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  • The far-right and environmentalism overlap is bigger than you think — and growing

    At first glance, the modern environmental movement and the far-right movement – including anti-immigrant and white supremacist groups – might appear to be on opposing sides of the political ideology spectrum. But overlap does exist.

    Researchers say this intersection between the far-right and environmentalism is bigger than many people realize – and it’s growing.

    “As climate change kind of turns up the heat, there’s going to be all sorts of new kinds of political contestations around these issues,” Alex Amend said.

    Amend used to track hate groups at the Southern Poverty Law Center. These days he researches eco-fascism. He says once you start to look at this overlap, you find two big misconceptions.

    “One that the right is always a climate denialist movement. And two that environmental politics are always going to be left-leaning,” Amend said.

    Conservative leaders – from Rush Limbaugh to former President Donald Trump – have certainly denied climate change in the past.

    But today, a different argument is becoming more common on the conservative political fringe.
    When environmentalism and right-wing politics align

    On the podcast “The People’s Square,” a musician who goes by Stormking described his vision for a far-right reclamation of environmentalism.

    “Right-wing environmentalism in this country is mostly – especially in more modern times – an untried attack vector,” Stormking said. “And it has legs, in my opinion.”

    “Attack vector” is an apt choice of words because this ideology has been used in literal attacks.

    In El Paso, Texas, in 2019, a mass shooter killed more than 20 people and wounded more than 20 others. He told authorities he was targeting Mexicans. He also left behind a manifesto.

    “The decimation of the environment is creating a massive burden for future generations,” the shooter wrote. “If we can get rid of enough people, then our way of life can be more sustainable.”

    He titled that manifesto, “An Inconvenient Truth,” which was also the name of Al Gore’s Oscar-winning 2006 documentary about climate change.

    Anti-immigrant environmental arguments pop up in more official places too – like court filings.

    Last July, Arizona Attorney General Mark Brnovich filed a lawsuit against the federal government. He claimed that the Biden administration’s decision to stop building the border wall was a violation of the National Environmental Policy Act.

    "I wish people like, you know, the environmentalists cared half as much about human beings and what’s going on in Arizona as they do, or they supposedly do, about plant and wildlife, Brnovich said in an interview with KTAR News.

    Brnovich argued that because migrants leave trash in the desert, a border wall is needed to protect the environment.

    “We know that there’s information out there that says that every time someone crosses the border, they’re leaving between six and eight pounds of trash in the desert,” he said. “That trash is a threat to wildlife. It’s a threat to natural habitats.”

    Mainstream environmental organizations take the opposite view — that a wall will harm ecosystems on the border. A federal judge ultimately tossed out Brnovich’s case.

    Environmental politics are not always left-leaning

    This strain of anti-immigrant environmentalism may be growing today — but it isn’t new. And that brings up another misconception — that environmental politics are always left-leaning.

    The truth is, eco-fascism has a long history, both in the U.S. and in Europe. Blair Taylor is a researcher at the Institute for Social Ecology. He said even the Nazis saw themselves as environmentalists.

    “The idea that natural purity translates into racial or national purity – that was one that was very central to the Nazis’ environmental discourse of blood and soil,” Taylor said.

    In the 90s when Taylor started reading books about the environmental movement, he stumbled upon some ideas that seemed very wrong.

    “There is this earlier very nativist, exclusionary and racist history of environmental thought,” Taylor said. “It was very much based on this idea of nature as a violent competitive and ultimately very hierarchical domain where, you know, white Europeans were at the top. So that’s been rediscovered, I think, by the alt-right.”

    Taylor was kind of horrified to learn that in some ways, the environmental movement was founded on ideas of white supremacy.

    The word “ecology” was even coined by a German scientist, Ernst Haeckel, who also contributed to the Nazis’ ideas about a hierarchy of races. This history applies to the United States, too.

    The history of the environmental movement is colored by white supremacy

    Dorceta Taylor is a professor at Yale University and author of The Rise of the American Conservation Movement: Power, Privilege, and Environmental Protection.

    Taylor’s research helped reveal parts of American environmental history that had not been widely known.

    “We see a taking of Native American lands to turn into park spaces that are described as empty, untouched by human hands, pristine, to be protected,” Taylor said.

    “Environmental leaders are very, very at fault for setting up this narrative around, you know, untouched spaces. And to preserve them, Native people must be removed, the lands taken from them and put under federal or state #protection ... so this is where the language of preservation really crosses over into this narrative of #exclusion.”

    Taylor read the notes and diaries of early American environmentalists and learned that the movement to preserve natural spaces in the U.S. was partly motivated by a backlash against the racial mixing of American cities.

    “White elites, especially white male elites, wanted to leave the spaces where there was racial mixing,” she said. “And this discomfort around racially mixed neighborhoods infuses the discourse of those early conservation leaders.”

