Thursday, March 5, 2020

BREAKING: Congress allocates billions in emergency funds to fight coronavirus








Win Without War



We were relieved to see Congress pass a multibillion dollar emergency coronavirus funding package yesterday as part of the U.S. response to the deepening global health crisis. But the fact remains that U.S. security spending continually fails to address real human security challenges because we’re spending TRILLIONS of dollars funding a bloated and ineffective Pentagon.

Why does the United States still think we can simply bomb our problems away?

Challenging this question is at the crux of everything Win Without War does. And my colleagues are on the Hill nearly every single day, meeting with members of Congress to demand they fight for solutions for the true crises of our time: climate change, global inequality, and pandemics like the coronavirus.

These meetings are changing minds, creating leverage, and building critical momentum. But if we’re going to successfully derail Trump’s proposed $1.2 TRILLION Pentagon budget this year, we need you with us too.


Can you chip in $4 to fuel our fight to beat back Trump’s blank check "security" budget?



Right now, even in the midst of a global health crisis, the Trump administration is proposing CUTS to critically needed public health programs:


  • A 34% reduction to the State Department and USAID’s global health funding
  • 7% cut from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
  • 58% cut in the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria, and 
  • A 50% decrease in U.S. funding for the World Health Organization
In their place, Trump’s $1.2 trillion "security" budget includes an itemized laundry list of things the world simply doesn’t need: massive funding for wars without end, a nuclear weapons spending spree, and an expanded U.S. military presence across the globe.

We’ve spent years building up an out of control military force based on the assumption that our biggest existential threats would come guns blazing. They're not.

For REAL global security, we must fund agencies and programs that address climate change, create infrastructure for public health and economic security, and support demilitarized emergency preparedness in the face of natural disasters.

Trump’s budget fails on ALL counts. That’s why Win Without War is ramping up our work to stop it in its tracks.

We’ll keep our people-first, violence-last priorities straight. We’ll fight every request to fund “usable” nukes. We’ll expose the corruption and inefficiency hiding between the line items. We’ll make sure that Congress hears from YOU, not just the arms industry and defense contractors. But to do this urgent work, we need to ask for your help.


Can you chip in $4 to fuel our fight to beat back Trump’s Pentagon budget and fund priorities that will actually make us safer?


What we fund today shapes what happens tomorrow. We simply can’t be in the business of supporting piecemeal funding requests to address breaking situations when we can support permanent, comprehensive solutions that help us avoid crises in the first place.

With the federal budget appropriations process ahead of us, we have the opportunity to address the real crises of the 21st century.

Thank you for working for peace,
Shayna, Erica, Amy, and the Win Without War team






Donate Like on Facebook Follow on Twitter
© Win Without War Education Fund 2019
1 Thomas Circle NW, Suite 700, Washington, DC 20005
(202) 656-4999 | info@winwithoutwar.org














RSN: Normon Solomon | Elizabeth Warren: Which Side Are You On?






Reader Supported News
05 March 20



Funding is in fact critically lacking and the situation is now becoming quite serious.

Marc Ash
Founder, Reader Supported News









If you would prefer to send a check:
Reader Supported News
PO Box 2043
Citrus Hts
CA 95611




Reader Supported News
05 March 20

It's Live on the HomePage Now:
Reader Supported News





RSN: Normon Solomon | Elizabeth Warren: Which Side Are You On?
Sen. Elizabeth Warren. (photo: Getty)
Normon Solomon, Reader Supported News
Solomon writes: "Now, days later, with corporate Democrat Joe Biden enjoying sudden momentum and mega-billionaire Mike Bloomberg joining forces with him, an urgent question hovers over Warren. It’s a time-honored union inquiry: 'Which side are you on?'"

