company:nation

  • The United Nations backs seed sovereignty in landmark small-scale farmers’ rights declaration

    On Dec. 17, the United Nations General Assembly took a quiet but historic vote, approving the Declaration on the Rights of Peasants and other People Working in Rural Areas by a vote of 121-8 with 52 abstentions. The declaration, the product of some 17 years of diplomatic work led by the international peasant alliance La Via Campesina, formally extends human rights protections to farmers whose “seed sovereignty” is threatened by government and corporate practices.

    “As peasants we need the protection and respect for our values and for our role in society in achieving food sovereignty,” said #Via_Campesina coordinator Elizabeth Mpofu after the vote. Most developing countries voted in favor of the resolution, while many developed country representatives abstained. The only “no” votes came from the United States, United Kingdom, Australia, New Zealand, Hungary, Israel and Sweden.

    “To have an internationally recognized instrument at the highest level of governance that was written by and for peasants from every continent is a tremendous achievement,” said Jessie MacInnis of Canada’s National Farmers Union. The challenge, of course, is to mobilize small-scale farmers to claim those rights, which are threatened by efforts to impose rich-country crop breeding regulations onto less developed countries, where the vast majority of food is grown by peasant farmers using seeds they save and exchange.
    Seed sovereignty in Zambia

    The loss of seed diversity is a national problem in Zambia. “We found a lot of erosion of local seed varieties,” Juliet Nangamba, program director for the Community Technology Development Trust, told me in her Lusaka office. She is working with the regional Seed Knowledge Initiative (SKI) to identify farmer seed systems and prevent the disappearance of local varieties. “Even crops that were common just 10 years ago are gone.” Most have been displaced by maize, which is heavily subsidized by the government. She’s from Southern Province, and she said their survey found very little presence of finger millet, a nutritious, drought-tolerant grain far better adapted to the region’s growing conditions.

    Farmers are taking action. Mary Tembo welcomed us to her farm near Chongwe in rural Zambia. Trained several years ago by Kasisi Agricultural Training Center in organic agriculture, Tembo is part of the SKI network, which is growing out native crops so seed is available to local farmers. Tembo pulled some chairs into the shade of a mango tree to escape the near-100-degree Fahrenheit heat, an unseasonable reminder of Southern Africa’s changing climate. Rains were late, as they had been several of the last few years. Farmers had prepared their land for planting but were waiting for a rainy season they could believe in.

    Tembo didn’t seem worried. She still had some of her land in government-sponsored hybrid maize and chemical fertilizer, especially when she was lucky enough to get a government subsidy. But most of her land was in diverse native crops, chemical free for 10 years.

    “I see improvements from organic,” she explained, as Kasisi’s Austin Chalala translated for me from the local Nyanja language. “It takes more work, but we are now used to it.” The work involves more careful management of a diverse range of crops planted in ways that conserve and rebuild the soil: crop rotations; intercropping; conservation farming with minimal plowing; and the regular incorporation of crop residues and composted manure to build soil fertility. She has six pigs, seven goats, and 25 chickens, which she says gives her enough manure for the farm.

    She was most proud of her seeds. She disappeared into the darkness of her small home. I was surprised when she emerged with a large fertilizer bag. She untied the top of the bag and began to pull out her stores of homegrown organic seeds. She laughed when I explained my surprise. She laid them out before us, a dazzling array: finger millet; orange maize; Bambara nuts; cowpea; sorghum; soybeans; mung beans; three kinds of groundnuts; popcorn; common beans. All had been saved from her previous harvest. The contribution of chemical fertilizer to these crops was, clearly, just the bag.

    She explained that some would be sold for seed. There is a growing market for these common crops that have all but disappeared with the government’s obsessive promotion of maize. Some she would share with the 50 other farmer members of the local SKI network. And some she and her family happily would consume. Crop diversity is certainly good for the soil, she said, but it’s even better for the body.
    Peasant rights crucial to climate adaptation

    We visited three other Kasisi-trained farmers. All sang the praises of organic production and its diversity of native crops. All said their diets had improved dramatically, and they are much more food-secure than when they planted only maize. Diverse crops are the perfect hedge against a fickle climate. If the maize fails, as it has in recent years, other crops survive to feed farmers’ families, providing a broader range of nutrients. Many traditional crops are more drought-tolerant than maize.

    Another farmer we visited already had planted, optimistically, before the rains arrived. She showed us her fields, dry and with few shoots emerging. With her toe, she cleared some dirt from one furrow to reveal small green leaves, alive in the dry heat. “Millet,” she said proudly. With a range of crops, she said, “the farmer can never go wrong.”

    I found the same determination in Malawi, where the new Farm-Saved Seed Network (FASSNet) is building awareness and working with government on a “Farmers’ Rights” bill to complement a controversial Seed Bill, which deals only with commercial seeds. A parallel process is advancing legislation on the right to food and nutrition. Both efforts should get a shot in the arm with the U.N.’s Peasants’ Rights declaration.

    The declaration gives such farmers a potentially powerful international tool to defend themselves from the onslaught of policies and initiatives, led by multinational seed companies, to replace native seeds with commercial varieties, the kind farmers have to buy every year.

    Kasisi’s Chalala told me that narrative is fierce in Zambia, with government representatives telling farmers such as Tembo that because her seeds are not certified by the government, they should be referred to only as “grain.”

    Eroding protection from GMOs

    As if to illustrate the ongoing threats to farm-saved seed, that same week in Zambia controversy erupted over two actions by the government’s National Biosafety Board to weaken the country’s proud and clear stance against the use of genetically modified crops. The board quietly had granted approval for a supermarket chain to import and sell three products with GMOs, a move promptly criticized by the Zambian National Farmers Union.

    Then it was revealed that the board secretly was drawing up regulations for the future planting of GM crops in the country, again in defiance of the government’s approved policies. The Zambian Alliance for Agroecology and Biodiversity quickly denounced the initiative.

    The U.N. declaration makes such actions a violation of peasants’ rights. Now the task is to put that new tool in farmers’ hands. “As with other rights, the vision and potential of the Peasant Rights Declaration will only be realized if people organize to claim these rights and to implement them in national and local institutions,” argued University of Pittsburgh sociologists Jackie Smith and Caitlin Schroering in Common Dreams. “Human rights don’t ‘trickle down’ — they rise up!”

    https://www.greenbiz.com/article/united-nations-backs-seed-sovereignty-landmark-small-scale-farmers-rights-
    #ONU #semences #déclaration #souveraineté #souveraineté_semencière (?) #agriculture #paysannerie #Zambie #OGM #climat #changement_climatique
    ping @odilon

  • While you’re sleeping, your #iPhone stays busy — snooping on you - NZ Herald
    https://www.nzherald.co.nz/business/news/article.cfm?c_id=3&objectid=12235267

    IPhone apps I discovered tracking me by passing information to third parties - just while I was asleep - include Microsoft OneDrive, Intuit’s Mint, Nike, Spotify, the Washington Post and IBM’s the Weather Channel. One app, the crime-alert service Citizen, shared personally identifiable information in violation of its published privacy policy.

    And your iPhone doesn’t feed data trackers only while you sleep. In a single week, I encountered over 5400 trackers, mostly in apps, not including the incessant Yelp traffic. According to privacy firm Disconnect, which helped test my iPhone, those unwanted trackers would have spewed out 1.5 gigabytes of data over the span of a month. That’s half of an entire basic wireless service plan from US telecommunictions company AT&T.

    “This is your data, why should it even leave your phone? Why should it be collected by someone when you don’t know what they’re going to do with it?” says Patrick Jackson, a former National Security Agency researcher who is chief technology officer for Disconnect. He hooked my iPhone into special software so we could examine the traffic. “I know the value of data, and I don’t want mine in any hands where it doesn’t need to be.”

    In a world of data brokers, Jackson is the data breaker. He developed an app called Privacy Pro that identifies and blocks many trackers. If you’re a little bit techie, I recommend trying the free iOS version to glimpse the secret life of your iPhone.

  • Pakistan : des insurgés baloutches visent les intérêts chinois à #Gwadar
    https://www.lemonde.fr/international/article/2019/05/13/pakistan-des-insurges-baloutches-visent-les-interets-chinois-a-gwadar_546151


    Des forces de sécurité pakistanaises patrouillent dans le port de Gwadar, à 700 km à l’ouest de Karachi, le 13 novembre 2016. La cité portuaire doit devenir le point d’ancrage sur la mer du Corridor économique Chine-Pakistan (CPEC).
    AAMIR QURESHI / AFP

    L’attaque, samedi 11 mai, contre le seul hôtel de luxe de la petite ville portuaire de Gwadar, aux confins de la province du Baloutchistan, symbole de la présence chinoise au Pakistan, a fait cinq morts, dont quatre employés de l’établissement et un soldat. Les forces de sécurité sont parvenues à reprendre le contrôle des lieux, dimanche, après avoir tué les trois assaillants qui s’y étaient repliés. L’opération a été revendiquée par l’Armée de libération du Baloutchistan (ALB) qui visait « les Chinois et autres investisseurs étrangers ».

