.

Recent polling shows that voters want the federal government to quickly pass ambitious policies that improve life for working people. According to a survey conducted last week by Data for Progress and Invest in America, 58% of likely voters support passing the American Jobs Plan and the American Families Plan together using the budget reconciliation process, compared with 34% who are opposed.

Emphasizing that congressional Democrats are not beholden to Biden's budget proposal, Alex Lawson, executive director of Social Security Works, told the Post, "It is the president's budget request, but the House actually drafts the budget."




THE FIGHT FOR A NEW COLOMBIA




By Hasan Dodwell and Nick MacWilliam, Tribune Magazine.

May 24, 2021




https://popularresistance.org/the-fight-for-a-new-colombia/



The Latest Round Of Protests Against Colombia’s Right-Wing Government Have Seen A Brutal Crackdown, Leading To At Least 43 Deaths.

But the mass movement for social change is only growing stronger.

On 28 April, Colombian trade unions and social movements staged a new round of Paro Nacional (National Strike) protests, the latest in an ongoing series of mobilisations to address the litany of problems impacting Colombian society.

Opposition to a planned tax reform – which strike organisers said would unfairly target the middle and working classes in what is one of Latin America’s most unequal countries – was the central issue, particularly in the context of the global pandemic which has pushed an estimated five million Colombians out of work. Calls to repeal the tax reform were aligned with longer-running demands around growing poverty levels, addressing the human rights crisis affecting much of the country and properly advancing implementation of the 2016 peace agreement.

Since the National Strike movement was launched in November 2019, protesters have become accustomed to the police crackdowns of President Iván Duque’s right-wing administration. Yet even by recent standards, the spread and duration of the violence unleashed since 28 April has been extreme. For over three weeks of daily protests across Colombia, Colombian security forces – especially the notorious riot police unit, the Mobile Anti-Disturbance Squadron (ESMAD) – have committed massive human rights violations as Duque’s government seeks to suppress anger towards his government.

As befits the camera phone era, social media has told the story of Colombia’s social revolt. Thousands of images and videos have spread virtually, with several standing out for their exhibitions of social unity or poignant solidarity: mothers bearing improvised shields join youthful protesters on the frontline to face off against militarised police; statues of colonisers are toppled and replaced with likenesses of victims of state violence: music, art and dance energise crowds whose voices rise as one to demand a fairer Colombia.

While the official organisation of the National Strike movement comes from trade unions together with peasant, indigenous and other established social organisations, the protests have been characterised by the mobilisation of young Colombians from poor urban neighbourhoods. In cities across the country, most notably in Cali, this new generation of political protesters have become the so-called ‘front line’ resisting ever-increasing levels of police brutality.

Social media has also exposed the horrific violence inflicted on protesters by security forces. In one harrowing video, as four ESMAD agents drag her into a police station in Popayán, 17-year-old Alison Melendez shouts that they are removing her trousers. The next day, after reporting they had sexually assaulted her, she took her life. Footage filmed in the town of Madrid in Cundinamarca shows a tear gas canister fired at protesters from an armoured police vehicle. The projectile hit 24-year-old Brayan Niño in the face, killing him despite the efforts of those around him.

By 18 May Colombian human rights organisations had registered security forces apparent responsibility for more than 2,300 acts of violence, 43 killings (including four minors), 18 sexual assaults and 30 cases of eye injuries. Men in plain-clothes have been filmed firing at protesters as uniformed police officers stand alongside them and do nothing, particularly alarming given Colombia’s long history of state collusion with paramilitary terror.

There has been widespread international condemnation of the Colombian government’s response to the protests. The United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights said it had witnessed the use of ‘excessive force’, while the US Embassy in Bogota called for ‘restraint’ from Colombian police to avoid ‘additional loss of life’.

55 Members of the US Congress signed a letter calling the human rights situation ‘out of control’, while British and Irish trade unions demanded justice for victims of police violence. The Inter-American Commission for Human Rights has requested permission from the Colombian government to investigate abuses. For its part, the British government, which has training programmes with the Colombian police, has not directly criticised the state violence.