he night before Super Tuesday, Elizabeth Warren spoke to several thousand people in a quadrangle at East Los Angeles College. Much of her talk recounted the heroic actions of oppressed Latina workers who led the Justice for Janitors organization. Standing in the crowd, I was impressed with Warren’s eloquence as she praised solidarity and labor unions as essential for improving the lives of working people.
Now, days later, with corporate Democrat Joe Biden enjoying sudden momentum and mega-billionaire Mike Bloomberg joining forces with him, an urgent question hovers over Warren. It’s a time-honored union inquiry: “Which side are you on?
How Warren answers that question might determine the 2020 Democratic presidential nomination. In the process, she will profoundly etch into history the reality of her political character.
Facing the fact that her campaign reached a dead end, Warren basically has two choices: While Bernie Sanders and Biden go toe to toe, she can maintain neutrality and avoid the ire of the Democratic Party’s corporate establishment. Or she can form a united front with Sanders, taking a principled stand on behalf of progressive ideals.
For much of the past year, in many hundreds of speeches and interviews, Warren has denounced the huge leverage of big money in politics. And she has challenged some key aspects of corporate power. But now we’re going to find out more about how deep such commitments go for her.
“After Warren's bleak performance in the Super Tuesday primaries, her associates, as well as those of Sanders and former vice president Joe Biden, say she is now looking for the best way to step aside,” The Washington Post reported on Wednesday — and “there is no certainty she will endorse Sanders or anyone else.”
A laudable path now awaits Warren. After winning just a few dozen delegates, she should join forces with Sanders — who has won more than 500 delegates and is the only candidate in a position to defeat Biden for the nomination.
The urgency of Warren’s decision can hardly be overstated. Sanders and Biden are fiercely competing for votes in a half-dozen states with March 10 primaries including Michigan (with 125 delegates), Washington (89 delegates) and Missouri (68 delegates). A week later, primaries in four states — Arizona, Florida, Illinois and Ohio — will determine the allocation of 577 delegates.
In the midst of these pivotal election battles, Warren should provide a vehement endorsement of Sanders and swiftly begin to campaign for him. Choosing, instead, to stand on the sidelines would be a tragic betrayal of progressive principles.
“Here’s the thing,” Warren said in a speech to a convention of the California Democratic Party nine months ago. “When a candidate tells you about all the things that aren’t possible, about how political calculations come first … they’re telling you something very important — they are telling you that they will not fight for you.”
We’ll soon find out whether Elizabeth Warren will fight for us.


Norman Solomon is co-founder and national coordinator of RootsAction.org. He was a Bernie Sanders delegate from California to the 2016 Democratic National Convention. Solomon is the author of a dozen books including War Made Easy: How Presidents and Pundits Keep Spinning Us to Death.
Reader Supported News is the Publication of Origin for this work. Permission to republish is freely granted with credit and a link back to Reader Supported News.






Sen. Elizabeth Warren campaigns in Lebanon, New Hampshire, on February 9, 2020. (photo: Scott Olson)
Sen. Elizabeth Warren campaigns in Lebanon, New Hampshire, on February 9, 2020. (photo: Scott Olson)


Elizabeth Warren, Once a Front-Runner, Will Drop Out of Presidential Race
Astead W. Herndon and Shane Goldmacher, The New York Times
Excerpt: "Senator Elizabeth Warren of Massachusetts told her staff she was dropping out of the presidential race on Thursday, ending a run defined by an avalanche of policy plans that aimed to pull the Democratic Party to the left and appealed to enough voters to make her briefly a front-runner last fall."

EXCERPT:
Ms. Warren, a senator and former law professor, staked her campaign on fighting corruption and changing the rules of the economy.

”I know that when we set out, this was not the call you ever wanted to hear,” Ms. Warren said on the call. “It is not the call I ever wanted to make.”
Though her vision excited progressives, that did not translate to enough excitement from the party’s more working-class and diverse base, and her support had eroded by Super Tuesday. In her final weeks as a candidate she effectively drove former Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg of New York, a centrist billionaire, out of the race with debate performances that flashed her evident skills and political potential.
























