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Hightower, Texas gets into slavery again

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Texas of course
Texas is trying to ban the use of its roads by people seeking care outside the state — and even dispatching right-wing vigilante groups to chase them. Women in Texas dress as characters from “The Handmaid’s Tale” to protest abortion restrictions. Shutterstock photo.

Abortion ban extremists are using
a slave law to repress women

by Jim Hightower — OtherWords

Here’s our big word of the day: extraterritoriality. It expresses a sketchy legal theory asserting that rulers in one state have a right to enforce their laws in another state.

Its most prominent was in the infamous Fugitive Slave Act of 1850, which required officials in Northern anti-slave states to capture and return escaped slaves to their plantation “owners” in the South, thus applying Southern slave laws in Northern jurisdictions. This abomination was finally repealed in 1864.

But 160 years later, here comes another faction of right-wing zealots trying to revive the slave-law concept of extraterritoriality — this time applying it to any and all American women who dare to make their own reproductive health decisions.

I’m ashamed to say that this repressive use of the doctrine is being led by my state’s misogynistic governor, Greg Abbott, and our corrupt attorney general, Ken Paxton. These two tyrannical men have already saddled Texas women with the most draconian abortion ban in the country, including piously forbidding abortion in cases of rape and incest.

For women to exercise their inherent right to control their own bodies, they’re forced to travel to nearby states. But Texas’s brutal extremists bark that “we’ll ban that, too!” They’ve pushed a flagrantly unconstitutional scheme to outlaw the use of public roads to drive out-of-state for care. And they’ve even sanctioned right-wing vigilantes to follow suspected medical travelers to doctors beyond our borders.

And, going full-tilt totalitarian, the Abbott-Paxton posse has demanded that out-of-state-care groups hand over the names and addresses of Texas women they’ve helped outside of Texas.

Talk about government overreach! Big Brother isn’t just watching… he’s stalking you. To oppose this brutish repression — and to keep it from coming to your state — contact RewireNewsGroup.com/abortion.

 

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Republican congressman openly advocates genocide

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him
“Any congressional resolutions to censure or expel Ogles?” asked one commentator. Representative Andy Ogles (R-TN), his official House portrait.

‘Kill ’em all,’ Republican Andy Ogles says of Palestinians in Gaza

by Jake Johnson Common Dreams

Republican Representative Andy Ogles of Tennessee said Tuesday that “we should kill ’em all” after an activist pressed him to respond to atrocities that the US-backed Israeli military is committing against Palestinians in Gaza, including children.

“I’ve seen the footage of shredded children’s bodies,” the activist told Ogles. “That’s my taxpayer dollars that are going to bomb those kids.”

“You know what? So, I think we should kill ’em all, if that makes you feel better,” Ogles responded. “Hamas and the Palestinians have been attacking Israel for 20 years. It’s time to pay the piper.”

Watch the exchange:

Ogles, a vocal supporter of arming Israel unconditionally, was among the 212 House Republicans who voted in November to censure Representative Rashida Tlaib (D-MI) on the false grounds that she “justified” the Hamas-led attack on Israel on October 7.

Following the Tennessee Republican’s call for the mass killing of Palestinians, Democratic strategist Waleed Shahid asked, “Any congressional resolutions to censure or expel Ogles?”

Video footage of Ogles’ remarks was posted to social media hours after the Biden administration vetoed a cease-fire resolution at the United Nations Security Council—the third time since October 7 that the United States has wielded its veto power to block a measure calling for an immediate end to the bloodshed in Gaza.

Hours before the latest US veto, an official with the United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF) warned that Gaza is “poised to witness an explosion in preventable child deaths” as malnutrition and disease spread rapidly across the enclave.

Israeli forces have killed more than 12,400 children in Gaza since October 7, according to the territory’s health officials. More than 600,000 children are currently trapped in Rafah, which Israeli forces are preparing to invade. On average, more than 10 Gaza children per day have lost one or both of their legs since October, according to Save the Children.

“After four months of relentless violence, we are running out of words to describe what children and families in Gaza are going through, as well as the tools to respond in any adequate way,” Jason Lee, Save the Children’s country director for the occupied Palestinian territory, said in a statement Tuesday. “The scale of death and destruction is astronomical.”

“Children are being failed by the adults who should be protecting them,” Lee added. “It’s beyond time for the adults in the room to step up their responsibilities and legal obligations to children caught up in a conflict they played no part in, who just want to be able to live.”

