Monday, February 27, 2023

FOCUS | Putin's Latest: Hostage Videos Featuring Kidnapped Children

 

 

Reader Supported News
27 February 23

Live on the homepage now!
Reader Supported News

KEEPING RSN DESPERATE — “Why are you always desperate?” a reader asks. Good question. The answer of course is that people don’t donate until we are desperate, which ensures a perpetual state of desperation. Which make sense in a weird unnecessary and unproductive way. We have the readers. We need a few donations. Desperately yours.
Marc Ash • Founder, Reader Supported News

Sure, I'll make a donation!

 

Russian President Vladimir Putin attends a wreath-laying ceremony at the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier, near the Kremlin Wall during the national celebrations of the 'Defender of the Fatherland Day' in Moscow on Feb. 23, 2023. (photo: Pavel Bednyakov/Sputnik/Kremlin/AP)
FOCUS | Putin's Latest: Hostage Videos Featuring Kidnapped Children
Andrew Roth, Guardian UK
Roth writes: "At the climax of the pageantry in Moscow to mark the first anniversary of the start of Vladimir Putin’s full-scale war in Ukraine, the Kremlin wheeled out children from Mariupol in occupied south-east Ukraine to 'thank' their invaders."  


Survivors’ disgust as children thank ‘rescuers’ in a lavish Moscow celebration


At the climax of the pageantry in Moscow to mark the first anniversary of the start of Vladimir Putin’s full-scale war in Ukraine, the Kremlin wheeled out children from Mariupol in occupied south-east Ukraine to “thank” their invaders.

The star of this orgy of Russian patriotism was Anna Naumenko, a 15-year-old with black hair, who was pushed on to the stage of Moscow’s Luzhniki stadium to thank a soldier nicknamed “Yuri Gagarin” for rescuing her: “Thank you Uncle Yura for saving me, my sister and hundreds of thousands of children in Mariupol.” Anna’s sister, Karolina, covered her ears against the noise of the crowd as she stood nearby.

As the Ukrainian children crowded round to hug the soldier, their former neighbours from Mariupol felt shock and disgust. These were children they had huddled with in basements less than a year earlier, sheltering from Russian bombs and suffering from hunger and cold as Moscow launched a bloody onslaught that destroyed the city. “The abomination is that these are not actors,” wrote one. “They are really children from Mariupol.”

Pointing out another child, he added: “That teenager in a black hat and grey jacket hugging the occupier is Kostya, my neighbour. We lived in the same building, and spent the first month of the war in the same shelter.”

The former resident gave the Observer social media information and other details about the family with whom he had shared a shelter underneath a building in Mariupol’s Left Bank district before being evacuated on 20 March. He described walking over dead bodies with Kostya’s father when they went to a bread factory to search for food and get water from a pump.

“I assume that they were invited to Moscow for this show. Perhaps for a monetary reward or motivated otherwise,” he said. “I can’t call Kostya’s parents pro-Russian because before the full-scale war, they never expressed a concrete opinion.”

The man’s comments were corroborated by another former Mariupol resident, Daria Shrycheva, who had sheltered in the same basement at the administration building, sharing a room with 40 people.

She has described similar scenes of bodies in the street near the bread factory – blood turning to jelly in the cold – and also told of dwindling food and water supplies, and eight of their neighbours being killed or wounded when bombs landed across the street.

At one point, food was so scarce that she and three other people shared a single chocolate bar, the only food they had had in days. They also fled Mariupol in late March.

“Kostya’s mom and dad were good people,” said Shrycheva, who remembered that Kristina, the mother, worked in a store in their neighbourhood. “We shared food with them, so did they. Kostya is a very kind and good boy.”

“My husband was running with Kostya’s dad to get water and food for us under fire,” she told the Observer. “Igor helped extinguish the fire when our building was set on fire by the Russians. I know their apartment is gone, their whole house burned down and has already been demolished.”