    Organizations are confronting their exclusionary pasts

    The connections between environmentalism and xenophobia in the U.S. are long and deep. In recent years, some prominent groups, including the Sierra Club, have begun to publicly confront their own exclusionary history.

    “We’re not just going to pretend that the problem’s not happening. We’re actively going to do the responsible thing and begin to address it,” said Hop Hopkins, the Sierra Club’s director of organizational transformation.

    The organization went through its own transformation. In the 20th century, the group embraced racist ideas that overpopulation was the root of environmental harm.

    In fact, in 1998 and again in 2004, anti-immigrant factions tried to stage a hostile takeover of the Sierra Club’s national board. They failed, but the organization learned a lesson from those experiences — you can’t just ignore these ideas or wish them away.

    “We need to be educating our base about these dystopian ideas and the scapegoating that’s being put upon Black, indigenous and people of color and working-class communities, such that they’re able to identify these messages that may sound like they’re environmental, but we need to be able to discern that they’re actually very racist,” Hopkins said.

    It’s common to come across people who say they believe in the environmental movement and the racial justice movement, but don’t believe the movements have anything to do with each other. That disbelief is why Hopkins said he does the work he does.

    That work goes beyond identifying the racism and bigotry in the environmental movement. It also means articulating a vision that can compete with eco-fascism. Because as climate change increases, more people will go looking for some narrative to address their fears of collapse, says Professor Emerita Betsy Hartmann of Hampshire College.

    “If you have this apocalyptic doomsday view of climate change, the far-right can use that doomsday view to its own strategic advantage,” Hartmann said.

    In that way, the threat of eco-fascism has something in common with climate change itself.

    The problem is visible now – and there is time to address it, but the longer people wait, the harder it’s going to be.

    https://www.npr.org/2022/04/01/1089990539/climate-change-politics?t=1649912681592

    #écologie #extrême_droite #environnementalisme #idéologie #idéologie_politique #éco-fasiscme #anti-migrants #migrations #wildlife #nature

    –—

    Cette phrase autour des #déchets laissés par les migrants sur leur chemin...

    Brnovich argued that because migrants leave trash in the desert, a border wall is needed to protect the environment.

    Rappelle celle-ci :
    Briançonnais : sur la route des migrants, des tas de #vêtements
    https://seenthis.net/messages/918606

    • Je lis la BD « L’affaire des affaires » ces temps, et c’est juste effrayant la facilité qu’il y a à faire transiter de l’argent partout tout le temps, dès qu’on en a les moyens. Et ce n’est pas l’affaire Clearstream qui doit avoir changé grand chose depuis. Les Pandora Papers ont un air de gros déjà vu pour tout dire, qui ont l’intérêt de rappeler que rien ne change vraiment, d’une révélation à l’autre.

  • Global health champion Dr. Paul Farmer has died
    https://www.npr.org/sections/goatsandsoda/2022/02/21/1082117707/global-health-champion-dr-paul-farmer-has-died
    Dr. Paul Farmer, global health champion, Harvard Medical School professor, anthropologist and founder of the nonprofit health organization Partners in Health, has died at age 62. PIH confirmed his death in a tweet on Monday.

    According to the tweet, Farmer “unexpectedly passed away today in his sleep while in Rwanda,” where he had been teaching for the past few weeks at the university he co-founded. A source close to Farmer said he had been in Rwanda for the past several weeks teaching at the University of Global Health Equity, the medical school that he helped found with the country’s former minister of health Dr. Agnes Binagwaho.

    In addition to starting hospitals in Rwanda and Haiti, Farmer helped bring life-saving HIV drugs to the people of Haiti in the early 2000s.
    https://media.npr.org/assets/img/2022/02/21/paul-farmer-getty-858182714-59d8093825ec7a5b39d6e4097a187b5e4c4f3f2b-s120

    #paul_farmer

  • A small island nation has cooked up not 1, not 2 but 5 COVID vaccin...
    https://diasp.eu/p/14073484

    A small island nation has cooked up not 1, not 2 but 5 COVID vaccines. It’s Cuba!

    Cuba has one of the world’s highest COVID vaccination rates, with more than 85% of the nation fully immunized and kids as young as 2 getting inoculated. And it’s done so using homegrown vaccines.

    #news #npr #publicradio #usa posted by pod_feeder_v2

    • propre lien :

      https://www.npr.org/sections/goatsandsoda/2022/02/01/1056952488/a-small-island-nation-has-cooked-up-not-1-not-2-but-5-covid-vaccines-its-cuba

      [...]

