• Report: Arlington’s first guaranteed income pilot boosted quality of life for poorest residents

    –—

    En résumé:
    Employment INCREASED by 16%, and their incomes from paid work INCREASED by 37%. The control group saw no such gains.
    https://hachyderm.io/@scottsantens/111890582659889973

    –—

    Results from Arlington’s first guaranteed income pilot reveal that an additional $500 per month significantly enhanced the quality of life for impoverished families.

    Parents with children under 18, earning less than $46,600 annually, reported that the additional $500 monthly helped them obtain better-paying jobs, address basic needs and improve their overall well-being, according to a new report by the Arlington Community Foundation (ACF), the local nonprofit that oversaw the pilot.

    Moreover, the monthly payments enabled individuals to invest in certifications and educational advancement and tackle their medical bills, credit card debt and student loans.

    Between September 2021 and last December, ACF provided the monthly stipend to families earning 30% of the area median income so they could continue living in Arlington, which is known for having some of the highest living costs in the nation.

    The pilot sought to challenge the stigma associated with guaranteed income, which grants a minimum income to those who do not earn enough to support themselves. It drew inspiration from similar programs in Stockton, California, and Jackson, Mississippi.

    In the long term, Arlington’s Guarantee is meant to persuade state and federal lawmakers to implement some form of guaranteed income. This is not to be confused with universal basic income, another touted policy reform that guarantees income to people regardless of their eligibility for government assistance or their ability to work.

    Findings from the pilot come on the heels of a separate report, which found that more than half of families living in South Arlington cannot afford basic food, housing, medical and childcare expenses, compared to just 15% of families in North Arlington. ACF noted that most guaranteed income pilot participants reside in South Arlington.

    While private donations and philanthropy fully funded the $2 million program, Arlington County’s Department of Human Services (DHS) helped select, track and evaluate participants.

    DHS randomly chose 200 households to receive $500 a month and created a control group with similar demographics and income levels, which did not receive stipends, to compare the results. Most (53%) of participants identified as Black or African-American, followed by people who identify as white (23%). Thirty percent identified as Hispanic or Latino and 70% as non-Hispanic.

    With the extra $500 a month, most participants reported putting the money toward groceries, paying bills, buying household essentials, rent and miscellaneous expenses including car repairs.

    Individuals who received the stipend reported increasing their monthly income by 36%, from $1,200 to $1,640, compared to the control group, whose income only rose 9%. ACF says the extra cash gave participants breathing room to make investments that could improve their job prospects.

    “Rather than working overtime or multiple jobs to meet basic needs, some participants reported using the time to pursue credentials… that could lead to a higher-paying job or starting their own business,” ACF said. “Other participants indicated that Arlington’s Guarantee helped them pursue better-paying jobs by allowing them to purchase interview clothes or cover the gap between their old and new jobs.”

    By the end of the study, nearly three-quarters of participants who received a guaranteed income reported improved mental and physical well-being and an increased sense of control, compared to the control group.

    “It’s a mental thing for me. Just the fact that I knew that I had an income coming, it helped me not have panic attacks,” said one participant. “I knew I could have food for the kids and pay the bills. It allowed me to use my time to be wise about money and not stressed about money.”

    Still, most participants reported they still could not cover an unexpected $400 expense from their savings and said they would need to borrow money, get a loan or sell their belongings in case of an emergency. Income, food and housing insecurity were most acute among undocumented immigrants and those who were once incarcerated.

    Arlington County is not the only locality in Northern Virginia experimenting with a guaranteed income program. Last year, Fairfax County also supported a guaranteed income pilot, offering a monthly stipend of $750 to 180 eligible families over 15 months.

    Although the Arlington County Board signed a resolution imploring state and federal lawmakers to implement a guaranteed income program, neither it nor Fairfax County has indicated that a permanent version of these programs would be implemented locally.

    Meanwhile, ACF said it has been engaging state lawmakers about the prospect of restoring the child tax credit, which expired in 2021, to help raise families out of poverty.