Like others, she was surprised at the boy’s appearance at the pro-Russian concert. “I don’t know why Kostya’s family has changed their attitude towards Russians. I think they’re ‘adapters’ … These are people who don’t care what flag to live under. They are looking for benefits for themselves from either side. Maybe then it was convenient for them to support Ukraine, and now it is convenient for them to support Russia.” Kostya’s mother, Kristina, now works in the “administration” of occupied Mariupol, she added.

Social media profiles for Kostya’s family show they still live in Mariupol. His father, Igor, and mother, Kristina, did not reply to a request for comment. But their stories, and others, have now also been confirmed by Russian and Ukrainian media, with bleak stories of what the children brought to the media circus in Moscow had been through.

Polina Tsvetkova, a Russian state TV presenter who helped organise the event, wrote: “After the broadcast, I met with the children who were saved in Mariupol by volunteer Yuri Gagarin. More than 300 children! They call him an angel, and the team and I also tried to be angels for the kids and organise a joyful time in Moscow! We will show the story about our children on Channel One next week.”

Anna was also confirmed to be from Mariupol by Informator, a Ukrainian news website. “Her mother, blogger Olga Naumenko, is known in the city,” the site wrote. According to the website, Olga was killed in the war. iStories, a Russian news website, later confirmed that the Naumenko family had sheltered in the House of Culture and then the Left Bank administration building, as had Kostya’s family.

In April, Olga was killed by shrapnel from an explosion when she “ran out for cigarettes”, an eyewitness said. She was buried in the grounds of a hospital. A social media post at the time said she had left behind three children: “Anya, Karolina and Danya.” While Anna thanked “Yuri Gagarin” for saving her and her sister, she made no mention of her brother.

Last week’s events were full of pomp, but thin on substance. Putin’s “state of the nation” speech on Tuesday had been hailed by state TV as the “most important political moment of the year”. Billboards in Moscow said, in white text on a black background, that there would be “no going back”, recalling Putin’s 2016 statement that “the borders of Russia end nowhere”.

In the event, it was standard fare: grievances against the west, modest promises of social aid, and assurances that Russia was fighting for national survival and would ultimately win.

Putin made news by suspending compliance with New Start, Russia’s last remaining nuclear arms treaty with the US. But what his speech did not include was any concrete idea as to how Russia would win in Ukraine or prevail in its new conflict with the west.

“This is revanchist rhetoric and it is losing,” wrote Maxim Trudolyubov, a prominent Russian journalist and columnist. “This is extremely far from a sermon – this kind of speech does not make the flock sigh, be touched and see the light ahead.”

There were quiet moments of reflection , as a trickle of Russians gathered at the statue of Ukrainian writer Lesya Ukrainka, which has become an informal memorial for opponents of the war. “It is endless pain. It’s a feeling life will never be the same again,” said one young woman filmed there sobbing. “The world has crumbled. All my family are Ukrainians but we live in Russia. If [my grandfather] were alive, he’d probably call himself Russian. But I can’t call myself Russian. I don’t have a home any more.”

But the state’s resources are far larger. It is estimated that 200,000 people were bussed, cajoled or lured to the stadium where, a little over four years ago, Russia hosted the World Cup final. Now, it was decked out in Russian tricolours, army flags and large Zs, the informal symbol of Russia’s war against Ukraine.

These are the images of Russia that Putin imagines to be true: loyal, patriotic, ecstatic at war, slavish. Observers have said it is similar to how he imagined Ukraine.

“Putin has convinced himself that Ukrainian society is the same kind of theatre that he, using murder and threats, has made out of Russian society,” Trudolyubov wrote when the war began. “His television and press have for many years had only one client and one viewer – he himself. He has poisoned himself with his own lie.”

For those watching from Ukraine, the spectacle is unbearable. “I feel sick,” wrote Kostya’s former neighbour. “I am burning from the inside.”


READ MORE

 

Contribute to RSN

Follow us on facebook and twitter!

Update My Monthly Donation

PO Box 2043 / Citrus Heights, CA 95611





POLITICO Massachusetts Playbook:

 

View in browser
 
Massachusetts Playbook logo

BY LISA KASHINSKY

Presented by Save Our Benefits Massachusetts

BIG DREAMS MEET BUDGET REALITIES —  I hope you’re well-rested from school vacation week, because we’re diving straight into budget season.