WaPo Prints Study That Found Paper Backed an Undemocratic Bolivia Coup









FAIR

WaPo Prints Study That Found Paper Backed an Undemocratic Bolivia Coup


WaPo: Bolivia is in danger of slipping into anarchy. It’s Evo Morales’s fault.
The Washington Post editorial board (11/11/19) stated as fact that Bolivian President Evo Morales "moved to falsify the results of the October 20 vote so as to hand him a first-round victory."
President Evo Morales won re-election in Bolivia’s presidential election last October 20, as pre-election polls predicted. He received 47% of the vote in an election with 88% turnout. He beat his nearest rival by just over 10 percentage points, which meant a second round was not required.
But the day after the election, the Organization of American states (OAS), whom Morales had allowed to monitor the election, put out a press release claiming there had been a “drastic and hard-to-explain change in the trend of the preliminary results.” It was an obviously false claim (FAIR.org, 12/19/19).
Even though the Washington, DC-based Center for Economic and Policy Research (CEPR) immediately put out a statement (10/22/19) pointing out the basic flaw in the OAS’s analysis—it overlooks that precincts that report early can be different from ones that report late—the OAS continued to claim that the change in trend was evidence of fraud. CEPR persisted in exposing the OAS deception—for example, in a paper the think tank published on November 8 and an op-ed in MarketWatch (11/19/19) by CEPR co-founder Mark Weisbrot.  On December 12, at a permanent council meeting, the OAS—which gets 60% of its funding from the US government—refused to allow Jake Johnston to present CEPR’s preliminary response to the OAS’s final report on the election.
In the meantime, the OAS’s disparagement of the election ignited violent protests that (combined with the treasonous behavior of Bolivia’s military and police) forced Morales to flee Bolivia on November 10 to avoid being lynched. Bolivia’s security forces “suggested” Morales resign, allowing him to be run out of the country (with his house ransacked), but then sprung murderously into action to consolidate the coup. Within two weeks, 32 people were killed protesting against the dictatorship that took over after he fled. The dictatorship openly says it will arrest Morales if he returns to Bolivia.
WaPo: Bolivia dismissed its October elections as fraudulent. Our research found no reason to suspect fraud.
The Washington Post (2/27/20) published the findings of MIT researchers that indicated that the Bolivian government whose ouster the paper's editorial board had celebrated had actually been legitimately reelected.
Late last month, MIT Election Data and ScienceLab researchers John Curiel and Jack R. Williams published an analysis of the election results in the Washington Post (2/27/20). The study was commissioned by CEPR to show that its analysis could be independently verified. The MIT researchers concluded that there “is not any statistical evidence of fraud that we can find,” and that “the OAS’s statistical analysis and conclusions would appear deeply flawed.”
That’s a scholarly but overly polite way to put it. The OAS repeatedly made statistical claims about Bolivia’s election that were clearly false. In layperson terms, that’s called lying.
The OAS’s lies proved lethal to Bolivians and devastating to their democracy, but the OAS evaded all accountability because, when it mattered most, corporate media shielded it from scrutiny. Between the October election and December 26, Reuters published 128 articles about the political situation in Bolivia that all failed to mention the efforts to get the OAS to retract its bogus statistical claim. Instead, Reuters regurgitated that claim many times without a trace of skepticism (FAIR.org, 12/19/19).