    “This expanded federal CTC in 2021 was a game changer: it reduced child poverty by 46% by lifting 3.7 million children out of poverty before it was allowed to lapse in 2022,” the report said. “This was effectively a trial of guaranteed income policy by the federal government.”

    The U.S. House of Representatives recently passed legislation to expand this credit, which has headed to the Senate for a vote. The tax credit offers a break of up to $2,000 per child, with potentially $1,600 of that being refundable. If signed into law, it would incrementally raise the tax credit amount of $100 annually through 2025.

    Democrats in the Virginia General Assembly, meanwhile, have proposed establishing a child tax credit that would extend until 2029. A House of Delegates subcommittee voted yesterday to delay consideration of the bill until next year.

    https://www.arlnow.com/2024/02/06/report-arlingtons-first-guaranteed-income-pilot-boosted-quality-of-life-for-

    #rdb #revenu_de_base #revenu_garanti #qualité_de_vie #réduction_de_la_pauvreté #travail #Arlington #USA #Etats-Unis #statistiques #chiffres

  • Assal Rad sur X :
    https://twitter.com/AssalRad/status/1754303542440174080

    At least 12,000 Palestinians, including almost 6,000 children have been killed in Gaza since Blinken said Israel agreed to protect civilians. Thousands more are still buried under rubble.

    Why? Because they know the U.S. will give them weapons and money no matter what they do.

    #post_vérité #états-unis

  • Le #Fentanyl, la #drogue surpuissante qui décime les #États-Unis
    https://www.rfi.fr/fr/am%C3%A9riques/20240203-le-fentanyl-la-drogue-surpuissante-qui-d%C3%A9cime-les-%C3%A9tats-unis

    Il est devenu la principale cause de décès des 18-45 ans aux États-Unis. Le fentanyl, un opioïde de synthèse d’une puissance jusque-là inégalée, tue par overdose un Américain toutes les sept minutes. Pourtant, à l’origine, c’est un #médicament fabriqué et exporté depuis la Chine. Détourné par les #cartels_mexicains, il est vendu sous la forme d’une pilule bleue estampillée M30, hautement addictive.

    […] En effet, quand 200 milligrammes d’héroïne sont létaux, seulement deux milligrammes de fentanyl suffisent. Selon la Drug Enforcement Administration (#DEA), les pilules, contrefaites, contiennent entre 0,02 et 5,1 milligrammes de fentanyl, soit deux fois la dose mortelle. Une vraie roulette russe.Tom Wolf l’assure, « en étant héroïnomane, tu peux vivre 25 ans, mais avec le fentanyl, à cause du risque d’overdose, il te reste à peine deux ans et tu es mort. »

    […] Si lui a pu s’en sortir, ce n’est pas le cas de tout le monde, loin de là. Aux États-Unis, le fentanyl a fait plus de 130 000 victimes l’année dernière, et continue de tuer en moyenne 150 personnes chaque jour, d’après le centre de contrôle et de prévention des maladies des États-Unis.

  • Noam Peleg sur X :
    https://twitter.com/NoamPeleg/status/1751818821567123882

    Israel’s war against UNRWA didn’t start today, and it has nothing to do with Oct 7. It’s about Palestinian right of return .

    A short thread:

    In 2016, a right wing thing tank ’Kohelet’ published a “position paper” that labels UNRWA as an organisation that aids terror and therefore it should be eliminated and its workers should be prosecuted

    In 2017, Avigdor Liberam, then the Minister of Foreign Affairs, asked the US to stop funding UNRWA, citing Kohelet’s "concerns ».

    In 2018, Netanyahu was explicit about Israel’s motivations: “This is an organization that perpetuates the problem of Palestinian refugees, it also perpetuates the narrative of the right of return”.

    The tactic of labelling organisations as ’terror organisations’ isn’t new. 2 yrs ago Israel used it against 6 human rights org at the West Bank and demanded that the EU and others stop funding them.This call was rejected as no evidence were provided.