Gov. Maura Healey will unveil her much-anticipated tax-relief package today, a person familiar with her plans told Playbook. Look for more details later this morning when Healey and Lt. Gov. Kim Driscoll make their “major affordability announcement” at 9:30 a.m. at the Demakes Family YMCA in Lynn. And look for legislative leaders' reactions after they sit down with the top executives this afternoon at the State House.

Healey is widely expected to follow through on her campaign-trail pledge  to provide families with a $600 tax credit for certain dependents , including children and people with disabilities.

The Democrat is also expected to revive parts of former Gov. Charlie Baker’s tax-relief plan. Healey has long backed the Republican's calls to raise the estate-tax threshold, the senior circuit breaker tax credit and the rent deduction cap — all of which had legislative support last year before record revenues triggered tax givebacks that derailed negotiations between chambers.

She also  hasn’t ruled out   something that didn’t have the support of top Democratic lawmakers: slashing the short-term capital gains rate to 5 percent from 12 percent. Neither chamber included that part of Baker’s proposal in the tax-relief plans they put forward last session.

Healey will file her tax-code changes alongside her first budget. The spending plan, expected Wednesday, will show how — and how much — the new governor intends to pay for some of her biggest priorities while also preparing for slowing revenues.

Beyond putting more details behind her promises to hire 1,000 MBTA workers, discount community college for some students and boost funding for environmental and energy agencies, Healey's budget will also likely give lawmakers a guide for allocating money from the millionaires tax. We'll see whether they follow her advice when the House and Senate write their own proposals.

GOOD MONDAY MORNING, MASSACHUSETTS Tips? Scoops? Budget predictions? Email me: lkashinsky@politico.com .

TODAY — Healey and Driscoll host the first meeting of the Governor’s Advisory Council on Black Empowerment at 11:30 a.m. at the State House and attend a meeting with legislative leaders at 2 p.m. Driscoll speaks at the Winter Reunion of the Civic Action Project at 5 p.m. at the State House. Healey is on WBZ Newsradio’s “Nightside with Dan Rea” at 8 p.m. Boston Mayor Michelle Wu is on WBUR’s “Radio Boston” at 11 a.m.

 

A message from Save Our Benefits Massachusetts:

In a time when there is so much that is driving up the price of health care - Pharmacy Benefit Managers (PBMs) create competition to bring prescription drug costs down. 
Find out how PBMs are advocating to lower drug costs on behalf of employers and unions.

 
DATELINE BEACON HILL

— “Healey to create advisory council on Black empowerment, taps over 30 Black leaders,” by Alison Kuznitz, MassLive: “Healey will issue an executive order to officially launch the initiative Monday, when the council holds its first meeting. Members will include more than 30 Black leaders, representing state government, religious groups, advocacy organizations and labor unions, among other interests. Members will delve into topics like education, health care, housing and workforce development. Tanisha Sullivan, president of the NAACP Boston, will serve as the council’s co-chair, alongside Anthony Richards II, vice president of equitable business development at the Massachusetts Housing Finance Agency.”

— “A renewed push to legalize ‘medical aid in dying’,” by Jennifer Smith, CommonWealth Magazine: “Legislators and medical choice advocates are taking another run at passing a medical aid in dying bill after the Supreme Judicial Court last year placed the responsibility squarely on lawmakers to consider the emotionally fraught subject. … ‘Gov. Healey supports legislative action to allow medical aid in dying, provided it includes sufficient safeguards for both patients and providers,’ said spokesperson Karissa Hand. ‘She will review any legislation that reaches her desk.’”

