IndianPunchline | What emerges is that Russia has given up hopes
of any negotiated settlement. Moscow was initially optimistic that Kiev
would negotiate, but the bitter experience turned out to be that
President Zelensky was not a free agent. The US-UK tandem undermined the
accord negotiated by Russian and Ukrainian officials in Istanbul in
April under Turkish mediation. The Biden Administration holds the stop
watch for the proxy war. And Washington’s timeline is linked to the
weakening and destruction of Russian state, which has been the ultimate
US objective.Lest we forget,
Joe Biden played a seminal role in installing the new regime in Kiev in
2014 and in moulding Ukraine as an anti-Russianstate.
Suffice to say, the referendum on Wednesday is Russia’s only available course of action under the circumstances, while Kiev maintains a maximalist position as advised by the US, UK and Poland.
The
accession of Donbass, Kherson and Zaporozhye creates a new political
reality and Russia’s partial mobilisation on parallel track is intended
to provide the military underpinning for it. The accession signifies a
paradigm shift insofar as any further attacks on these regions can be
construed by Moscow as attacks on Russia’s territorial integrity and
sovereignty.
Certainly, Kiev’s wanton attacks on
civilians and civilian infrastructure in Donbass, Kherson and
Zaporozhye will trigger Russian reaction. Any attack will be considered
aggression and Moscow reserves the right to respond “adequately.”The
fact the Russian deployment in these territories will be significantly
augmented and upgraded signals the willingness to use force.
Meanwhile,
Russia’s special military operations will continue until its set
objectives are fully realised. Which means, even more territories may
come under Russian control, creating ever newer facts on the ground,
whilst the track of dialogue has become extinct.
And, of course, all this will be playing out at a juncture when Europe
descends into recession, as sanctions against Russia boomerang. It is
improbable that European public will support their governments to enter
into a war with Russia over Ukraine. Kiev and its mentors in Washington
and London need to factor all this very carefully.
The Pentagon
spokesman Patrick Ryder has reacted as follows: “No one will take such
bogus referendums seriously, and the US will certainly not recognise
their results. How will this affect our and international support for
Ukraine? This will not affect in any way, we will continue to work with
Ukraine and our international partners to provide them with the
necessary assistance to protect their territory.”
That is a sufficiently evasive statement couched in brave words. Neither
Pentagon nor the Russian military command will risk brinkmanship. The
likelihood is that the accession of the new territories to the Russian
Federation will not be militarily challenged by the US or NATO.
That said, Russia is anyway at war with the NATO, as Defence Minister Sergey Shoigu said,
albeit not in terms of US weapons supplies, which “we find ways to
counter,” but in the Western systems that exist — communication systems,
information processing systems, reconnaissance systems and satellite
intelligence systems.
The point is, the accession of Donbass,
Kherson and Zaporozhye regions to the Russian Federation is an
irrevocable step that cannot and will not be undone for as long as
Russian Federation remains an independent state, as Medvedev underlined.
The US — and the “Collective West” and NATO — would know it. Plainly
put, the NATO’s proxy-war algorithm has become obsolete and becomes a
museum piece.
It’s the DNC neoliberal modus operandi – if you can’t get your
way fairly, then just stack the deck – see SCOTUS “Packing things”
seems to be the strategy the Biden regime has settled on as cover for
the pitiful joke
that masquerades as “governing.”
Pack the supreme court, make d.c. and Puerto Rico states to pack the senate - and now - pack the UN security council.
outlookindia | US President Joe Biden supports Germany, Japan, and India as
permanent members of a reformed United Nations Security Council, a
senior official of his administration has said.
At the same time, a lot of work needs to be done in this matter, the
official told reports on Wednesday on condition of anonymity.
"We have historically and continue to stand behind the idea that
Germany, Japan, and India should be permanent members of the Security
Council," the official said in response to a question.
Earlier on Wednesday, President Joe Biden in his address at the UN
General Assembly reiterated his commitment to reforming the UN Security
Council.
Biden said he believes the time has come for the institution to
become more inclusive so that it can better respond to the needs of
today's world.
Members of the UN Security Council, including the United States,
should consistently uphold and defend the United Nations Charter and
refrain from the use of the veto, except in rare and extraordinary
situations, to ensure that the Council remains credible and effective,
he said.
"That is also why the United States supports increasing the number of
both permanent and non-permanent representatives of the Council. This
includes permanent seats for those nations we've long supported," Biden
said.
What the western analysis is missing is that
legally it’s not possible for Russian military units to be active in
foreign countries. There have obviously been workarounds in Ukraine, but
it’s part of why so few regular army units are involved
and the parsimonious use of manpower. That’s the big change that comes
with the referenda and mobilization.
At this point the AFU is significantly but not
catastrophically degraded. The minimal force applied by Russia has had
its share of failures but has done that degradation and mostly held the
line. It likely would have been sufficient for
the whole task except the west has gone all in and is now a direct
participant in the conflict. That’s problematic but has apparently done
terrible things to western military stocks (especially Eastern European
stocks), which does reduce the larger threat
to Russia in the short term.
Partial mobilization means the ability to backfill
rear duties in the conflict as well as border duties in the western
military zone and along the Russian-Ukrainian border. With the
referenda, regular army can be applied at large scale
against a degraded AFU and with loosened rules of engagement concerning
infrastructure. It’s openly telegraphed to give Washington DC another chance to
act rationally. If not, you go NATO on the degraded AFU, infrastructure
and aim to give the west a crushing defeat
on the battlefield of its choosing. It will be costly but could achieve
encirclement of the AFU in Donbas/Kharkov as well as the capture of
Odessa. And I maintain that when Odessa falls, the US taps out.
In this scenario we all have to hope the US doesn’t
further escalate because that escalation ladder will see nukes. NATO
leadership thinks it can manage and win a “limited nuclear war” and it
doesn’t handle losing very well.
Something obscured by the Western MSM’s focus on
playing up the general threat of Putin escalating to nuclear weapons is what Putin actually said:
“Those who are using nuclear blackmail against us should know that the wind rose (NATO symbol) can turn around.”
There’s a very specific threat implied in that
phrasing, which gives Putin and Russia the scope of climbing another
rung up the escalation ladder before actual use of nuclear weapons. The threat is as
follows: –
[1] The Kiev regime’s shelling of the Zaporizhzhia
nuclear power plant, its lies about that, and the subsequent refusal of
the IAEA and the UN to acknowledge those Ukrainian lies - will have
further hardened Russian attitudes towards the EU and the
West .
[2] There are fifteen nuclear reactors located
across four power plants in Ukraine, nine of which remain in the Kiev
regime’s territory.
