Thursday, September 3, 2020

US POLITICAL SCIENTISTS ARGUE EVO MORALES SHOULD BE PRESIDENT OF BOLIVIA





https://popularresistance.org/us-political-scientists-argue-evo-morales-should-be-the-president-of-bolivia/


By Vijay Prashad and Manuel Bertoldi, Globetrotter.
September 2, 2020
| EDUCATE!



Three political scientists from the United States closely studied allegations of fraud in the Bolivian election of 2019 and found that there was no fraud. These scholars—from the University of Pennsylvania and Tulane University—looked at raw evidence from the Bolivian election authorities that had been handed over to the New York Times. They suggest late-counted votes came from rural regions where the candidacy of incumbent President Evo Morales Ayma was popular; the character of these votes, and not fraud, accounts for the margin of victory announced by the Supreme Electoral Tribunal (TSE) on October 21, 2019.Allegations of fraud were made most sharply by the Organization of American States (OAS). It is the OAS report that is closely scrutinized by Professors Nicolás Idrobo, Dorothy Kronick, and Francisco Rodríguez, and it is found wanting on statistical and analytical grounds. If what the professors say is correct and if the OAS allegations were incorrect, then Evo Morales should have been serving his fourth term as president of Bolivia rather than be exiled to Argentina. Because Morales was removed from power by a coup d’état, his country’s democratic system is being suffocated by an interim presidency.
What Happened In October 2019

As the Idrobo, Kronick, and Rodríguez study published in July 2020 reports, at 7:40 p.m. on October 20, after the voting ended, Bolivia’s TSE paused the public transmission of the results for the election. The government had previously announced that the transmission would be paused so that the 7:50 p.m. press conference by election officials could be held in a calm manner. At this press conference, the officials said that 83 percent of the voting booths had reported to the central office, and that of these votes Morales (with 45.71 percent) was in the lead over Carlos Mesa (with 37.84 percent). The gap between the two at that point was 7.87 percent, short of the 10 percent margin needed for Morales to avoid a runoff.

The election officials did not publish any more results until the following evening; they said that they had no intention of posting any more results on October 20. On October 21, the officials said that Morales had a lead of 10.15 percent; three days later (on October 24), the Plurinational Electoral Organ announced that Morales (with 47.05 percent) had defeated Carlos Mesa (with 36.53 percent) by 10.52 percent, above the 10 percent threshold. Morales had won the election.
What The OAS Said

At 10:35 p.m., two and a half hours after the TSE held its press conference on October 20, the OAS sent out a tweet asking the TSE to explain why the transmission of results had been stopped. Here begins the mischief.

Days before the election, Bolivian authorities and their contracted firm for providing administration and support during the election—Neotec—had said that they would not be able to publish all the results on October 20 due to the lack of internet connectivity in rural parts of Bolivia. On the day of the election, Marcel Guzmán de Rojas, manager of Neotec, said that it would “take one or two more days” to confirm the official numbers; he had made this point as early as October 9. This simple explanation for the delay was not considered by the OAS or by European and U.S. ambassadors who began to whisper the phrase “election fraud” to the media.

During the break from the transmission of the results on October 20, the Panamanian cybersecurity firm Ethical Hacking that had been hired by the Bolivian government to oversee the process issued a “maximum alert” about activity on the servers. We were told by a former TSE official that Morales’ party—Movement for Socialism (MAS)—had objected to the work of Neotec, which had overseen the Bolivian elections for years; Neotec was hired to do the election five weeks before October 20 at the urging of the opposition.

The TSE brought in Ethical Hacking on September 19, 2019, just a month before the election, according to former TSE officials. The first meeting between Neotec and Ethical Hacking did not take place before October 4. The process was fraught, and any implementation was going to produce trouble. This was the backdrop to Ethical Hacking’s alert; simpler explanations—such as a lack of communication—better explain the chaos. Continued conflict into the present between Neotec and Ethical Hacking demonstrates the deep rot in the system.

Neither the timeline laid out by Neotec nor the open evidence of confusion between Neotec and Ethical Hacking entered the mainstream news. The focus was on the OAS tweet from October 20 and the OAS statement of October 21. The OAS statement spoke of its “deep concern and surprise at the drastic and hard-to-explain change in the trend of the preliminary results revealed after the closing of the polls.” There was nothing “hard-to-explain” if Neotec’s own timeline is taken seriously: no final numbers would be released before October 21, and the results followed the already established trendline.