— “Better sex ed, stronger abortion rights are priorities for Planned Parenthood in Mass.,” by Alison Kuznitz, MassLive: “PPLM has urged state lawmakers to support bills — filed by Reps. Marjorie Decker and Susannah Whipps and Sen. Adam Gomez — to permanently extend telehealth visits that are covered by insurance. … A bill filed by Rep. Sally Kerans and Sen. Becca Rausch to further expand abortion access, such as removing barriers that could delay the procedure or impose unnecessary regulations on health care facilities, has the backing of PPLM, as well. The legislation would remove parental consent or judicial bypass requirements for pregnant people under age 16.”

— "Several thorny political corruption cases await new Attorney General Andrea Campbell," by Samantha J. Gross, Boston Globe: "The newly elected attorney general, Andrea Campbell, inherited several high-profile political cases, including allegations of illegal campaign finance activity by a sitting Republican state senator and the former head of the Mass GOP and pending criminal charges against a former Republican state senator and congressional candidate. ... [Campbell will] have to decide on a referral from campaign finance regulators to investigate possible violations by Republican state Senator Ryan Fattman and Jim Lyons, the recently ousted head of the Massachusetts Republican Party. Her office said she hasn’t made a decision yet."

FROM THE HUB

— “Boston City Council President Ed Flynn on crime: ‘We desperately need more police in our city,’" by Jon Keller, WBZ: “'What I know is we desperately need more police in our city. And I'm advocating for hiring at least two-to-three hundred police officers every year consistently for the next 10 years.' [Flynn said].”

— “BPS bus failures violated rights of special education students, state finds,” by Mandy McLaren, Boston Globe: “From late arriving buses to missing pickups, the constant breakdowns in the Boston Public Schools transportation service for students with disabilities amounts to a violation of their right to special education services, the Massachusetts Department of Education said Friday.”

— “Cybercriminals steal $6.4 million from Pipefitters Local 537 in Dorchester: ‘Very unfortunate news’,” by Rick Sobey, Boston Herald: “Pipefitters Local 537 has fallen victim to a cyberattack, as thieves recently stole more than $6 million from the Dorchester union’s health fund. The feds are investigating the cybercrime, and law enforcement is ‘optimistic’ that they’ll be able to return the vast majority of the $6.4 million in stolen funds, according to Daniel O’Brien, business manager/financial secretary-treasurer of Pipefitters Local 537.”

 

JOIN POLITICO ON 3/1 TO DISCUSS AMERICAN PRIVACY LAWS: Americans have fewer privacy rights than Europeans, and companies continue to face a minefield of competing state and foreign legislation. There is strong bipartisan support for a federal privacy bill, but it has yet to materialize. Join POLITICO on 3/1 to discuss what it will take to get a federal privacy law on the books, potential designs for how this type of legislation could protect consumers and innovators, and more. REGISTER HERE .

 
 
PLANES, TRAINS AND AUTOMOBILES

— “MBTA continues transparency efforts under Gonneville,” by Bruce Mohl, CommonWealth Magazine: “On Friday, the MBTA spelled out clearly for the first time the progress it has made in boosting staffing levels at the operations control center, even though its new staffing target shows just how bad employee levels there were before the Federal Transit Administration ordered changes.”

— ON TRACK: Speaking of transparency, the MBTA has a new online tracker for the public to keep tabs on its progress meeting the feds' safety directives.

— “Feds probing Pennsylvania contract with MBTA’s Chinese contractor,” by Gayla Cawley, Boston Herald: “The inspector general’s office of DOT announced Friday that it was launching an audit of Chinese-state-owned CRRC MA’s $138 million contract with the Southeastern Pennsylvania Transportation Authority, for 45 new passenger rail cars. USDOT launched the probe based on concerns raised by three then-ranking members of the House Transportation and Infrastructure Committee last year, who, citing a Philadelphia Inquirer article, stated that the rail cars appeared to be built almost completely in China before being shipped to Springfield for final assembly.”

 

A message from Save Our Benefits Massachusetts:

 
FROM THE DELEGATION

— “Ed Markey helped make Elon Musk. Now, Markey is working to slow him down,” by Tal Kopan, Boston Globe: “[T]heir history goes far beyond trading dunks on Twitter, the platform Markey has adopted as his signature communication method. For while he mocks the senator now, Musk has benefited from Markey’s environmental foresight — policies that Markey got through Congress helped boost the electric vehicle market, build Musk’s wealth, and make him a household name.”