[3] When the coming referenda are done, the
territories of Donetz and Lugansk will become officially Russian. The
US-NATO will then continue its proxy war and push the Kiev regime to
attack those regions, though they will then be Russia
by Russian lights. At that point, the Russians will take that as an act
of war, conclude the special military operation, and commence the war
proper on Ukraine.
[4] They can then do what they’ve been technically
capable of doing from the beginning and what the USA canonically does
when it invades a country: target and take out with missile and air
strikes both the enemy’s C&C centers — currently
occupied to some greater or lesser extent by the US-NATO personnel
actually directing this war — and the country’s civil infrastructure of
water, railroads, communications, specific bridges and roads, and its
power plants and transmission lines.
[5] In general, as Docotorow suggests, then. But
among those power plants are the nine nuclear reactors. And the
targeting of those could be done on days when the wind is specifically
blowing east to west, towards Europe.
[6] Not only that. Here’s a map of those reactors’ locations.
Presumably, those reactors are built to Soviet
specs and, like Zaporizhzhia, are built to standards whereby
conventional attack by shelling or an aircraft crashing into them won’t
crack their containment vessels (Although spent fuel pools
are far more vulnerable.) A Kinzhal hypersonic missile OTOH — or a barrage
of them — will break open their containment vessels .
An exclusion zone created at South Ukraine Nuclear
Power Plant, a.k.a the Pivdennoukrainsk Nuclear Power Plant, in Mykolaiv
oblast, about 350 kms south of Kiev, would have the effect of focusing a
few minds in the US, NATO, and the EU.
thegrayzone |By April of 2022, Zelensky’s
admiration for the Israeli state had apparently reached new heights.
Immediately following his declaration that Ukraine would soon become “a
big Israel,” Washington’s former ambassador to Tel Aviv, Daniel B.
Shapiro, published a blueprint for Zelensky to achieve that dream at the
Washington DC-based, NATO-sponsored Atlantic Council.
“By adapting their country’s mindset
to mirror aspects of Israel’s approach to chronic security challenges,
Ukrainian officials can tackle critical national-security challenges
with confidence and build a similarly resilient state,” Shapiro, an
Atlantic Council “distinguished fellow,” wrote.
The nearly 900-word outline offered eight bullet points detailing how Ukraine can become more like Israel, a country recently described
by Amnesty International as an “apartheid state.” The points included
advice such as to place “security first,” maintain “Intelligence
dominance,” and remember that “technology is key.”
According to Shapiro, a central component of Israel’s security strategy is that “the whole population plays a role.”
“Civilians recognize their
responsibility to follow security protocols and contribute to the
cause,” Shapiro wrote of the Israeli population. “Some even arm
themselves (though under strict supervision) to do so. The widespread
mobilization of Ukrainian society in collective defense suggests that
the country has this potential.” These comments align directly with
Zelensky’s prediction that in a future Ukraine, “people with weapons”
will be present in nearly every aspect of civilian life.
Like the propaganda touting Israel’s
“success” as a security state, Shapiro’s blueprint imagined Ukraine’s
citizenry united by a “common purpose” with help from Tel Aviv’s
“high-tech innovation” in the military and intelligence sectors. His
game plan portrays Israel’s advancements in security to as an almost
mythical achievement owing purely to the feisty, innovative spirit of
its citizens, overlooking the single greatest material factor in its
success: unprecedented levels of foreign military assistance,
particularly from the United States. Indeed, without US taxpayers
virtually subsidizing its military through yearly aid packages amounting
to untold billions of dollars, it is difficult to see how a country the
size of New Jersey would have attained the status of the world’s
leading surveillance technology hub.
Even as Shapiro urged Zelensky to
maintain “active defense partnerships,” he simultaneously downplayed the
role foreign aid has played in preserving Israel’s settler-colonial
imperatives, arguing that the “single principle” informing Tel Aviv’s
security doctrine is that “Israel will defend itself, by itself—and rely
on no other country to fight its battles.”
Shapiro must have forgotten that principle when he tweeted, “Thank God Israel has Iron Dome” — a reference to Israel’s air defense system that US taxpayers funded to the tune of $1 billion in 2021 alone, on top of $3.8 billion in military assistance earmarked for Tel Aviv that year.
Ukraine
has prepared a draft law that provides for criminal responsibility for
obtaining a Russian passport in the temporarily occupied territories;
the Cabinet of Ministers called for this.
Details: Experts
from the Office of the Prosecutor General, the Security Service, the
Ministry of Reintegration, human rights defenders and people's deputies
have jointly prepared a draft law that introduces criminal liability
for:
acquisition of
citizenship or obtaining a Russian passport by state officials or
representatives of local self-government in the absence of signs of high
treason;
propaganda, public appeals, and coercion to act correspondingly;
restriction of the rights of people who have not received citizenship or passports from the Russian Federation.
The
Ministry of Reintegration of the Temporary Occupied Territories noted
that obtaining a Russian passport in the temporarily occupied
territories is justified only if a person thus tries to return to the
territory controlled by Ukraine through Russia and third countries.
Russian occupiers began to resort to various gimmicks to force people to get a Russian passport in the temporarily occupied territories of Ukraine.
The President's Office said that issuing Russian passports to residents of the occupied territories is meaningless because this passport is not recognised worldwide.
The subject of this address is the situation in Donbass and the course of the special military operation to liberate it from
the neo-Nazi regime, which seized power in Ukraine in 2014 as the result of an armed state coup.
Today
I am addressing you – all citizens of our
country, people of different generations, ages and ethnicities,
the people of our great Motherland, all who are united by the great
historical Russia, soldiers,
officers and volunteers who are fighting on the frontline and doing
their
combat duty, our brothers and sisters in the Donetsk and Lugansk
people’s
republics, Kherson and Zaporozhye regions and other areas that have been
liberated from the neo-Nazi regime.
The issue
concerns the necessary, imperative
measures to protect the sovereignty, security and territorial integrity
of Russia and support the desire and will of our compatriots to choose
their
future independently, and the aggressive policy of some Western elites,
who are
doing their utmost to preserve their domination and with this aim
in view are
trying to block and suppress any sovereign and independent development
centres
in order to continue to aggressively force their will and pseudo-values
on other countries and nations.
The goal
of that part of the West is to weaken,
divide and ultimately destroy our country. They are saying openly now
that in 1991 they managed to split up the Soviet Union and now is
the time to do the same to Russia, which must be divided into numerous
regions that would be at deadly feud with each other.
They
devised these plans long ago. They
encouraged groups of international terrorists in the Caucasus and moved
NATO’s
offensive infrastructure close to our borders. They used indiscriminate
Russophobia as a weapon, including by nurturing the hatred of Russia
for decades, primarily in Ukraine, which was designed to become
an anti-Russia bridgehead.