    Le commando armé, habillé en militaires, s’était introduit à l’intérieur de l’hôtel, construit sur une colline faisant face à la mer. Souvent peu occupé, voire quasi désert, le Pearl Continental accueille généralement des officiels pakistanais de passage ou des étrangers, surtout des cadres chinois, travaillant à la construction d’un port en eau profonde qui doit être l’un des maillons des « nouvelles routes de la soie » promues par Pékin. Le premier ministre pakistanais, Imran Khan, a condamné l’attaque, considérant qu’elle voulait « saboter [les] projets économiques et [la] prospérité » du pays.

    Le symbole est fort. Gwadar doit devenir le point d’ancrage sur la mer du Corridor économique Chine-Pakistan (CPEC), dans lequel Pékin a prévu d’investir 55 milliards d’euros pour relier la province occidentale chinoise du Xinjiang et la mer d’Arabie. En 2018, le responsable du développement portuaire de Gwadar, Dostain Jamaldini, indiquait au Monde « qu’en 2014, la ville n’était encore qu’un village de pêcheurs mais en 2020-23, nous disposerons de 2,6 kilomètres de quais capables de recevoir cinq cargos, et dans vingt ans, ce sera l’un des principaux ports du monde ».

    Pour l’heure, en dépit de l’inauguration, au printemps 2018, par le premier ministre pakistanais d’alors, de plusieurs bâtiments construits par les Chinois dans la zone franche qui longe le port, l’activité demeure très faible.

    #OBOR #One_Belt_One_Road

  • Boxed in: $1 billion of Iranian crude sits at China’s Dalian port - Reuters
    https://www.reuters.com/article/us-china-iran-oil-sanctions-idUSKCN1S60HS


    FILE PHOTO: Oil tankers pass through the Strait of Hormuz, December 21, 2018.
    REUTERS/Hamad I Mohammed/File Photo

    Some 20 million barrels of Iranian oil sitting on China’s shores in the northeast port of Dalian for the past six months now appears stranded as the United States hardens its stance on importing crude from Tehran.

    Iran sent the oil to China, its biggest customer, ahead of the reintroduction of U.S. sanctions last November, as it looked for alternative storage for a backlog of crude at home.

    The oil is being held in so-called bonded storage tanks at the port, which means it has yet to clear Chinese customs. Despite a six-month waiver to the start of May that allowed China to continue some Iranian imports, shipping data shows little of this oil has been moved.

    Traders and refinery sources pointed to uncertainty over the terms of the waiver and said independent refiners had been unable to secure payment or insurance channels, while state refiners struggled to find vessels.

    The future of the crude, worth well over $1 billion at current prices, has become even more unclear after Washington last week increased its pressure on Iran, saying it would end all sanction exemptions at the start of May.

    No responsible Chinese company with any international exposure will have anything to do with Iran oil unless they are specifically told by the Chinese government to do so,” said Tilak Doshi of oil and gas consultancy Muse, Stancil & Co in Singapore.

    Iran previously stored oil in 2014 at Dalian during the last round of sanctions that was later sold to buyers in South Korea and India.

    China last week formally complained to the United States over the unilateral Iran sanctions, but U.S. officials have said Washington is not considering a further short-term waiver or a wind-down period.

    The 20 million barrels is equal to about a month’s worth of China’s imports from Iran over the past six months, or about two days of the country’s total imports.

    Iran says it will continue to export oil in defiance of U.S. sanctions.

    A senior official with the National Iranian Tanker Company (NITC), who spoke on condition of anonymity, told Reuters: “We will continue to sell our oil.”

    “_Iran is now desperate and will deal with anyone with steep discounts as long as they get paid somehow,” said Doshi.

  • How to #product Manage Your Own Career with Stanford PM Instructor Daniel Elizade
    https://hackernoon.com/how-to-product-manage-your-own-career-with-stanford-pm-instructor-daniel

    Daniel Elizade teaches Internet of Things product management at Stanford University, and works as an Internet-of-Things PM Coach full-time. Daniel and I discuss IoT product management and how to succeed in PM recruiting by imagining yourself as a product.Tell us about how you broke into product management. I was born and raised in Mexico City, went to school there, and graduated with a dual degree in Electronics and Computer Science. My first job was in Austin, Texas at a company called National Instruments, which is an industrial automation and instrumentation company. That was a fascinating job for me because it started me on a path of IoT that I work on today.One of my favorite roles in that company was serving as a solutions architect for the consulting team. My role was to go out (...)

    #product-manager #interview #product-management #hackernoon-top-story

  • Cryptographic essence of #bitcoin part # 1: What is a Hash function?
    https://hackernoon.com/cryptographic-essence-of-bitcoin-part-1-what-is-a-hash-function-f468e7f7

    What is a Hash?Cryptographic hash functions are mathematical operations run on digital data. In Bitcoin, all the operations use SHA256 as the underlying cryptographic hash function.SHA (Secure Hash Algorithm) is a set of cryptographic hash functions designed by the United States National Security Agency (NSA).To put it in simple term, a Hash function is like a black box, where you input any kind of digital information of any size, and the result (output) is an alphanumeric string (e.g.: 0xe3b0c44298fc1c149afbf4c8996fb92427ae41e4649b934ca495991b7852b855). In the case of SHA-256, the output is 32 bytes. This function has 2 characteristics:1) Unequivocal: the hash (output) is like the fingerprint of the input data. From a human fingerprint, you can´t create the human. So from the hash of a (...)

    #cryptocurrency #cryptography #hashing #blockchain

  • How the Disposable Straw Explains Modern Capitalism - The Atlantic
    https://www.theatlantic.com/technology/archive/2018/06/disposable-america/563204

    Alexis C. Madrigal - Jun 21, 2018

    A straw is a simple thing. It’s a tube, a conveyance mechanism for liquid. The defining characteristic of the straw is the emptiness inside it. This is the stuff of tragedy, and America.

    Over the last several months, plastic straws have come under fire from environmental activists who rightly point out that disposable plastics have created a swirling, centuries-long ecological disaster that is brutally difficult to clean up. Bags were first against the wall, but municipalities from Oakland, California, (yup) to Surfside, Florida, (huh!) have started to restrict the use of plastic straws. Of course, now there is a movement afoot among conservatives to keep those plastics flowing for freedom. Meanwhile, disability advocates have pointed out that plastic straws, in particular, are important for people with physical limitations. “To me, it’s just lame liberal activism that in the end is nothing,” one activist told The Toronto Star. “We’re really kind of vilifying people who need straws.” Other environmentalists aren’t sure that banning straws is gonna do much, and point out that banning straws is not an entirely rigorous approach to global systems change, considering that a widely cited estimate for the magnitude of the problem was, umm, created by a smart 9-year-old.

    All this to say: The straw is officially part of the culture wars, and you might be thinking, “Gah, these contentious times we live in!” But the straw has always been dragged along by the currents of history, soaking up the era, shaping not its direction, but its texture.

    The invention of American industrialism, the creation of urban life, changing gender relations, public-health reform, suburbia and its hamburger-loving teens, better living through plastics, and the financialization of the economy: The straw was there for all these things—rolled out of extrusion machines, dispensed, pushed through lids, bent, dropped into the abyss.

    You can learn a lot about this country, and the dilemmas of contemporary capitalism, by taking a straw-eyed view.

    People have probably been drinking things through cylindrical tubes for as long as Homo sapiens has been around, and maybe before. Scientists observed orangutans demonstrating a preference for a straw-like tool over similar, less functional things. Ancient versions existed, too.

    But in 19th-century America, straws were straw, rye stalks, cut and dried. An alternative did not present itself widely until 1888. That year, Marvin Stone, a Washington, D.C., gentleman, was awarded a patent for an “artificial straw”—“a cheap, durable, and unobjectionable” substitute for natural straws, Stone wrote, “commonly used for the administration of medicines, beverages, etc.”

    Workmen created these early artificial straws by winding paper around a thin cylindrical form, then covering them in paraffin. Often, they were “colored in imitation of the natural straw.” Within a decade, these straws appeared often in newspaper items and advertisements across the country.
    A typical Stone straw ad from a newspaper in 1899 (Google Books)

    Advertising for the Stone straw describes its virtues and emphasizes the faults of the natural straw. Stone’s straws were free from TASTE and ODOR (natural straws were not). Stone’s straws were SWEET, CLEAN, and PERFECT (natural straws could be cracked or musty). You only had to use one Stone straw per drink (not always the case with natural straws).

    They worked. They were cheap. They were very popular and spawned many imitators because once an artificial straw had been conceived, it just wasn’t that hard to make them, tinkering with the process just enough to route around Stone’s patent. This could be read as a story of individual genius. America likes this kind of story.