Days after the election, the Washington Post editorial board (10/24/19) uncritically quoted the OAS expressing “worry and surprise about the drastic and hard-to-justify change in the tendency of the preliminary results.” The editorial added that “the [US] State Department issued a similar message,” as if that boosted OAS credibility. The day after Morales fled, the Post (11/11/19) followed up with another editorial headlined “Bolivia Is in Danger of Slipping Into Anarchy. It’s Evo Morales’s Fault.”
If the Post editorial board knew anything at all about the scathing criticism the OAS had received, it kept completely quiet about it. And it’s actually quite possible the editorial board members knew nothing, if they relied on their paper’s own reporting. The Post’s search engine turns up only ten articles since the October 20 election that contain the terms “Bolivia,” “Morales” and “OAS.” Only two of those mention any criticism of the OAS: One is a November 19 op-ed by Gabriel Hetland (11/19/19), the other is the piece the Post just published by the MIT researchers (2/27/20).
Guardian: The OAS has to answer for its role in the Bolivian coup
Economists and statisticians (Guardian, 12/2/19) called on the Organization of American States to retract its discredited study — but the US-funded institution stuck to its guns.
On December 2, the Guardian published a letter signed by 98 economists and statisticians asking the OAS to retract its false statistical claims. Such breaks with the silence over the CEPR’s efforts to hold the OAS accountable were all too rare. Even a Guardian oped by Hetland that opposed the coup (11/13/19) mentioned OAS claims about the election without saying anything about the criticism they had received from CEPR.
Just like the Post, the day after Morales fled Bolivia, the New York Times editorial board (11/11/19) described the coup as a risky but necessary step towards restoring democracy:
The forced ouster of an elected leader is by definition a setback to democracy, and so a moment of risk. But when a leader resorts to brazenly abusing the power and institutions put in his care by the electorate, as President Evo Morales did in Bolivia, it is he who sheds his legitimacy, and forcing him out often becomes the only remaining option. That is what the Bolivians have done, and what remains is to hope that Mr. Morales goes peacefully into exile in Mexico and to help Bolivia restore its wounded democracy.
Like the Post, the Times editorial board members were breezily ignorant (or unconcerned) about the OAS repeatedly lying about the election. The Times recently published a news article (2/28/20) about the MIT researchers who rejected the OAS lies. The article said that the researchers “waded into a fierce domestic and international debate over Mr. Morales’s legitimacy.” That “fierce” debate was essentially buried by the corporate media when it might have prevented a coup. Incidentally, now even Reuters (3/1/20) has prominently reported the MIT study.
Stung by its lies belatedly getting some high-profile criticism, the OAS responded angrily to the study. The researchers looked at only one of the allegations it made, the OAS complained, saying other “irregularities” validated its assessment of the election. Amazingly, the OAS also said it continues to “stand by” its bogus statistical analysis.
All elections have some “irregularities” and “vulnerabilities,” as any US voter should be well aware. That does not automatically justify throwing the results in the garbage. If it did, any election could be unjustly discredited by unscrupulous monitors. Moreover, CEPR did address other allegations, in the presentation the OAS refused to allow it to make (FAIR.org, 12/19/19).
At this point, the OAS report on Bolivia's election should be discarded, except for the purpose of a credible investigation into how such appalling work ever came to be done—and promulgated uncritically, and turned to such devastating effect. In a just world, jobs would be lost, and OAS General Secretary Luis Almagro would resign. But when you have election monitors beholden to the US government, and a corporate media willing to cover for them, it is only duly elected officials in poor countries that need fear those kinds of consequences—and much worse.