Opposition to the planned tax reform comes at a time when more than five million people are estimated to have lost their main source of income due to the global pandemic and poverty levels increasing to over 40 per cent. Coronavirus has particularly impacted the many Colombians eking out a living in the large informal sector, which accounts for roughly half of the labour force in roles such as transport workers, domestic staff and street vendors.

National lockdowns, coupled with an absence of state support, pushed many Colombians into even deeper conditions of precarity. Although Duque repealed the tax reform after five days of intense unrest, it was far too late. His government had spilled too much blood.

In the midst of the killings and brutal violence being carried out by state agents, and far from calling for the abuses to come to an end, government officials issued repeated stigmatising statements against the protesters. On 3 May, defence minister Diego Molano said ‘Colombia faces the terrorist threat of criminal organisations,’ while Vice-President Martha Ramírez implied that indigenous organisations were funded by illegal drug money.

The use of smears to delegitimise popular movements is by no means a new tactic – trade unionists and activists have long been labelled as ‘guerrillas’ or ‘terrorists’. During the recent weeks, however, and in the context of a peace agreement now signed with the country’s largest and oldest guerrilla organisation, the attempts to stigmatise appear to have largely strengthened the resolve of the protesters.

Anger over economic injustice sits alongside major concern for human rights and peace. The 2016 peace agreement brought the curtain down on decades of armed conflict between the Colombian state and the FARC. The peace process has seen important advances, such as the FARC’s reformation as a political party and the development of an internationally acclaimed transitional justice system which has begun investigating crimes committed during the conflict.

In one of its most significant findings so far, it found that between 2002 and 2008 – during the government of former president Alvaro Uribe – the Colombian military murdered 6,402 civilians and falsely presented them as guerrillas killed in combat.

Since its inception, however, the Colombian right has made efforts to undermine the peace process. Indeed, Uribe, who continues to wield significant political power and whose support for Duque was fundamental to his successful presidential campaign, has been the lead voice in that opposition.

Duque’s electoral campaign was based on antagonism to the peace agreement and a promise to make fundamental changes. Since 2018, when Duque was elected, Colombia has depended on a political movement hostile to the peace process. The protests have given voice to a major rejection of the ongoing influence of uribismo in Colombian politics and its attacks on human rights and peace.

Furthermore, since the agreement was signed, more than 1,000 social activists and community leaders have been murdered across Colombia, with violence concentrated in regions historically impacted by conflict, structural poverty and state abandonment. The FARC’s agreed withdrawal created power vacuums in areas the state has failed to secure. Paramilitaries and other illegal armed groups now vie to exert control over territories or illicit economies, targeting local leaders and displacing entire communities.

Additionally, more than 270 FARC former combatants have been murdered since putting down their weapons. The UN Verification Mission in Colombia warns that violence towards social activists and FARC former combatants is the main threat to the peace process. The Duque government, however, has sought to downplay the human rights crisis and denies that killings reflect a systematic targeting of specific groups.

With elections scheduled in 2022, the protests could prove pivotal in determining who takes the presidency. The pro-peace movement enters electoral campaigning in a position of strength but whether it will be able to successfully coalesce around a single candidate could prove decisive. Left candidate and 2018 runner-up Gustavo Petro currently leads the polls and his supporters will be confident that the intensity of the protests reflects a widespread desire to fundamentally reshape Colombia’s social, political and economic model.

The multitude of factors underpinning popular discontent in Colombia has now exploded to the fore. In meetings on 10 and 16 May with government officials, the National Strike Committee presented demands to resolve the crisis, including an immediate end to the violence. Human rights organisations have called for drastic police reform, which involves removing police jurisdiction from the Ministry of Defence and disbanding the ESMAD. However, with the Duque government still committing flagrant human rights abuses, there is little indication resolution is close. The Colombian people have shown they do not plan to back down any time soon.