    But in 1850, long before Stone, Abijah Fessenden patented a drinking tube with a filter attached to a vessel shaped like a spyglass. Disabled people were using drinking tubes in the mid-19th century, as attested to by a patent from 1870. These were artificial, high-value straws; rye was natural and disposable. But it wasn’t until the late 1880s that someone thought to create the disposable, artificial straw.

    Why?

    Americans were primarily a rural people in the early 19th century. Cities had few restaurants until the 1830s and 1840s. Most that did exist were for very rich people. It took the emergence of a new urban life to spark the creation of the kind of eating and drinking establishment that would enshrine the straw in American culture: the soda fountain.

    Carbon dioxide had been isolated decades before, and soda water created with predictably palate-pleasing results, but the equipment to make it was expensive and unwieldy. It wasn’t until the the gas was readily available and cheap that the soda fountain became prevalent. In the 1870s, their technical refinement met a growing market of people who wanted a cold, sweet treat in the city.

    At the same time, the Civil War had intensified American industrialization. More and more people lived in cities and worked outside the home. Cities had saloons, but they were gendered spaces. As urban women fought for greater independence, they, too, wanted places to go. Soda fountains provided a key alternative. Given the female leadership of the late-19th-century temperance movement, soda fountains were drafted onto the side. Sodas were safe and clean. They were soft drinks.

    By 1911, an industry book proclaimed the soda fountain the very height of democratic propriety. “Today everybody, men, women and children, natives and foreigners, patronize the fountain” said The Practical Soda Fountain Guide.

    Temperance and public health grew up together in the disease-ridden cities of America, where despite the modern conveniences and excitements, mortality rates were higher than in the countryside. Straws became a key part of maintaining good hygiene and public health. They became, specifically, part of the answer to the scourge of unclean drinking glasses. Cities begin requiring the use of straws in the late 1890s. A Wisconsin paper noted in 1896 that already in many cities “ordinances have been issued making the use of wrapped drinking straws essential in public eating places.”

    But the laws that regulated health went further. A Kansas doctor campaigned against the widespread use of the “common cup,” which was ... a cup, that many people drank from. Bans began in Kansas and spread.
    The Cup Campaigner

    In many cases, this cup was eventually replaced by the water fountain (or paper cups). Some factories kept the common cup, but purchased straw dispensers that allowed all to partake individually. “The spectacle of groups of able-bodied men standing around drinking water through straws and out of a common, ordinary drinking cup, prompted no end of facetious comment,” read an item in the Shelbina Democrat of October 11, 1911.

    Cup and straw both had to be clean to assure no germs would assail the children (or the able-bodied men). So even the method by which straws were dispensed became an important hygienic indicator. “In some stores, customers are permitted to choose their own straws, and this system would work very well if customers would not finger the straws,” The Practical Soda Fountain Guide lamented.

    That led to the development of the straw dispenser, which has a deep lineage. Already, in 1911, the thing existed where you individually pop a straw into reach. That’s it, right below, with the rationale written in: “Protects straws from flies, dust, and microbes.”
    The Practical Soda Fountain Guide

    To people living through the early 20th century, the straw was a creation of the new public-health regime. “Due to the ‘Yankee mania for sanitation,’ the [American] output of artificial straws has increased from 165 million in 1901 to 4 billion a year at present,” the Battle Creek Enquirer wrote in May 1924. “A manufacturer pointed out yesterday that, laid end to end, these straws would build an ant’s subway 16 times around the world at the equator.”

    Four billion straws! There were only 114 million Americans at the time, so that’s 35 straws per capita (though some were exported).

    Of course, straw making was improving through all these decades—mechanizing, scaling up—but the straw itself basically stayed the same. According to Sidney Graham—who founded the National Soda Straw Company in 1931, and who competed against Stone and other early straw manufacturers—in a 1988 history of the straw:

    Straws were uniform up until the 1930s ... They were tan in color, thin, and exactly 8.5 inches long. Then someone in the soda-bottling business started marketing eight-ounce bottles, and straws grew to 10.5 inches. Various soda fountains began mixing malted milks, and the old straws were too thin. So we started making them thicker. Still, they were all tan in color, like the original straws.

    In the interwar years, however, major changes came to straws. In 1937, for example, Joseph Friedman invented the bendy straw at his brother’s soda shop in San Francisco, leading to the design that’s prevalent today.

    But what happened to the straw industry is far more interesting than its (limited) technical advances. Three of the biggest names in the industry—Friedman’s Flexi-Straw Company; the Lily-Tulip Cup Corporation, which made popular white straws; and Maryland Cup Corporation—have bumped around the last 80 years like corporate Forrest Gumps.

    As it turns out, all three companies’ histories intersect with each other, as well as with structural changes to the American economy. But first, we have to talk about McDonald’s.

    Let’s start with Ray Kroc, who built the McDonald’s empire. For about 16 years, beginning in 1922, he sold cups for the Lily-Tulip Cup Corporation, rising to lead sales across the Midwest. “I don’t know what appealed to me so much about paper cups. Perhaps it was mostly because they were so innovative and upbeat,” Kroc recalled in his memoir, Grinding It Out. “But I sensed from the outset that paper cups were part of the way America was headed.”

    At first, selling cups was a tough job. Straws were cheap—you could get 100 for nine cents in the 1930s—but cups were many times more expensive. And besides, people could just wash glasses. Why would they need a paper cup? But America was tilting toward speed and disposability. And throwaway products were the future (“innovative and upbeat”). Soda fountains and their fast-food descendants were continuing to grow, spurring more sales of cups and straws. In the end, Kroc called the years between 1927 and 1937 “a decade of destiny for the paper-cup industry.”

    Selling all those cups brought Kroc into contact with soda fountains, and eventually he went into business selling milkshake mixers. This led him to Southern California, where he saw the first McDonald’s in operation. He bought his way into the small company and deposed the original owners. With Kroc growing the brand, McDonald’s added 90 franchises between 1955 and 1959. By 1961, Kroc was fully in control of the company, and by 1968, there were 1,000 McDonald’s restaurants.
    The first McDonald’s that Ray Kroc opened in Des Plaines, Illinois, is now a museum dedicated to the burger chain. (Reuters/Frank Polich)

    The restaurant chain became a key customer for Maryland Cup, which began as an ice-cream-cone bakery in Boston. Its first nonfood product launched under a brand that became nationally famous, Sweetheart. That product? The straw. The name derived from the original packaging, which showed “two children sharing a milkshake, each drinking from a straw and their heads forming the two curved arcs of a heart.”

    After the war, the company went into cups, and later other kinds of packaging for the growing fast-food industry. It developed new products for McDonald’s, like those old foam clamshell packages that hamburgers used to come in. It also snatched up the Flexi-Straw Company—along with all its patents and rights—in 1969. Things were going great. The founder’s son-in-law was president of the company in Baltimore; one nephew of the founder ran the McDonald’s relationship; the other ran the plastics division.

    Because the future, at that point, had become plastics! In 1950, the world produced 1.5 million tons of plastic. By the late 1960s, that production had grown more than tenfold. Every product was being tried as a plastic thing, and so naturally, the straw became a plastic thing, too. It didn’t happen overnight. It took years for paper straws to lose their cultural salience.

    While functionally, paper and plastic straws might have seemed the same, to the keen observer who is the narrator of Nicholson Baker’s dazzling 1988 novel, The Mezzanine, the plastic and paper straw were not interchangeable. Paper did not float. Plastic did: “How could the straw engineers have made so elementary a mistake, designing a straw that weighed less than the sugar-water in which it was intended to stand? Madness!”

    Baker’s narrator wonders why the big fast-food chains like McDonald’s didn’t pressure the straw engineers into fixing this weighting mistake. “[The chains] must have had whole departments dedicated to exacting concessions from Sweetheart and Marcal,” Baker writes.

    But there was a problem: lids, which had come into vogue. Plastic straws could push through the little + slits in the cap. Paper ones could not. The restaurant chains committed fully to plastic straws.

    Baker goes on to imagine the ramifications, painting a miniature portrait of the process of path-dependent technological choice, which has helped shape everything from the width of railroad tracks to the layout of your keyboard. The power players went plastic, so everyone had to go plastic. “Suddenly the paper-goods distributor was offering the small restaurants floating plastic straws and only floating plastic straws, and was saying that this was the way all the big chains were going,” Baker writes. Sometimes it all works. Other times, a small pleasure is lost, or a tiny headache is created: “In this way the quality of life, through nobody’s fault, went down an eighth of a notch.”

    I can’t prove that this was the precise series of events that took hold among straw engineers, cup distributors, and McDonald’s. Most corporate decision-making of this kind simply doesn’t stick in the nets of history. Yet these differences influence the texture of life every single day, and ever more so, as the owners of corporations become ever further removed from the products they sell. Let’s just say that the logic Baker describes, the way he imagines the development and consequences of these forgettable technologies, squares with the histories that we do know. The very straw engineers that Baker describes might well have been working in the plastics division of the Maryland Cup Corporation, owners of the Sweetheart brand.