They turned the Ukrainian people into cannon fodder and pushed them into
a war
with Russia, which they unleashed back in 2014. They used the army
against
civilians and organised a genocide, blockade and terror against those
who
refused to recognise the government that was created in Ukraine
as the result
of a state coup.
After the Kiev regime publicly refused to settle the issue of Donbass peacefully and went as far as to announce its ambition
to possess nuclear weapons, it became clear that a new offensive in Donbass –
there were two of them before – was inevitable, and that it would be inevitably
followed by an attack on Russia’s Crimea, that is, on Russia.
In this connection, the decision to start a pre-emptive military operation was necessary and the only option. The main goal
of this operation, which is to liberate the whole of Donbass, remains
unaltered.
The Lugansk
People’s Republic has been
liberated from the neo-Nazis almost completely. Fighting in the Donetsk
People’s Republic continues. Over the previous eight years, the Kiev
occupation
regime created a deeply echeloned line of permanent defences.
A head-on attack
against them would have led to heavy losses, which is why our units,
as well as the forces of the Donbass republics, are acting competently
and systematically,
using military equipment and saving lives, moving step by step
to liberate
Donbass, purge cities and towns of the neo-Nazis, and help the people
whom the Kiev regime turned into hostages and human shields.
As you know, professional military personnel
serving under contract are taking part in the special military operation. Fighting
side by side with them are volunteer units – people of different ethnicities,
professions and ages who are real patriots. They answered the call of their
hearts to rise up in defence of Russia and Donbass.
In this
connection, I have already issued
instructions for the Government and the Defence Ministry to determine
the legal
status of volunteers and personnel of the military units of the Donetsk
and Lugansk people’s republics. It must be the same as the status
of military
professionals of the Russian army, including material, medical
and social
benefits. Special attention must be given to organising the supply
of military
and other equipment for volunteer units and Donbass people’s militia.
While
acting to attain the main goals of defending Donbass in accordance with
the plans and decisions of the Defence
Ministry and the General Staff, our troops have liberated considerable
areas in the Kherson and Zaporozhye regions and a number of other areas.
This has created a protracted line of contact that is over 1,000
kilometres long.
This
is what I would like to make public for the first time today. After
the start of the special military operation, in particular after
the Istanbul talks, Kiev representatives voiced quite a positive
response to our proposals. These proposals concerned above all
ensuring Russia’s security and interests. But a peaceful settlement
obviously
did not suit the West, which is why, after certain compromises were
coordinated, Kiev was actually ordered to wreck all these agreements.
More weapons were pumped into Ukraine. The Kiev
regime brought into play new groups of foreign mercenaries and nationalists, military units trained according to NATO
standards and receiving orders from Western advisers.
At the same time, the regime of reprisals
throughout Ukraine against their own citizens, established immediately after
the armed coup in 2014, was harshly intensified. The policy of intimidation,
terror and violence is taking on increasingly mass-scale, horrific and barbaric
forms.
I want to stress the following. We know that
the majority of people living in the territories liberated from the neo-Nazis,
and these are primarily the historical lands of Novorossiya, do not want to live
under the yoke of the neo-Nazi regime. People in the Zaporozhye and Kherson
regions, in Lugansk and Donetsk saw and are seeing now the atrocities
perpetrated by the neo-Nazis in the [Ukrainian-] occupied areas of the Kharkov
region. The descendants of Banderites and members of Nazi punitive expeditions
are killing, torturing and imprisoning people; they are settling scores,
beating up, and committing outrages on peaceful civilians.
There
were over 7.5 million people living in the Donetsk and Lugansk people’s
republics and in the Zaporozhye and Kherson
regions before the outbreak of hostilities. Many of them were forced
to become
refugees and leave their homes. Those who have stayed – they number
about five
million – are now exposed to artillery and missile attacks launched
by the neo-Nazi militants, who fire at hospitals and schools and stage
terrorist
attacks against peaceful civilians.
We cannot, we have no moral right to let our kin
and kith be torn to pieces by butchers; we cannot but respond to their sincere
striving to decide their destiny on their own.
The parliaments
of the Donbass people’s
republics and the military-civilian administrations of the Kherson
and Zaporozhye regions have adopted decisions to hold referendums
on the future of their territories and have appealed to Russia
to support this.
I would
like to emphasise that we will do
everything necessary to create safe conditions for these referendums so
that
people can express their will. And we will support the choice of future
made by the majority of people in the Donetsk and Lugansk people’s
republics and the Zaporozhye and Kherson regions.
whitehouse | THE PRESIDENT: Mr. President, Mr. Secretary-General, my fellow
delegates, to all those who dedicate themselves to this noble mission of
this institution: It’s my honor to speak to you for the first time as
President of the United States.
We meet this year in a moment of — intermingled with great pain and
extraordinary possibility. We’ve lost so much to this devastating —
this devastating pandemic that continues to claim lives around the world
and impact so much on our existence.
We’re mourning more than 4.5 million people — people of every nation
from every background. Each death is an individual heartbreak. But our
shared grief is a poignant reminder that our collective future will
hinge on our ability to recognize our common humanity and to act
together.
Ladies and gentlemen, this is the clear and urgent choice that we
face here at the dawning of what must be a decisive decade for our world
— a decade that will quite literally determine our futures.
As a global community, we’re challenged by urgent and looming crises
wherein lie enormous opportunities if — if — we can summon the will and
resolve to seize these opportunities.
Will we work together to save lives, defeat COVID-19 everywhere, and
take the necessary steps to prepare ourselves for the next pandemic?
For there will be another one. Or will we fail to harness the tools at
our disposal as the more virulent and dangerous variants take hold?
Will we meet the threat of challenging climate — the challenging
climate we’re all feeling already ravaging every part of our world with
extreme weather? Or will we suffer the merciless march of
ever-worsening droughts and floods, more intense fires and hurricanes,
longer heatwaves and rising seas?
Will we affirm and uphold the human dignity and human rights under
which nations in common cause, more than seven decades ago, formed this
institution?
Will we apply and strengthen the core tenets of inter- — of the
international system, including the U.N. Charter and the Universal
Declaration of Human Rights, as we seek to shape the emergence of new
technologies and deter new threats? Or will we allow these universal —
those universal principles to be trampled and twisted in the pursuit of
naked political power?
In my view, how we answer these questions in this moment — whether we
choose to fight for our shared future or not — will reverberate for
generations yet to come.
Simply put: We stand, in my view, at an inflection point in history.
And I’m here today to share with you how the United States intends to
work with partners and allies to answer these questions and the
commitment of my new administration to help lead the world toward a more
peaceful, prosperous future for all people.
en.kremlin.ru |President of Russia Vladimir Putin: Good evening,
I am listening.