      Cuba’s success in developing COVID vaccine at a pace on par with some of the world’s largest pharmaceutical companies may seem surprising. The country has been in economic and social turmoil. It’s been facing shortages of food, fuel and foreign currency, that sparked major street protests last summer. Pandemic lockdowns further battered the economy, depriving the country of one of it’s largest sources of revenue- tourism. U.S. President Trump in his final days in office, ramped up sanctions against the communist island, making it even harder for Cuba to import raw materials and pharmaceutical manufacturing equipment. But William LeoGrande, a professor of government at American University in Washington, D.C. who’s written extensively about Cuba, wasn’t surprised that Cuba’s bet on a domestic vaccine paid off. LeoGrande says many people in the U.S. often underestimate the sophistication of the Cuban biotech industry.

      “The reason is because there are large sectors of the Cuban economy that really don’t work very well,” he says. “And so the image that that creates here in the United States is that nothing works in Cuba. But the reality is that there are some sectors and biotechnology is one of them that work pretty well.”

      LeoGrande says Cuba’s rapid development of 5 COVID vaccines was a major coup for the Caribbean nation.

      “Cuba was able to vaccinate virtually the entire population without having to worry about access to foreign vaccines while most of the Third World is not yet vaccinated because the vaccines are all produced in the developed countries,” he says. “And finally, Cuba may be able to generate some revenue by selling the vaccines to other developing countries at a time when it is really in desperate need of foreign exchange currency.”

      One potential stumbling block for exporting Cuban COVID vaccines is that hasn’t made progress in getting regulatory authorization for the products from the WHO. Individual countries are still welcome to authorize the shots locally if they so wish but a stamp of approval from WHO or another major regulator would make it far easier for Cuba to export these medical products.

      Cuba has submitted Soberana 1, Soberana 2, Soberana Plus and Abdala for Emergency Use Listing by the WHO but their application hasn’t moved forward. Notes on the WHO’s website tracking the status of vaccine applications says that the regulatory body is still “awaiting information on strategy and timelines for submission” regarding the communist nation’s COVID vaccines.

      [...]

      #Cuba #vaccins #covid #biotechnologie

    • Vaccin #Soberana 02

      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Soberana_02#Efficacy

      [...]

      Efficacy

      The interim results of a Phase III trial in Cuba has shown an efficacy of 62% after only two doses.[9][10][11] Two-dose vaccine efficacy of 62% against symptomatic disease was attained “during predominant transmission of the beta VOC.”[12] When combined with a booster dose of Soberana Plus, the vaccine showed an efficacy of 91.2%,[13] according to BioCubaFarma.

      The interim results of the Phase III trial in Iran show that the efficacy of a two-dose regimen is 51.31% against symptomatic disease, 78.35% against severe disease, and 76.78% against hospitalization.[14][15] A third dose of Soberana Plus increases the efficacy against symptomatic disease to 70.58%, 83.52% against severe disease, and 91.76% against hospitalization.[14] 89% of the cases in the Iranian trial were identified as having the delta strain.[15]

      The final results of the Phase III trials in Cuba show an efficacy against symptomatic disease of 71.0% against the beta and delta strains, while a third dose of Soberana Plus increased the efficacy up to 92.4%.[12] Efficacy against severe disease and death is 100% for the heterologous three-dose regimen.[16]

      The final results of the Phase III trial in Iran show an efficacy of 67% against symptomatic disease and 96.5% against severe disease and hospitalization for a heterologous three-dose regimen.[17][18] No deaths were observed in the trial group that received the three-dose regimen.[19] Unlike the Phase III trials in Cuba,[12] the majority of cases throughout the entire trial were of the delta strain (more than 90% at the time of vaccine evaluation).[20]

      [...]

  • Is omicron a sign that SARS-CoV-2 is evolving into a milder virus? : Goats and Soda : NPR
    https://www.npr.org/sections/goatsandsoda/2022/01/14/1072504127/fact-check-the-theory-that-sars-cov-2-is-becoming-milder

    […] #omicron didn’t evolve directly from delta. It evolved from an earlier version of the virus circulating in 2020. And so omicron could actually be more severe than its ancestral virus, and it could be progressing toward higher severity, Bhattacharyya says.

    And thus, there’s no guarantee that the next #variant to emerge will be milder. It could be the most severe yet.

    “I think we don’t really know what direction this virus is taking,” says evolutionary biologist Stephen Goldstein at the University of Utah. “We’ve learned that trying to predict the evolutionary trajectory of this virus is very, very difficult. If not impossible.”

  • First sickle cell patient treated with #CRISPR gene-editing still thriving https://www.npr.org/sections/health-shots/2021/12/31/1067400512/first-sickle-cell-patient-treated-with-crispr-gene-editing-still-thriving

    She’s doing so well for so long that she’s officially no longer in the landmark study https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT03745287?term=crispr&cond=sickle+cell&draw=2&rank=] she volunteered for. That involved doctors taking cells out of her bone marrow, and editing a gene in the cells in their lab, using the revolutionary gene-editing technique known as CRISPR.

    CRISPR allows scientists to make very precise changes in DNA much more easily than ever before. Many think it will revolutionize medicine.