The Campaign To Crush Gig Workers





BY ROBERT GALBRAITH – 25 MAY 2021




Lyft, Uber, and other allied gig work companies are reportedly nearing a deal with New York state legislators and labor leaders that would allow tech giants to continue classifying their workers as independent contractors rather than employees, and would prohibit newly unionized workers from “any picketing, strikes, slow downs, or boycotts,” according to leaked language of the state bill.

The potential legislation comes as companies led by Lyft and Uber have engaged in a multi-year, multi-million-dollar political influence campaign in the state and cultivated deep ties to New York Democrats. Their efforts could lead to a radical reshaping of labor relations in a state that has long been a labor stronghold.

If the bill leaked last week passes into law in its current form, the development would be a landmark victory for gig work companies. While the firms failed to secure a similar compromise in Connecticut, they spent $200 million to pass a 2020 California ballot initiative denying employee status to gig workers in the state after labor negotiations broke down there.

Details about the deal Uber and Lyft are negotiating with New York politicians and labor leaders were obtained last Friday by Labor Notes and Bloomberg. While the pact would allow gig workers to vote to form unions and collectively bargain, it would codify the non-employee status of app-based ride hailing and delivery companies drivers. It would also preempt local laws — like New York City’s — that set minimum wages and require companies to pay drivers for time they are waiting for fares.

Gig work companies are willing to invest heavily in this fight because classifying their workers as independent contractors — which foists the costs of buying and maintaining cars and other necessary equipment onto workers in addition to denying them a minimum wage, health care, and other basic workplace rights — is critical to their corporate model.

Democratic state Senator Jessica Ramos, who chairs the senate labor committee, came out strongly against the deal on Friday, saying that it would legitimize company-dominated unions and undermine the Protecting the Right to Organize (PRO) Act, a federal bill that has passed the U.S. House of Representatives that would recognize a more expansive set of rights for gig company workers.

“I cannot support legislation crafted without uncompromised worker voices at the table and I will not stand aside while billion-dollars corporations try to legislate the lives of immigrant workers, my neighbors,” Ramos said in a statement.
A Million-Dollar Election Campaign

Uber and Lyft spent a combined $1.1 million to influence New York elections in 2020, the bulk of which went to ads backing Democratic candidates for the state Senate. The money came through a pair of independent expenditure committees, or super PACs, that can pour unlimited sums of corporate money into state and local elections: New Yorkers for Independent Work, registered by Lyft head of external affairs Jordan Markwith, and New Yorkers for Flexible Work, registered by Uber director of public policy Josh Gold.

The company’s efforts in New York have focused on buying favor with the state’s Democratic Party, which controls both houses of the state legislature. Even though Democrats are traditionally more amenable to workers rights than Republicans, the New York party under Gov. Andrew Cuomo has displayed a decidedly pro-corporate bent.

New Yorkers for Independent Work, which was funded by two Lyft loans totaling more than $1.2 million, did the bulk of the outside spending.

In the Democratic primary, Lyft’s super PAC spent $86,000 on digital ads and $127,000 on mailers supporting six incumbent assembly members, all but one of whom won their primaries. In the general election, Lyft spent $774,640 through its super PAC on ads and mailers supporting five Democratic state senate candidates, three of whom won their elections.

Lyft’s spending appeared targeted at maintaining a Democratic majority in the state senate as billionaire Ronald Lauder and New York police groups attempted to flip control of the state house back to Republicans. Lyft even paid to boost progressive, union-backed Democrats presumably more likely to back protections for gig economy workers, underscoring the firm’s apparent view of the Democratic Party as a necessary collaborator in blocking workers’ rights.

Uber spent far less on the 2020 elections than Lyft, spending $105,000 for streaming ads on Spotify and “telephone and data services” backing six incumbent state Assembly candidates facing primary challenges, most of whom lost their races.

Beyond their Super PACs, Uber and Lyft have spent a combined $12.1 million on traditional lobbying in New York from 2017 through April 2021, mostly through firms with close ties to the Democratic Party establishment.
Deep Democratic Ties

Uber and Lyft have also hired staff with deep ties to New York Democrats.