 

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First Quantum, its new spokeswoman and the true face of terrorism here

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First Quantum, su nueva portavoz y la verdadera cara del terrorismo aquí

por Eric Jackson et al

Whatever any of the candidates wish to do, we now see First Quantum putting that widely detested mining operation front and center in the campaign for the May 5 elections:

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See https://twitter.com/CJBICHET/status/1760039737786511374

 

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Shall we talk about “terrorism” in last year’s strike?

The gunman who killed people was on the mine’s side. He was a mafia lawyer for the now disbanded financial crimes outfit The Harris Organisation, former consul for South Africa and son of the consul for apartheid-era South Africa. Gaby Carrizo is the son of the manager / CEO for First Quantum’s predecessor in interest in that always unconstitutional concession, Petaquilla Minerals. The gunman’s daughter is married to Gaby Carrizo’s brother. Petaquilla’s founder, principal owner and main brain? That’s former Cocle governor Richard Fifer, who is now in prison for fraud. Yeah, devotees if the Murdoch media hailed the guy as an American “gun rights” hero, but that’s the face and social milieu of actual terrorism in Panama.

Corporations are persons, the legal fiction and neoliberal religion says?

Well, fine. First Quantum is a foreign person not only found in violation of Panama’s constitution, but engaged in a long-running and in-everyone’s-face intervention in Panama’s sovereign political affairs. It should be declared persona non grata and expelled from Panama.

 

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García-Quismondo Hernáiz, Las baterías de sodio y la recarga inalámbrica

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new electric gizmo
Juguete nuevo. Foto temp-64GTX / Shutterstock.

Nos acercan al sueño de coches eléctricos más baratos y con mayor autonomía

por Enrique García-Quismondo Hernáiz, IMDEA ENERGÍA

Las baterías de iones de sodio están emergiendo como alternativas prometedoras para los vehículos eléctricos de gama baja-media. La empresa francesa Tiamat Energy, respaldada por el Grupo Stellantis, acaba de anunciar sus planes para construir una fábrica de celdas de iones de sodio con una capacidad de producción máxima de 5 GWh por año. Este enfoque no solo apunta a reducir costes en la movilidad eléctrica sino también a contrarrestar las problemáticas del litio, un componente crítico en las baterías actuales.

Este tipo de baterías basadas en sodio pueden resultar ideales para automóviles eléctricos de dimensiones reducidas, especialmente aquellos que transitan por tramos de carretera con capacidad de recarga en movimiento. En este contexto, la necesidad de una gran capacidad energética en los coches podría reducirse significativamente.

Recientemente, se ha implementado esta tecnología de recarga sin cables en Detroit, Michigan (EE. UU.), abriendo la posibilidad de baterías más compactas para vehículos eléctricos.

La tecnología de baterías de sodio se basa en el movimiento de iones entre los electrodos de forma muy similar a las baterías de iones de litio, pero utilizando sodio. Este concepto, impulsado por su bajo coste y la disponibilidad de sus principales componentes, plantea una solución a la dependencia del litio, cuya extracción no está exenta de impactos ambientales negativos y cuyos precios son volátiles.

A diferencia del litio, el sodio se puede producir a partir de un material abundante: la sal. Esta materia prima está disponible en gran medida, es sencilla de extraer y asequible.

Luces y sombras de las baterías de sodio

Hasta el momento, este tipo de baterías han mostrado una densidad de energía inferior en comparación con las baterías de iones de litio, lo que se traduce en una mayor carga de peso para almacenar la misma cantidad de energía. A pesar de este desafío, fabricantes de baterías líderes como NorthVolt en Suecia y la alianza entre BYD y Huaihai en China están intensificando sus esfuerzos para superar esta limitación.

El pasado noviembre, BYD anunció la construcción de su primera gigafábrica de baterías de iones de sodio en Xuzhou, provincia de Jiangsu. Con una capacidad de 30 GWh anuales y una inversión de 1 284 millones de euros, se prevé que BYD se convierta en el principal proveedor mundial de baterías de sodio para microcoches.

Una característica destacada de las baterías de iones de sodio es su capacidad para ser descargadas por completo y almacenadas o transportadas en este estado sin degradación, lo cual añade versatilidad a su implementación en aplicaciones de movilidad. A diferencia de las baterías de iones de litio, que pueden dañarse de forma irreversible en una descarga completa, esta característica simplificaría toda la logística de transporte de las baterías, la haría más segura y reduciría más el coste de su comercialización.