Question:
Now that the SCO summit is over, summing
it up, can you tell us how you regard the SCO’s development prospects
and what the most important thing is for Russia in the SCO?
Vladimir Putin: The most important thing always and everywhere is economic development. And the SCO, cooperation with the SCO
countries, creates conditions for the development of the Russian economy, and thus
for the social sphere and for resolving the tasks related to improving the living standards of our citizens.
The Shanghai Cooperation Organisation
includes countries whose population, as has been said many times, comprises almost
or even slightly more than half of humanity. It is 25 percent of world GDP.
And, most importantly, the national economies in the region, those of the SCO member
states, are developing much faster than others in the world.
Now
we had a separate meeting. I sat next to the Prime Minister of India
at the working dinner. India’s GDP grew by 7 percent, China’s
by more than 5 percent. China was in the lead for quite a time and its
potential is tremendous. Our trade with these countries is growing fast.
If these
rates are preserved, and they are bound to be for many objective
reasons, we will
be one of these countries, next to them, ensuring our interests. This is
what we
are doing and this is the main point.
Question:
This question is certainly worrying very many
people in our country. People have already developed certain concerns
over the course of the special military operation in Ukraine. We are
increasingly seeing
strikes, raids and acts of terror even on Russian territory. We are
hearing all
the time very aggressive statements that the final goal of Kiev
and the West is
Russia’s disintegration. Meanwhile, many think that Russia’s response
to all of this is very restrained. Why is that?
Vladimir Putin: There is nothing new about this. Frankly, I find it even a bit strange to hear your question because Western countries have
cultivated the idea of the collapse of the Soviet Union and historical Russia
and Russia as such, its nucleus.
I have
already cited these statements and studies
by some figures in Great Britain during World War I and after it.
I cited excerpts
from Mr Brzezinski’s writings in which he divided the entire territory
of our
country into specific parts. True, later he changed his position a bit
in the belief
that it was better to keep Russia in opposition to China and use it
as a tool
to combat China. It will never happen. Let them address their own
challenges as they see fit. But we are seeing how they are handling them
and, most likely,
they are doing harm to themselves in the process. Their tools are no
good.
But they have always been seeking the dissolution
of our country – this is very true. It is unfortunate that at some point they
decided to use Ukraine for these purposes. In effect – I am answering your
question now and the conclusion suggests itself – we launched our special
military operation to prevent events from taking this turn. This is what some US-led
Western countries have always been seeking – to create an anti-Russia enclave
and rock the boat, threaten Russia from this direction. In essence, our main goal
is to prevent such developments.
With regard to our restrained response,
I would not say it was restrained, even though, after all, a special military
operation is not just another warning, but a military operation. In the course
of this, we are seeing attempts to perpetrate terrorist attacks and damage our civilian
infrastructure.
Indeed, we were quite restrained in our response, but that will not last forever. Recently, Russian Armed Forces
delivered a couple of sensitive blows to that area. Let’s call them warning shots.
If the situation continues like that, our response will be more impactful
Terrorist
attacks are a serious
matter. In fact, it is about using terrorist methods. We see this
in the killing of officials in the liberated territories, we even see
attempts at perpetrating
terrorist attacks in the Russian Federation, including – I am not sure
if this was
made public – attempts to carry out terrorist attacks near our nuclear
facilities, nuclear power plants in the Russian Federation. I am not
even talking
about the Zaporozhye Nuclear Power Plant.
We are monitoring the situation and will do our best to prevent a negative scenario from unfolding. We will respond
if they fail to realise that these approaches are unacceptable. They are, in fact, no different than terrorist attacks.
Remark: Good
afternoon, Mr President.
Kiev presented draft security
guarantees for Ukraine the other day…
Vladimir Putin:
Wait a second. I have something to add to my answer to the first question. You
said that we are seeing activity here and there. But Kiev has announced that it
has launched an active counter-offensive operation. Let’s see how it unfolds
and how it ends.
VK | A meeting of States parties to the Convention on the
Prohibition of Biological and Toxin Weapons was held in Geneva from 5 to
9 September in connection with the violation of articles I and IV of
the Convention by the United States and Ukraine, initiated by the
Russian Federation.
The Russian Ministry of Defense
analyzed the materials of speeches made by representatives of the United
States and Ukraine, working documents of the participating states,
joint statements and the final document of the meeting.
Recall
that the Russian Federation was asked more than 20 questions concerning
the illegal activities of Kiev and Washington in the framework of the
BTWC. Here are some of them.
What is the reason for the
choice of pathogenic microorganisms studied on the territory of Ukraine
within the framework of the Threat Reduction Program and why the
nomenclature of pathogens studied is not related to current health
problems, for example, the Tep-6 project on the study of the glanders
pathogen, cases of which have never been recorded on the territory of
Ukraine?
How should the accumulation of highly dangerous
strains of infections and their transfer to other countries contribute
to improving the state of infectious diseases?
Why was
the emphasis placed on studying natural foci and particularly dangerous
infections, which according to the US Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention lists are considered potential agents of biological weapons?
What
studies using infectious agents and toxic substances were conducted on
Ukrainian military personnel and the mentally ill, who are one of the
most vulnerable categories of citizens?
And finally, why
do the United States and Ukraine hide the facts of cooperation in the
military-biological sphere in international reporting under the BTWC,
while the United States has blocked the development of its verification
mechanism since 2001?
The meeting participants were
presented with copies of real documents previously announced by the
Russian Ministry of Defense, as well as material evidence confirming the
implementation of military biological programs on the territory of
Ukraine.
None of the delegations had any doubts about
the authenticity of the submitted documents, including the accumulation
of pathogenic materials in Ukrainian laboratories, including the
Mechnikov Anti-Plague Institute.
In its speech, Ukraine
acknowledged the fact that the institute was inspected by a commission
of the Ministry of Health, noting that the QUOTE: "... 80 percent of
violations were eliminated...". At the same time, the Ukrainian side
completely ignored questions about the unjustified storage of dangerous
biological agents on the basis of the institution and revealed gross
violations of the conditions for their accumulation: storage of
biomaterials in stairwells, the lack of a functioning access control
system for pathogenic microorganisms.
No explanation was
received regarding the nomenclature of accumulated strains of dangerous
pathogens, although 19 studies aimed at studying potential agents of
biological weapons (Congo-Crimean fever, hantaviruses, anthrax and
tularemia) and economically significant ones have been implemented in
Ukraine since 2008 under the projects codenamed "Yu-Pi" and "Tep".
infections (African and classical swine fever, Newcastle disease).
