Thursday, August 22, 2019

Nina Turner responds to Neera Tanden's idiotic attacks against Susan Sarandon






TURNER AND SARANDON ARE REAL PROGRESSIVES.

TANDEN IS JUST ANOTHER IDIOT CLINTON STOOGE.






https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9dmnu6YHoNE


















































BOLSONARO FIDDLES WHILE THE RAINFOREST BURNS.





THE LUNGS OF THE PLANET ARE BEING DESTROYED. 







https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NAQZvlaNF4s













































Argentina's Kirchner leads call to free Brazil's Lula










August 21, 2019. AFP



Presidential frontrunner Alberto Fernandez and running-mate Cristina Kirchner led calls by dozens of Argentine personalities Tuesday to free Brazil's jailed leftist icon Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva.


Human rights activists, lawmakers, trade unionists, artists and scientists signed a petition published in the left-leaning Pagina 12 daily.


They included Nobel Peace laureate Adolfo Perez Esquivel, president of the Grandmothers of the Plaza de Mayo Estela Carlotto and the leader of the Families of the Disappeared, Lita Boitano.


"It is a very big clamor for freedom in the face of an injustice, such as the detention and conviction of Lula da Silva, which implies that Brazil continues to be in a state of emergency," said Nicolas Trotta, the rector of the Metropolitan University for Education and Labor, one of the organizers of the petition.


Fernandez, the favorite to unseat President Mauricio Macri in upcoming elections, visited Lula last month in Curitiba prison in southern Brazil where he is serving a nearly nine-year sentence for corruption and money laundering.


Fernandez blasted President Jair Bolsonaro last week as "misogynist, racist and violent" after the Brazilian leader said a leftist victory in October elections would spark an exodus of Argentines to Brazil.


Lula, who was the favorite to win last year's presidential election in Brazil before he was jailed, has continued to insist he is an innocent victim of a political conspiracy to thwart him returning to power.



















Amazon burning: Brazil reports record forest fires








Lisandra Paraguassu. Reuters. August 20, 2019



Wildfires raging in the Amazon rainforest have hit a record number this year, with 72,843 fires detected so far by Brazil’s space research center INPE, as concerns grow over right-wing President Jair Bolsonaro’s environmental policy.

The surge marks an 83% increase over the same period of 2018, the agency said on Tuesday, and is the highest since records began in 2013.

Since Thursday, INPE said satellite images spotted 9,507 new forest fires in the country, mostly in the Amazon basin, home to the world’s largest tropical forest seen as vital to countering global warming.

Images show the northernmost state of Roraima covered in dark smoke. Amazonas declared an emergency in the south of the state and in its capital Manaus on Aug. 9. Acre, on the border with Peru, has been on environmental alert since Friday due to the fires.

Wildfires have increased in Mato Grosso and Para, two states where Brazil’s agricultural frontier has pushed into the Amazon basin and spurred deforestation. Wildfires are common in the dry season, but are also deliberately set by farmers illegally deforesting land for cattle ranching.

The unprecedented surge in wildfires has occurred since Bolsonaro took office in January vowing to develop the Amazon region for farming and mining, ignoring international concern over increased deforestation.

Asked about the spread of uncontrolled fires, Bolsonaro brushed off criticism, saying it was the time of the year of the “queimada” or burn, when farmers use fire to clear land.

“I used to be called Captain Chainsaw. Now I am Nero, setting the Amazon aflame. But it is the season of the queimada,” he told reporters.

Space agency INPE, however, said the large number of wildfires could not be attributed to the dry season or natural phenomena alone.

“There is nothing abnormal about the climate this year or the rainfall in the Amazon region, which is just a little below average,” said INPE researcher Alberto Setzer.

People frequently blame the dry season for the wildfires in the Amazon, but that is not quite accurate, he said.

“The dry season creates the favorable conditions for the use and spread of fire, but starting a fire is the work of humans, either deliberately or by accident,” Setzer said.

Bolsonaro recently fired the director of INPE after he criticized agency statistics showing an increase in deforestation in Brazil, saying they were inaccurate.

“I am waiting for the next set of numbers, that will not be made up numbers. If they are alarming, I will take notice of them in front of you,” he told reporters.


















Two Communist Lawmakers Are Suddenly Setting the Agenda in Chile











Eduardo Thomson  and Daniela Guzman.
Bloomberg.
August 20, 2019


In a country that’s long stood out as the beacon of free-market principles in Latin America, two young communist women are capturing much of the attention in government circles.