Sin embargo, la adopción generalizada de las baterías de iones de sodio enfrenta desafíos importantes. Los costes de componentes como el separador y el electrolito pueden ser considerablemente más altos, lo que podría resultar en un aumento significativo en el coste total de la batería.

Además, a diferencia del litio, la capacidad del sodio para cargarse y descargarse puede disminuir rápidamente durante la vida útil de la batería. Por eso es importante remarcar la necesidad de más investigación para abordar los aspectos técnicos que permitan la implantación efectiva de esta tecnología emergente.

Recarga de las baterías en circulación

En paralelo, la evolución de la carga inalámbrica podría resolver otro problema crítico: la infraestructura de recarga de los vehículos eléctricos. Este método permite cargar los coches durante la conducción, superando las limitaciones de las estaciones de carga convencionales.

La implantación de esta tecnología por parte de la ciudad de Detroit en colaboración con Ford y la compañía Electreon Wireless busca no solo aumentar la conveniencia de las recargas sino también allanar el camino para vehículos con baterías más pequeñas, ya que no se requieren recargas conectadas tan frecuentes.

Este proyecto piloto implica la instalación de 400 metros de tecnología de carga inductiva, ofreciendo un vistazo al futuro de la carga de vehículos eléctricos.

La carga inductiva funciona mediante la transferencia de energía a través de campos magnéticos. Unos raíles ubicados en la calzada crean un campo electromagnético que, cuando detecta un sistema compatible con la carga por inducción en un coche, transmite energía. Esta energía se convierte en energía eléctrica que carga la batería del coche.

Este enfoque podría hacer que los conjuntos de baterías sean más compactos y, por ende, más asequibles, facilitando la transición hacia la movilidad eléctrica. Aunque el proceso de producción es costoso, una evaluación de cinco años determinará si la carga inalámbrica es una alternativa viable a las estaciones de carga convencionales.

En Europa, la empresa Elonroad ha desarrollado una variante de carreteras electrificadas que se ha desplegado en varios tramos en las ciudades suecas de Lund y Maristad. El funcionamiento se basa en tiras metálicas electrificadas en tramos alternos de la carretera que generan electricidad cuando hay un coche conectado a ellas. Para que los vehículos recarguen sus baterías en movimiento, deben contar con un sistema de raíles desplegables que actúan como conexiones, como si se tratara de coches de Scalextric.

Sistemas de carreteras electrificadas de Elonroad.

En este sentido también hay que ser prudentes, ya que hay que tener presente que ciertos aspectos de estos desarrollos están en sus fases iniciales. Si bien estos avances son alentadores, aún se encuentran en una etapa donde la viabilidad comercial debe demostrarse a mayor escala.

Hacia una movilidad eléctrica asequible y práctica

Estos avances son muy relevantes por varios motivos. Por un lado, permiten gestionar mejor la energía y aprovechar las infraestructuras de transporte para que no hagan falta cargas muy largas ni coches con baterías muy grandes y, por tanto, que no se necesiten tantos recursos minerales. Por otro lado, contribuyen a que los vehículos eléctricos sean más accesibles y prácticos para una gama más amplia de usuarios.

Así, la convergencia de coches propulsados por baterías de iones de sodio más pequeñas y baratas y tramos de carretera electrificados en los que los vehículos recuperan energía mientras circulan podría suponer un cambio significativo en la movilidad eléctrica.The Conversation

Enrique García-Quismondo Hernáiz, Investigador en energías renovables, IMDEA ENERGÍA

Este artículo fue publicado originalmente en The Conversation. Lea el original.

 

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Davidson, Where Putin is really at

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them

Enter Putin’s Russia, Stage Right

by Carl Davidson — Left Links

For several reasons, Putin and Russia have been at the top of the news in the past ten days.

This morning, February 16, we learned of the death of Aleksei Navalny, age 47, in a remote Siberian prison above the Arctic Circle. No cause of death was yet given. But we know for sure only a few years ago, Navalny survived an attempt to kill him with a nerve toxin unavailable to anyone outside certain circles.

Russia’s courts imprisoned Navalny for a list of crimes. Included at the top was his opposition to Putin’s ‘special military operation’ against Ukraine (In Russia, you can be busted simply for calling it a ‘war’). But Navalny committed a much greater ‘crime,’ leading a significantly powerful antifascist opposition to Putin’s rule, one offering a different vision of both Russia’s past and for a different and more democratic future. It’s worth noting that minor parties are allowed in Russia’s elections. But they must observe an unwritten rule carefully: always remain ‘minor’ and not too critical of the new tsar at the top. Whatever other charges were made against him, breaking this one made Navalny a subject of imprisonment and assassination plotting. Our theoretical piece in this week’s issue offers a Navalny article published in 2022. Make what you will of it. We’ll also include a report on Boris Kagarlitsky’s recent re-imprisonment.