    Doctors then infused billions of the modified cells back into Gray’s body. The hope was the edited cells would produce a protein known as fetal hemoglobin, alleviating the symptoms of sickle cell.

    And it appears to have worked, for Gray and other patients. Doctors have now treated at least 45 patients with sickle cell and a related condition known as beta thalassemia, and reported data indicating it’s working for at least 22 of them.

    #drépanocytose

  • What the Taliban really want from the world, in their own words
    https://www.npr.org/2021/12/15/1064001076/taliban-afghanistan-girls-education-womens-rights

    15.12.2021 DOHA, Qatar — Afghanistan’s Taliban rulers believe that women “must have the right to education and to work,” the spokesman for the Taliban’s political office in Doha tells NPR. “Our endeavors are underway now to solve this problem,” Muhammad Naeem Wardak says.

    Speaking in Arabic in a wide-ranging, 40-minute interview on Dec. 11, Wardak, 47, also discussed efforts to resume operations at Kabul’s international airport, expressed support for protection of Afghanistan’s cultural heritage and emphasized the Taliban’s commitment to continuing talks with the U.S. and international community, which has not formally recognized the Taliban as Afghanistan’s government.

    “We want to deal positively with the whole world and all countries,” Wardak said. “We do not want any problems.”

    When asked about what the Taliban are doing to address the many problems facing Afghanistan, he deflected responsibility, saying, “In reality, we did not create these problems. These problems came from the outside.”

    Interview Highlights

    On the biggest challenges facing Afghanistan

    At the moment, the biggest challenge facing the people of Afghanistan and the government of Afghanistan is the economic siege, and the freezing of funds by the United States, and other problems in the banks as well. And as you know, this isn’t a problem that was born today, the previous [Afghan] administration unfortunately emptied out the funds in the banks. At the same time, the failure to acknowledge the government of Afghanistan that represents the Afghan people and has provided safety and security to them and has ended the wars that have been going on for over 40 years.

    On what the Taliban are doing to address crucial problems

    In reality, we did not create these problems. These problems came from the outside. We have completed our responsibilities where it concerns us. We are trying, as you know, we are in constant communication with various governments and international groups, the U.S., European countries, and so on. So there are ongoing conversations and ties and relations and we are trying to convince these groups to recognize the Afghan people and the rights of the Afghan people, and to end this siege and these problems.

    For over 40 years, the Afghan people have been living in war, and all thanks to God, the war is now over, so we are trying to convince them [the international community] when we sit with them, we ask them why all these problems, they can’t come up with convincing reasons. So that is what we have.

    Of course we don’t give in and we continue to work on it. And as you know the Afghan people have suffered for years and are resilient and if anyone wants to pressure the Afghan people by these issues, it is a futile effort because the Afghan people have been under pressure for the past 40 years, and especially, the last 20 they have been attacked and killed and displaced and what’s been done to them has not been done to any other people.

    But the reality is that the Afghan people do not give in to these pressures, so we say that these efforts are pointless and to the international community, and specifically the United States, we say that if they recognized these realities as well as the Afghan government, then we think these problems will end.

    On Afghan girls’ right to education

    This issue is truly a thorny one and there are some problems. As you know, everyone has their own principles, traditions and customs, and there are some customs that are wrong, but some societies live under these customs, and this is present all over the world among many peoples and especially in the Afghan people. That is the first point.

    The second point unfortunately came through the occupation of Afghanistan. When [Western forces] came to Afghanistan, they carried out some actions that distorted the image of women’s education among the Afghan people — for example, girls’ dancing on television; for example, women and girls abandoning some of the cultural norms of society. So all of this creates a distorted picture of girls’ education for most of Afghan society.

    And as you know the Afghan people are not only in Kabul. Kabul is a city. And the Afghan population is around 40 million people. And all of these 40 million do not live in Kabul. In Kabul there are maybe 5 or 6 million, and all of them do not think the same, if they are not all of the same idea, and this is another point.

    Unfortunately, as I said, some societies have incorrect traditions and customs. This exists in our country as well, unfortunately. For example, girls and women in general in most regions of Afghanistan are not given the right to inherit, for example, they are not entitled to choose a husband, for example, or at least consent. Or for a girl to consent for her father or others to arrange a marriage for her. It is in our Hanafi jurisprudence that the girl consent to such things. And also, if a woman’s husband dies, it’s in the traditions of some tribes that she becomes the property of the patriarch of the house, her husband’s brother or others. They are the ones who marry her as they want and she is not allowed to choose by herself.

    There are some decrees from the Commander of the Faithful [Taliban leader Hibatullah Akhundzada], may God Almighty preserve him. One of the first of these decrees is that a woman is a free human being, and that no one has the right to think that a woman is his slave or that she does not have her choice.

