Friday, March 20, 2020

Nick Turse | America's Commandos Deployed to 141 Countries: And 'Criminal Misconduct' Followed






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19 March 20

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Nick Turse | America's Commandos Deployed to 141 Countries: And 'Criminal Misconduct' Followed
A joint special forces team moves together out of an Air Force CV-22 Osprey aircraft, Feb. 26, 2018, at Melrose Training Range, N.M. (photo: Air Force Senior Airman Clayton Cupit)
Nick Turse, TomDispatch
Turse writes: "Since the attacks of September 11, 2001, the United States has leaned ever more heavily on its most elite troops. While U.S. Special Operations forces (USSOF or SOF) make up just 3% of American military personnel, they have absorbed more than 40% of the casualties of these years, mainly in America's conflicts across the Greater Middle East and parts of Africa."
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Young women wear face masks as protection against the coronavirus during Chinese New Year celebrations in London on January 26, 2020. (photo: Barry Lewis/Getty)
Young women wear face masks as protection against the coronavirus during Chinese New Year celebrations in London on January 26, 2020. (photo: Barry Lewis/Getty)


America's Coronavirus 'Curve' May Be at Its Most Dangerous Point
Kim Hjelmgaard and Jim Sergent, USA TODAY
Excerpt: "Soon, the United States will find out whether it's likely to be the next South Korea or Italy or even China when it comes to the acceleration of coronavirus cases and deaths."
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Prof. Juan Cole. (photo: University of Michigan)
Prof. Juan Cole. (photo: University of Michigan)


Juan Cole | Not Giving Up on Happiness: Care of the Self and Well-Being in a Plague Year
Juan Cole, Informed Comment
Cole writes: "The specter of plague haunts our world, and it brings with it not only the ghouls of disease and death but vast economic and social uncertainty of a sort only the most elderly among us remembers (the Great Depression and World War II)."










Sen. Richard Burr, R-NC. (photo: Mark Wilson/Getty)
Sen. Richard Burr, R-NC. (photo: Mark Wilson/Getty)


GOP Senator Kept Coronavirus Info Secret for Weeks, but Shared It With Wealthy Donors
Tim Mak, NPR
Mak writes: "The chairman of the Senate Intelligence Committee warned a small group of well-connected constituents three weeks ago to prepare for dire economic and societal effects of the coronavirus."

EXCERPT:
One public health expert told NPR that early warnings about a coming health crisis and its effects could have made a difference just a few weeks ago.
"In the interest of public health, we actually need to involve the public. It's right there in the name. And being transparent, being as clear as possible is very important," said Jason Silverstein, who lectures at the Department of Global Health and Social Medicine at Harvard Medical School.
"The type of language that could have come out there at the end of February saying here's what we ought to expect could have, you know, not panicked people, but gotten them all together to have to all prepare," Silverstein added.



A group of young women walk past New Orleans police officers on Bourbon Street. (photo: Max Becherer/AP)
A group of young women walk past New Orleans police officers on Bourbon Street. (photo: Max Becherer/AP)


Younger Adults Are Large Percentage of Coronavirus Hospitalizations in United States, According to New CDC Data
Ariana Eunjung Cha, The Washington Post
Cha writes: "The deadly coronavirus has been met with a bit of a shrug among some in the under-50 set in the United States. Even as public health officials repeatedly urged social distancing, the young and hip spilled out of bars on Bourbon Street in New Orleans. They gleefully hopped on flights, tweeting about the rock-bottom airfares. And they gathered in packs on beaches."
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Funeral workers transport the coffin of a coronavirus victim into a cemetery in Bergamo. (photo: Flavio Lo Scalzo/Reuters)
Funeral workers transport the coffin of a coronavirus victim into a cemetery in Bergamo. (photo: Flavio Lo Scalzo/Reuters)