But a second matter, the topic of our weekly cartoon above, also put Putin on page one. Tucker Carlson had made his way to Moscow to interview Putin, not quite knowing what to expect. At the opening, Putin asked whether Tucker wanted ‘a show’ or ‘a dialogue.’ Tucker chose the latter, although it might be better described as a two-hour monologue.

Our major media outlets plucked out a few juicy bits about Ukraine, but mainly panned Putin’s talk as ‘boring medieval history.’ As Marxists, however, we’re quite interested in history, both our own views of it and the views of our adversaries, both domestic and abroad. So boring or not, we looked it over.

For starters, Putin reminded us that Russia’s history was long, over 1000 years, much richer, by implication, than any 250-year-old youngsters still wet behind the ears. What was more interesting is how he told it, not as a history from below but from the top. It was a tsarists’ version of history (note that ‘Tsar’ is derived from the Russian version of ‘Caesar’). For those of us familiar with Lenin’s account of the Russian Empire as ‘a prison house of nations,’ the first thing we’ll note in Putin’s account is the absence of the term. It’s replaced by Russia as ‘family,’ and a family that kept gathering a variety of lost relatives back into the fold, and thus welcome at family reunions.

Putin starts in the 900s CE, but really attributes the first in-gathering of relatives to Tsar Ivan IV, a/k/a ‘The Terrible,’ 1547-1584. This Ivan was the first to be named ‘Tsar of all Russia,’ meaning he asserted dominance over the entire prison of nations and started the streltsy (standing army) and the oprichniki (secret police) to make it so. For curious reasons, Putin brushes over the first tsars, including the various Vladimirs. Most likely, the reason was they were Swedes or too intermarried with Swedes, and thus largely vassals of Swedes. The Swedes called the people in the area they dominated ‘the Rus,’ which is how Russia got its name.

So Putin plants a flag with Ivan IV and briskly moves forward, weaving a tale that quickly brings Ukraine into Russia’s fold. It’s not really a separate country, you see, even the name simply means ‘lands on the edge’ of the Empire. In brief, for Russia to be Russia again, this wayward cousin needs to be brought back to sit at the family reunion table. Those asserting otherwise are expressing the views of the Germans and, later, the Nazis who occupied that ‘part of Russia’ for a spell. Can a negotiated settlement with Ukraine bring an end to the conflict there? ‘Of course,’ Putin tells Carlson. But not without ‘DeNazifying’ the territory. Elsewhere, Putin had dismissed Lenin’s position on ‘self-determination, including the right to secede,’ for all the imprisoned nations under the tsars, as simply a ‘mistaken’ viewpoint.

Much of this was reported, in bits, about Carlson’s interview. But one fascinating piece was not, and it says something about Putin’s views of fascism and World War II. Today it’s widely held, both by the left and others as well, that WWII got its start with ‘appeasement’ at Munich followed by the Third Reich’s takeover of Czechoslovakia and adsorption of Austria, then again followed quickly by Hitler’s invasion of Poland, knowing full well, due to Poland’s treaties, that this meant war with the UK and others in Europe.

But according to Putin, we would be wrong. Here’s what he told Tucker:

“So before World War II, Poland collaborated with Hitler and although it did not yield to Hitler’s demands, it still participated in the partitioning of Czechoslovakia together with Hitler. As the Poles had not given the Danzig Corridor to Germany, and went too far, pushing Hitler to start World War II by attacking them. Why was it Poland against whom the war started on 1 September 1939? Poland turned out to be uncompromising, and Hitler had nothing to do but start implementing his plans with Poland.”

So the Poles started it by refusing to give up Gdansk. Hitler had no choice. In a way, Putin is telling us about today. Applying the same logic, his ‘little green men’ (aka, Russian volunteers with their military uniform’s insignias removed and sent into the Donbas circa 2014), just wanted Ukraine’s easternmost provinces (for starters). But the stubborn ‘Nazified’ rulers in Kiev refused to give them up, and thus they started the war, leaving Putin no choice. Putin, you see, is fighting fascism and defending Christendom.

Nice try, Vlad, but no cigar–at least from this corner of the left. What’s truly amazing about our time, however, is the emergence of the GOP as Putin’s ally. Ideologically, they share a contempt for democracy, especially if it means practicing consistent democracy regarding sexuality and gender roles. Pussy Riot, the Russian girl rockers, got busted for that.