— “Cape Cod bridge grants will be right next time, Keating says, still plenty of time,” by Matthew Medsger, Boston Herald: “Money to replace the Cape’s two only connecting bridges will be available to get the job done when the state and the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers get their acts together on a winning application to fund the critical project, Congressman Bill Keating said Sunday [on WCVB’s ‘On the Record’ ]. … Keating said the denials of previous grant requests were the result of missing commitments on the part of the Army Corps and the state, which apparently won’t be absent from following applications.”

— “Days before the Supreme Court takes on Biden's student-loan forgiveness, Elizabeth Warren urges it to 'do its job and apply the law as it is written',” by Ayelet Sheffey, Insider.

— IN MEMORIAM: “John Olver, longtime US representative in Western Massachusetts, dies at 86,” by Bryan Marquard, Boston Globe.

— MORE: “Former U.S. Rep. John Olver, who represented Western Massachusetts, is remembered as 'a humble public servant',” by Greta Jochem and Amanda Burke, Berkshire Eagle.

DATELINE D.C.

— "John Kerry plans to stay in special climate envoy role at least through late this year," by Jess Bidgood, Boston Globe: "John Kerry, the nation’s top international climate envoy, has told President Biden he will stay in his role at least through this year’s United Nations climate summit in Dubai, which begins in late November. The decision by the elder statesman of American climate politics to stay stands in contrast to that of other high-profile administration officials decamping for the private sector, and might surprise close associates who expected him to depart his post well before now."

 

DOWNLOAD THE POLITICO MOBILE APP: Stay up to speed with the newly updated POLITICO mobile app, featuring timely political news, insights and analysis from the best journalists in the business. The sleek and navigable design offers a convenient way to access POLITICO's scoops and groundbreaking reporting. Don’t miss out on the app you can rely on for the news you need, reimagined. DOWNLOAD FOR iOS – DOWNLOAD FOR ANDROID .

 
 
MARIJUANA IN MASSACHUSETTS

— “Legal clinic in Somerville offers free aid to help people clear their records of marijuana crimes,” by Laura Crimaldi, Boston Globe: “The program, called Changing Legacies, offered free legal assistance to people who hope the easing of marijuana laws have made them eligible to expunge state marijuana offenses from their criminal records or seal them from public view in most cases.”

FROM THE 413

— “Shelter, food, art funded through Northampton’s $4M ARPA grant,” by Alexander MacDougall, Daily Hampshire Gazette: “Ventilation systems, pickleball courts and manhole covers honoring the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles are just some of the projects awarded grants by the city of Northampton, using $4 million the city received in [ARPA] funds during the COVID-19 pandemic.”

THE LOCAL ANGLE

— “A year since the war started, Ukrainians in Massachusetts now wait to see how long they can stay,” by Sarah Betancourt, GBH News: “Under the federal rule that existed the day they entered the country, [Larysa] Atamas, her husband and son were granted humanitarian parole when they turned themselves in at the border. That means they can legally remain in the U.S. for a year, minus two days. That clock runs out on April 16.”

— “Sheriff's department drops hiring age to 19 due to 'critical shortage',” by Jill Harmacinski, Eagle-Tribune: “Starting Monday, the Essex County Sheriff’s Department is lowering its minimum age for correctional officers from 21 years old to 19 years old to help address a critical shortage of officers. … [Essex County Sheriff Kevin] Coppinger said he’s spoken to peers in Massachusetts who are also having hiring difficulties. The trend is also mirrored nationally, fueled by 'anti-law enforcement feelings' across the country, he said.”

 

A message from Save Our Benefits Massachusetts:

For nearly 50 years, federal law and legal precedent has prevented state legislators from preempting federal laws governing self-funded ERISA plans. Health plans are offered by employers, labor-management trusts as well as local, state and federal governments. With roughly 60 percent or more of the health plans offered by ERISA protected entities, these protected plans could expect consistency across state lines and a fair regulatory climate.