Matthew Wing, Uber’s head of work communications, is a former communications director and press secretary for Cuomo and is married to Melissa DeRosa, Cuomo’s top aide. Josh Gold, the Uber lobbyist named as the control person on Uber’s super PAC, is a former political director for the Hotel Trades Council and manager of New York City Mayor Bill De Blasio’s universal pre-kindergarten campaign.

What’s more, the companies have spent tens of millions of dollars retaining lobbying firms and launching front groups with heavy Democratic Party connections.

That includes Mercury Public Affairs, which ran Lyft’s super PAC, New Yorkers for Independent Work.

Charlie King, Mercury’s New York co-chair, worked under Cuomo at the Department of Housing and Urban Development, ran as Cuomo’s running mate in 2002, and advised Cuomo’s 2014 reelection campaign. Morris Reid, a partner at Mercury, was also a senior aide to Cuomo at HUD. Another Mercury partner, Michael McKeon is the executive director of Republicans for Andrew Cuomo. Mercury also ran Lyft’s New Yorkers for Independent Work super PAC in the 2020 election.

Uber’s super PAC, New Yorkers for Flexible Work, was run by Red Horse Strategies, which is closely affiliated with the Democratic Party and progressive political campaigns. Red Horse Strategies previously worked with the Long Island Law Enforcement Foundation, a super PAC affiliated with the Suffolk County police union. The firm has also worked in the past for 32BJ, one of the unions at the center of the fight to win employment status for gig company workers in New York.

Patrick Jenkins, another Uber lobbyist, is a close friend and the former college roommate of New York State Assembly Speaker Carl Heastie. While lobbying on behalf of Uber and other corporate clients, Jenkins has also engaged in political consulting work for Heastie’s campaign and political action committee.

In December 2019, Uber and Lyft launched Flexible Work for New York, a front group seeking “to protect New Yorkers’ ability to maintain flexible work hours that fit their schedules and support their families,” to create the appearance of grassroots support for their agenda.

In its registration documents, Flexible Work for New York indicated that it is lobbying on behalf of TechNet, a lobbying group representing many big technology companies, including Uber, Lyft, and DoorDash as well as other major gig work firm like GrubHub, Postmates, Seamless, and TaskRabbit. The coalition listed its address as Technet’s office in Washington, D.C.

Flexible Work for New York was initially run by the public relations and lobbying firm SKDKnickerbocker, which also disclosed lobbying on behalf of the group “on a pro bono basis.” SKDKnickerbocker had previously disclosed pro bono lobbying for both Lyft and Uber in 2018.

SKDKnickerbocker is owned by the Stagwell Group, a conglomerate founded by Mark Penn, a close advisor to Bill and Hillary Clinton. SKDK partner Josh Isay is a former chief of staff to Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer. Former partner Jennifer Cunningham, who has lobbied for both Uber and Lyft in the past, is a long-time friend and political advisor to Cuomo. Anita Dunn, a partner at SKDK, was a senior advisor and communications director for former President Barack Obama’s campaigns and was a top strategist with “effective control over” President Joe Biden’s 2020 campaign. Dunn is now a temporary senior advisor in the Biden White House.

In December 2020, Flexible Work for New York was rebranded as the New York Coalition for Independent Work (NYCIW) and re-launched under the control of Mercury Public Affairs, party-affiliated strategy firm that also ran Lyft’s super PAC.

Under both its names, the Uber- and Lyft-backed front group employed similar tactics to those used by gig economy employers in their successful $200 million campaign to pass Proposition 22, the 2020 California ballot initiative overturning a law granting employment status to gig workers in that state.

During the Prop. 22 campaign, gig employers paid the president of the California chapter of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People to speak out in favor of the initiative. Similarly, Flexible Work for New York enlisted religious leaders from across the state to pressure legislators not to grant labor protections to gig workers.

Further, when the “launch” of the rebranded NYCIW was announced in December 2020, the nonprofit Arc of Justice, Inc. was named as a “founding member” of the coalition and its director, Rev. Kirsten Foy, was quoted in the press release. Foy is a protege of Rev. Al Sharpton and works as the Northeast Regional Director of Sharpton’s National Action Network, which is also named as a coalition member on the NYCIW website.