It’s easier to understand if we look at Trump’s past using the well-known tool, ‘follow the money.’ Long before Trump aimed at being POTUS, he was in bed with Russian oligarchs. After Trump’s failures in his Atlantic City casinos, they bailed him out from near bankruptcy. At first, all Trump wanted was a hotel in Moscow and beauty pageants there. But Putin, the KGB expert on handling ‘assets,’ aimed higher. Keep this naive mark on a leash. We have bigger plans for him.

So long story short: we now have a Trump bloc in Congress willing to hand over Ukraine and even consider wrecking NATO. The old curse attributed to ancient Chinese seers is: ‘May you live in interesting times.’ For those of us who cut our political teeth in the years of Cold War, the political terrain today is certainly something we never imagined. But here it is, and it’s wise to deal with it, and not deny or minimize it.

 

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Lunch at Lissy’s and local culture in Anton

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Here on the main bus stop for public transportation headed eastbound — toward the city — some popular art. I think it’s unfinished. The image has the name of the town and a depiction of the most noteworthy local religious symbol, Jesucristo de Esquipulas. Photo by Eric Jackson.

Back to routine — sort of — on the Monday after Carnival Week

by Eric Jackson

It’s a habit that could be dangerous if that guy who threatened me in the 2021 home invasion was and is serious. It would probably be even more life-threatening if I am so frantic about it that I can’t sleep or lead some semblance — for me — or a “normal” life.

What I do is shut the dogs in the house — the cats can come and go through the windows, lock the doors and gate and walk almost a kilometer to my usual bus stop in barrio El Bajito in the corregimiento of Juan Diaz, then head into town. Sometimes the town is Penonome, occasionally it’s into Panama City, but usually it’s Anton. As it was this day.

Turning east onto the Pan-American Highway, I looked to the sky over the city dump. Fewer vultures circling than usual on this day, so my bird photography mission will have to wait.

Approaching the town center, these blue hearts painted on the highway where there was a bus accident that killed 19 people a few years back. Then, what was a few months ago in 2023’s abbreviated rainy season a duck pond, now dried up and fitted with irrigation pipes and crop recently planted.

Then comes the regular people-watching stop, the Ministry of Health’s local birthing and infant and maternal health center. A large man, beaming with pride and carrying a tiny newborn, a bedraggled-looking new mother and a grandmother looking very satisfied got on. Panamanian family values that seemed to be working on this day.

Next stop? I wasn’t the only person to call “puente,” for the caseta just before the town’s western pedestrian overpass. Paid my 75¢, got off, went into the supermarked behind me and bought the usual — a bottle of Powerade and a copy each of La Prensa and La Estrella. Hold the necro-porn this time, but the day before I also bought El Siglo, as it had the tale of a double murder near where I grew up.

Coming out of the store, I noticed some new street art in progress and took out my camera, which I almost always carry, to get a picture. Then, without having to go much out of my way lunch decisions. I could go a couple of door west to Sabores and read my newspapers and drink my concoction while eating empanadas or pastelitos — the REAL kind that are baked instead of fried. In the other direction Doña Eva’s was closed. Beyond that, what did the fruit and veggie stands have? Ah, yes, a big Spanish onion to go a contemplated future pasta meal.

Then across the side street, past some more vendors — some selling fruit, some lottery tickets and some with bollos.

That little squeeze is what military tacticians call a defile, a place to get pickpocketed. The game usually gets played with someone creating a brief obstruction and a confederate slipping a hand in from behind. The cops know all about that, too.

Dogs hanging out at the entrance to Lissy’s bakery and chafing table restaurant in hope of a treat add to the potential stumbles for this senior citizen. The little yellow mama dog wasn’t there this time. Whenever she is, she knows that the gringo with the white hair and beard is usually a soft touch to give her chicken bone and maybe part of a carimañola or something.

No chicken on display, baked or fried, and only the fried wheat empanadas. None of the corn meal ones. SO, a rather common Plan B — a couple of hampao and four hsiu mai. That and Powerade as I perused the tales of infamy and opinions about all sorts of things in the newspapers. La Prensa leans oligarchic liberal, La Estrella is more PRD-oriented and also more or less dedicated to neoliberal economic thinking.

What’s a democratic socialist to do? What Karl Marx did all those years at the Royal Library in London — read the bourgeois papers, look askance at the things that seem obviously wrong, assimilate the information that’s almost surely true, synthesize it all into a world view different from that of the people who own those media. Adjust opinions when the facts demand it.