    Baker was writing in the 1980s, when straws of all kinds had begun to proliferate, and the American economic system entered a period of intense consolidation and financialization. A key component of this new form of capitalism was the “leveraged buyout,” in which private-equity firms descended on old companies, sliced them up, took out huge amounts of debt, and sold off the various components, “unlocking value” for their investors. You might remember this was how Mitt Romney made his fortune. Matt Taibbi described the model in acerbic but not inaccurate terms: “A man makes a $250 million fortune loading up companies with debt and then extracting million-dollar fees from those same companies, in exchange for the generous service of telling them who needs to be fired in order to finance the debt payments he saddled them with in the first place.”

    Global competition and offshoring enabled by containerized trade was responsible for some of the trouble American manufacturing encountered in the 1970s and 1980s. But the wholesale restructuring of the economy by private-equity firms to narrow the beneficiaries of business operations contributed mightily to the resentments still resounding through the country today. The straw, like everything else, was swept along for the ride.

    In the early 1980s, Maryland Cup’s family-linked executives were on the glide path to retirement. Eighty family members held about half the company’s stock. In 1983, the company had $656 million in revenue, $32 million in profits, and 10,000 employees. It was the biggest disposable-food-product manufacturer in the nation, an empire built on cups, straws, and plastic silverware. The family was ready to cash out.

    The big paper and food companies circled Maryland Cup, but it was eventually sold for $534 million to Fort Howard, a paper company that had gone public in the early ’70s, and began to aggressively expand beyond its Wisconsin base.

    The sale was a boon for Maryland Cup’s shareholders, but the company did not fare well under the new management. Following the transaction, the Baltimore Sun relates, Maryland Cup executives flew to dinner with Fort Howard’s hard-charging CEO, Paul Schierl. He brought out a flip chart, on which he’d written the company’s “old” values—“service, quality, responding to customers.” He turned the page to show the company’s “new” values—“profits, profits, profits.” It’s like a scene out of Tommy Boy, or a socialist’s fever dream.

    Fort Howard forced deep cuts on the company. Some longtime managers quit. The trappings of the family company went out the window. No more executives dressing up as Santa Claus or local charitable contributions. And while Fort Howard was cutting people, it invested in expanding the company’s factories. This was just business. Schierl literally appeared at a sales meeting in a devil’s mask.

    Maryland Cup’s struggles intensified after the wave of departures that followed the acquisition. It needed customer volume to keep its new, bigger plants running, so Fort Howard snatched up the Lily-Tulip Cup Corporation in 1986 for another $332 million. Surely there would be synergies. More layoffs came.

    Two years later, the private-equity guys struck. Morgan Stanley, which had helped broker Fort Howard’s deals, swept in and snatched the company for $3.9 billion in one of those famed leveraged buyouts. The whole enterprise was swept off the public markets and into their hands.

    One of their moves was to spin out the cup business as Sweetheart Holdings—along with a boatload of debt jettisoned out of Fort Howard. Just eight years inside Fort Howard and a turn through the private-equity wringer had turned a profitable company into one that still made money on operations in 1991, but was $95 million in the red because it was so loaded up with debt.

    The company made layoffs across the country. Retirement health-care benefits were cut, leaving older employees so livid they filed a class-action lawsuit. A huge Wilmington factory closed after McDonald’s got rid of its plastic clamshell packaging for hamburgers, citing environmental concerns over plastic.

    In 1993, the company was sold again to a different investment group, American Industrial Partners. Eventually, it was sold yet again to the Solo Cup Company, makers of one-third of the materials necessary for beer pong. And finally, in 2012, Solo was itself sold to Dart Container, a family-owned packaging company that sells a vast array of straws under the Solo brand.

    Fort Howard continued on, going back public in 1995, then merging with another paper company, James River, in 1997, to become Fort James. Just three years later, an even bigger paper company, Georgia Pacific, snatched up the combined entity. In 2005, Koch Industries bought the shares of all the companies, taking the company back private. They still make straws.

    While bulk capitalism pushes hundreds of millions of plain plastic straws through the American food system, there are also thousands of variations on the straw now, from the “krazy” whirling neon kind to a new natural straw made from rye stalks advertised on Kickstarter (the entrepreneur calls them “Straw Straws”). There are old-school paper straws and newfangled compostable plastic straws. Stone Straw, founded by the inventor of the artificial straw, even survives in some form as the straw-distributing subsidiary of a Canadian manufacturing concern. Basically, there’s never been a better time to be a straw consumer.

    Meanwhile, the country has shed manufacturing jobs for decades, straws contribute their share to a dire global environmental disaster, the economy continues to concentrate wealth among the very richest, and the sodas that pass through the nation’s straws are contributing to an obesity epidemic that threatens to erase many of the public health gains that were won in the 20th century. Local governments may legislate the use of the plastic straw, but they can’t do a thing about the vast system that’s attached to the straw, which created first disposable products, then companies, and finally people.

    The straw is the opposite of special. History has flowed around and through it, like thousands of other bits of material culture. What’s happened to the straw might not even be worth comment, and certainly not essay. But if it’s not clear by now, straws, in this story, are us, inevitable vessels of the times in which we live.

    #USA #histoire #capitalisme #alimentation #plastique

  • La liste des incidents du USCG Polar Star continue à s’allonger. Les capacités polaires des garde-côtes états-uniens sont à la merci d’un incident…

    FIRE IN ANTARCTIC OCEAN Aboard USCG’s Last Heavy Icebreaker – gCaptain
    https://gcaptain.com/fire-in-antarctic-ocean-uscg-icebreaker-mcmurdo


    The Coast Guard Cutter Polar Star, with 75,000 horsepower and its 13,500-ton weight, is guided by its crew to break through Antarctic ice en route to the National Science Foundation’s McMurdo Station, Jan. 15, 2017. The ship, which was designed more than 40 years ago, remains the world’s most powerful non-nuclear icebreaker.
    U.S. Coast Guard photo by Chief Petty Officer David Mosley

    The 150-member crew of the U.S. Coast Guard Cutter Polar Sta_r fought a fire at approximately 9 p.m. PST Feb. 10 that broke out in the ship’s incinerator room about 650 miles north of McMurdo Sound, Antarctica.

    After initial response efforts using four fire extinguishers failed, fire crews spent almost two hours extinguishing the fire. Fire damage was contained inside the incinerator housing, while firefighting water used to cool exhaust pipe in the surrounding area damaged several electrical systems and insulation in the room.

    Repairs are already being planned for the Polar Star’s upcoming maintenance period. The incinerator will need to be full functional before next year’s mission.
    […]
    “_It’s always a serious matter whenever a shipboard fire breaks out at sea, and it’s even more concerning when that ship is in one of the most remote places on Earth,
    ” said Vice Adm. Linda Fagan, commander of the U.S. Coast Guard’s Pacific Area.
    […]
    The Feb. 10 fire was not the first engineering casualty faced by the Polar Star crew this deployment. While en route to Antarctica, one of the ship’s electrical systems began to smoke, causing damage to wiring in an electrical switchboard, and one of the ship’s two evaporators used to make drinkable water failed. The electrical switchboard was repaired by the crew, and the ship’s evaporator was repaired after parts were received during a port call in Wellington, New Zealand.

    The ship also experienced a leak from the shaft that drives the ship’s propeller, which halted icebreaking operations to send scuba divers into the water to repair the seal around the shaft. A hyperbaric chamber on loan from the U.S. Navy aboard the ship allows Coast Guard divers to make external emergency repairs and inspections of the ship’s hull at sea.

    The Polar Star also experienced ship-wide power outages while breaking ice. Crew members spent nine hours shutting down the ship’s power plant and rebooting the electrical system in order to remedy the outages.

    The U.S. Coast Guard maintains two icebreakers – the Coast Guard Cutter Healy, which is a medium icebreaker, and the Polar Star, the United States’ only heavy icebreaker. If a catastrophic event, such as getting stuck in the ice, were to happen to the Healy in the Arctic or to the Polar Star near Antarctica, the U.S. Coast Guard is left without a self-rescue capability.

    By contrast, Russia currently operates more than 40 icebreakers – several of which are nuclear powered.

    nouvel épisode après https://seenthis.net/messages/754347 il y a 6 semaines.

  • The early work of groundbreaking photojournalist Gordon Parks – in pictures
    https://www.theguardian.com/artanddesign/gallery/2019/feb/14/gordon-parks-early-work-photography


    Washington DC Government Charwoman, July 1942

    Photograph: Gordon Parks/Courtesy The Gordon Parks Foundation, National Gallery of Art, Washington and Library of Congress, Washington
    #photographie

  • En #France, le décompte des cas de #cancer n’est effectué que pour 22 % de la population
    https://www.lemonde.fr/sciences/article/2019/01/22/cancers-aucune-donnee-pour-78-de-la-population-francaise_5412764_1650684.htm

    Qu’importe la vague de registres nationaux qui déferle sur l’#Europe, la France, ce territoire présentant l’un des taux de cancers les plus forts du monde, une #agriculture intensive sur 30 % de sa surface et quelque 500 000 sites industriels distincts, la France donc serait pour Philippe-Jean Bousquet « à la pointe » du suivi épidémiologique.