    The situation isn’t entirely as it’s being described [in some international media] that girls are not allowed to go to schools. You know that private universities in Afghanistan are open to girls and older girls who go to universities. ... There are also high schools open to girls from governmental and nongovernmental organizations. Private secondary schools are open in all the country, while public secondary schools are very open in these eight or nine and 10 governorates.

    Our endeavors are underway now to solve this problem, but this problem and all the problems cannot be solved at once.
    On Afghan women’s right to work

    We believe that our religion commands us that women have the right to work. Now, women work for us in a handful of ministries, the Ministry of Health, the Ministry of Interior, the Ministry of Education, and in some other sectors, as well as the media in general. You know that young girls, they graduate and they work in news or they manage meetings and are on radio and television news. And all of this is not hidden from anyone watching.

    So, we are not against women’s work and we are not against women’s education, but the work and education must be arranged and organized to be in accordance with the traditions of our people. And women also must have the right to education and to work.

    In general, you know that there is a great transformation happening in Afghanistan, we are now building a new system. And you know that the United States of America and other countries have now evacuated [thousands of] people. These women and men, they were scientists, technicians, professionals. And they worked in various sectors, and this is another problem that we face in the scientific cadres, this is another problem point.

    And we have before that, more than once, we have told the United States of America in private meetings “do not do this” ... because we need to create a system for the future. So this is another unfortunate issue.

    On the other hand, not all problems are solved only in a matter of months. ... If there are elections and a new government comes in, it at least has the opportunity, sometimes for six or three months, for example, to discover itself and put things in order.

    This was present in the agreement that we want to enter Kabul through dialogue and understanding, but unfortunately they [the previous government] fled Kabul and left Kabul, and there we faced a problem, not just us, but the international community and the United States of America itself says that we faced this unexpected problem.

    So now we are trying, but we cannot precisely specify, for example, a month or three or four, but we have a chance now that the holidays have started, we are taking advantage of the schools being out. Winter has come and we have about about two or three months [before school starts again].

    So we are trying, but what the deadline will be? It’s hard to say.

    On Taliban talks with the U.S.

    The first topic is the recognition of the Afghan government — and before that, the release of financial assets in Afghanistan, because this returns first and foremost its benefits for the people. For the healing of women, children, the elderly.

    Now there are calls for human rights and women’s rights, but on the other hand, there are women, children and the elderly who suffer from this problem. This was our goal, and before this there were some issues of human rights or women’s rights or women’s education, and such things ... and [whether] the government is inclusive of all parts of society.

    We discussed these topics in detail [with the U.S.]. We presented them with evidence and explained the situation to them that there is this comprehensive government in which all minorities are represented to the strength and the tribes present in Afghanistan and also for women, and we said all these things in the beginning.

    We are now seeing and we have seen that women work in various fields and they are learning, but we are trying, God willing, in the future time to solve this problem as well. These in general are the matters that we discussed in the negotiations, and in general the negotiations are in a good atmosphere, and there was also a desire on their part, and ours and all the parties, that these negotiations continue and that problems are resolved through dialogue and, God willing, possibly next month there will also be another round of negotiations.

    In the end, we are optimistic and expect that these negotiations will bring the desired result.

    On efforts to resume operations at the Kabul airport

    As you know, unfortunately when the United States and other foreign forces left the airport, they very sadly and unfortunately destroyed everything. Even the computers and the toilets, and the closets and rooms. They destroyed everything. Unfortunately. They even cut off the electric wires. But with the help of Qatar — and we thank them — they helped with organizing some things. And even now there are ongoing discussions with Qatar, Turkey and the United Arab Emirates, but at the moment there’s no agreement with any of those parties. We are working toward resolving this issue and that one of these nations will take over the management of the airport.

    At the moment, the airport is usable for flights and international flights to places like the UAE and today I heard a flight to India. Whoever reaches an agreement with us, they will be the ones to tidy things up more and more.

    As you know, the airport plays an essential role in communications with foreign communities, neighboring countries, and countries in the region, and countries all over the world in general.

    The aid needs a way to get in. If the airport functions, that will make it so much easier for the humanitarian aid to reach the Afghan people. As you know, at the moment, winter has arrived in Afghanistan and the cold is bitter there and particularly harsh on children and women. So for that, we can call the airport a gate to connect with the world.
    On protection of Afghan cultural heritage

    As you know, this responsibility was given to the ministry of information. The minister of education and the acting minister of information were present with us in the negotiations. They have begun their research in different provinces. For example, they went to Kandahar, Herat and other provinces, they want to preserve those ancient monuments found in museums and other places, so we want to preserve all of this.

    They are part of our history and part of the identity of the Afghan people, and you know the Afghan people have a long history dating back to about 5,000 years. So we will preserve this, and we have no problem with heritage and historical monuments.
    On the Taliban’s aspirations for international relations

    We in general — and as you know, this is our position from the beginning, and this came up after we took control of Kabul — a letter from the Commander of the Faithful, may God protect him, and one of the first points he referred to was that we want to deal positively with the whole world and all countries. We do not want any problems.