Now, lobbyists for Big Pharma and independent pharmacists are looking to increase their profits by ignoring federal law and undermining the cost-savings in self-funded plans. Save Our Benefits Massachusetts is ready to help you fight back against rising costs. Please, Join our coalition today and help us keep health benefits affordable and accessible for employers, employees and unions.

 
HEARD ‘ROUND THE BUBBLAH

TRANSITIONS — Laura Dove is joining the Institute of Politics at Harvard Kennedy School as senior director of administration. She previously was Senate Republican secretary.

HAPPY BIRTHDAY — to former state Sen. Eric Lesser, Susan Zalkind, Alan Harvey Guth and Ayub Tahlil , press assistant for Gov. Maura Healey. Happy belated to Li Zhou , who celebrated Sunday.

Want to make an impact? POLITICO Massachusetts has a variety of solutions available for partners looking to reach and activate the most influential people in the Bay State. Have a petition you want signed? A cause you’re promoting? Seeking to increase brand awareness among this key audience? Share your message with our influential readers to foster engagement and drive action. Contact Jesse Shapiro to find out how: jshapiro@politico.com .

 

Follow us on Twitter

Lisa Kashinsky @lisakashinsky

 

Subscribe to the POLITICO Playbook family

Playbook  |  Playbook PM  |  California Playbook  |  Florida Playbook  |  Illinois Playbook  |  Massachusetts Playbook  |  New Jersey Playbook  |  New York Playbook  |  Ottawa Playbook  |  Brussels Playbook  |  London Playbook

View all our politics and policy newsletters

FOLLOW US

Follow us on FacebookFollow us on TwitterFollow us on InstagramListen on Apple Podcast
 

 POLITICO, LLC 1000 Wilson Blvd. Arlington, VA, 22209, USA




Fox muzzles its own anchors over shameful lawsuit




atAdvocacy

OD Action is now atAdvocacy!


Today’s Action: Pass the George Floyd Policing Act


OD Action is now atAdvocacy!


Today’s Action: Pass the George Floyd Policing Act

Daily Dose of Democracy:


Fox News, self-proclaimed champion of free speech, muzzling anchors from discussing Fox-Dominion lawsuit on air

Fox News, self-proclaimed champion of free speech, muzzling anchors from discussing Fox-Dominion lawsuit on air

The right-wing propaganda network has effectively muzzled its entire stable of anchors — many of whom have railed against censorship in the media for years — from even mentioning the multi-billion dollar defamation lawsuit filed by Dominion Voting Systems. Text messages from the likes of Tucker Carlson, Sean Hannity, Laura Ingraham, and others at the network prove they knew Trump's claims of widespread voter fraud and election theft were total bullshit, but they happily carried his filthy water all the same. Now facing the threat of billions of dollars in damages, the network is forcing its anchors to simply ignore the case altogether.

Take Action: Demand Fox News suspend Tucker Carlson for calling for violence against teachers and LBGTQ+ people!







VIDEO OF THE DAY: Fox News host calls Trump out live on air over train derailment disaster

Fox & Friends host Steve Doocy donned a journalist-in-training cap and accurately reported on Trump's years-long deregulatory rampage that made train derailments like the one in East Palestine, Ohio, earlier this month far more likely to occur. The disgraced ex-president and his fellow Republicans have incessantly championed deregulation as some sort of win for the American people, but the Norfolk Southern disaster serves as a stark reminder that removing regulatory guardrails is nothing more than a cost-cutting, corporate cash-grab for the ultra-elite to the detriment of literally everyone else.


photo
Republicans caught pulling DISGUSTING stunt over train derailment

No Lie with Brian Tyler Cohen Unbelievable. Brian Tyler Cohen's videos are now in Spanish! If you have friends or family who speak Spanish and want to keep up with politics, please send them this link to subscribe to my channel. And if you want to help support the Spanish effort, you can also watch and subscribe just to get things moving in the algorithm. Every bit helps!



THEORY!