Neither
Ukraine nor the United States has provided convincing evidence that
cooperation has helped improve the sanitary and epidemiological
situation, which has steadily worsened over the past 15 years.
The
practical results of the activities of the US Department of Defense's
Office for Threat Reduction DITRA in Ukraine presented during the
meeting were reduced to a demonstration of several photos of renovated
laboratory facilities. Most likely, apart from these pseudo
"achievements", no other results were achieved.
The
explanations of the United States and Ukraine regarding the export of
strains and biomaterials of Ukrainian citizens and compliance with
ethical standards when conducting research on military personnel, low –
income citizens, as well as on one of the most unprotected categories of
the population-patients in psychiatric hospitals looked extremely
unconvincing.
When discussing this issue, the American
delegation acknowledged such facts, while noting that the transfer of
samples of pathogenic biomaterials to the United States QUOTE: "...was
infrequent...".
Apart from this wording, which does not
allow estimating the volume and frequency of bioassays transferred
abroad, no other explanations were provided to the meeting participants.
WaPo | Russia
pushed ahead Tuesday with plans to annex occupied regions of Ukraine,
as Moscow’s puppet authorities set dates to stage referendums on joining
Russia — moves that could dramatically escalate the war.
Officials
in the self-declared separatist “republics” of Luhansk and Donetsk, and
in the occupied region of Kherson in southern Ukraine, announced
“referendums” to be held from Friday to Tuesday. Such votes, which are
illegal under Ukrainian and international law, have been widely derided
by Western officials as a sham and merely a precursor to annexation.
After
annexing the territories, Moscow probably would declare Ukrainian
attacks on those areas to be assaults on Russia itself, analysts warned,
a potential trigger for a general military mobilization or a dangerous
escalation, such as the use of a nuclear weapon.
White
House spokesman Jake Sullivan said Tuesday that the United States would
never recognize Russian claims to annexed territory, calling the
planned referendums a direct violation of Ukrainian sovereignty. “We
reject Russia’s actions unequivocally,” he said.
The
head of the Russian-appointed occupying administration of Zaporizhzhia
region, Yevgeny Balitsky, said a referendum would be held on the same
dates in the parts of that region controlled by Russian forces, which
includes Enerhodar, where Ukraine’s largest nuclear power plant is
located.
Balitsky said there was “no point in postponing the procedure.”
Moscow’s
proxy leader in Kherson, Vladimir Saldo, appealed to Russia for help
organizing the referendum, highlighting the thin veneer of pretense that
local officials were in control. Denis Pushilin, the puppet leader in
Donetsk, said police and members of his administration’s “electoral
commission” would knock on people’s doors and “invite” them to vote.
Russia
does not have a firm military grip on any of the regions it could move
to annex, and the quick staging of votes suggested Russian President
Vladimir Putin now aims to accomplish by political fiat what he failed
to achieve on the battlefield.
But
seizing Ukrainian sovereign territory in flagrant violation of
international law, just as world leaders gather at the United Nations
for the annual General Assembly, would be a remarkably brazen step, even
for Putin, who has shown little regard for global public opinion as he
launched the largest land war in Europe since World War II.
Hitler outlawed independent unions, removed safety
and work hour regulations, and cracked down on any complaining workers.
Plus, real incomes for the workers fell. He was doing what his boss's,
the aristocracy and oligarchs of Germany wanted
- he was always a creation of the German upper class wanting to take
back the little gains that the working class had made.
An excellent book on this "Big Business and Hitler"
by Jacques R. Pauwels, you can probably fund one of his talks on
youtube as well.
The elites installed Hitler (made the Chancellor by
Hindenberg against the wishes of the electorate) after the Nazi vote
went down and more voters were moving to the left wing parties -
producing a panic within the elites.
Fascism is the tool used by the elites when
"liberal democracy" cannot be managed in such a way to provide the
required outcomes. Just like in Italy, Spain and Portugal in the same
period (also the military dictatorship in Poland). The
elites attempted a fascist coup in France in the 1930s but it was
defeated, then implemented fascism in Vichy France.
newyorker | Johnson & Johnson is one of America’s most trusted companies, and as
Berg moved through her cycles of chemotherapy she kept thinking about a
slogan for its body powder: “A sprinkle a day helps keep odor away.”
For more than thirty years, she had taken that advice, applying the
powder between her legs to prevent chafing. But that powder wasn’t like
her chemo drugs: their side effects were awful, but they were keeping
her alive. The powder felt, instead, like an unnecessary gamble, one she
thought other people should be warned about.
Slippery to the touch and soft enough to flake with
your fingernail, the mineral talc is found all around the world, in
deposits that can be more than a billion years old. Such deposits are
sometimes laced with actinolite, anthophyllite, chrysotile, and
tremolite. These accessory minerals, better known in their fibrous form
as asbestos, grow alongside talc like weeds in a geological garden. As
early as 1971, Johnson & Johnson scientists had become aware of
reports about asbestos in talc. They and others also worried about a
connection between cancer and talc itself, whether or not it contained
asbestos. By the time of Berg’s diagnosis, the World Health
Organization’s International Agency for Research on Cancer had
designated talc containing fibrous particles a carcinogen and the
genital application of any talc powder possibly carcinogenic. The F.D.A.
had safety concerns, too, but its authority over products like baby
powder was and remains, in the words of Ann Witt, a former senior
official at the agency, “so minimal it’s laughable.”
Johnson &
Johnson has always insisted, including to this magazine, that its baby
powder is “safe, asbestos-free, and does not cause cancer”; however, a
2016 investigation by Bloomberg and subsequent revelations by Reuters
and the New York Times, based in part on documents that
surfaced because of discovery in suits like Berg’s, exposed the possible
health risk related to its powders. Following those reports, tens of
thousands of people filed suits against the company, alleging that its
products had caused their cancers. In 2020, after juries awarded some of
those plaintiffs damages that collectively exceeded billions of
dollars, Johnson & Johnson announced that it would no longer supply
the talc-based version of its product to American stores.
And
then, quietly, the company embraced a strategy to circumvent juries
entirely. Deploying a legal maneuver first used by Koch Industries,
Johnson & Johnson, a company valued at nearly half a trillion
dollars, with a credit rating higher than that of the United States
government, declared bankruptcy. Because of that move, the fate of forty
thousand current lawsuits and the possibility of future claims by
cancer victims or their survivors now rests with a single bankruptcy
judge in the company’s home state, New Jersey. If Johnson & Johnson
prevails and, as Berg puts it, “weasels its way out of everything,” the
case could usher in a new era in which the government has diminished
power to enforce consumer-protection laws, citizens don’t get to make
their case before a jury of their peers when those laws fail, and even
corporations with long histories of documented harm will get to decide
how much, if anything, they owe their victims.
cbsnews | Scott Pelley: Mr. President, as you know, last Tuesday the annual
inflation rate came in at 8.3%. The stock market nosedived. People are
shocked by their grocery bills. What can you do better and faster?