    So, we are not with one country against another. We do not want to be a victim of regional and international conflicts. No, we want to deal with everyone. China is our neighbor and Russia is also close to us. We want relations with everyone, our relations with one country will not come at the expense of another or with an official body. We are open to everyone and this is our position, even with our neighbors, with the countries of the region and with the countries of the world.
    On the Taliban’s readiness for dialogue

    We want to convey this message to everyone, especially to the American people, that we do not want problems, and this was our position in 2001. And in the future, we want positive relations with the United States of America and with Western countries. The problem is not on our end, and in 2001, when this problem [al-Qaida’s terrorist attacks on the U.S.] happened, we have said and sympathized with this incident at that time, we are not murderers and we are against the killing of civilians and the killing of innocents, and this is of course our position from the beginning.

    And now we also want to have relations with the international community, with Western countries, to benefit from each other, to benefit from the developments and advancements that come from the West. But we must also not forget to respect and treat every society with its principles and traditions and mores, knowing that nothing can be imposed, especially on the Afghan people, and this is proven in history.

    So these pressures [such as freezing of assets] do not help. We want understanding. We want dialogue. If there are problems, we want to solve these problems through dialogue, through understanding, and we are ready for any problem.

    We want to prove to everyone forever that we respect humanity. So the person who lives in Afghanistan is a human being and the person who lives in America is also a human, and the one who lives in the West is also a human being, and who lives in the East is also a human being. There is no such thing that a person who lives in the West is human and the person who lives in Afghanistan is not.

    And here there is something that we marvel at: On the one hand, [foreigners] say that the woman has the right to education and a right to work, and why does the woman not have a right to work or to learn? Then on the other hand, they froze financial assets for that very woman.

    This woman is a part of the Afghan people, and she is starving to death. Her child starves to death, dies of starvation. They cannot find a morsel to stay alive. Is this not a human right?

    So of course, this kind of double standard adds tension to the situation and lack of confidence. We want all of us to be human and to live together. And to truly give rights to everyone who lives. There shouldn’t be a difference in human blood, whether one person’s blood is expensive, and another person’s blood is cheap. No. They are human beings

  • U.S. States Toss Thousands Of Vaccine Doses. Could They Be Donated Instead? : Goats and Soda : NPR
    https://www.npr.org/sections/goatsandsoda/2021/08/10/1025463260/alabama-just-tossed-65-000-vaccines-turns-out-its-not-easy-to-donate-unused-dos

    Persad says another barrier could be the contracts that the Trump administration signed with vaccine makers in which there appears to be some language restricting the use of vaccines abroad — although the contract language isn’t fully public.

    #états-unis #leadership

  • New Evidence Suggests #COVID-19 Vaccines Remain Effective Against #Variants
    https://www.npr.org/sections/health-shots/2021/06/09/1004738276/new-evidence-suggests-covid-19-vaccines-remain-effective-against-variants

    “What we showed is that the neutralizing antibodies are reduced about fivefold to the B.1.351 variant,” says Dan Barouch, director of the Center for Virology and Vaccine Research at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center in Boston. Under the new nomenclature proposed by the World Health Organization, B.1.351 is now called Beta. It first appeared in South Africa.

    “That’s very similar to what other investigators have shown with other vaccines,” he says. “But what we also showed is that there’s many other types of immune responses other than neutralizing antibodies, including binding antibodies, FC functional antibodies and T-cell responses.”

    And it’s that last immune response, the T-cell response, that Barouch says is critically important. Because T cells, particularly CD8 T cells, play a crucial role in preventing illness.

    […]

    “Those are the killer T cells,” Barouch says. “Those are the types of T cells that can basically seek out and destroy cells that are infected and help clear infection directly.”

    They don’t prevent infection; they help keep an infection from spreading.

    “The T-cell responses actually are not reduced — at all — to the variants,” Barouch says. It’s not just the Beta variant, but also the Alpha and Gamma variants.

    That may help explain why the Johnson & Johnson vaccine prevented serious disease when tested in volunteers South Africa, where worrisome variants are circulating.

    “The data is very solid,” says Alessandro Sette, an immunologist at the La Jolla Institute for Immunology. “Dan Barouch’s data really show very nicely that there is no appreciable decrease in [CD8 T-cell] reactivity.”

    Sette’s lab has had similar results with the Pfizer-BioNTech and Moderna COVID-19 vaccines. So has Marcela Maus at Massachusetts General Hospital. Although it will take studies in people to be certain the vaccines will work against variants, “Anything that generates a T-cell immune response to the #SARS-CoV-2, I would say has promise as being potentially protective,” Maus says.