But if Carnival is over, Chinese New Year was not entirely.

Dragon dancers approached. They could be heard easily enough by this hard-of-hearing old buzzard. Ah, Chinese culture — lots of firecrackers. One of the two cops standing just inside the entrance gave a startled look. Little explosions and the training and experiences of THAT job would probably prompt such a reaction.

Dogs? They HATE firecrackers, which physically hurt their ears. The fled in several directions, some of them into Lissy’s.

The dragon dancers also set off another common Panamanian cultural reaction — anti-Chinese racism. A white-haired cholo, not old enough to remember when all Panamanians of Chinese ancestry were stripped of their citizenship for a few months back in 1941, but likely to have heard defenses of that infamous move from elders way back when — started shouting some ugly stereotypes about chinos.

The cops went out and warned the guy to cut out that disturbance. He did not challenge them.

And this fulo went back to reading the mainstream newspapers.

 

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Editorials: Arithmetic plus principles; and Grifting along

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This is not a goveling sycophant’s use of a government-funded image. Is it a heinous crime? The guy wants to make it a crime to use his image without his blessing. Look for the candidates who would pass a law banning legal actions over the use of politicians’ images, and make it one of your cutting-edge issues. From an Asamblea Nacional video, electronically altered by the editor.

Changing the electoral math

Martinelli holed up in the Nicaraguan Embassy with cops waiting outside to take him to prison if he steps out? He may have been a front-runner in the polls, but color him irrelevant.

The PRD pulling out all the stops to break tradition and retain the presidency? If they didn’t have such a ridiculous candidate it might be possible.

The electoral math for next May has changed and will be momentarily hard to predict. It looks at the moment like it may be a close race among Rómulo Roux, Martín Torrijos and Ricardo Lombana, with others left in the dust and the toxic negative cloud being the realities and perceptions of the candidates’ relationships to the mining colony project.

Listen carefully to what the candidates propose, both to find attractions and to find disqualifications. Beware of magic solutions. Denounce bigotry, racism, class snobbery, xenophobia, homophobia, misogyny and other such below-the-belt appeals when you see or hear them. Don’t let anyone buy your vote, nor get away with offering to do so.

Don’t be a pendejo. Yes, the editor has his point of view and favorites. But think and vote for yourself if you are a Panamanian citizen.

 

TU
Graphic by gfkDSGN – pixabay.com

Thanks to Ron Filipowski of MeidasTouch.com, a reminder

List of Some of Trump’s Failed Businesses:

• Trump Steaks
• Trump Vodka
• Trump Board Game
• Trump University
• Trump Mattresses
• Trump Ice
• Trump Shuttle
• Trump Vitamins & Urine Test Kits
• Tour de Trump
• New Jersey Generals
• Trump Modeling
• Trump Princess
• Trump Mortgages
• Trump Success Cologne
• Trump Magazine
• Trump Style
• Trump Taj Mahal
• Trump Plaza Hotel & Casino
• Trump Castle
• Trump Hotels & Casino Resorts
• Trump Entertainment
• Trump Marina
• Trump Casino Indiana
• Trump Travel Agency
• Trumpnet Telecom
• Trump Tower Tampa
• Trump Empire Cologne
• Paris is Out Musical
• Management of Trump Ocean Club Panama

 

Voltaire
Voltaire (Marie François Arouet), a bust by Jean-Antoine Houdon.

                     If God did not exist, it would be necessary to invent him.

Voltaire                     

Bear in mind…

Eccentricity is not, as dull people would have us believe, a form of madness. It is often a kind of innocent pride, and the man of genius and the aristocrat are frequently regarded as eccentrics because genius and aristocrat are entirely unafraid of and uninfluenced by the opinions and vagaries of the crowd.

Edith Sitwell

Complaining is good for you as long as you’re not complaining to the person you’re complaining about.

Lynn Johnston

I loathe the expression “What makes him tick.” It is the American mind, looking for simple and singular solution, that uses the foolish expression. A person not only ticks, he also chimes and strikes the hour, falls and breaks and has to be put together again, and sometimes stops like an electric clock in a thunderstorm.

James Thurber

 

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Israel’s US-backed impunity ripped at the World Court

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ICJ
The United States has shown it is willing to go “very far indeed” in disregarding international law to defend the Israeli government, said Paul Reichler during a hearing on the occupation of Palestine. The International Court of Justice in The Hague. UN Photo.