    #pollution #épidémiologie

  • Half of the world’s annual precipitation falls in just 12 days, new study finds
    https://phys.org/news/2018-11-world-annual-precipitation-falls-days.html

    The findings, which suggest that flooding and the damage associated with it could also increase, have implications for water managers, urban planners, and emergency responders. The research results are also a concern for #agriculture, which is more productive when rainfall is spread more evenly over the growing season.

    The research was supported by the U.S. Department of Energy and the National Science Foundation, which is NCAR’s sponsor.

    #eau #climat #urbanisme

  • La crucifixion de Julian Assange – Ce qui arrive à Assange devrait terrifier la presse (Truth Dig) – Salimsellami’s Blog
    https://salimsellami.wordpress.com/2018/11/14/la-crucifixion-de-julian-assange-ce-qui-arrive-a-assange-dev

    Le silence sur le traitement d’Assange n’est pas seulement une trahison à son égard, mais une trahison de la liberté de la presse elle-même. Nous paierons cher cette complicité.

    L’asile de Julian Assange à l’ambassade d’Equateur à Londres s’est transformé en une petite boutique des horreurs. Au cours des sept derniers mois, il a été largement coupé de toute communication avec le monde extérieur. Sa nationalité équatorienne, qui lui a été accordée en tant que demandeur d’asile, est en cours de révocation. Sa santé s’est détériorée. On lui refuse l’accès à soins médicaux appropriés [ie à l’extérieur de l’ambassade – NdT]. Ses efforts pour obtenir réparation ont été paralysés par les « règles du bâillon » [« gag rules » – Une règle de bâillon est une règle qui limite ou interdit la discussion, la considération ou la discussion d’un sujet particulier par les membres d’un organe législatif ou exécutif. – NdT], y compris les ordres équatoriens lui interdisant de rendre publiques ses conditions de vie à l’intérieur de l’ambassade dans sa lutte contre la révocation de sa citoyenneté équatorienne.

    Le Premier ministre australien Scott Morrison a refusé d’intercéder en faveur d’Assange, un citoyen australien, même si le nouveau gouvernement équatorien, dirigé par Lenín Moreno – qui appelle Assange un « problème hérité » et un obstacle à de meilleures relations avec Washington – rend la vie du fondateur de WikiLeaks dans cette ambassade insupportable. Presque tous les jours, l’ambassade impose des conditions plus dures à Assange, notamment en lui faisant payer ses frais médicaux, en lui imposant des règles obscures sur la façon dont il doit prendre soin de son chat et en lui demandant d’effectuer diverses tâches ménagères dégradantes.

    Les Équatoriens, réticents à expulser Assange après lui avoir accordé l’asile politique et la citoyenneté, ont l’intention de rendre son existence si pénible qu’il accepterait de quitter l’ambassade pour être arrêté par les Britanniques et extradé vers les États-Unis. L’ancien président de l’Equateur, Rafael Correa, dont le gouvernement a accordé l’asile politique à l’éditeur, qualifie les conditions de vie actuelles d’Assange de « torture ».

    Sa mère, Christine Assange, a déclaré dans un récent appel vidéo : [L’auteur cite de longs extraits. Voir l’appel en entier et en français : https://www.legrandsoir.info/unity4j-christine-assange-lance-un-appel-… – NdT]

    Assange était loué et courtisé par certains des plus grands médias du monde, dont le New York Times et le Guardian, pour les informations qu’il possédait. Mais une fois que ses documents sur les crimes de guerre commis par les États-Unis, en grande partie fournis par Chelsea Manning, ont été publiés par ces médias, il fut mis à l’écart et diabolisé. Un document du Pentagone qui a fait l’objet d’une fuite et préparé par la Cyber Counterintelligence Assessments Branch (Direction du contre-espionnage cybernétique) du 8 mars 2008 a révélé une campagne de propagande visant à discréditer WikiLeaks et Assange. Le document dit que la campagne de diffamation doit chercher à détruire le « sentiment de confiance » qui est le « centre de gravité » de WikiLeaks et à salir la réputation d’Assange. Cela a largement fonctionné. Assange est particulièrement vilipendé pour avoir publié 70 000 courriels piratés appartenant au Comité national démocrate (DNC) et à de hauts responsables démocrates. Les démocrates et l’ancien directeur du FBI, James Comey, affirment que les courriels ont été copiés des comptes de John Podesta, chef de campagne de la candidate démocrate Hillary Clinton, par des pirates du gouvernement russe. Comey a dit que les messages ont probablement été transmis à WikiLeaks par un intermédiaire. Assange a dit que les e-mails n’avaient pas été fournis par des « acteurs étatiques ».

    Le Parti démocrate, qui cherche à imputer sa défaite électorale à l’ » ingérence » russe plutôt qu’à la grotesque inégalité des revenus, à la trahison de la classe ouvrière, à la perte des libertés civiles, à la désindustrialisation et au coup d’Etat des entreprises que le parti a aidé à orchestrer, accuse Assange d’être un traître, bien qu’il ne soit pas un citoyen américain. Ni un espion. Et à ma connaissance, aucune loi ne lui interdit de publier les secrets du gouvernement US. Il n’a commis aucun crime. Aujourd’hui, les articles parus dans les journaux qui publiaient autrefois des articles de WikiLeaks mettent l’accent sur son comportement prétendument négligeant – ce qui n’était pas évident lors de mes visites – et sur le fait qu’il est, selon les mots du Guardian, « un invité indésirable » à l’ambassade. La question vitale des droits d’un éditeur et d’une presse libre a cédé le place à la calomnie contre la personne.

    Assange a obtenu l’asile à l’ambassade en 2012 afin d’éviter l’extradition vers la Suède pour répondre à des questions sur des accusations d’infractions sexuelles qui ont finalement été abandonnées. Assange craignait qu’une fois détenu par les Suédois, il soit extradé vers les États-Unis [un accord d’extradition entre la Suède et les Etats-Unis autorise l’extradition d’une personne comme simple « témoin » – NdT]. Le gouvernement britannique a déclaré que, bien qu’il ne soit plus recherché pour interrogatoire en Suède, Assange sera arrêté et emprisonné s’il quitte l’ambassade pour avoir violé les conditions de sa libération sous caution.

    WikiLeaks et Assange ont fait plus pour dénoncer les sombres machinations et crimes de l’Empire américain que toute autre organisation de presse. Assange, en plus de dénoncer les atrocités et les crimes commis par l’armée américaine dans nos guerres sans fin et de révéler les rouages internes de la campagne Clinton, a rendu publics les outils de piratage utilisés par la CIA et la NSA, leurs programmes de surveillance et leur ingérence dans les élections étrangères, notamment les élections françaises. Il a révélé le complot contre le chef du Parti travailliste britannique Jeremy Corbyn par des députés travaillistes au Parlement. Et WikiLeaks s’est rapidement mobilisé pour sauver Edward Snowden, qui a exposé la surveillance totale du public américain par le gouvernement, de l’extradition vers les États-Unis en l’aidant à fuir Hong Kong pour Moscou. Les fuites de Snowden ont également révélé, de façon inquiétante, qu’Assange était sur une « liste de cibles d’une chasse à l’homme » américaine.

    Ce qui arrive à Assange devrait terrifier la presse. Et pourtant, son sort se heurte à l’indifférence et au mépris sarcastique. Une fois expulsé de l’ambassade, il sera jugé aux États-Unis pour ce qu’il a publié. Cela créera un précédent juridique nouveau et dangereux que l’administration Trump et les futures administrations utiliseront contre d’autres éditeurs, y compris ceux qui font partie de la mafia qui tentent de lyncher Assange. Le silence sur le traitement d’Assange n’est pas seulement une trahison à son égard, mais une trahison de la liberté de la presse elle-même. Nous paierons cher cette complicité.

    Même si ce sont les Russes qui ont fourni les courriels de Podesta à Assange, il a eu raison de les publier. C’est ce que j’aurais fait. Ces courriers ont révélé les pratiques de l’appareil politique Clinton qu’elle et les dirigeants démocrates cherchaient à cacher. Au cours des deux décennies où j’ai travaillé en tant que correspondant à l’étranger, des organisations et des gouvernements m’ont régulièrement divulgué des documents volés. Ma seule préoccupation était de savoir si les documents étaient authentiques ou non. S’ils étaient authentiques, je les publiais. Parmi ceux qui m’en ont transmis, il y avait les rebelles du Front de Libération Nationale Farabundo Marti (FMLN) ; l’armée salvadorienne, qui m’a un jour donné des documents du FMLN ensanglantés trouvés après une embuscade, le gouvernement sandiniste du Nicaragua ; le Mossad, le service de renseignement israélien ; le FBI ; la CIA ; le groupe rebelle du Parti des travailleurs du Kurdistan (PKK) ; l’Organisation de libération de la Palestine (OLP) ; le service de renseignement français, la Direction générale de la sécurité extérieure, ou DGSE ; et le gouvernement serbe de Slobodan Milosovic, qui a ensuite été jugé comme un criminel de guerre.