A labor-reform bill introduced by Chile’s Camila Vallejo and Karol Cariola, who made a name for themselves as student-movement leaders eight years ago, is gaining widespread support -- and putting the two Communist Party lawmakers in the crosshairs of right-leaning President Sebastian Pinera.


At issue is a plan to cut the country’s maximum work week to 40 hours from 45. Pinera has called the bill unconstitutional, vowing to fight it in court if it wins approval. He has his own proposal that’s struggling to move forward.


For Pinera, a 69-year-old billionaire in his second stint as president, the labor squabble and congressional gridlock are far from what was envisioned near the midpoint of his term. He was elected in late 2017 under the promise of bringing in major reforms that would usher in an economic boom. Now, growth is expected to cool as key tax and pension bills are also stalled, just as the U.S.-China trade war is hitting prices for copper, the country’s top export.


“The government should be setting the agenda and using its political capital,” Macarena Lobos, who served as deputy finance minister for Pinera’s predecessor, Michelle Bachelet, said in an interview at radio Pauta Bloomberg. “Instead, it’s being pushed aside in its key reforms.”


The economy has already showed signs of weakness, with the central bank cutting its growth estimates for 2019 to 2.8% from 3.6% at the beginning of the year. The country’s benchmark IPSA stock index is down about 6% this year, while the MSCI EM Latin America Index is little changed.

Student Protests


In Chile, the president has powers to decide what’s discussed at the legislative level, making the rise of the communist duo’s bill all the more surprising.


Vallejo, 31, and Cariola, 32, could be considered early versions of Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, the New York congresswoman who’s become a leftist star in America. Vallejo gained notoriety during Pinera’s first tenure by leading student demonstrations over Chile’s education system. Hundreds of thousands of people joined the protests, fueled by discontent over inequality.


Pinera’s response included a cabinet shuffle and a new education fund, but Chilean students were unsatisfied. His approval ratings sank while Vallejo became a rising star of the Communist Party, backed by popular support. Polls in 2011 showed she was even more admired than Bachelet or famous revolutionary songstress Violeta Parra.


Cariola, also a young activist of the Communist Party, joined the ranks of the student leaders and traveled around the globe with Vallejo as a representative of the movement. They became congressional deputies in 2014, turning into powerful politicians on the left, and Pinera’s adversaries.


Like Ocasio-Cortez, Vallejo “is a young person in the opposition who is an incisive critic of the government and is skilled at placing issues on the congressional agenda,” said Kenneth Bunker, a Chilean political scientist.


The Vallejo-Cariola bill aims to cut down the labor load for a country that ranks sixth for hours worked among members of the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development. The lawmakers, aiming to increase productivity and bolster quality of life, have cited how European countries like France have implemented similar measures with positive results.


The bill has been approved by the Lower House and garnered 74% popular support in a respected Chilean poll. It will then have to go through “particular discussions” before it can move on to the Senate.

‘Extreme Urgency’


Pinera -- whose approval rating is about 34%, according to Cadem -- has pitched a labor reform bill that would give more flexible contracts and lower work hours to 180 hours a month, or an average of 41 per week. It was lingering in the Senate when his labor minister announced Aug. 8 that it would be given “extreme urgency,” which gives deadlines for Congress to vote on it.


Business associations have rallied against the Vallejo-Cariola bill, saying it would hurt productivity and increase labor costs for local companies by as much as 12%.


“Chileans want to work like the French and grow like the Asians. It doesn’t work like that. It’s one or the other,” Ricardo Caballero, an MIT economist, said in an interview with La Tercera about the bill.

Economic growth has cooled from strong 2018


One way for the president’s government to advance on his agenda would be for the government to back parts of the communist-backed bill and add to its own labor flexibility plan as a trade to secure votes for Pinera’s other key issues, such as a tax overhaul, according to Patricio Navia, a political science professor at New York University.


“But Pinera would likely see that as bowing to the communist party,” Navia said. “It’s a concession that he wouldn’t be willing to do.”


That stubbornness in an opposition-controlled Congress could have a political impact as well as an economic one, with next year’s regional and municipal elections potentially swaying based on how Chileans respond to the policy, Bunker said.


“A perfect storm is approaching that could affect the government’s approval rating,” he said. “In adverse weather, the government needs to change something, and that could be by negotiating with the opposition.”
