Foy has been an outspoken advocate for the gig company position on labor rights, giving interviews and publishing opinion pieces on the matter. On Arc of Justice’s website, both Uber and Mercury Public Affairs are listed as “benefactors” of the organization.




The very expensive human cost of climate change




Storms devastate. Climate change makes them more devastating. Now we know how much the human cost of climate change really is.


By Tim Radford

https://climatenewsnetwork.net/the-very-expensive-human-cost-of-climate-change/




LONDON, 25 May, 2021 − We know already that the human cost of climate change is immense. Now we can put a figure on it. Nine years on, New Yorkers have a clearer idea of the direct cost of human-driven climate change to them during just one stormy weekend in October 2012.

They became poorer by $8.1 billion, say researchers from Princeton, New Brunswick and Hoboken in New Jersey, and Boston in Massachusetts, just because of sea level rise powered first by global heating fuelled by profligate combustion worldwide of coal, oil and gas, and then by a superstorm called Hurricane Sandy.

Researchers can also number the additional people who suffered damages inflicted precisely because of human-driven climate change on that one long, painful weekend: 71,000.

“This study is the first to isolate the human-contributed sea level effects during a coastal storm and put a dollar sign to the additional flooding damage,” said Philip Orton, of Stevens Institute of Technology in Hoboken, one of the authors.

“With coastal flooding increasingly impacting communities and causing widespread destruction, pinpointing the financial toll and lives affected by climate change will hopefully add urgency to our efforts to reduce it.”


“If we were to calculate the cost of climate change across all flooding events that figure would provide clarity on the severe damage we are inflicting on our planet”

There would have been damage anyway: Sandy was a powerful hurricane that slammed into the northeast US coast so hard it set the earthquake alarms ringing. The destruction attributed to Sandy is more than $62 billion, as one of the worst storms in history at the New York bight arrived with the evening high tide to cause devastation and disruption in New York City, New Jersey and Connecticut.

It also killed 43 people in New York City and destroyed thousands of homes and around a quarter of a million cars, vans, buses and trucks.

And now a study in the journal Nature Communications reasons that anthropogenic or human-powered sea level rise must have accounted for at least 13% of the total bill. That is because global heating from greenhouse gas emissions seems to have raised mean sea levels in the New York region by around 10 cms over the last century or so. In fact, Sandy arrived with the highest water level in at least 300 years in the New York metropolitan area.

The researchers set themselves the target of identifying precisely the impact of climate change on sea level rise in that region. To do that, they had to subtract the change that could be explained by coastal subsidence: as a consequence of heavy construction and groundwater abstraction, coastal settlements everywhere are likely to subside.

Knowing the threat

Then they combed maps of the damage, contour data and insurance data to arrive at a specific contribution by sea level rise linked to climate change: at the very least, they judged, $4.7bn, at the most $14bn, and so they compromised on $8bn.

They then numbered the humans who might not have been hit by flooding had there been no climate change: they calculated at least 40,000, and no more than 131,000, before settling on 70,000 additional victims.

Such exercises matter: city planners, coastal defence agencies, insurers and seaside property-holders need to know the scale of extra risk conferred by climate change. There will be more storm damage and flooding, and the new methodology could be adapted to other vulnerable cities.

US coasts already face more frequent floods, rising seas promise more such superstorms and − once again because of global heating − the north-eastern US seaboard can expect to be in the track of fiercer hurricanes.

“If we were to calculate the cost of climate change across all flooding events − both nuisance floods and those caused by extreme storm events − that figure would be enormous,” Dr Orton said. ”It would provide clarity on the severe damage we are inflicting on ourselves and on our planet.”