    Nous avons appris par les courriels publiés par WikiLeaks que la Fondation Clinton a reçu des millions de dollars de l’Arabie saoudite et du Qatar, deux des principaux bailleurs de fonds de l’État islamique. En tant que secrétaire d’État, Hillary Clinton a remboursé ses donateurs en approuvant la vente de 80 milliards de dollars d’armes à l’Arabie saoudite, ce qui a permis au royaume de mener une guerre dévastatrice au Yémen qui a déclenché une crise humanitaire, notamment une grave pénurie alimentaire et une épidémie de choléra, et fait près de 60 000 morts. Nous avons appris que Clinton avait touché 675 000 $ pour une conférence chez Goldman Sachs, une somme si énorme qu’elle ne peut être qualifiée que comme un pot-de-vin. Nous avons appris que Mme Clinton avait dit aux élites financières, lors de ses entretiens lucratifs, qu’elle voulait » l’ouverture du commerce et des frontières » et qu’elle croyait que les dirigeants de Wall Street étaient les mieux placés pour gérer l’économie, une déclaration qui allait directement à l’encontre de ses promesses électorales. Nous avons appris que la campagne Clinton avait pour but d’influencer les primaires républicaines pour s’assurer que Donald Trump était le candidat républicain. Nous avons appris que Mme Clinton avait obtenu à l’avance les questions posées lors du débat pendant les primaires. Nous avons appris, parce que 1 700 des 33 000 courriels provenaient d’Hillary Clinton, qu’elle était l’architecte principale de la guerre en Libye. Nous avons appris qu’elle croyait que le renversement de Moammar Kadhafi lui permettrait d’améliorer ses chances en tant que candidate à la présidence. La guerre qu’elle a voulu a plongé la Libye dans le chaos, vu la montée au pouvoir des djihadistes radicaux dans ce qui est aujourd’hui un État en déliquescence, déclenché un exode massif de migrants vers l’Europe, vu les stocks d’armes libyens saisis par des milices rebelles et des radicaux islamiques dans toute la région, et fait 40 000 morts. Cette information aurait-elle dû rester cachée ? Vous pouvez dire oui, mais dans ce cas vous ne pouvez pas vous qualifier de journaliste.

    « Ils sont en train de piéger mon fils pour avoir une excuse pour le livrer aux États-Unis, où il fera l’objet d’un simulacre de procès« , a averti Christine Assange. « Au cours des huit dernières années, il n’a pas eu accès à un processus juridique approprié. A chaque étape, c’est l’injustice qui a prévalu, avec un énorme déni de justice. Il n’y a aucune raison de penser qu’il en sera autrement à l’avenir. Le grand jury américain qui produit le mandat d’extradition se tient en secret, a quatre procureurs mais pas de défense ni de juge.

    Le traité d’extradition entre le Royaume-Uni et les États-Unis permet au Royaume-Uni d’extrader Julian vers les États-Unis sans qu’il y ait de preuve prima facie. Une fois aux États-Unis, la National Defense Authorization Act permet la détention illimitée sans procès. Julian risque d’être emprisonné à Guantánamo Bay et torturé, d’être condamné à 45 ans de prison de haute sécurité, ou la peine de mort.« 

    Assange est seul. Chaque jour qui passe lui est plus difficile. C’est le but recherché. C’est à nous de protester. Nous sommes son dernier espoir, et le dernier espoir, je le crains, pour une presse libre.

    Chris Hedges

    Chris Hedges, a passé près de deux décennies comme correspondant à l’étranger en Amérique centrale, au Moyen-Orient, en Afrique et dans les Balkans. Il a fait des reportages dans plus de 50 pays et a travaillé pourThe Christian Science Monitor, National Public Radio, The Dallas Morning News et The New York Times, pour lesquels il a été correspondant à étranger pendant 15 ans.

    Traduction « il y aura des comptes à rendre » par VD pour le Grand Soir avec probablement toutes les fautes et coquilles habituelles » »https://www.truthdig.com/articles/crucifying-julian-assange/URL de cet article 34082 
    https://www.legrandsoir.info/la-crucifixion-de-julian-assange-ce-qui-arrive-a-assange-devrait-terri

  • Iranian Tanker That Sank Months Ago Among Ships Hit by Sanctions - Bloomberg
    https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2018-11-05/iranian-tanker-that-sank-months-ago-among-ships-hit-by-sanctions

    Among the hundreds of Iranian-linked banks, companies and vessels that the U.S. slapped sanctions against on Monday was an Iranian crude oil tanker called the Sanchi. There’s one problem: The ship sank after a collision and fiery explosion in January.

    The U.S. Treasury Department’s sanctions list distributed Monday leaves no doubt about the identity of the vessel targeted with sanctions. It’s the Sanchi, otherwise known as the Gardenia, the Seahorse and the Sepid, that’s flown under flags including those of Tanzania, Malta and Tuvalu. Its International Maritime Organization number is 9356608, and it’s linked to the National Iranian Tanker Company.

    Tanker tracking data compiled by Bloomberg shows that’s the same ship that sank in the East China Sea — with all 32 people aboard — after colliding with another vessel on Jan. 6. The tanker was laden with more than 1 million barrels of light crude oil and burned for several days, creating a large oil spill, before an explosion destroyed what was left of it and sent the vessel to the bottom of the sea.

  • Estonie. Climat de guerre froide à la frontière russe

    En 2016, le photographe italien #Alessandro_Gandolfi s’est rendu en Estonie, tout près de la frontière russe, pour y réaliser cette série intitulée “Estonie. La nouvelle Crimée ?” Selon lui, un rideau de fer s’est à nouveau abattu sur l’Europe. Et plus précisément dans cet État. Ce pays Balte, aujourd’hui membre de l’Union européenne et de l’Otan, faisait partie de l’Union soviétique pendant la première guerre froide. Aujourd’hui, il se retrouve au beau milieu de la partie qui se joue entre Washington et Moscou. “Il me semblait intéressant de raconter le quotidien des Estoniens, surtout ceux qui vivent à la frontière avec la Russie. Ils sont russophones pour la plupart, pro-Poutine et peu intégrés”, explique Alessandro Gandolfi à Courrier international.

    Depuis que la Russie a annexé la Crimée en 2014, l’Estonie craint d’être la prochaine victime de son expansionnisme. L’Otan est d’ailleurs en train d’intensifier sa présence militaire le long de la frontière balte. En 2017, son budget pour cette région est monté à 3,4 milliards de dollars, et l’organisation y a détaché des milliers de soldats supplémentaires. De plus, le nombre de civils qui rejoignent des milices de volontaires ne cesse de croître.
    Né en 1970 à Parme, Alessandro Gandolfi a été journaliste au quotidien La Repubblica avant de se consacrer au photojournalisme à partir de 2001. Il a cofondé l’agence Parallelozero à Milan. Son travail, publié dans de nombreux titres internationaux comme Time, Die Zeit et National Geographic, a été plusieurs fois primé.


    https://www.courrierinternational.com/diaporama/estonie-climat-de-guerre-froide-la-frontiere-russe

    #Estonie #frontières #Russie #photographie
    ping @reka @albertocampiphoto

  • 100 entreprises responsables de plus de 70 % des émissions mondiales de carbone - Sciences et Avenir
    https://www.sciencesetavenir.fr/nature-environnement/100-entreprises-responsables-de-plus-de-70-des-emissions-mondiales-

    « Sur les 635 milliards de tonnes d’équivalent CO2 issues des 100 plus gros producteurs, 32% peuvent être rattachés à des investissements publics, 9% à des investissements privés, et même 59% à des investissements nationaux », alerte le rapport. Parmi les sociétés privées les plus émettrices, on compte sans surprise ExxonMobil, Shell, BP, Chevron, Peabody, Total, ou BHP Billiton. Du côté des entreprises nationalisés, on compte évidemment l’Arabie Saoudite, la Russie, la Chine, ou encore l’Inde, avec Saudi Aramco, Gazprom, National Iranian Oil, Coal India, Pemex, et CNPC (PetroChina). Enfin, la production de charbon en Chine a été agrégée en incluant divers acteurs comme Shenhua Group, Datong Coal Mine Group, ou encore China National Coal Group. Au total, le charbon chinois est responsable de plus de 14% des émissions globales de gaz à effet de serre !

  • Exclusive: Mesa to include nine countries while prioritising Iran threat - The National

    https://www.thenational.ae/world/mena/exclusive-mesa-to-include-nine-countries-while-prioritising-iran-threat-

    S Deputy Assistant Secretary of State for Arabian Gulf Affairs Tim Lenderking has spent the last three weeks in shuttle regional diplomacy across the Gulf to lay the groundwork for a US-hosted summit in January that would launch the Middle East Strategic Alliance (Mesa), a concept similar to an Arab Nato.