RSN: Marc Ash | Why Is Joe Biden Even Still in This Race?







Reader Supported News
05 March 20



Quickly moving in the direction of a funding disaster. Very disheartening. Surely of the eleven thousand readers we have already served today someone could have contributed.

We need your help.

Marc Ash
Founder, Reader Supported News








If you would prefer to send a check:
Reader Supported News
PO Box 2043
Citrus Hts
CA 95611





Reader Supported News
05 March 20

It's Live on the HomePage Now:
Reader Supported News




RSN: Marc Ash | Why Is Joe Biden Even Still in This Race?
The recently retired (forced out) MSNBC anchor and ardent Joe Biden Supporter Chris Matthews. (photo: Illustration by Elizabeth Brockway/The Daily Beast/Getty)
Marc Ash, Reader Supported News
Ash writes: "The ultimate political retread, a guy on his third run for the Democratic nomination after the first two failed decades ago, who would be considered a racist if the obvious were not banned from the discourse, is leading the race for the Democratic presidential nomination on the backs of African American voters, mostly in former slave-states twenty years into the twenty-first century. How can this be?"

Propaganda, propaganda, and more propaganda.
Fear the cable networks, for they enslave you. How did the Democrats get their good old boy, game manager Joe Biden back in the game? With a massive onslaught of unreported campaign donations in the form of campaign promotion on cable news.
Try not to lose sight of the fact that Biden is almost entirely bereft of new ideas or solutions. What he is selling is being kinder, gentler, and better than Donald Trump. That bar is so low you have to dig a tunnel to get under it.
What the DNC and the cable networks are selling is a “Unity” effort to oust Trump. Yeah, fine. One thing they want is Trump out, but you can be sure they want to consolidate Democratic power in the process.
While Bernie Sanders has proven far more adept at stirring crowds, building a movement, and generating donations, Biden is still sold like snake oil around the clock by the cable networks as more electable. It is as false a narrative as anything promulgated by Trump and his minions.
To this day if you ask a Biden supporter why they back him, they still recite the exact same logic promulgated on cable news, word for word. There’s not a thread of policy substance there, nor do Biden’s DNC masters want there to be. Biden will in effect be a DNC puppet. The priority will be protecting the Democratic Party’s very lucrative relationship with the very same deep-pocketed donors Sanders wants to “take on.”
Biden will be a dutiful errand boy for the 1% and if the voters in November figure that out we’ll have four more years of Donald Trump … at a minimum. To defeat Trump you need a broad, enthusiastic movement. We have that with Bernie Sanders. The cable news outlets, at the behest of powerful monied interests, are breaking all the rules and spending unlimited cash to defeat it.
Contrary to popular misconception, lemmings do not leap from cliffs to achieve false narratives, but people do. Stop. Turn around. Get back to work.

Marc Ash is the founder and former Executive Director of Truthout, and is now founder and Editor of Reader Supported News.
Reader Supported News is the Publication of Origin for this work. Permission to republish is freely granted with credit and a link back to Reader Supported News.





Sen. Bernie Sanders and Sen. Elizabeth Warren. (photo: Getty)
Sen. Bernie Sanders and Sen. Elizabeth Warren. (photo: Getty)




Sanders Speaks With Warren Following Super Tuesday, Sets Sights on Biden
Isaac Fornarola, Burlington Free Press
Fornarola writes: "Sen. Bernie Sanders on Wednesday said he spoke with Sen. Elizabeth Warren, who told him she is assessing the future of her presidential campaign after failing to win a single primary contest, including in her home state, Massachusetts."
READ MORE


Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez. (photo: Mandel Ngan/Getty)
Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez. (photo: Mandel Ngan/Getty)


AOC Says That Ensuring Access to Free Coronavirus Testing and Treatment Is an 'Argument for Medicare for All'
Joseph Zeballos-Roig, Business Insider
Zeballos-Roig writes: "Democratic Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez said in an interview published Tuesday that ensuring free coronavirus testing and medical treatment is 'absolutely' an 'argument for Medicare for All.'"
READ MORE


Houston voters wait in line to cast ballots in the Texas primary March 3. (photo: Mark Felix/Getty)
Houston voters wait in line to cast ballots in the Texas primary March 3. (photo: Mark Felix/Getty)


Waiting Six Hours to Vote in Texas Is a Bad Omen for November
Eric Lutz, Vanity Fair
Lutz writes: "While political pundits tracked the horse race between Biden and Bernie Sanders, voters in Texas endured punishingly long wait times at the polls, some still waiting to cast their ballots hours after the polls were supposed to close."
READ MORE



The Sister and father of Nathaniel Woods ask for a stay of execution for Nathaniel outside the Alabama State Capitol building. (photo: Mickey Welsh/Advertiser)
The Sister and father of Nathaniel Woods ask for a stay of execution for Nathaniel outside the Alabama State Capitol building. (photo: Mickey Welsh/Advertiser)


MLK's Son Joins Calls to Halt Alabama Execution of "100% Innocent" Inmate
Kirsten Fiscus and Melissa Brown, Montgomery Advertiser
Excerpt: "The time Nathaniel Woods has left to live is quickly diminishing."
READ MORE