President
Joe Biden: Well, first of all, let's put this in perspective. Inflation
rate month to month was just-- just an inch, hardly at all,
Scott Pelley: You're not arguing that 8.3% is good news.
President
Joe Biden: No, I'm not saying it is good news. But it was 8.2% or--
8.2% before. I mean, it's not-- you're ac-- we act-- make it sound like
all of a sudden, "My god, it went to 8.2%." It's been--
Scott Pelley: It's the highest inflation rate, Mr. President, in 40 years.
President Joe Biden: I got that. But guesswhat
we are. We're in a position where, for the last several months, it
hasn't spiked. It has just barely-- it's been basically even. And in the
meantime, we created all these jobs and-- and prices-- have-- have gone
up, but they've come down for energy. The fact is that we've created 10
million new jobs. We're in-- since we came to office. We're in a
situation where the-- the unemployment rate is about 3.7%. one of the
lowest in history. We're in a situation where manufacturing is coming
back to the United States in a big way. And look down the road, we have
mas-- massive investments being made in computer chips and-- and
employment. So, I-- look, this is a process. This is a process.
Scott Pelley: Is the economy going to get worse before it gets better?
President
Joe Biden: No. I don't think so. We hope we can have what they say, "a
soft landing," a transition to a place where we don't lose the gains
that I ran to make in the first place for middle-class folks, being able
to generate good-paying jobs and-- expansion. And at the same time--
make sure that we-- we are-- are able to continue to grow.
Scott Pelley: And you would tell the American people that inflation is going to continue to decline?
President
Joe Biden: No, I'm telling the American people that we're gonna get
control of inflation. And their prescription drug prices are gonna be a
hell of a lotta lower. Their health care costs are gonna be a lot lower.
Their basic costs for everybody, their energy prices are gonna be
lower. They're gonna be in a situation where they begin to gain control
again. I'm-- more optimistic than I've been in a long time.
Scott Pelley: Sir, with the Federal Reserve rapidly raising interest rates, what can you do to prevent a recession?
President
Joe Biden: Continue to grow the economy. And we're growing the economy.
It's growing in-- in a way that it hasn't in years and years.
Scott Pelley: How so?
President
Joe Biden: We're growing entire new industries. Six hundred and
ninety-five, I think it is, or eighty-five thousand new manufacturing
jobs just since I've become president in United States. Continue to grow
the economy and continue to give hard-working people a break in terms
of we pay the highest drug prices in the world of any industrialized
nation. Making sure that Medicare can negotiate down those prices by the
way, we've also reduced the debt and reduced the deficit by $350
billion my first year. This year, it's gonna be over $1.5 trillion
reduced the debt. So, to continue to put people in a position to be able
to make a decent living and grow, and grow, and increase their capacity
to grow.
WSJ | To make
life easier for the algorithms that will be coming for our jobs, we in
the journalism business apply a template to labor disputes: management
is bad, labor is good. Joe Biden
molds his administration to simple stereotypes too. He defines himself
as the most pro-labor president in history. The favor is not returned,
apparently.
In
the wee hours of Thursday, after anticipatory ripples of destruction
were already spreading through the economy, an all-night effort by the
White House barely averted a national rail strike, supposedly. The deal
was dubbed “tentative,” but expect the unions to approve it. Leveraging
the president for one last squeeze of the fruit, after all, was how they
planned it from day one.
Mr.
Biden’s skin in the game was real, and not just the risk to the economy
and inflation but fear of voters going to the polls in a few weeks
believing the country was slipping into 1970s-style chaos. But something
else about this episode should also be plain: its nuttiness. The angst
was absurdly disproportionate to the dollar value of the employee
benefits at issue, which concerned sick days. A national crisis was
spawned for no better reason than an 88-year-old legal throwback to a
bygone era of (to borrow a recent Bidenism) semi-fascist corporatism,
which is the exact flavor of the Railway Labor Act amendments of 1934.
This
obsolete law forces big government, big labor and big business into bed
in a way that hardly makes sense anymore in a mostly free-market
economy. If not for the law’s legacy, a nationwide strike encompassing
the whole of the rail transportation system (33 private companies) would
be all but unthinkable, much less the industry’s leverage to force the
White House to dance to the industry’s exceedingly penny-ante economic
disputes.
In
the briefest recap, under the antiquated railroad law, a
Biden-appointed emergency board had already tried to split the
difference between the 12 unions and 33 carriers, recommending a 24% pay
hike and $5,000 in bonuses.
But
rejecting the deal were the important engineers and conductors, who
insisted on trying further to leverage Mr. Biden over something called
attendance policy, which the board considered outside the negotiation’s
statutory ambit.
Trains can’t run if crews don’t show up, at least until algorithms take over their jobs, which is not at all farfetched.
washingtontimes | Students of political and philosophical concepts are required to learn the definitions of socialism, democracy, republicanism, fascism
— among many others. Libraries are filled with volumes written by
thinkers and theorists explaining the origins of those ideologies and
movements. And now President Biden has coined a new term we might add to that list: semi-fascism.
In remarks at a Democratic National Committee
reception on Aug. 25, Mr. Biden said former President Donald Trump and
his loyalists within the Republican Party represent a distinct threat to
American democracy, a theme he has repeated while campaigning for
Democrats ahead of this year’s midterm elections.
“And what we’re seeing now is either the beginning or the death knell
of an extreme MAGA philosophy. It’s not just — it’s not just Trump.
It’s the entire philosophy that underpins — it’s — I’m going say
something — it’s almost like semi-fascism,” the president said. When
asked to clarify what he meant, Mr. Biden, rather than define the term,
said, “You know what I mean.”
The word “fascism” is everywhere on social
media these days. And while some folks may use it as a slur to attack
those with whom they disagree, a number of professional scholars have embraced the term to describe what they view as the dangerous rise of right-wing radicalism in American politics.
“We believe the threat posed by fascism and the radical right in
Western countries has been egregiously inflated and exaggerated ever
since the end of World War II. If you listen to certain pundits, radical
left-wing groups, or the self-appointed watchdog groups… they’re always
presenting this image that fascism is on the march. They’re still
living in the past like it’s the 1930s,” said Mr. Bale, an expert on
violent political and religious extremists at Middlebury Institute of
International Studies at Monterey.
Whatever one thinks of Mr. Trump and his
politics, they do not fit the definition of fascism, said Mr. Bar-On, a
political scientist at Tecnológico de Monterrey in Mexico.