The United States government (and its allies in Argentina, Brazil, and Colombia) issued a statement against the election results based on the OAS report; Carlos Mesa and Luis Fernando Camacho of the Committee for Santa Cruz used the OAS claims to call the election results fraudulent. The OAS report was used as the instrument to overthrow Morales.
What The Professors Say

The day before the election, the TSE held a press conference where its president María Eugenia Choque said that the system for the transmission of election results was safe. She responded to a news report that anonymously quoted a TSE official who complained that the TSE had hired Ethical Hacking to deliberately slow the process of the transmission down. The TSE tried desperately to defend the integrity of the process, but it was already clear—as many of us knew—that the accusation of fraud was going to be used to overthrow the government of President Morales.

Two U.S. scholars from the MIT Election Data and Science Lab—Jack R. Williams and John Curiel—published a paper in February 2020 that showed no “evidence of an irregular trend.” It was clear to these scholars that the precincts that remained “to be counted already highly favored Morales.” Williams and Curiel found that after the interruption on October 20 “there was no clear change in favor of a single party.” Because of this analysis, Williams and Curiel wrote, “We find it is very likely that Morales won the required 10 percentage point margin to win in the first round of the election on October 20, 2019.”

The new paper by Idrobo, Kronick, and Rodríguez—published in July 2020—went further. It demonstrated two main points. First, building on Williams and Curiel, it argued that the precincts being counted after the pause in the transmission were largely in the highlands of Bolivia and in its rural districts, both areas that favored Morales by a landslide. “The changing composition of voting booths—rather than fraud—explains the pro-Morales shift in vote share over the reporting window,” the more recent paper stated.

Second, looking at the models used by the OAS and others, Idrobo, Kronick, and Rodríguez showed that the jumps found by the OAS were “the artifact of using an estimator not designed for regression discontinuity analysis”; in other words, the statisticians who claim fraud used the wrong analytical framework for their assessment. Looking at one precinct in the town of Llallagua, Potosí, the scholars found that “MAS’s margin increases with reporting time even before the government stopped transmitting updated results.… This is not an isolated case.”
What Morales Wanted

On November 10, 2019, Morales offered an important concession: he announced new elections that would be overseen by a new electoral body. The oligarchy and its parties smelled blood. They were uninterested in strengthening Bolivian democracy. Two hours after the announcement, the commander of Bolivia’s armed forces General Williams Kaliman—trained by the U.S. military—“suggested” that Morales resign.

Morales offered another re-election. It was rejected in place of a coup. There has been no election for a year in Bolivia since the coup.

Price Gouging for Life Saving Drugs Amid a Pandemic


 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IK3ASyir-pk


NYPD ACCOUNT IN KILLING OF BRONX MAN ‘NOT TRUE,’ MOM SAYS



By Rosa Goldensohn, The City.
September 2, 2020

https://popularresistance.org/nypd-account-in-killing-of-bronx-man-not-true-mom-says/


Before the start of a Zoom call with the Bronx district attorney’s staff Wednesday, in the sitting room of the house Kawaski Trawick grew up in Milledgeville, Ga., his mother, father, sisters, and grandmother formed a circle and prayed for the strength to watch a video of him being shot to death.

Trawick’s entire interaction with police in The Bronx on April 14, 2019, lasted only a few minutes before an officer fired four shots, killing him.

His mother, Ellen Trawick, says the video told a different story than the version police offered last year.

“The way they wrote it up is like he was a threat to them, and that was not true,” she told THE CITY in a phone interview.

“NYPD went into Kawaski’s home and murdered him,” she added.
He Made The 911 Call

Trawick had himself called 911 after getting locked out of his Morris Heights apartment with food on the stove, according to the FDNY. Firefighters came and helped break his door open, in an otherwise uneventful interchange, fire officials have said.

But only minutes later, police arrived, responding to calls from the superintendent and a security guard saying Trawick had been harassing neighbors at the city-funded supportive housing building.

The two cops on the scene, Officers Brendan Thompson and Herbert Davis, found him wielding a wooden stick and a serrated knife, according to the NYPD.

