Tuesday, December 3, 2024

Weekend Edition | 'We Must Defeat the Oligarchs'

 

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Sunday, December 1, 2024

■ Today's Top News 


Major Plastic Polluters Win as UN Treaty Talks Conclude Without Agreement

"Every day that governments allow polluters to continue flooding the world with plastic, we all pay the price," said one campaigner.

By Jon Queally



With Vow to 'Fight for Working People,' Wikler Goes for DNC Chair

"The Democratic Party can win," the former progressive organizer argued, "when voters know that we're the ones fighting for them against those who will seek to rip them off to add an extra billion dollars to their bank account."

By Jon Queally



Trump Picks 'Deeply Strange' Kash Patel—Who Vowed to 'Come After People in the Media'—for FBI Director

Kash's nomination to lead the FBI, said one watchdog, "represents the cronyism that is coming to define the second Trump administration. Loyalty to President-elect Trump is what matters above all else."

By Jon Queally



Sanders Says There Is No Choice: 'We Must Defeat the Oligarchs'

The U.S. Senator from Vermont is asking big questions about how to achieve—even in the face of Trump's return—an "economy and government that works for all, not just the few."

By Jon Queally



Over 125,000 March in London Against Israel's Gaza Genocide

"All of you here are beacons of hope in this darkness," said one demonstrator in a speech to the massive crowd.

By Jon Queally



World Central Kitchen 'Heartbroken' After Israel Bombing Kills Five in Gaza

The humanitarian aid group, which lost seven workers earlier this year in an attack by Israeli forces, said it was working with "incomplete information" about the latest strikes in Khan Younis.

By Jon Queally

Israel bombed a humanitarian vehicle in Gaza on Saturday, reportedly killing three aid workers with World Central Kitchen and Palestinian bystanders who tried to come to help after an initial strike.

"We are heartbroken to share that a vehicle carrying World Central Kitchen colleagues was hit by an Israeli airstrike in Gaza," the U.S.-based aid group founded by chef José Andrés, said in a statement.

"At this time, we are working with incomplete information and are urgently seeking more details," the group said.

While Israeli officials said the vehicle was carrying a wanted Palestinian militant, WCK said it had "no knowledge that any individual in the vehicle had alleged ties to the October 7th Hamas attack." The group said it was pausing operations in Gaza for the time being. "Our hearts," they said, "are with our colleagues and their families in this unimaginable moment."

According to reports, the WCK vehicle was targeted on Salah al-Din Street in Khan Younis. After the three aid workers were killed in the first strike, Middle East Eye reports two other people "tried to help" but "were also targeted and killed" by what is known as a double-tap strike.

"The vehicle carried rice and other food supplies," Tamer Sammour, an eyewitness, told the news outlet.

MEE spoke with other witnesses:

Mohammed Abu Abed, a Khan Younis resident, identified one of the two men killed in the second strike as Adel Sammour.

"He asked me last night for bread, but I couldn’t help him," Abu Abed told MEE.

"The two men were farmers heading to work to make ends meet," he explained.

"They were waiting to be picked up for work when the first strike hit the vehicle nearby,”"he continued.

"When they tried to assist, they were also targeted and killed. They were just trying to make a living. They were innocent."

In April, a multi-vehicle WCK convoy was bombed by Israel, killing seven of the organization's workers. The attack sparked global condemnation but did little to end Israel's blocking of humanitarian aid.

A view of the destroyed vehicle following the Israeli army targeted the vehicle carrying aid workers of the US-based international aid organization World Central Kitchen (WCK) in an attack on Salah ad-Din Street in Khan Yunis, Gaza on November 30, 2024. (Photo by Ali Jadallah/Anadolu via Getty Image)

Earlier this month, as Common Dreamsreported, an analysis showed the delivery of life-saving aid into Gaza had "fallen to an all-time low," largely due to Israel's obstruction.

Across Gaza over the last 24 hours, at least 19 people were killed in attacks by Israel.

Following the attack on WCK vehicle, Al-Jazeera's Hind Khoudary reported from Khan Younis on the organization's decision to halt its operations in the area.

"After today's attack, the community kitchens did not work and serve people," Khoudary reported. "So, it's beyond attacking Palestinians, Palestinian workers, aid organizations, it’s attacking all sources of aid, and all sources of community kitchens, and those who have been working tirelessly to prevent starvation in Gaza."

"The question remains," she added, "why does Israel continue to target the World Central Kitchen community and their employees in the Gaza Strip?"




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■ More News


Latest Plastics Treaty Draft 'Far From What We Need' as Talks Near Deadline


Black Friday Actions in 30+ Countries Aim to 'Make Amazon Pay'

excerpt: 

Amazon workers and their allies are participating in a series of global actions aimed at holding the online retailer "accountable for labor abuses, environmental degradation, and threats to democracy," according to the labor group UNI Global Union.

Dubbed "Make Amazon Pay," the campaign is set to last from November 29 to December 2 and will include strikes and protests across six continents, according to the group—and is timed to disrupt Black Friday (or "Make Amazon Pay Day") and Cyber Monday, two of the busiest online shopping days of the year.

"When we announced our intention to protest today, our management attempted to stop us in multiple ways. We want to say to Amazon—you could not stop us today, you cannot stop us in the future," said the general secretary of the Amazon India Workers Union during a demonstration held in India on Friday.

Make Amazon Pay Day was launched in 2020 by UNI Global Union and the left-leaning movement group Progressive International. It has expanded each subsequent year, say organizers, and today the coalition behind Make Amazon Pay Day brings together a wide range of groups, including climate, racial, and economic justice organizations.


'A Dire Situation': Flooding Intensifies Gaza Crisis as Israel's US-Backed Assault Rages



Seawater floods the tents of displaced Palestinians in Gaza

Displaced Palestinian children are pictured at a flooded makeshift camp in Nuseirat, Gaza on November 26, 2024.

 (Photo: Moiz Salhi/Anadolu via Getty Images)


Muslim Rights Group Calls for Probe Into GOP Lawmaker's Threat to Omar, Tlaib

RANDY FINE FLORIDA BIGOT FORMER GAMBLING EXEC


■ Opinion


The Democratic Party Reaped What It Sowed

Without a return to authentic working class politics, the party has no future at all.

By Bruce T. Boccardy


Just How Fully Will Trump Embrace Hitler's Fascist Playbook?

Trump has muscled unquestioned loyalty of the Republican Party, and weak resistance by a Democratic Party establishment that appears to detest the left more than it does the far right. Now our challenge begins.

By Chuck Idelson


100 Years After Mussolini's Dictatorship, a Trumpian US Flirts With the Long Night of Authoritarianism

The comparisons between Mussolini's declaration of dictatorship in 1924 and Trump’s re-election are striking.

By Brian J. Griffith


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