    #UNRWA #états-unis #leadership #génocide

    • Le lien sur la déclaration de Netanyahu (janvier 2018)

      נתניהו הודיע : « מקימים אי מלאכותי לחופי ישראל, חושב על זה עוד מ-96’ » | חדשות מעריב
      https://www.maariv.co.il/news/politics/Article-616831

      אם בקרוב ישראל תיכנס לרשימת הרשימות המצומצמת אשר מחזיקות באי מלאכותי? ייתכן מאוד. ראש הממשלה בנימין נתניהו, הודיע כי הוא מתכוון למנות צוות אשר יחל בעבודה על מנת לגרום לתוכנית הגרנדיוזית לקרות. נתניהו, אשר הציג את הכוונה לעשות זאת בפתח ישיבת הממשלה, טען כי הוא חושב על הרעיון במשך 20 השנים האחרונות, ולא הזכיר במילה אחת את השר ישראל כ"ץ, אשר דוחף את הנושא בשנים האחרונות.

      “אני מביא לממשלה אישור לצוות כדי שיקים אי מלאכותי לחופינו. ישראל היא אחד המקומות הצפופים בעולם. ההצעה הזאת צריכה לעזור להקים ליד חופי ישראל איים מלאכותיים שינתבו את העבודה לשם. זה דבר שאני חושב עליו מאז הקדנציה הראשונה שלי ב-96’ וזה נעצר בגלל ארגוני זכויות הסביבה והתכנון. ב-20 השנים האחרונות התפתחה הטכנולוגיה ויש היתכנות פיננסית וטכנולוגית. מיניתי את פרופ’ אבי שמחון שיעמוד בראש הצוות”.

      עוד לפני כן מתח נתניהו ביקורת על אונר"א, סוכנות הפליטים הפלסטינית, וטען כי היא צריכה לחלוף מהעולם: “אני מסכים לחלוטין עם הביקורת החריפה של הנשיא טראמפ על ארגון אונר”א. זהו ארגון שמנציח את בעיית הפליטים הפלסטינים, הוא גם מנציח את הנרטיב של זכות השיבה, כביכול, במטרה לחסל את מדינת ישראל ולכן אונר"א צריך לעבור מן העולם. זהו גוף שהוקם בנפרד לפני 70 שנה, רק לפליטים הפלסטינים, בשעה שיש את נציבות האו"ם לטיפול בבעיות יתר הפליטים בעולם. כמובן שהדבר הזה יוצר מצב שיש כבר נינים של פליטים שאינם פליטים שמטופלים על ידי אונר"א, ויעברו עוד 70 שנה ויהיו ניני-נינים - ולכן את האבסורד הזה צריך להפסיק. “אני הצעתי הצעה פשוטה, את כספי התמיכה לאונר”א צריך להסב בהדרגה לנציבות האו"ם לפליטים, עם קריטריונים ברורים לתמיכה בפליטות אמתית ולא בפליטות פיקטיבית כפי שהדבר קורה היום תחת אונר"א. את העמדה הזאת הבאתי לתשומת ליבה של ארצות הברית. זו הדרך להעביר את אונר"א מן העולם, ולטפל בבעיות פליטות אמתית, במידה שיוותרו כאלה".

  • Three US troops killed in drone attack in Jordan, at least two dozen injured | CNN Politics
    https://www.cnn.com/2024/01/28/politics/us-troops-drone-attack-jordan/index.html

    Three US Army soldiers were killed and at least two dozen service members were injured in a drone attack overnight on a small US outpost in Jordan, US officials told CNN, marking the first time US troops have been killed by enemy fire in the Middle East since the beginning of the Gaza war.

    The killing of three Americans at Tower 22 in Jordan near the border with Syria is a significant escalation of an already-precarious situation in the Middle East. Officials said the drone was fired by Iran-backed militants and appeared to come from Syria.

    US Central Command confirmed in a statement on Sunday that three service members were killed and 25 injured in a one-way drone attack that “impacted at a base in northeast Jordan.”