Energy Department joins FBI in supporting COVID-19 lab leak theory

The US Department of Energy now believes that the COVID-19 pandemic most likely originated from a laboratory leak, according to an updated classified "low confidence" intelligence report that allegedly lays bare the spectrum of conclusions made by eight different parts of the intelligence community tasked with investigating the virus’ origin. The Energy Department’s finding aligns with that of the FBI, which claimed in 2021 with “moderate confidence” that the virus likely started due to a lab leak in Wuhan, China. Two agencies, including the CIA, are still undecided in their conclusions. Most scientists still believe COVID-19 had a natural, zoonotic origin. 


When you're stupid, you do stupid things...like firing EPIDEMIOLOGISTS.

https://www.dailykos.com/stories/2021/6/6/2033874/-Republicans-forget-that-Trump-fired-embedded-CDC-observer-in-China-months-before-the-outbreak

https://www.reuters.com/article/us-health-coronavirus-china-cdc-exclusiv-idUSKBN21910S

https://khn.org/morning-breakout/trump-administration-eliminated-cdc-position-intended-to-detect-disease-outbreaks-in-china-several-months-ago/

https://www.vox.com/policy-and-politics/2020/3/23/21190713/coronavirus-trump-china-cdc-embed-quick

https://medium.com/alarmed-independents/why-were-us-epidemiologists-not-allowed-to-study-covid-in-china-1af6913f356b

https://www.businessinsider.com/us-cdc-cut-health-expert-job-china-months-before-coronavirus-2020-3?op=1

https://www.dailykos.com/stories/2021/6/6/2033874/-Republicans-forget-that-Trump-fired-embedded-CDC-observer-in-China-months-before-the-outbreak


Take Action: Tell Congress to ban partisan gerrymandering!


Justice Thomas wrote of "crushing weight" of student loans
The Supreme Court won’t have far to look if it wants a personal take on the “crushing weight” of student debt that underlies the Biden administration’s college loan forgiveness plan. In his 2007 memoir, "My Grandfather's Son," Clarence Thomas wrote about his own experience drowning in student loan debt, the balance of which he didn't pay off until his mid-40s as a sitting justice on the nation's highest court. Will Thomas muster even the faintest trace of empathy when the Supreme Court takes up Biden's student loan forgiveness plan this week? We aren't holding our breath.

Take Action: Tell the Senate to confirm Biden's judges ASAP!


photo
Rampaging Israeli settlers burn Palestinian homes, cars in Nablus following Israeli government agreement to pause authorization of illegal settlement expansions for 6 months

Israeli rioters carried out more than a dozen arson attacks on Palestinian houses in Nablus hours after Israeli and Palestinian officials pledged to implement measures to de-escalate tensions amid a surge in violence in the occupied West Bank. Prior to the attacks, the Palestinians and Israelis released a joint statement reaffirming "the need to commit to de-escalation on the ground and to prevent further violence."

Take Action: Tell Congress to reform Supreme Court ethics!


Elon Musk defends Dilbert dickhead, calls US media and schools "racist against whites & Asians"
The billionaire tech bozo aired his very-well-thought-out grievances on Twitter, telling his 130 million followers that “the media” and “elite colleges and high schools” are “racist” against white and Asian people, without evidence. Musk made his latest mind-numbingly stupid observation in response to newspapers across the country severing ties with cartoonist and sentient marshmallow Scott Adams and his chronically unfunny comic strip, "Dilbert," following Adam' abhorrent, racist tirade over the weekend where he advised white people to "get the hell away from Black people." Good talk, Elon!


photo
BREAKING: Progressive Janet Protasiewicz wins primary with chance to flip Wisconsin’s Supreme Court from MAGA extremists

Wisconsin Democrats: Judge Protasiewicz nearly doubled the vote count of MAGA radical Dan Kelly in last week's four-way primary election, setting her up in great position to flip Wisconsin’s Republican Supreme Court in April 4th’s must-win general election. EVERYTHING we hold dear — abortion rights, LGBTQ rights, the right to vote, and even the ability to elect a Democratic president at all — could hinge on this pivotal battleground state — can you chip in to make sure Democrats claim victory and keep Republicans from turning Wisconsin into a one-party state?