Australia: Transport Workers Union calls for food delivery minimum wage





https://www.wsws.org/en/articles/2021/05/24/ubea-m24.html




Jack Turner
a day ago







On Wednesday, the Transport Workers Union (TWU) held a rally in Sydney over the low wages and dangerous conditions faced by UberEats delivery drivers. Five of these highly-exploited workers were killed on Australian roads in just two months late last year.
Workers at the protest (Credit:WSWS)




Far from being part of a fight to improve the atrocious conditions, the rally was part of a campaign by the union to use the growing anger of delivery drivers to give the TWU a seat at the bargaining table with Uber. Called with just over a day’s notice and barely promoted by the union among delivery drivers, let alone the working class more broadly, the rally was attended by no more than 15 drivers. The small turnout was certainly not due to any lack of concern among workers about worsening pay and conditions in the industry.

Drivers who spoke to the World Socialist Web Site described growing pressure to make deliveries and a sharp decline in their income. One bicycle rider said after expenses are considered, he makes an average of only $5 an hour. Another rider said he now makes $10 an hour during peak times, half of what he used to earn.

Ady explained that when he started in 2017, he worked eight to nine hours a day, five days a week and earned over $1,000 a week from just one app.
Ady (Credit: WSWS)




“Now I am on every app,” he said. “New ones keep coming and you just sign up hoping they will be better than the last, but they are all just getting worse. The riders are facing the impact of this. A driver will try to get as much work as he can in the busy hours to maximise his earnings, he doesn’t have any option. If he doesn’t do it then he may not get another order for the rest of the day.

“Just imagine the mental aspect of a person who is sitting in a car waiting for the next order to hit and if it is not coming then he is in a constant state of panic. It is getting worse and worse. Every passing day the rates are coming down. You could be online for a couple of hours and you won’t get anything.”

Vamshidhar said he started on a bicycle but after two years on UberEats he had his access suddenly cancelled due to “poor service” according to an email from Uber, even though he delivered food in “bad weather conditions, rainy days, very hot days, very busy days, sometimes with very late pickups and drop offs at night.”

The rally was addressed by Michael Kaine, national secretary of the TWU, who lauded Tuesday’s decision by the Fair Work Commission (FWC) that former delivery driver Diego Franco was an employee of Deliveroo and that he had been unfairly dismissed by the company. Kaine presented the FWC’s decision as a “landmark ruling” that made Uber’s boardroom members “panic.” The ruling, however, was explicitly presented as a one-off case, without any immediate impact on the status of any other rider.

Over the last four years the FWC has, on four separate occasions, ruled that delivery drivers are not employees, but “independent contractors,” with next to no legal rights or benefits. However, the Deliveroo ruling, as well as Uber’s recent out-of-court settlement over the alleged unfair dismissal of Amita Gupta, and findings in the UK and elsewhere that delivery drivers are employees, have prompted Uber competitor Menulog to work closely with the TWU to ensure that any changes to riders’ legal status has minimal impact on profit.

Kaine praised Menulog, which he claimed, had “come forward to say that things have to change.” The TWU is currently in negotiations with Menulog to establish the country’s first “on-demand industry award,” which would change the status of delivery drivers to “employees” while continuing their exploitation and formalising the role of the union in the growing sector. The new award is necessary because Menulog is unwilling to accept the minimum shift lengths required under existing awards.

Menulog will soon begin a small trial in which delivery riders will be employed under the Miscellaneous Award, meaning workers will be paid the minimum casual wage of $24.80 per hour. The company says it will also provide an injury insurance plan that is “as close as we can get to workers compensation.” When asked at a recent NSW parliamentary inquiry if the changes would “destroy” Menulog’s business, Menulog Australia’s managing director Morten Belling bluntly replied, “No. Otherwise we wouldn’t go down this path.”

Minimum wage and formal status as employees will not end the exploitation of delivery drivers. Indeed, it will create new opportunities for employers to exercise control over workers. The nature of gig-economy work, which requires workers to constantly run a GPS- and internet-connected smartphone app, allows employers unprecedented scope to enforce performance targets and demand speed-ups.

Permanent employees will likely be unable to pick up rides from competitors, reducing their potential sources of income. The establishment of a permanent, low-paid workforce will also allow Menulog to reduce the number of riders on its books.