'A Generation Has Died': Italian Province Struggles to Bury Its Coronavirus Dead
Angela Giuffrida and Lorenzo Tondo, Guardian UK
Excerpt: "Coffins awaiting burial are lining up in churches and the corpses of those who died at home are being kept in sealed-off rooms for days as funeral services struggle to cope in Bergamo, the Italian province hardest hit by the coronavirus pandemic."
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The beauty that is Bears Ears National Monument in Utah. (photo: Getty)
The beauty that is Bears Ears National Monument in Utah. (photo: Getty)


New Study Disproves the Republican Lie That National Monuments Hurt Local Economies
Yessenia Funes, Gizmodo
Funes writes: "Donald Trump stripped Bears Ears National Monument and the Grand Staircase-Escalante in Utah of their federal designations during his first year in office. State legislators applauded this move, fearing that the protections that come with this designation would hurt local economic benefits from mining, logging, and ranching. A new study, however, paints a different picture."

A new study, however, paints a different picture. Published in Science Advances on Wednesday, the study finds that national monument designations don’t actually change much in the local economy—except when they grow businesses in communities closest to these federal sites. Reducing the size of these two national treasures—Bears Ears and Grand Staircase—may have actually caused the loss of some 700 jobs in nearby communities. 
The study zooms into national monuments in eight western states: Arizona, Colorado, New Mexico, Idaho, Montana, Nevada, Utah, and Wyoming. The data covers economic changes in the surrounding 15 miles of a monument from 1990 to 2015, which includes the designation of 14 monuments such as Grand Staircase-Escalante and the Sonoran Desert in Arizona.
Per the study, business establishments do better, on average, after a monument becomes official. This is especially true in hotel and lodging services, with a 16 percent average jobs increase, and construction, with a 17 percent increase, the study found. Business services; health services; and finance, insurance, and real estate services also saw notable increases. Industries such as mining and forestry saw no change, which goes against much of the rhetoric local Republican lawmakers in Utah put forth in opposing Bears Ears. 
Private interest was ultimately behind opposition to these national protections, and these interests come from the mining and fossil fuels sectors. Emails the New York Times obtained show that the Trump administration was focused on protecting oil and gas exploration in its decision to shrink Bears Ears. Consequently, the lands are now open to those looking to extract gold, uranium, silver, and copper.
This is despite the fact that this national monument is home to priceless indigenous artifacts and prehistoric fossils. Native American tribes were at the forefront of the efforts to designate this land under former President Barack Obama. With Trump in the White House, all their efforts went out the window. Now, their cultural and sacred sites remain threatened by the fools who decide to drive through these canyons on their ATVs, as well as the fossil fuel and mining companies that want to strip the lands of their natural resources.
That’s what makes this new study so important: It shows that the reasoning behind removing these protections was unfounded. It refutes the lie that these national monuments hurt local economies. 
“I hope these findings somewhat lay to rest the concern that monuments are going to have a negative effect and let us focus instead on other issues,” study author Margaret Walls, a senior fellow at environmental nonprofit research group Resources for the Future, told Earther.
The jobs data comes from the National Establishment Time Series, a private database that offers data on every establishment that employs people in the U.S. Through this resource, the team of researchers were able to see physical addresses, an estimate of sales, employment data, and what industry the establishment falls under. These data points help set this study apart from earlier research looking at the economic impacts of national monument designation.
The team also compared the impacts to local economies to the changes happening in communities a little farther away. These other communities served as a control group of sorts. It helped the researchers get a sense of any larger influences that may be unrelated to the national monuments themselves. Even after controlling for this, their findings were clear: National monuments are not bad, man. They’re good, even. 
We already knew this, of course. The Grand Staircase-Escalante is home to bee species only recently discovered. These national monuments preserve wildlife habitat and key ecosystems that help pull carbon dioxide out of our atmosphere. The economic benefits are but one element to how necessary these protections are—especially when humans are seemingly destroying what little untouched bits of nature we have left.














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