    In an interview with The National on Wednesday, Mr Lenderking divulged details about the structure of Mesa and its long term prospects. He said besides the Gulf Cooperation Council members – Saudi Arabia, UAE, Kuwait, Bahrain, Qatar and Oman – the US and both Egypt and Jordan would be members of such an alliance.

    Mr Lenderking said that US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo will be hosting a GCC + 2 meeting on the margins of United Nations General Assembly on Friday to prepare for the January summit.

    “This stems from the Riyadh summit in 2017 where everyone agreed that the US and the GCC would meet on an annual basis...we added on top of that the keen interest on both sides in building Mesa,” Mr Lenderking explained. The alliance would be based on a security, economic and political agreement that would bind together the GCC countries, along with the US, Egypt and Jordan.

    Notwithstanding the different policy priorities within the GCC itself, Mr Lenderking said the idea of Mesa is “it builds a good strong shield against threats in the Gulf,” naming Iran, cyber concerns, attacks on infrastructure, and coordinating conflict management from Syria to Yemen as part of its agenda.

    “The more we have coordinated efforts, the more effective in enhancing stability,” he said, adding that Iran was the “number one threat” on the Mesa list.

    The senior US official confirmed that the US would be part of the alliance and “we [US] would like to agree on the concept of Mesa by the January summit.”

    He cautioned, however, that these conversations are still in their early stages and “if we find we need to change dates we need to be flexible on that”.

  • Reality Winner, who pleaded guilty to leaking secret U.S. report, gets 63-month sentence

    https://www.cbsnews.com/news/reality-winner-sentenced-pleaded-guilty-to-leaking-secret-u-s-report-today-2018-08-23/?ftag=CNM-00-10aab7e&linkId=55922192

    A former government contractor who pleaded guilty to mailing a classified U.S. report to a news organization was sentenced to more than five years Thursday as part of a deal with prosecutors, who called it the longest sentence ever imposed for a federal crime involving leaks to the media. 

    Reality Winner, 26, pleaded guilty in June to a single count of transmitting national security information. The former Air Force translator worked as a contractor at a National Security Agency’s office in Augusta, Georgia, when she printed a classified report and left the building with it tucked into her pantyhose. Winner told the FBI she mailed the document to an online news outlet.

    In court Thursday, Winner apologized and acknowledged that what she did was wrong.

    Authorities never identified the news organization. But the Justice Department announced Winner’s June 2017 arrest the same day The Intercept reported on a secret NSA document. It detailed Russian government efforts to penetrate a Florida-based supplier of voting software and the accounts of election officials ahead of the 2016 presidential election. The NSA report was dated May 5, the same as the document Winner had leaked.

    U.S. intelligence agencies later confirmed Russian meddling.

    #Reality_Winner

  • China Shipowners Stop Hauling Iranian Oil as U.S. Sanctions Near - Bloomberg
    https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2018-08-21/china-shipowners-stop-hauling-iranian-oil-as-u-s-sanctions-near

    • Only Iranian ships are carrying crude to China since July
    • OPEC producer has sold cargoes on its tankers to India as well

    China’s shipowners are shunning Iran’s oil, while the OPEC producer is using its own tankers to supply top customers as impending U.S. sanctions threaten to disrupt global crude trade.

    All 17 ships used to carry oil from the Islamic Republic to China in July and August are owned by the state-run National Iranian Tanker Co., according to ship-tracking data compiled by Bloomberg. By contrast, almost half the vessels that made the journey in the prior three months were owned by companies in the North Asian nation, the data show.

    • « Mon silence blesse ma conscience. Nous avons plus de 23 sœurs qui, en un an, ont été renvoyées de la congrégation car elles ont été abusées sexuellement, il y a eu un abus d’autorité. » Le 24 juillet, sur le plateau de la TVN, la chaîne de télévision nationale du Chili, sœur Yolanda Tondreaux et cinq religieuses de la congrégation du Bon samaritain ont dénoncé la série d’abus sexuels commis par les prêtres qui rendaient visite à leur communauté de Molina, rattachée au diocèse chilien de Talca.

      De l’autre côté de l’Atlantique, c’est une autre religieuse qui brise le silence, vingt ans après son agression. Dans un article d’Associated Press publié le 28 juillet, une sœur italienne raconte l’abus sexuel dont elle a été victime alors qu’elle se confessait auprès d’un prêtre à Bologne. « Cela a ouvert une blessure en moi, raconte-t-elle. J’ai fait comme si rien ne s’était produit. » Le 29 juin, en Inde, une sœur indienne a porté plainte pour viol et plusieurs agressions sexuelles contre un évêque du diocèse de Jalhandar qui, pour sa part, nie les faits.
      Depuis quelques mois, des cas d’abus commis par des membres du clergé sur des religieuses émergent de tous les continents. La libération de la parole due au mouvement #MeToo, né dans le sillage de l’affaire Weinstein en octobre 2017, se répandrait dans les ordres. Ces religieuses témoignent aussi de l’inaction et du silence de l’Église face à des pratiques qui seraient connues depuis une vingtaine d’années.

      À la fin des années 1990, des rapports avaient été présentés au Vatican. Parmi eux, celui de la sœur Maura O’Donohue, médecin et coordinatrice pour le sida au sein du Fonds catholique de développement outre-mer de la Caritas. Elle avait réalisé un sondage auprès de religieuses dans 23 pays en 1994. Elle y dénonçait, au milieu d’autres situations tragiques, les viols commis par des prêtres sur des religieuses, considérées comme des partenaires « sûres », dans les pays gravement atteints par l’épidémie de sida. Ces enquêtes devaient rester privées, mais le journal américain National Catholic Reporter les avait mises en ligne en 2001.

      #viol #catholicisme

      ____

      La révolte des nonnes au Kerala
      https://www.lemonde.fr/m-actu/article/2018/09/21/la-revolte-des-nonnes-au-kerala_5358317_4497186.html

      Les religieuses de la Congrégation des missionnaires de Jésus-Christ dénoncent l’inertie de l’Eglise et des autorités face aux accusations de viols d’une congréganiste par un évêque.

      Samedi 8 septembre, cinq religieuses vêtues de robes marron et coiffées d’un voile se sont installées sur une place de Kochi (Inde), dans l’Etat du Kerala, avec des pancartes sur les genoux et un micro.

      Jusqu’alors, personne n’avait voulu les entendre. Ni les responsables politiques, ni les médias, ni les autorités ecclésiastiques indiennes, et encore moins le Vatican. Alors depuis deux semaines, les cinq nonnes de la Congrégation des missionnaires de Jésus-Christ se relaient pour dénoncer l’inertie de l’Eglise et des autorités indiennes après les accusations de viol d’une congréganiste à l’encontre d’un évêque.
      « Nous nous battrons à l’intérieur de l’Eglise et de la congrégation. Nos supérieurs ont coupé tous les liens avec nous dès le moment où nous les avons questionnés. Mais nous continuerons à nous battre. » sœur Anupama

      Une religieuse de 44 ans accuse l’évêque Franco Mullackal de treize agressions sexuelles, entre 2014 et 2016. Après avoir alerté sa hiérarchie à plusieurs reprises, en vain, elle a finalement décidé de porter plainte, fin juin. La police a attendu près d’un mois et demi avant d’interroger le prélat qui est à la tête de la congrégation, basée à Jalandhar, dans l’Etat du Pendjab. Un délai inhabituellement long.
      Un geste de colère inouï en Inde

      L’évêque a finalement donné, le 16 septembre, sa démission temporaire au pape François pour se consacrer à sa défense, après avoir rejeté les accusations. Il a été arrêté et inculpé pour « viol », vendredi 22 septembre.

      La congrégation, de son côté, accuse la religieuse d’avoir « enfreint la discipline » de sa communauté et d’« avoir eu une liaison avec un chauffeur de taxi ».
      Monseigneur Franco Mullackal (en blanc), évêque de Jalandhar, est escorté par la police, près de Kochi, dans l’Etat du Kérala, le 21 septembre.

      Ce scandale éclate quelques semaines seulement après la publication, en août, d’une lettre du pape François dans laquelle ce dernier exprime « la honte et la repentance » de l’Eglise concernant les abus sexuels commis par des membres du clergé, et la passivité des responsables qui les ont couverts.

      Lire aussi : Violences sexuelles : le pape François condamne, les victimes demandent des actes

      « Nous nous battrons à l’intérieur de l’Eglise et de la congrégation, a déclaré la sœur Anupama, l’une des cinq religieuses à l’initiative du sit-in. Nos supérieurs ont coupé tous les liens avec nous dès le moment où nous les avons questionnés. Même les prêtres ont cessé de venir au couvent pour célébrer la messe. Mais nous continuerons à nous battre. »

      Ce geste de colère est inouï dans un pays où les nonnes n’ont pas l’habitude d’organiser des protestations, encore moins de dénoncer les agressions sexuelles. L’audace des cinq religieuses a pris de court le pays tout entier et, au fil des jours, le mouvement de soutien s’est amplifié. Des poètes, des acteurs de cinéma, des associations de résidents, des syndicats étudiants, de toutes les confessions, les ont rejointes sur le square de Kochi. « C’est le combat d’une religieuse sans argent ni pouvoir ni influence contre la puissante Eglise », explique Shyju Antony, l’un des leaders du mouvement.
      Le silence des responsables politiques

      Seuls absents : les responsables politiques de tous bords. Sauf un, P. C. George, député régional indépendant, qui a qualifié la religieuse de « prostituée ». « Douze fois, elle y a pris plaisir, et la treizième fois c’est un viol ? Pourquoi n’a-t-elle pas porté plainte la première fois ? », a-t-il déclaré à la presse locale.