At the ICJ, lawyer for Palestine rips the USA for
defending ‘whatever offenses’ that Israel commits

by Jake Johnson — Common Dreams

An attorney representing Palestine at the United Nations’ highest court called out the United States on Monday for routinely defending Israel’s violations of international law, including its brutal 57-year occupation of Gaza, the West Bank, and East Jerusalem.

Paul Reichler, an American lawyer who has a record of success at the International Court of Justice (ICJ), said during a historic hearing on Israel’s occupation of Palestinian territory that the United States is nearly alone in attempting to provide legal cover for the Israeli government’s actions over the past six decades.

The “two outliers” among nations that have intervened in the ICJ case on Israel’s occupation are Fiji and the United States, said Reichler.

“This is not surprising: Whatever offenses against international law Israel commits, the United States comes forward to shield it from accountability,” he continued.

In its written submission to the ICJ, Reichler noted, the USA “argues that belligerent occupation is governed exclusively by international humanitarian law and not by the UN Charter or general international law.”

“Here the United States attempts to defend Israel not by arguing that the occupation is lawful but that it is neither lawful nor unlawful,” Reichler said, adding that such a position runs directly counter to that of its allies, including France and Switzerland.

“Just how far in disregarding the international legal order will the United States go to exempt Israel from the consequences of its ongoing violation of peremptory norms, including the prohibition on acquisition of territory by force?” Reichler asked. “Apparently very far indeed.”

Reichler’s presentation followed remarks by Palestinian Foreign Minister Riyad al-Maliki, who said that “the genocide underway in Gaza is a result of decades of impunity and inaction” in the face of Israel’s illegal occupation and seizure of Palestinian land.

“Ending Israel’s impunity is a moral, political, and legal imperative,” said al-Maliki.

Monday’s presentations kicked off a week of public ICJ hearings examining the legality of Israel’s occupation of Palestinian territory.

The United States is set to deliver its arguments in the case on Wednesday. Israel will not be participating.

The proceedings began less than a month after the ICJ handed down an interim ruling ordering the Israeli government to prevent genocidal acts in Gaza, a decision that Israel has repeatedly flouted as it continues committing atrocities in the enclave and targets the severely overcrowded city of Rafah.

Israeli forces have killed more than 29,000 people in Gaza since October 7.

Agnès Callamard, secretary-general of Amnesty International, said Monday that “the current conflict raging in the occupied Gaza Strip, where the ICJ has ruled there is a real and imminent risk of genocide, has brought into sharp focus the catastrophic consequences of allowing Israel’s international crimes in the [occupied Palestinian territories] to continue with impunity for so long.”

“The world must recognize that ending Israel’s illegal occupation is a prerequisite to stopping the recurrent human rights violations in Israel and the OPT,” Callamard added.

 

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Lytton, Mexico sues companies that arm its gangsters in a US court

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DHS
A US Department of Homeland Security warning to people about to cross the border into Mexico. DHS photo.

Mexico is suing American gun manufacturers for arming its
gangs − and a US court could award billions in damages

by Timothy D. Lytton, Georgia State University

The government of Mexico is suing US gun-makers for their role in facilitating cross-border gun trafficking that has supercharged violent crime in Mexico.

The lawsuit seeks US$10 billion in damages and a court order to force the companies named in the lawsuit – including Smith & Wesson, Colt, Glock, Beretta and Ruger – to change the way they do business. In January, a federal appeals court in Boston decided that the industry’s immunity shield, which so far has protected gun-makers from civil liability, does not apply to Mexico’s lawsuit.

As a legal scholar who has analyzed lawsuits against the gun industry for more than 25 years, I believe this decision to allow Mexico’s lawsuit to proceed could be a game changer. To understand why, let’s begin with some background about the federal law that protects the gun industry from civil lawsuits.

Gun industry immunity

In 2005, Congress passed the Protection of Lawful Commerce in Arms Act, which prohibits lawsuits against firearm manufacturers and sellers for injuries arising from criminal misuse of a gun.

Importantly, there are limits to this immunity shield. For example, it doesn’t protect a manufacturer or seller who “knowingly violated a State or Federal statute applicable to the sale or marketing” of a firearm. Mexico’s lawsuit alleges that US gun-makers aided and abetted illegal weapons sales to gun traffickers in violation of federal law.

Mexico’s allegations

Mexico claims that US gun-makers engaged in “deliberate efforts to create and maintain an illegal market for their weapons in Mexico.”

According to the lawsuit, the manufacturers intentionally design their weapons to be attractive to criminal organizations in Mexico by including features such as easy conversion to fully automatic fire, compatibility with high-capacity magazines and removable serial numbers.