Sanders Unveils Workplace Democracy Plan to Expand Labor Rights and Double Union Membership









Wednesday, August 21, 2019


The presidential hopeful aims to end "right to work for less" and union-busting, and bar federal contracts for companies that exploit workers










Ahead of an AFL-CIO event in Iowa Wednesday, Democratic presidential primary candidate Sen. Bernie Sanders announced that, if elected, he would "make it easier, not harder, for workers to join unions by implementing the Workplace Democracy Plan and establishing a national goal to double union membership during his first term."

Pointing to research from the think tank Economic Policy Institute which shows that "since the 1970s, declining unionization has fueled rising inequality and stalled economic progress for the broad American middle class," Sanders aims to reverse that national trend with a new plan that builds on legislation the Independent senator from Vermont initially introduced in 1992.

"Corporate America and the billionaire class have been waging a 40-year war against the trade union movement in America that has caused devastating harm to the middle class in terms of lower wages, fewer benefits, and frozen pensions," Sanders said in a statement. "That war will come to an end when I am president. If we are serious about rebuilding the middle class in America, we have got to rebuild, strengthen, and expand the trade union movement in America."

Described by the Sanders campaign as a "pro-union" plan, the comprehensive proposal from the longtime labor rights advocate calls for enabling the National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) to certify a union if the majority of eligible employees have signed valid authorization cards.

The plan incorporates various policies Sanders has championed for years as a member of Congress. The campaign says he would sign the Public Service Freedom to Negotiate Act and Keep Our Pension Promises Act, codify the Brown-Ferris joint-employer standard into law, and repeal Section 14(b) of the Taft-Hartley Act, which would end the power of states to enact so-called "right to work for less" laws that eliminate the ability of unions to collect dues from those who benefit from contracts.

"When Bernie is president he will work with the trade union movement to establish a sectoral collective bargaining system that will work to set wages, benefits, and hours across entire industries, not just employer-by-employer," the campaign explains. "In addition, under this plan all cities, counties, and other local jurisdictions would have the freedom to establish their own minimum wage laws and guarantee other minimum standards for workers."

Under the plan, employers would be required to start negotiations within 10 days of receiving new unions' requests; honor existing union contracts if they merge with or acquire other companies; and "disclose anti-union information they disseminate to workers and provide for equal time for organizing agents."

Companies would not be able to permanently replace striking workers, force workers to attend anti-union meetings, or "ruthlessly exploit workers by misclassifying them as independent contractors or deny them overtime by falsely calling them a 'supervisor.'"

Sanders would also work to establish federal protections so that employees cannot be fired for any reason other than "just cause" and give federal workers the right to strike.

As president, Sanders would issue an executive order barring federal contracts for any companies that "outsource jobs overseas, pay workers less than $15 an hour without benefits, refuse to remain neutral in union organizing efforts, pay executives over 150 times more than average workers, hire workers to replace striking workers, or close businesses after workers vote to unionize."

In a campaign newsletter Wednesday, speechwriter David Sirota highlighted some corporations that could lose government contracts under the plan: Amazon, Boeing, General Motors, Honeywell, McKesson, and United Technologies.

"Of course, there is one way for these companies to avoid losing their federal contracts under a Bernie Sanders administration: they could simply start paying their workers better, stop their union-busting, and stop offshoring jobs," wrote Sirota.

Responding to the proposal on Twitter Wednesday, Ben Spielberg, co-founder of the political blog 34justicewrote that "it would be hard for unions to dream up a better friend in the White House than Bernie Sanders, who has tirelessly stood with the labor movement throughout his entire career."

Mary Kay Henry, international president of the Service Employees International Union, was among those who welcomed the plan, calling it "the latest sign 2020 candidates can't ignore millions of workers demanding leaders rewrite the rules so everyone can join a union, no matter where we work."

The new labor plan also ties in another of Sanders's signature proposals—replacing the country's for-profit healthcare system with Medicare for All. As part of that transition, companies with union-negotiated healthcare plans would be required to hold new negotiations overseen by the NLRB to ensure that corporate savings are put toward wage increases and other benefits for workers.

Sanders and Rep. Mark Pocan (D-Wis.) introduced the most recent version of the Workplace Democracy Act in May 2018, during the last session of Congress. The bill, which would amend "the National Labor Relations Act and related labor laws to preserve workers' rights to join labor organizations and engage in collective bargaining," was co-sponsored by several other presidential hopefuls—Democratic Sens. Cory Booker (N.J.), Kirsten Gillibrand (N.Y.), Kamala Harris (Calif.), and Elizabeth Warren (Mass.).





















Dr. Cornel West: "Race Matters", Apr 26, 2019, UO















https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AUdPI21I7As