After the officers talked with Trawick for less than two minutes, they tased him, police said. He fell and, as the officers moved to arrest him, police allege he got up, threatened them and charged.

Thompson fired his gun four times, hitting Trawick twice, killing him.

Others who had previously seen the body camera footage, including Public Advocate Jumaane Williams, questioned why Thompson fired his gun when police could have stepped into the hallway or otherwise de-escalated the situation.

Ellen Trawick said her son was cooking at the time, explaining the knife in his hand.

“I could just see the frustration of him and asking the police officers, ‘Why are y’all in my home? Why are you here?’” she said. “And they never answered. They never answered him.”

Thompson first shot Trawick with a Taser and then put the Taser down, multiple viewers of the footage told THE CITY. The officer then fired his gun at Trawick, they said.

Both officers present had been trained in crisis intervention at the time of the shooting, according to the NYPD.

No Charges

The Trawick family wants all of the officers involved to at least be fired.

“They are not fit for duty for the New York Police Department,” Ellen Trawick said.

The Bronx District Attorney’s Office on Thursday announced no criminal charges would be brought in the case.

“Although we do not find that the facts warrant a criminal prosecution, this event does demand a thoughtful review of police procedures and training techniques,” Bronx DA Darcel Clark, who was not on the call with the family, said in a statement.

State Attorney General Letitia James’ office will also not take on the case, citing an 2015 executive order that appoints the AG special prosecutor in police killings of unarmed civilians and instances in which “there is a significant question as to whether the civilian was armed and dangerous at the time of his or her death.” James’ office considers Trawick to have been armed.

The NYPD said the case will be presented to the first deputy commissioner’s Use of Force Review Board on Sept. 28, “where the facts and circumstances of the case will be reviewed by the board for a recommendation to the police commissioner regarding whether the actions of the officers were within departmental guidelines.”
A Family’s Prayer

Trawick had moved to New York from Georgia in 2016 to pursue a dance career, his family said.

“You could see his happiness, you could see his smile through his dance,” his mother said. “You could see his drive.”

She got through most of the police body camera video, but her son’s final pleas were too much to watch.

“I couldn’t stand to see him in distress, and, you know, crying and asking, ‘Why did you shoot me?’” she said. “I walked away.”

After the call, the family joined hands again and prayed for justice, she said.

Can the Police Ever Become Anti Racist?

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cGce7S24uyc&ab_channel=TheTightRope



US’ ANTI-CHINA CALL TO ARMS HAS NOT WON OVER ALL OF EUROPE



By Jiang Feng, South China Morning Post.
September 2, 2020

https://popularresistance.org/us-anti-china-call-to-arms-has-not-won-over-all-of-europe/


Foreign Minister Wang Yi’s Tour Of Europe Comes At A Time Of Heavy US Pressure For The EU To Step Back From Its Dialogue And Cooperation With China.

But despite the frosty reception by some, a number of people are voicing support for a more balanced view of China, taking in all facets of the relationship.

Against the backdrop of Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi’s visit to Europe, there are signs Germany and the rest of Europe are tilting towards “partial Trumpism”, adversely affecting Sino-European relations. The trust and understanding that was hard-earned through extensive dialogue and cooperation has been undermined, and the relationship as a whole has been politicized.

China is made to seem like a “systemic rival” of Europe. There is a clear trend of increasing hostility in Europe towards China.

Yet, in some ways, there has also been a notable shift in German views about China. On August 17, Der Tagesspiegel published a column titled, “The West has to prove that it offers the better life”, which emphasized the role positive competition plays in Sino-European relations. It pointed out that if Europe can take effective action against internal social divides, then the West does not have to fear China’s rise.

On August 2, the directors of 10 Confucius Institutes in Germany issued a joint statement to decry the politicization of these institutes. The statement notes that the institutes, which are similar to Germany’s Goethe-Institut, make important contributions to Sino-German academic, cultural and social exchanges.

So far, against a backdrop of negative coverage of China in Europe, these voices are in the minority but may point to a new direction in European opinion.

It’s not strange to see discordance in European views towards China – how to define and develop relations is a great challenge for Europe. This is not only the result of the unprecedented scale and speed of China’s development but more importantly, it reflects a “gap of understanding” on the part of Europe towards a rapidly changing China, which leads to difficulty in categorizing it as a partner, competitor or rival.