Mexico also points to industry marketing that promises buyers a tactical military experience for civilians. And Mexico alleges that manufacturers distribute their products to dealers whom they know serve as transit points for illegal gunrunning through illegal straw sales, unlicensed sales at gun shows and online, and off-book sales disguised as inventory theft.

In short, Mexico claims that illegal gun trafficking isn’t just an unwanted byproduct of the industry’s design choices, marketing campaigns and distribution practices. Instead, according to the lawsuit, feeding demand for illegal weapons is central to the industry’s business model.

In response, the gun-makers insist that Mexico’s attempt to hold them legally responsible for the criminal activity of others is precisely the type of lawsuit that the federal immunity shield was designed to block. They argue that merely selling a product that someone later uses in a crime does not amount to a violation of federal law that would deprive a manufacturer of immunity. Additionally, the gun-makers assert that, even if Mexico’s lawsuit were not barred by the immunity law, they have no legal duty to prevent criminal violence that occurs outside the United States.

The next legal steps

In January 2024, a federal appeals court in Massachusetts decided that Mexico’s allegations, if true, would deprive the gun-makers of immunity, and it sent the case back to trial court. Mexico now needs to produce evidence to prove its allegations that the industry is not only aware of but actively facilitates illegal gun trafficking.

Additionally, to win, Mexico will need to convince a Boston jury that the manufacturers’ design choices, marketing campaigns and distribution practices are closely enough connected to street crime in Mexico to consider the companies responsible for the problem. This is known as “proximate cause” in the law.

For their part, the gun-makers have asked the trial judge to put the case on hold while they pursue an appeal to the US Supreme Court. However, the Supreme Court has been reluctant to weigh in on gun industry cases until they have reached their conclusion in the lower courts, where most of them are dismissed and a few have settled.

High stakes for the industry

If Mexico does win at trial, its demand for $10 billion in damages could drive several of the nation’s largest firearm manufacturers into bankruptcy. Even if the case were to settle for much less, a victory by Mexico would provide a template for a wave of future lawsuits that could change the way the gun industry operates.

Similar theories about dangerous product designs, irresponsible marketing and reckless distribution practices in opioid litigation have transformed the pharmaceutical industry. Civil lawsuits have forced the drugmakers to take public responsibility for a nationwide health crisis, overhaul the way they do business and pay billions of dollars in judgments and settlements.

Mexico’s lawsuit holds out the prospect that the gun industry could be next.The Conversation

Timothy D. Lytton, Regents’ Professor & Professor of Law, Georgia State University

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

 

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¿Wappin? Partes de quienes somos / Parts of who we are

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jc
El panameño Jhonathan Chávez, a punto de tocar en el escenario más grande de América Latina. Foto de su página de Facebook.
Panama’s Jhonathan Chávez, about to play on Latin America’s biggest stage. Photo from his Facebook page.

Esta vez, primordialmente en español
This time, primarily in Spanish

Susana Baca – Flor de Canela
https://youtu.be/8OKd1cxbrJY?si=q8–DxxgCVhDGmSr

Rómulo Castro & Grupo Tuira – La Rosa de los Vientos
https://youtu.be/QUoV65mVgss?si=Pnb4FxhNX8-CIkpH

Rihanna – Desperado
https://youtu.be/aD6pjhFOjFM?si=lCLtmTYj4E4jmUXL

Señor Loop – Jazz Fest
https://youtu.be/RX24IYrPUSc?si=_jHxOEO_0xcA_9JA

I Threes – Many Are Called
https://youtu.be/MUXm8v5WBdg?si=tqRn6JyyWJhTqtIL

Buena Beats – Cuban Music Revival
https://youtu.be/DTqoK2FZG8M?si=wU7FAkye19n6a5DV

Idania Dowman – Lypsojazz
https://youtu.be/l9GlvpQbdJo?si=t1fuJqEz6p7U-Ho2

Rubén Blades y Ana Belén – Algo Contigo
https://youtu.be/ETQC0Yez9mQ?si=inoZ0FAbvgfq1trK

Romeo Santos – La Bella Y La Bestia
https://youtu.be/Ugxxq5lfOqI?si=HiUsAcGbwwKjSw9A

iLe – Algo Bonito
https://youtu.be/mmehOrxEnjI?si=GGgwNDtA1R9ix4Sm

Jhonathan Chávez – Dame una razón
https://youtu.be/15LKXalM5Io?si=X8nemQro7tfaXGup

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