“Fascism is spoken about as if we should know
what fascism is. There’s a whole body of literature on what constitutes
fascism and it goes back to the period when fascists rose to power in
the 1920s. At minimum, I would think that if you are a scholar, a
journalist or a think tank, you should define what fascism is,” he said.
So what is fascism? What is semi-fascism? Listen to this episode of History As It Happens.
wired |In the early hours of
Thursday morning, major US freight railroad companies reached a
tentative agreement with unions, narrowly averting a nationwide rail
shutdown less than 24 hours before a strike deadline. A work stoppage
would have heaped devastating consequences on the nation’s economy and supply chain,
nearly 30 percent of which relies on rail. Even a near miss had some
impact. Long-distance Amtrak passenger services, which use freight
tracks, and hazardous materials shipments are now being restored after
railroads suspended them to prevent people or cargo becoming stranded by
a strike.
The tentative agreement, to be voted on
by union members, came through talks brokered by the Biden
administration. It scrambled this week to avoid a shutdown that would
have caused major disruption and worsened inflation by restricting the
supply of crucial goods and driving up shipping costs. Rail unions and
the railroad industry association released statements Thursday welcoming
the deal. But freight rail service has been unreliable since long before this week’s standoff, and trade groups representing rail customers say much work remains to restore it to acceptable levels.
Just two-thirds
of trains were arriving within 24 hours of their scheduled time this
spring, down from 85 percent pre-pandemic, forcing rail customers to
suspend business or—grimly—consider euthanizing
their starving chickens. Scott Jensen, a spokesperson for the American
Chemistry Council, whose members depend on rail to ship chemicals,
called the latest shutdown threat “another ugly chapter in this long
saga of freight rail issues.”
Although
Thursday’s agreement was lauded by companies dependent on rail freight,
the ACC, the National Grain and Feed Association, and other trade
groups also argue that further reforms to the rail industry are needed.
Competition has dwindled as service concentrated among a handful of big
railroads, which slashed their combined workforce by 29 percent over the
past six years. Rail customers have asked
lawmakers and rail regulators to intervene. Suggestions include federal
minimum service standards, including penalties for leaving loaded cars
sitting in rail yards for long periods, and a rule that would allow
customers to move cargo to another service provider at certain
interchanges, to work around the fact that many customers are captive to
a single carrier.
Major US freight railroads made deep staff cuts in
recent years as part of an effort to implement a leaner, more profitable
operating model called Precision Scheduled Railroading. Profits have
indeed soared—two of the largest freight carriers, Union Pacific and
BNSF, owned by Warren Buffett, broke records last year. But after many
workers decided not to return to the rail industry after pandemic
furloughs, a staffing shortage tipped the network into crisis. At
federal hearings this spring, rail customers complained about suffering
their worst ever service levels from a network that had been stripped of
its resiliency.
Many
freight rail jobs have always involved erratic schedules and long
stretches away from home, but workers complained that the leaner
operations saddled them with still longer hours, higher injury rates,
and less predictable schedules. Many workers received no sick leave and
were penalized for taking time off outside of their vacation time, which
averaged three weeks a year, or holiday and personal time, which
reached 14 days a year for the most senior employees.
smart-union | Since the announcement of the tentative agreement (TA) yesterday
morning, a number of posts purporting to reveal the finalized contents
or finalized components of the TA have spread rapidly and are being
presented as factual.
They are not.
Anyone
who states that they have seen a final copy of the TA, have a copy of
the final TA or knows the final contents of the agreement is not being
truthful. The final documents have not been fully reviewed by both
parties’ legal counsel as is required before it can be presented to the
SMART-TD District 1 General Chairpersons, nor has it been distributed to
officers or membership.
Per the SMART Constitution, the TA’s
language, when finalized, will first be released to General Chairpersons
engaged in national handling for their review. This is anticipated to
happen as soon as sometime next week.
Once the proper steps with
our SMART-TD District 1 General Chairpersons have occurred, factual
information will be released on the union website for members for them
to evaluate and to carefully consider the tentative agreement.
In
the meantime, please do not draw conclusions on the information
concerning this agreement from what is being circulated on social media
until such time that it comes from our official sites.
slate | If
you were planning to spend Thursday stocking up on toilet paper in
advance of a seemingly imminent freight-railroad strike or lockout, you
woke up to welcome news. President Joe Biden has announced a tentative agreement
to avert the disruption and the body blow it would have caused the
economy and our supply chains. The deal isn’t final—workers will soon
vote on it—but, nonetheless, it’s a relief following a week of headlines
warning about the potential of $2 billion a day in economic loss, including disruptions to passenger trains, grain shipments, carmakers, and refiners.
What
was missing from these headlines? The actual reason for the conflict
between railroad workers and their employers. The potential strike or
lockout was not because of any dispute over pay, but because of inhumane attendance policies that currently mean railroad engineers and conductors are either working or “on call” 90 percent of the time.
When they’re on call, they can be summoned to work on two hours’ notice
or less, and then may be away from home for days at a time. Workers
report that they have no sick days, paid or unpaid. If they have to take
time off unexpectedly, even because of illness, they lose points in a
convoluted, points-based attendance system. That means workers are at
risk of being disciplined or fired for getting sick, going to a doctor’s
appointment or a family funeral, or for any other absence that can’t be
planned far in advance.
As railroad worker Hugh Sawyer told the American Prospect,
this meant that on his 65th birthday this year, he got home at 7:30 in
the morning after working 12 hours the day before, slept for five hours,
and then spent the day refreshing his computer to see if he was being
called back to work. Another worker, describing the onerous requirements
for scheduling off-time in advance, wrote on Facebook,
“How do you schedule a funeral in October if it’s only February?” He
also noted that he gets 30 days fully off for the entire year, no
weekends. And the wife of an engineer told Vice,
“They go to work sick, they miss funerals of loved ones, they miss
final goodbyes to parents on hospice, they miss holidays, birthdays, all
of it.”
As the unions put it in a statement on Sunday, “these policies are destroying the lives of our members.”
The unions initially pushed for paid sick leave, but later sought only
unpaid sick leave. Yes, really: They’ve had to fight in order not to be
punished for taking unexpected, urgently needed unpaid sick leave. It appears that the tentative agreement
between the parties would address these attendance and leave policies
by creating “voluntary assigned days off,” granting one additional paid
day off, allowing workers to attend medical appointments without
penalty, and creating exemptions from attendance policies for
hospitalizations and surgeries.
It
should not be controversial to say it, but: People should have sick
leave so they do not have to come to work when they get sick. They
should be able to take leave to attend doctors’ appointments or deal
with family emergencies without risking their jobs. Workers should also
have regular time off, not be on call almost every day of their lives.