    What’s not clear yet is how long the T-cell response will last, but several labs are working to answer that question.

    #immunité_cellulaire #vaccins

  • A Prominent Anti-Vax Group Is Spreading False Vaccine Info To Black Americans : Shots - Health News : NPR
    https://www.npr.org/sections/health-shots/2021/06/08/1004214189/anti-vaccine-film-targeted-to-black-americans-spreads-false-information

    the anti-vaccine movement — promoting its new film, Medical Racism: The New Apartheid.

    The free, online film is the latest effort by Robert F. Kennedy Jr., the founder of Children’s Health Defense. (He’s the son of the former U.S. Attorney General Robert “Bobby” Kennedy and nephew of President John F. Kennedy.) With this film, Kennedy and his allies in the anti-vaccine movement resurface and promote disproven claims about the dangers of vaccines, but it’s aimed squarely at a specific demographic: Black Americans.

    The film draws a line from the real and disturbing history of racism and atrocities in the medical field — such as the Tuskegee syphilis study — to interviews with anti-vaccine activists who warn communities of color to be suspicious of modern-day vaccines.

    L’apartheid c’est aussi ça : cibler expressément les communautés afro-américaines avec de la désinformation anti-vaccinale.

  • A New #Coronavirus May Be Making People Sick. And It’s Coming From Dogs : Goats and Soda : NPR
    https://www.npr.org/sections/goatsandsoda/2021/05/20/996515792/a-newly-identified-coronavirus-is-making-people-sick-and-it-s-coming-from-dogs

    Zhang has studied coronaviruses for more than 30 years. He thinks it’s too early to call this new virus a human pathogen. “As the authors are careful to say in their paper, they have not proven what’s called Koch’s postulates,” he says. That is, Vlasova, Gray and colleagues haven’t shown that the new coronavirus causes pneumonia; so far, it has only been associated with the disease.

    “To do that, strictly, they need to inject the virus into humans and see if it reproduces the disease,” he says. “Of course [for ethical reasons], we cannot do that.”

    Instead, Zhang says, they can look to see how common the virus is in pneumonia patients around the world — and they can test to see whether it makes mice or another animal sick.

    #zoonose

  • Vaccine Disparity Hits Home For Many Foreign-Born Doctors : NPR
    https://www.npr.org/2021/03/04/973791968/vaccine-disparity-hits-home-for-many-foreign-born-doctors

    Many U.S. doctors have received their COVID-19 vaccines, but nearly a third are foreign-born with family in countries facing no access to it — a disparity that troubles many as they fight the virus.

    #états-unis #leadership #discrimination

  • Le covid à Manaus
    https://threadreaderapp.com/thread/1355812836946173953.html

    J’ai décidé de faire un long thread sur Manaus. Pourquoi ? Parce que Manaus a suivi exactement les préconisations des anti-tout. Alors on va voir ce que ça donne.

    Petite présentation démographique : Manaus est une ville brésilienne, avé une population très jeune.

    https://www.citypopulation.de/en/brazil/amazonas/manaus/130260305__manaus

    3/ L’année dernière, Manaus a laissé filer l’épidémie. Il y a eu deux résultats :
    –Des cimetières trop petits.

    http://www.theguardian.com/world/2020/apr/30/brazil-manaus-coronavirus-mass-graves

    4/ Et l’atteinte, semble-t-il, de l’immunité collective (avec entre 60 et 75% des habitants contaminés). Manaus s avait souffert, mais été censée être tranquille.

    https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-020-02948-4

    5/ Sauf que, stupeur, en fin d’année, les cas remontent à Manaus. Sauf qu’ils sont censés avoir l’immunité collective !

    https://www.economist.com/the-americas/2021/01/23/a-brazilian-city-thought-it-had-herd-immunity-it-was-wrong

    6/ Et en plus, ils ont les fameux kits covid traitements précoces!

    https://www.correiobraziliense.com.br/brasil/2021/01/4898757-kit-precoce-ou-fechamento-como-as-capitais-enfrentam-

    7/ petite parenthèse : au Brésil, là où ces kits sont utilisés, la mortalité est supérieure (9 municipalités sur 10).

    https://br.noticias.yahoo.com/de-10-municipios-que-adotam-kit-covid-9-tiveram-taxa-de-mortalida

    8/ Autre petite parenthèse : le créateur du kit covid est mort du covid.

    https://saude.ig.com.br/2020-09-04/criador-do-kit-covid-medico-morre-da-doenca-apos-45-na-uti.html

    9/ Bref tout devrait bien aller avec le « petit covid ». Et pourtant : hôpitaux saturés, même plus d’oxygène.

    https://www.bbc.com/news/world-latin-america-55670318

    10/ Le système hospitalier s’effondre.

    https://www.msf.org/coronavirus-covid-19-collapses-health-system-manaus-brazil

    11/ Pourtant ils avaient le kit covid, et l’immunité de groupe !