GOP primary candidates must agree to loyalty pledge in order to debate, RNC chair says
Thinking for oneself is decidedly doubelplusungood in today's Republican Party.


Notoriously pro-life Duggar family member Jessa Duggar reveals she had miscarriage & life-saving abortion procedure
Jessa Duggar, a member of the Christian extremist "Quiverfull" cult and reality TV star who once compared abortion to the Holocaust, has announced that she had a miscarriage and a dilation and curettage procedure to remove the nonviable fetus from her womb — also known as an abortion. It's a stark reminder that abortion care saves lives and needs to be accessible to all, no matter your politics or where you live or how much money you have. Hopefully, this will encourage a change of heart in Jessa Duggar, but since her entire brand is built around anti-abortion extremism...probably not.


Colorado sheriff's deputy who dragged innocent, unarmed man from his mother's car in middle school carpool line and shot him three times at point-blank range awarded Purple Heart for "injuries" sustained during fatal incident
There are no words.


Trump White House pressured Disney to censor ABC's Jimmy Kimmel
The notoriously thin-skinned, disgraced ex-president reportedly made his White House staff call one of Disney’s top executives on multiple occasions and demand they do something to blunt Kimmel’s nightly barbs. Of COURSE he did.


photo


The USA, today

The daily planet

Hope...

Want more hope? Subscribe to our favorite good news newsletter FREE.



Today’s Action: Pass the George Floyd Policing Act

George Floyd was taken from us on May 25, 2020. His death — at the hands of officers sworn to protect and serve people like him — triggered nationwide, collective outrage and amplified calls to transform America’s historically racist and brutal policing system. The man who knelt on his neck for nearly nine minutes, former officer Derek Chauvin, was found guilty of murder and manslaughter — verdicts he predictably appealed just a few weeks ago. Since Floyd’s death, Americans — all too often our Black and Brown brothers and sisters — have been subjected to more unconscionable brutality and misconduct by police and further inaction by local, state, and federal officials. Where is the justice?

Just last month in Memphis, 29-year-old Tyre Nichols died, three days after being brutally beaten by five police officers — members of a now-defunct, militarized anti-crime unit call SCORPION. Seriously? SCORPION?

Nichols’ mother attended the State of the Union earlier this month as a mourning guest of the First Lady, and President Biden made sure America heard her plea — that something good must come from Tyre’s death. We cannot wait for another Black or Brown person to be killed by poorly trained, racially charged, overly aggressive police. As Biden said — we need our elected officials to finish the job. And let’s be clear, this is a huge job that’s barely just begun.

For George Floyd. For Breonna Taylor. For Tyre Nichols. For so many others lost to us forever. Call (202.224.3121) or email your members of Congress and demand they pass the George Floyd Policing Act.

Numerous bills — many named after victims of police violence — have been introduced in Congress since Floyd’s death nearly three years ago, only to be killed by obstinate Republicans disinterested in changing the status quo. Time and time again we have seen that America’s policing problem will not go away on its own. Why have so many of our elected officials refused to heed calls for meaningful reform? Newly empowered Republicans would rather waste time passing performative bills “denouncing the horrors of socialism” than confront the glaring injustices occurring daily throughout the country. Enough is enough.

Congress must step up and help our hurting communities. They can start by passing the George Floyd Policing Act. If they don’t, well, we’ll make sure to remember when election time comes.

Tyre Nichols’ mother said something good must come from his death, his murder — in truth, that something should have come decades ago. Tyre’s blood — and the blood of so many others — is on Congress’ hands.

Email or call (202.224.3121) your members of Congress and ask them if they care about Black lives. Then, ask them to prove it by passing the George Floyd Policing Act.

PS — Please don't forget to sign the petition to reject the GOP's plan to ban Women and Gender Studies from Florida colleges, and be sure to follow us on TwitterFacebook, and Instagram.

 @advocacy | 1002 Hull St., Louisville, KY 40204








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...