This strike or lockout was threatened because of the railroad companies’
refusal, right up until the last minute, to accept these basic human
needs, and their willingness to bring an already weary country to the
brink of yet another economic disaster, all in the name of ever more
profits.
The
United States, unlike many countries, does not have a national law
guaranteeing sick leave; if we did, the railroads’ attendance systems
would be clearly illegal. The kind of point-based attendance systems
that railroads employ can still be considered unlawful retaliation
if workers lose points for taking leave that is legally protected, such
as for absences guaranteed by the Family and Medical Leave Act, the
Americans with Disabilities Act, or state or local sick-leave laws.
Apart from questions of legality, it is grossly irresponsible to punish
people for unexpected illnesses ever, and especially during a pandemic.
tabletmag | Behind
the closed doors of an unassuming philanthropic consultancy in
Washington, D.C., is one of the most powerful lobbying forces in the
United States. The Atlantic has called
it “the massive progressive dark-money group you’ve never heard of” and
“the indisputable heavyweight of Democratic dark money.” TheWashington Post believes its potent lobbying arm is reason enough for Congress to enact forced donor disclosure laws, while Politicolabelled
it a “dark-money behemoth.” “The system of political financing, which
often obscures the identities of donors, is known as dark money,” wroteTheNew York Times, “and Arabella’s network is a leading vehicle for it on the left.”
Meet Arabella Advisors, the brainchild of ex-Clinton administration staffer Eric Kessler
and the favorite tool of anonymous, billionaire donors on the
progressive left. Since 2006, the Arabella hub has overseen a growing
network of nonprofits—call them the “spokes”—that collected $2.4 billion in the 2019-20 election cycle, nearly twice as much as the Republican and Democratic national committees combined.
These nonprofits in turn manage and supervise a vast array of “pop-up”
groups—mainly political attack-dog websites, ad campaigns, and
“spontaneous” demonstrations staffed by Arabella’s network of activist
professionals who pose as members of independent activist organizations.
These groups—such as Fix Our Senate, the Hub Project, and Floridians for a Fair Shake—typically
emerge very suddenly in order to savage the political opposition on the
policy or outrage of that particular day or week, then vanish just as
quickly. The pop-ups do not file IRS disclosures or report their
budgets, boards, or staff. In most cases, their connection to Arabella
goes unreported. Many of them have offered sympathetic ordinary voters
the opportunity to donate to whatever the “grassroots” cause happens to
be, when in fact the money feeds back into Arabella’s enormous
dark-money network.
The
relatively novel and innovative model of political activism perfected
by Arabella, which was founded 2005, went more or less unnoticed until
2018, when I was reporting on the activist groups that attempted to
prevent the Senate confirmation of Supreme Court Justice Brett
Kavanaugh. Among the sea of picket signs outside the court in July 2018
was the name of an unfamiliar group: Demand Justice.
A search of the IRS nonprofit archives showed the name itself wasn’t
listed. What did turn up in an online search was a downtown address on
Connecticut Avenue shared by dozens of other organizations, including
the Arabella “spoke” that appeared to be running Demand Justice, Sixteen Thirty Fund.
It isn’t uncommon for political groups to share expensive D.C. office space, especially when they’re affiliated, like the Center for American Progress (CAP) and its lobbying arm, CAP Action.
But Arabella’s arrangement is unique: A for-profit consultancy
(Arabella Advisors) is the central hub; four (perhaps five) tax-exempt
nonprofits (New Venture Fund, Sixteen Thirty Fund, Hopewell Fund,
Windward Fund, and possibly North Fund, all founded and led by Arabella
leadership) are the spokes; and countless ephemeral pop-ups branching
out from the nonprofits.
In early 2019, the Capital Research Center (where I work) released a report on the network. Since then, my colleagues and I have collected large amounts of data
on Arabella’s origins, lobbying, pop-up campaigns, board connections,
and donors, which helped lay the groundwork for later reporting on
Arabella in mainstream outlets like The Atlantic and New York Times—which have since acknowledged that the political “left” has outraised and outspent the political “right” using dark money in recent years by a margin of nearly 2 to 1.
And
yet today, the vast majority of American voters remain unaware of
Arabella’s existence, even as it promises to play an increasingly
central role in American politics, and as the culture wars and fight for
control of federal institutions reaches a fever pitch in the fall of
2022.
tabletmag | Tides
was founded in 1976 by Drummond Pike, a California real estate investor
who named the entity after a Bay Area bookstore popular among
left-leaning activists. From the beginning, according to their own documents,
Tides was designed unlike most other nonprofit institutions. Rather
than building up or spending down an endowment, it sought to become more
like a sophisticated piece of software—a financial instrument that
would allow wealthy individuals and donors to contribute to the causes
of their choosing with more anonymity than is generally allowed by the
laws governing ordinary nonprofits.
Recently,
after Pike stepped away, the Tides network has taken on a distinctly
political role, whose guiding star appears to be Barack Obama. The
secretary of the Tides board
is Suzanne Nossel, the CEO of PEN America and a former deputy assistant
secretary of state for international organizations in the Obama
administration; board member Cheryl Alston was appointed by Obama to the
advisory committee of the federal pension program. Peter Buttenwieser,
the heir to the Lehman Brothers fortune who passed away in 2018,
financed a fund in his own name which is administered and distributed
entirely by the Tides Foundation. A “major behind-the-scenes supporter of Democratic candidates,”
Buttenwieser was one of President Obama’s earliest high profile
backers, helping the then-senator organize his bid for the White House.
Moreover, Atlantic Philanthropies, a nonprofit created by billionaire retailer Chuck Feeney in the 1980s, has directed more than $42 million in grants through the Tides network since 2000. Based in Bermuda,
Atlantic Philanthropies was able to participate in political lobbying
efforts in ways that continental United States nonprofits cannot.
Atlantic became increasingly aggressive under the Obama administration.
As Gara LaMarche, Atlantic’s president, said in one think tank address,
when Obama was elected “we saw opportunities to assist our grantees in
moving forward more rapidly and broadly in a number of areas central to
our mission.” In return, Atlantic dispensed $27 million to help push Obamacare through Congress. At the ceremony to sign Obamacare into law, LaMarche stood beside President Obama in the East Room of the White House.
In
any case, what’s clear is that there is now a sophisticated and complex
structure underneath what many assume to be an organic and spontaneous
social movement, one with deep pockets and ambitious goals. “After over
fourteen years of learning and over 700 million dollars invested ... the
collapse we have been expecting is surely underway,” reads the NoVo
Foundation’s website. Right now there’s only this one statement on the
site, which is under construction as noted: “Working on solutions now so
old patterns of power can’t, once again, re-form to rebuild and
continue to repress.”
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