However, because of ideological influences, European media and think tanks tend to see China as a threat, ignoring the history of cooperation and mutual benefit. Volker Stanzel, a political analyst and former German ambassador to China, told German Radio that “China’s economy is gradually eroding European unity”, with Western firms being “pushed out of China”. He proposes that Europe jointly take countermeasures against China.

Such voices have completely missed the cause and effect. China’s economic growth and especially its open markets have been a boon to Germany, and have not undermined European unity. Foreign capital flowing into Chinese stock markets has nearly doubled over the past two years, reaching almost US$600 billion.

Talking to some European firms, I was told that among all their branches worldwide, their business in China was the first to recover after the outbreak of the pandemic, with revenues exceeding those elsewhere, which will buttress their budgets this year.






In June, the EU Chamber of Commerce in China and Roland Berger published the “European Business in China Business Confidence Survey 2020,” which shows that the percentage of firms considering moving operations out of China has dropped from 15 percent to 11 percent. This shows that trading and business relations between China and Europe remain strong. China does not want European firms to leave China and is taking various measures to encourage them to stay.

It is true that the standards for goods and services in Chinese markets are rising, requiring greater innovation and quality control efforts by all firms; this is both a challenge and an opportunity for European firms. However, politicizing these challenges will only make the problem more difficult to solve, and will do nothing to help these firms.

Another source of tension in Europe’s relationship with China comes from the US. Europe’s long-time ally has continuously pressured European countries to take a stand on US-China strategic competition, on issues such as 5G development and Huawei.






Some European countries have been forced to acquiesce, but still try to maintain their own sovereignty and interests against American demands, such as through restrictions on the scope of Huawei’s operations, leaving them still able to benefit from Huawei’s technology.

Some European media outlets clearly perceived that US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo’s visit to Europe in August was aimed at containing China and Russia, while dividing Europe, to achieve its economic and geopolitical goal of maintaining global hegemony. For America, Europe is no doubt only a tool for its global ambitions.

Recent data shows that, despite Covid-19, Sino-European economic relations have continued to grow, displaying great resilience and complementarity. Further, the efforts made in May to provide “express channels” to facilitate European executives, engineers and others returning to their work in China, amid Covid-19 travel restrictions, underline the willingness of both sides to work together. This shows that bilateral ties are far stronger than some media and political figures would have you believe.

Some German media have also criticized Chancellor Angela Merkel for lacking a big-picture China strategy, saying that she treats China-German relations as just an economic relationship. They have a point. Economic ties involve more than the economic exchange of goods and services.

It should be clear that the China-Europe and China-Germany relationship are not just about single issues, but also affect the overall development outlook of all concerned. Therefore, one should not view these ties through a narrow lens, and certainly not add ideological shackles to them. The diverse breadth of ties requires all sides to rationally grow and maintain them. Recent German perspectives on China that are based on reason and logic would be a positive trend.

FEDERAL JUDGE TACKLES POLICE IMMUNITY LAW





https://popularresistance.org/federal-judge-tackles-police-immunity-law/

By Marjorie Cohn, Black Agenda Report.September 2, 2020
| RESIST!


The Black Judge Listed The Injustices Of “Qualified Immunity,” Which Allows Police And Other Government Officials To Escape Liability For Their Law Breaking.


“His opinion is titled, “Qualified Immunity: The Empire Strikes Back.”

As the Massachusetts legislature debates whether to water down its qualified immunity defense, a federal judge in Mississippi filed a stunning 72-page opinion blasting the doctrine. Qualified immunity has entered the national discourse with the massive uprisings in the wake of the public lynching of George Floyd. It allows police and other government officials to escape liability for their law breaking.

In Jamison v. McClendon, U.S. District Court Judge Carlton Reeves recently concluded that Officer Nick McClendon violated Clarence Jamison’s Fourth Amendment rights when he subjected Jamison to a nearly two-hour ordeal that included badgering, pressuring, lying and intrusively searching his car. But the judge’s hands were tied by the qualified immunity doctrine so he was forced to deny Jamison’s legal claim. Reeves, an African American man, traced the development of the law and the institutional racism and police brutality that continue to plague our society. “Black people in this country are acutely aware of the danger traffic stops pose to Black lives,” the judge wrote.