    https://twitter.com/Ba_Serrano/status/1354363631723573256

    12/ Rebelotte pour les cimetières.

    https://www.france24.com/en/live-news/20210127-as-covid-death-rate-soars-race-to-dig-graves-in-brazil-s-manaus

    13/ Il s’est passé quoi ? Le virus a muté, selon toute vraisemblance les gens sont re infectés, et les « traitements précoces » ne servent à rien ou pas grand chose .

    https://www.npr.org/sections/goatsandsoda/2021/01/21/958953434/reinfections-more-likely-with-new-coronavirus-variants-evidence-suggests

    L’émergence de variants est fréquente dans les endroits où les virus circulent beaucoup : beaucoup plus de possibilités de muter, pression de sélection. Ils semblerait que certains de ces variants, dont le brésilien, soient plus contagieux voir plus dangereux. Ils échappent

    15/ Aux anticorps produits par une infection précédente, et certains peuvent poser problème avec le vaccin.

    16/ Voici la triste histoire de Manaus. Qui a pourtant appliqué tout ce qui est préconisé par les anti-tout : laisser circuler le virus dans une population jeune pour construire l’immunité de groupe et « soigner » avec les « traitements précoces ».

    18/ Au Brésil la colère monte. Ils paient cher le choix de cette stratégie.

    https://www.rtbf.be/info/monde/detail_coronavirus-au-bresil-des-milliers-de-manifestants-contre-bolsonaro?id=1

  • Fauci Predicts U.S. Could See Signs Of Herd Immunity By Late March Or Early April : Coronavirus Updates : NPR
    https://www.npr.org/sections/coronavirus-live-updates/2020/12/15/946714505/fauci-predicts-u-s-could-see-signs-of-herd-immunity-by-late-march-or-early-apri

    Grâce aux vaccins; avec un grand « si » cependant,

    Marc Lipsitch sur Twitter : “There is a big if to this. Works if the vaccines strongly block infection/infectiousness/transmission like measles and mumps vaccines. Won’t work if vax effects mainly on illness, with more modest effects on transmission, like pneumococcal and acellular pertussis vaccines.” / Twitter
    https://twitter.com/mlipsitch/status/1338921331564351489

    #sars-cov2 #covid-19 #vaccins #immunité_de_groupe

  • Google Employees Say Scientist’s Ouster Was ’Unprecedented Research Censorship’
    https://www.npr.org/2020/12/03/942417780/google-employees-say-scientists-ouster-was-unprecedented-research-censorship?t=

    Hundreds of Google employees have published an open letter following the firing of a colleague who is an accomplished scientist known for her research into the ethics of artificial intelligence and her work showing racial bias in facial recognition technology. That scientist, Timnit Gebru, helped lead Google’s Ethical Artificial Intelligence team until Tuesday. She says she was forced out of the company following a dispute over a research paper and an email she subsequently sent to peers (...)

    #Google #algorithme #biométrie #éthique #racisme #facial #reconnaissance #sexisme #biais (...)

    ##discrimination

  • #COVID-19 Death Rates Are Going Down, And Not Just Among The Young And Healthy : Shots - Health News : NPR
    https://www.npr.org/sections/health-shots/2020/10/20/925441975/studies-point-to-big-drop-in-covid-19-death-rates

    Et pas seulement parce que la population atteinte est plus jeune en moyenne,

    Two new peer-reviewed studies are showing a sharp drop in mortality among hospitalized COVID-19 patients. The drop is seen in all groups, including older patients and those with underlying conditions , suggesting that physicians are getting better at helping patients survive their illness.

    “We find that the death rate has gone down substantially,” says Leora Horwitz, a doctor who studies population health at New York University’s Grossman School of Medicine and an author on one of the studies, which looked at thousands of patients from March to August.

    The study, which was of a single health system, finds that mortality has dropped among hospitalized patients by 18 percentage points since the pandemic began. Patients in the study had a 25.6% chance of dying at the start of the pandemic; they now have a 7.6% chance.

    That’s a big improvement, but 7.6% is still a high risk compared with other diseases, and Horwitz and other researchers caution that COVID-19 remains dangerous.

    The death rate “is still higher than many infectious diseases, including the flu,” Horwitz says. And those who recover can suffer complications for months or even longer. “It still has the potential to be very harmful in terms of long-term consequences for many people.”

    #mortalité

  • Ginsburg Vigil Draws Tears, Protests Against McConnell (https://www...
    https://diasp.eu/p/11677028

    Ginsburg Vigil Draws Tears, Protests Against McConnell

    Sen. Elizabeth Warren forcefully condemned the Senate Majority leader at the vigil: “What Mitch McConnell does not understand is this fight has just begun.”

    #news #npr #publicradio #usa posted by pod_feeder_v2