Jair Bolsonaro has often attacked LBGT people, indigenous people, and journalists. (photo: Adriano Machado/Reuters)
Jair Bolsonaro has often attacked LBGT people, indigenous people, and journalists. (photo: Adriano Machado/Reuters)


Brazilians Call for Boycotts of Major Companies That Support Bolsonaro
Dom Phillips, Guardian UK
Phillips writes: "Brazilians appalled by Jair Bolsonaro's bigotry and authoritarianism are calling for boycotts of major companies whose founders or owners support the far-right president."
READ MORE



A bald eagle is seen on March 15 in Ponte Vedra Beach, Florida. The Endangered Species Act is credited with saving the bald eagle, among many other species, from extinction. (photo: Sam Greenwood/Getty)
A bald eagle is seen on March 15 in Ponte Vedra Beach, Florida. The Endangered Species Act is credited with saving the bald eagle, among many other species, from extinction. (photo: Sam Greenwood/Getty)


Trump Admin Failed to Protect 241 Species From Extinction
Jordan Davidson, EcoWatch
Davidson writes: "The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service and the Department of the Interior have failed to protect 241 plant and animal species under the Endangered Species Act, according to a federal lawsuit filed last week by the Center for Biological Diversity, as Bloomberg Environment reported."

he U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service and the Department of the Interior have failed to protect 241 plant and animal species under the Endangered Species Act, according to a federal lawsuit filed last week by the Center for Biological Diversity, as Bloomberg Environment reported.
Four years ago, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Services created a framework to address the backlog of more than 500 species that were slated to receive protections, including the 241 species listed in the lawsuit. In the filing, the Center for Biological Diversity claims that the Trump Administration prevented the Fish and Wildlife Service from working its way through the list, as Newsweek reported.
One of the most pernicious things that can happen for species that need direct protection or habitat protection is for the federal government to do nothing. By systematically doing nothing, the administration has allowed 241 species to reach the brink of extinction, according to Mother Jones. Most of the species listed in the lawsuit have been awaiting protections for a decade or longer.
Among the species listed in the suit are spotted turtles in the Great Lakes and on the Eastern seaboard, moose in the Midwest, a western bumblebee that has declined by 84 percent, and a tiny freshwater fish in Chesapeake Bay that flips stones with its nose to find food, according to a statement from the Center for Biological Diversity. The Center also created an interactive map of the U.S. that details which species are living in each state.
"As moose and golden-winged warblers and hundreds of other species fight the rising tide of the extinction crisis, Trump officials won't lift a finger to help," Noah Greenwald, the Center for Biological Diversity's endangered species director said. "This administration's ugly contempt for wildlife and the Endangered Species Act threatens our country's entire web of life. Every day of delay brings these incredible, irreplaceable plants and animals one step closer to extinction."
The Center for Biological Diversity ran the numbers and calculated that the Trump administration has only approved 21 species to be listed on the Endangered Species list, which averages less than seven per year, as Mother Jones reported. That number is the lowest of any administration this far into its presidential term, slightly outpacing the Bush administration, which added protections for about eight species per year. By contrast, the Obama administration added about 45 species per year and the Clinton administration approved 65 species per year.
"The extinction crisis gets worse by the day, but Trump officials are twiddling their thumbs as plants and animals fade away," Greenwald said in a statement. "It's a moral failure of epic proportions. And it's hurting future generations in ways that can never be undone."
Greenwald identified several sources of the backlog to Mother Jones. He said, "There are these various political appointees in different positions [there] who have a very long record of opposition to the protection of endangered species, and I think they just end up hanging up decisions by asking questions: 'Well, are we sure about the range of the species?'; 'Are we sure this threat is really impacting them?'"
The lawsuit simply asks that the courts require the Fish and Wildlife Service to end the backlog for 231 species, finalize a determination for six in limbo, and finalize critical habitat protections for four other species.


















The GOP just tried to kick hundreds of students off the voter rolls

    This year, MAGA GOP activists in Georgia attempted to disenfranchise hundreds of students by trying to kick them off the voter rolls. De...