      Dans un Etat où les chrétiens forment près de 19 % de la population, les partis hésitent à critiquer l’Eglise, y compris les communistes au pouvoir dans l’Etat du Kerala : « Même eux sont sous l’influence de l’Eglise », maugrée Shyju Antony.

      Des catholiques se sont pourtant mobilisés. Le père Augustine Vattoli, de l’Eglise catholique syro-malabare, a fondé le mouvement Save Our Sisters (SOS, Sauvez nos sœurs) pour venir en aide à la victime présumée de viols. « Bien sûr que ce scandale entache la réputation de l’Eglise, mais nous espérons qu’il va réveiller les consciences, explique-t-il. Le silence de l’Eglise est insupportable. »

      Sur le site d’informations India Currents, le prêtre capucin Suresh Mathew a également dénoncé en août les conditions de vie des religieuses. « En Inde, les nonnes de nombreuses congrégations ne sont pas autorisées à utiliser leur téléphone portable ou à envoyer des e-mails pour être en contact avec leurs proches », écrit-il, ajoutant qu’elles doivent « utiliser des vêtements pendant leurs règles car les serviettes hygiéniques sont interdites. »

      Par crainte que la révolte des sœurs ne se propage, plusieurs congrégations, dont celle de la mère du Carmel, ont demandé à leurs nonnes de ne surtout pas prendre part au débat, y compris sur Whatsapp ou sur les réseaux sociaux.

  • How a West Bank highway’s roadsign captures the Israeli psyche - Opinion

    There’s nothing more political than a company paving roads beyond the state’s borders to enable Jewish Israelis to violate international law, completely oblivious of Palestinian residents

    Amira Hass
    Jul 17, 2018 6:59 PM

    https://www.haaretz.com/opinion/.premium-how-a-west-bank-highway-s-roadsign-captures-the-israeli-psyche-1.6

    If you want a tour of the Israeli subconscious, follow Route 60 through the West Bank to the junction of the villages of Beitin, Dir Dibwan and Burqa, then turn left. You’re not familiar with that intersection? Here’s a hint: Netivei Israel, the National Transport Infrastructure Company, is upgrading the junction and has even posted signs there with the following wording: “Very dangerous site. Drive carefully.” The warnings are written inside a circle with a needle pointing to a red stripe, for emphasis.
    Underneath the circle, it says, “Givat Assaf Junction. Widening the intersection and making safety upgrades. Working to fix a dangerous intersection. Date of completion: January 2019.” The notice is signed by the Transportation Ministry and the roads company.

    A Hebrew only sign at Givat Assaf Junction in the West BankAmira Hass
    In mid-March, I asked spokespeople at Netivei Israel why it chose that name for the intersection, given that Givat Assaf is, as I put it, “An unauthorized and illegal outpost built on privately owned land belonging to residents of the Palestinian village of Beitin. Moreover, this land was taken over by means of forged documents.” The outpost was built in 2001 by exploiting the severe restrictions the army had imposed on Palestinian movement at that time, which enabled settler gangs of robbers to take over more land.
    I added that I’d been informed the outpost hadn’t been legalized. In other words, that Israeli authorities couldn’t find any cunning legal wizardry with which to whitewash this blatant forgery, which included the “sale” of the land in 2002 or 2003 by a Beitin resident who died in 1995. “Isn’t the choice of this name a form of encouragement for real estate crime?” I asked the company.
    Here is the answer I received: “Netivei Israel is the national transportation infrastructure company and doesn’t get involved in political issues at all, but only in the core issues it is responsible for – planning, building and maintaining a network of roads.”
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    It doesn’t get involved in political issues? There’s nothing more political than a state-owned company that built a major road on lands belonging to the Palestinian villages of Beitin, Burqa and Dir Dibwan, without even giving them direct access to the road and the intersection. There’s nothing more political than a company paving roads beyond the state’s borders to enable Jewish Israelis to violate international law, which forbids transferring members of an occupying population into occupied territory.
    But all this is still within the bounds of the Israeli conscious. Israel doesn’t hide its goal: formal, complete seizure of over 60 percent of the West Bank. Israel doesn’t hide its position that every bit of land on which a Jew lays his hand is sanctified to him and belongs to Israel.

  • Navarro Rebukes Mnuchin for Declaring China Trade War ‘On Hold’ - Bloomberg
    https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2018-05-30/navarro-undercuts-mnuchin-s-trade-truce-line-as-china-talks-near

    Toujours aussi facile de se repérer dans la pétaudière de l’administration Trump. Pour la porte-parole, #SNAFU

    White House trade adviser Peter Navarro criticized Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin for declaring the U.S.-China trade war was on hold, calling the remarks an “unfortunate sound bite” and acknowledging there’s a dispute that needs to be resolved.

    What we’re having with China is a trade dispute, plain and simple,” Navarro said in an interview broadcast Wednesday with National Public Radio. “We lost the trade war long ago” with deals such as Nafta and China’s entry into the World Trade Organization, he said.

    The remarks from Navarro, a hard-liner on President Donald Trump’s trade team, come just days before U.S. Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross is scheduled to meet with his counterparts in Beijing to discuss ways to reduce the U.S. trade deficit with China. The White House on Tuesday said the U.S. is moving ahead with plans to impose tariffs on $50 billion of Chinese imports and curb investment in sensitive technology.

    Just over a week ago, Mnuchin said in a televised interview that the prospect of a trade war with China was “on hold.

    A person familiar with the matter pushed back against the idea that Navarro was rebuking Mnuchin, saying the trade adviser hadn’t intended his comments as a reflection on the Treasury secretary. Navarro merely intended to convey that the skirmish with China didn’t rise to the level of trade war, said the person, who spoke on condition of anonymity.

    White House Press Secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders downplayed the Treasury secretary’s comments on Wednesday when asked about Navarro’s remarks.

    Mnuchin “didn’t say it was on hold indefinitely,” Sanders said in the daily press briefing in Washington. “The president ultimately makes the decisions on trade, and when he does we announce them. And that’s exactly what’s taking place in this process.

    The renewed threat of tariffs could stop the planned talks between Ross and his Chinese counterparts, the Wall Street Journal reported Wednesday, citing sources in both countries. A team of U.S. officials was in the Chinese capital on Wednesday to prepare for the talks.

    Asked about potential Chinese retaliation, especially on American farm goods, Navarro said “we’re ready for anything.”

  • CppCast Episode 150: Freestanding Proposal with Ben Craig
    http://isocpp.org/feeder/?FeederAction=clicked&feed=All+Posts&seed=http%3A%2F%2Fisocpp.org%2Fblog%2F2

    Episode 150 of CppCast the only podcast for C++ developers by C++ developers. In this episode Rob and Jason are joined by Ben Craig to discuss his proposal for a freestanding C++ Library.

    CppCast Episode 150: Freestanding Proposal with Ben Craig by Rob Irving and Jason Turner

    About the interviewee:

    Ben is a Principal Software Engineer at National Instruments, primarily developing device drivers for various operating systems (Windows, Linux, Mac, OpenRTOS, vxWorks, ETS Pharlap), and occasionally tinkering with the firmware side of things. Ben is an occasional contributor to libc++ and Apache (...)

    #News,Video&_On-Demand,

  • Freestanding Proposal with Ben Craig
    http://cppcast.libsyn.com/freestanding-proposal-with-ben-craig

    Rob and Jason are joined by Ben Craig to discuss his proposal for a freestanding C++ Library. Ben is a Principal Software Engineer at National Instruments, primarily developing device drivers for various operating systems (Windows, Linux, Mac, OpenRTOS, vxWorks, ETS Pharlap), and occasionally tinkering with the firmware side of things. Ben is an occasional contributor to libc++ and Apache Thrift. News Convert Macro to Constexpr in VS 2017 CppCon 2018 Registration is Open How to Adopt Modern C++17 into your C++ Code 7++ Reasons to Move Your C++ Code into Visual Studio 2017 Effective C++/WinRT for UWP and Win32 C++ Insights P0709 Zero overhead deterministic exceptions Ben Craig Ben Craig’s GitHub Links Freestanding Proposal Freestanding Trip Report: emBO++ and Jacksonville wg21 (...)

    http://traffic.libsyn.com/cppcast/cppcast-150.mp3?dest-id=282890