Kaine sought to promote illusions in the Labor Party, who he said, “has indicated what it will” address the conditions of gig-economy workers, unlike the Liberal-National government. He called on Tony Sheldon, a New South Wales (NSW) Labor senator, who told workers “you should all be allowed to ensure you get minimum wage.”
Tony Sheldon (Credit: alp.org.au)




Sheldon directly appealed to the Coalition, stating, “This is a real opportunity for the government to turn around and say let’s have a bipartisan support for decent working conditions for everybody who works in this country.”

Sheldon’s posturing is bogus. It was the Labor governments of Bob Hawke and Paul Keating, as well as the unions, that signed a series of accords with big business in the 80s and 90s, providing for the deregulation of the economy, the destruction of hundreds of thousands of permanent jobs and the elimination of entire industries.

Since then, Labor and the unions have worked hand-in-hand with corporations to suppress the class struggle and enforce one enterprise agreement after another that undermined secure working conditions, paving the way for the gig-economy. As a result, about one-third of Australian workers are now in insecure casual or part-time work or are “independent contractors.”

Sheldon played a central role in implementing this agenda in the transport and delivery sector. It was under his tenures as the TWU’s NSW state secretary (1999–2008) and national secretary (2006–2019), that the gig-economy became predominant in the delivery industry, without the slightest opposition from the union.

The already rapid growth of the Australian food delivery industry—now worth $2.6 billion—was accelerated by the coronavirus pandemic. Consumer spending in the sector has tripled since the beginning of 2020.

Mass unemployment and the federal government’s decision to exclude international students and overseas workers on temporary visas from any form of welfare during the pandemic, without opposition from Labor, helped ensure a ready supply of desperate riders and drivers for Uber and its competitors.

According to a report commissioned by Uber, 59 percent of the company’s delivery riders began work during the COVID-19 pandemic, 77 percent said they were ineligible for government support and 60 percent said they found it difficult to access “traditional” work.

The TWU is desperate to expand its deal with Menulog to include other companies, such as Uber and Deliveroo. The establishment of delivery drivers as employees will potentially give the TWU access to a vast and untapped supply of membership dues. More than that, it will enable the TWU to extend its role as an industrial police force in a growing sector of the economy in Australia and internationally, which only exists due to the betrayals and defeats of the working class presided over by the unions over decades.

None of the measures presented by either Kaine or Sheldon have anything to do with defending the rights and conditions of delivery drivers. Workers should reject with contempt the demands by the TWU and Labor that they accept the poverty-level minimum wage.

Instead, all workers should be provided with permanency and a living wage that eliminates the need to risk their lives to complete jobs or make quotas. But that requires a head on assault on the wealth of the corporate and financial elite, which the unions and Labor oppose. The next step for delivery drivers is therefore to establish independent rank-and-file committees that can take forward a unified fight for wages and conditions.




Boeing donates $50 million to Virginia Tech University’s “Innovation Campus”





https://www.wsws.org/en/articles/2021/05/24/tech-m24.html




Ray Coleman
a day ago







On May 4, the aerospace manufacturer Boeing announced it will donate $50 million to Virginia Tech to help launch the university’s new Innovation Campus located in Alexandria, Virginia, just outside Washington D.C. The donation is the largest in the university’s history, and will support scholarships and financial aid, faculty hiring, as well as programs aimed at preparing students for undergraduate course study in tech-focused and computer science programs.

The website for the Innovation Campus describes the gift as a “multiyear commitment” from Boeing to “jump-start Virginia Tech’s effort to create the most diverse graduate technology campus in the United States.” Located alongside Amazon’s HQ2, the Pentagon, and industry-related academic research centers such as George Mason University’s Institute for Digital Innovation, Virginia Tech’s generously funded Innovation Campus will become a major locus for the state-military-intelligence apparatus in Northern Virginia.