Reeves began his blockbuster opinion by listing 19 victims of outrageous police misconduct, who would have been met with the qualified immunity defense if they or their heirs sued the offending officers. He wrote: “Clarence Jamison wasn’t jaywalking” (like Michael Brown); “wasn’t outside playing with a toy gun” (like 12-year-old Tamir Rice); “didn’t look like a ‘suspicious person’” (like Elijah McClain); “wasn’t suspected of ‘selling loose, untaxed cigarettes’” (like Eric Garner); “wasn’t suspected of passing a counterfeit $20 bill” (like George Floyd); “didn’t look like anyone suspected of a crime” (like Philando Castile and Tony McDade); “wasn’t mentally ill and in need of help” (like Jason Harrison); “wasn’t assisting an autistic patient” (like Charles Kinsey); “wasn’t walking home from an after-school job” (like James Earl Green); “wasn’t walking back from a restaurant” (like Ben Brown); “wasn’t hanging out on a college campus” (like Phillip Gibbs); “wasn’t standing outside of his apartment” (like Amadou Diallo); “wasn’t inside his apartment eating ice cream” (like Botham Jean); “wasn’t sleeping in his bed” (like Breonna Taylor); “wasn’t sleeping in his car” (like Rayshard Brooks); “didn’t make an ‘improper lane change’” (like Sandra Bland); “didn’t have a broken tail light” (like Walter Scott); “wasn’t driving over the speed limit” (like Hannah Fizer); and “wasn’t driving under the speed limit” (like Ace Perry).


“Black people in this country are acutely aware of the danger traffic stops pose to Black lives.”

“No,” Reeves continued, “Clarence Jamison was a Black man driving a Mercedes convertible.” McClendon lied about why he stopped Jamison, who was driving home to South Carolina after a vacation in Arizona. Jamison, Reeves wrote, “was pulled over and subjected to one hundred and ten minutes of an armed police officer badgering him, pressuring him, lying to him, and then searching his car top-to-bottom for drugs.” McClendon found nothing and his canine search came up empty as well.

“Thankfully, Jamison left the stop with his life,” Reeves observed. “Too many others have not.” Reeves cited the cases of 70 people — including Eric Garner and George Floyd — whose last words were, “I can’t breathe,” as they died in police custody.

McClendon tried to justify his stop of Jamison by claiming that the temporary license tag was “folded over to where [he] couldn’t see it.” Jamison, who had recently purchased the 12-year-old car, pulled over immediately and gave McClendon his license, insurance and bill of sale for the vehicle. McClendon didn’t tell Jamison that his background check came back clear. The officer lied that he had a tip that there were 10 kilos of cocaine in Jamison’s car and falsely asserted that the car was stolen. After McClendon’s five requests to search his car, Jamison finally consented. The search and subsequent dog sniff turned up nothing. In the process, McClendon tore the car apart, doing $4,000 worth of damage to it.

“In an America where Black people ‘are considered dangerous even when they are in their living rooms eating ice cream, asleep in their beds, playing in the park, standing in the pulpit of their church, birdwatching, exercising in public, or walking home from a trip to the store to purchase a bag of Skittles,’” Reeves, wrote, “who can say that Jamison felt free that night … to say no to an armed Officer McClendon?”

Jamison sued McClendon under 42 U.S.C. section 1983, claiming violation of his constitutional rights and seeking money damages.
A “Manufactured Doctrine” To Let Cops Off The Hook

Reeves determined that McClendon’s search of Jamison’s car violated the Fourth Amendment, which prohibits unreasonable searches and seizures. Nevertheless, Reeves was legally bound to rule against Jamison because of the qualified immunity defense.

“[J]udges have invented a legal doctrine to protect law enforcement officers from having to face any consequences for wrongdoing,” Reeves wrote. “The doctrine is called ‘qualified immunity.’ In real life it operates like absolute immunity.” However, he added, “[i]mmunity is not exoneration. And the harm in this case to one man sheds light on the harm done to the nation by this manufactured doctrine.”