In a statement announcing the donation, Virginia Tech President Tim Sands said, “We are extraordinarily grateful to Boeing for this extraordinarily generous show of support.” Sands called the corporate gift “a milestone moment in our university’s history.” He enthused that the corporate donation “will propel our work to help establish the greater Washington, D.C. area as the world’s next major tech hub.”
Virginia Tech (Credit: https://vt.edu)




Virginia Tech is set to begin construction on its $1 billion Innovation Campus later this year, with the first building opening in 2024. Eventually, the goal for the Innovation Campus is to have close to 1,000 students in master’s or doctoral level programs. Once completed, the Innovation Campus will be the focal point of a 65-acre area, just across the Potomac River from Washington, serving as an “innovation district” with labs, academic spaces and office space for startup and corporate partners.

Boeing, a commercial airplane maker and defense contractor, has spent much of the past two years seeking to rehabilitate its image in the wake of the fatal crashes involving its 737 MAX. Despite the criminality of Boeing’s executives and US regulators, the aerospace giant received the legal equivalent of a slap on the wrist.

The aerospace corporation is just one of several major companies investing in tech talent in the Washington region. Amazon, which is building its second corporate headquarters in Alexandria, also has connections to the future Innovation Campus. In wooing the company during its HQ2 competition of 2018-19, Virginia agreed to invest millions of dollars in the Innovation Campus as part of its larger $750 million sweetheart deal with the online retailer.

Furthermore, in 2019, the Commonwealth of Virginia announced it will invest a total of $961.5 million over two decades in computer science and STEM programs at 11 of the state’s universities through the Tech Talent Investment Program. The goal of this program is to produce an additional 31,000 graduates in technology-focused fields over 20 years.

These university-level programs at the undergraduate-through-postdoctoral levels complement initiatives by corporations to fund childhood education in STEM (science, technology, engineering, and mathematics) fields. Amazon, for instance, helps fund computer science education and scholarships through its Future Engineer program.

Likewise, the Innovation Campus, Virginia Tech and other universities in the state will engage not only in advanced research but also in STEM education and outreach at the level of primary and secondary education, which will be partly supported by Boeing’s donation.

In its statement, Virginia Tech itself said the Innovation Campus in Alexandria will not only be a large innovation district but serve as “a nexus of government, industry, and research.” In other words, Boeing’s gift serves to align further the corporate world with the US military and intelligence agencies.

This entrenched alignment of corporate America and the interests of US imperialism was emphasized by Senator Mark Warner (Democrat from Virginia), himself a former venture capitalist, at an announcement ceremony attended by university officials. “The US must maintain international leadership in advancing technology, and talent is our most critical resource,” the senator declared.

Warner continued, “We are seeing in China an emerging competitive threat. This is one of the few remaining issues where there is wide bipartisan agreement. ... The competition of the 21st century will be military, but even more, technology-based.” Warner also said developing a diverse “pipeline” of tech workers was “the right moral thing to do” but would also provide an optimal “return on investment.”

In 2015, a report in Vice determined Virginia Tech, along with GMU and Northern Virginia Community College, were among the 20 most militarized college campuses in the US. The further integration of companies, universities, and government agencies through so-called “STEM talent pipelines,” as Calhoun called them, only serves to subordinate the possibilities of science, engineering and technology to the requirements of war and the surveillance state.

In addition to the state and military implications of Boeing’s investments in Northern Virginia, the corporation also sought to dress up its alliance with Washington in the language of “inclusion” and “diversity,” signaling an appeal to middle-class advocates of racial and gender-based identity politics.

Speaking on the donation, Boeing CEO Ed Calhoun stated, “Virginia Tech has a bold and unique vision to unlock the power of diversity to solve the world’s most pressing problems through technology, and we’re proud to help make that vision a reality.” Calhoun continued, “Boeing is dedicated to advancing equity and inclusion, both within our company and in our communities, and we look forward to partnering with Virginia Tech to build a robust and diverse STEM talent pipeline to drive the future of aerospace.”

Boeing’s use of such language in announcing its donation to the Innovation Campus becomes further evidence of the ruling class’ increasing reliance on identity politics and racialism to silence objections as it seeks to impose its militaristic policies on the population and suppress working class social opposition. A struggle on the basis of the international working class, regardless of gender or race, is the only way technology can be secured as a tool to improve the lives of billions of people around the world.