Section 1983, Reeves noted, is a product of the Civil War and the ensuing “brief era” of “Reconstruction.” The judge wrote, “If the Civil War was the only war in our nation’s history dedicated to the proposition that Black lives matter, Reconstruction was dedicated to the proposition that Black futures matter, too.”

Reconstruction, however, was short-lived. Congress, responding to the reign of terror by the Ku Klux Klan against Black people and their white allies, passed the Ku Klux Act of 1871. It has since been codified as 42 U.S.C. section 1983, which provides:

Every person who, under color of any statute, ordinance, regulation, custom, or usage, of any State or Territory or the District of Columbia, subjects, or causes to be subjected, any citizen of the United States or other person within the jurisdiction thereof to the deprivation of any rights, privileges, or immunities secured by the Constitution and laws, shall be liable to the party injured in an action at law, suit in equity, or other proper proceeding for redress.…

But the Supreme Court has steadily neutralized the law, even though section 1983 nowhere mentions defenses or immunities. In a section of his opinion titled, “Qualified Immunity: The Empire Strikes Back,” Reeves described how the high court first held that officers could avoid liability if they acted in good faith, then created a balancing test, and finally made it nearly impossible to sustain a section 1983 claim against the police.

Reeves wrote that qualified immunity “now protects all officers, no matter how egregious their conduct, if the law they broke was not ‘clearly established’,” that is, a court must have clearly ruled that the precise offensive conduct violated the law. Even if the officer acted in bad faith, he or she can mount a successful qualified immunity defense unless it is clearly established, beyond debate, that every reasonable officer would understand that his or her conduct violates the law. The defense applies “‘to all but the plainly incompetent or those who knowingly violate the law.’”

Since qualified immunity is a court-made rule, the courts could abolish it.

The question is whether a prior court has specifically determined that the same conduct engaged in by McClendon violated the law. The query, in Reeves’s words, “is whether it was clearly established that an officer who has made five sequential requests for consent to search a car, lied, promised leniency, and placed his arm inside of a person’s car during a traffic stop while awaiting background check results has violated the Fourth Amendment. It is not.”

Reeves was thus legally required to rule against Jamison.
Reeves Challenges The Supreme Court To Abolish Qualified Immunity

Reeves invoked the Movement for Black Lives. “[A]s people marching in the streets remind us today, some have always stood up to face our nation’s failings and remind us that ‘we cannot be patient,’” he wrote. “Through their efforts we become ever more perfect.” Reeves cited Congressman John Lewis, who “stared down the racists of his era when he marched over the Edmund Pettus Bridge.” He mentioned the Supreme Court’s landmark decision in Brown v. Board of Education, which abolished the doctrine of “separate but equal.” Reeves wrote, “The question of today is whether the Supreme Court will rise to the occasion and do the same with qualified immunity.”

Since qualified immunity is a court-made rule, the courts could abolish it. Although the Supreme Court declined to review the doctrine in the last term, the abolition of qualified immunity in Colorado state courts, together with Reeves’s comprehensive condemnation of it, may well lead the high court to reconsider the endurance of qualified immunity in its next term.

The Ending Qualified Immunity Act is pending in the House of Representatives and its companion bill has been introduced by three progressive Democrats in the Senate. A bill to reform, but not abolish, qualified immunity, introduced by Sen. Mike Braun (R-Indiana), is also pending in the Senate. As long as Republicans maintain control of the Senate, and Democrats — many of whom were architects of the current criminal legal system — continue their lukewarm opposition to qualified immunity, it is unlikely the doctrine will be watered down or abolished by Congress.


“The abolition of qualified immunity in Colorado state courts, together with Reeves’s comprehensive condemnation of it, may well lead the high court to reconsider.”

Meanwhile, the state of Massachusetts is debating whether to weaken its qualified immunity defense. The House bill would eliminate the defense only for officers who have been decertified by a standards board because they have violated someone’s civil rights. The Senate bill would permit judges to rule for plaintiffs even where the current case is not almost identical to a prior case.

In light of the ongoing mass uprisings against white supremacy and police brutality, other states are likely to reconsider their qualified immunity doctrines. As state after state reviews its qualified immunity law, the Supreme Court will hopefully do so as well.

Trump Tells His Supporters To Commit A Felony

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fZSyF7ANZ_Q&ab_channel=TheRationalNational