    #Jordanie #Gaza

  • China Is Trying to Have It Both Ways in the Middle East https://www.nytimes.com/2024/01/26/opinion/china-redsea-houthi-shipping.html

    Le brasier du Moyen-Orient ? La faute à la Chine.

    The deteriorating security situation in the Middle East shows how ineffectual Mr. Xi’s promotion of peace and tranquillity has been

    Mais heureusement les #états-unis sont là pour ramener la paix et la prospérité pour tous, y compris la #Chine

    China’s seeming indifference to the Red Sea crisis reinforces the United States’ role as the world’s predominant power, and demonstrates that China’s capabilities and strategic objectives beyond its own region remain narrow and dependent on America’s global #leadership.

  • 🧵Listing government reactions to the ICJ order for provisional measures on Gaza today (will limit this to European & Western govts) 👇
    https://twitter.com/martinkonecny/status/1750951151099367876?s=48&t=Iwn4bpiKIJHEjLmmCl0aaQ

    […]

    🇪🇸Spain: “We welcome the decision of the ICJ and ask the parties to apply the provisional measures it has decreed.” (NB: ICJ measures are all addressed to Israel, not “parties”, though it does also call for release of Israeli hostages.)

    […]

    🇩🇪Germany - quite measured in comparison to earlier statement against S Africa case.

    ICJ’s provisional measures “are binding under international law. Israel must abide by them.”

    🇫🇷France - the most muddled one so far: supporting ICJ and int’l law but fails to urge implementation of the measures.

    Also: you can’t argue for narrower interpretation of genocide after you’ve argued for broader one in the Myanmar case
    @steph_

    […]

  • Tesla needs graphite. #Alaska has plenty. But mining it raises fears in nearby villages.

    Ducks and swans flew overhead as Sylvester Ayek, 82, and his daughter Kimberly, 35, hauled rocks to anchor their small salmon net on the bank of a deep, tidal channel — 25 miles inland from the open Bering Sea coast.

    Nearby on that July day, MaryJane Litchard, Ayek’s partner, picked wild celery and set out a lunch of past subsistence harvests: a blue-shelled seabird egg, dried beluga whale meat and red salmon dipped in seal oil.

    Then, as they waited for fish to fill the net, the family motored Ayek’s skiff up the channel, known as the Tuksuk, spotting birds and seals and passing family fish camps where drying salmon hung on racks. Soon, the steep channel walls gave way to a huge estuary: the Imuruk Basin, flanked by the snow-dotted peaks of the Kigluaik Mountains.

    Ayek describes the basin as a “traditional hunting and gathering place” for the local Iñupiat, who have long sustained themselves on the area’s bounty of fish, berries and wildlife.

    But despite a long Indigenous history, and a brief settler boom during the Gold Rush more than a century ago, a couple of weather-beaten cabins were the only obvious signs of human impact as Ayek’s boat idled — save for a set of tiny, beige specks at the foot of the mountains.

    Those specks were a camp run by a Canadian exploration company, Graphite One. And they marked the prospective site of a mile-wide open pit mine that could reach deep below the tundra — into the largest known deposit of graphite in the U.S.

    The mine could help power America’s electric vehicle revolution, and it’s drawing enthusiastic support from powerful government officials in both Alaska and Washington, D.C. That includes the Biden administration, which recently announced up to $37.5 million in subsidies for Graphite One through the U.S. Department of Defense.

    So far, the announcements from the project’s politically connected boosters have received far more attention than the several hundred Alaskans whose lives would be affected directly by Graphite One’s mine.

    While opinions in the nearby Alaska Native villages of Brevig Mission and Teller are mixed, there are significant pockets of opposition, particularly among the area’s tribal leaders. Many residents worry the project will harm the subsistence harvests that make life possible in a place where the nearest well-stocked grocery store is a two-hour drive away, in Nome.

    “The further they go with the mine, our subsistence will just move further and further away from us,” Gilbert Tocktoo, president of Brevig Mission’s tribal government, said over a dinner of boiled salmon at his home. “And sooner or later, it’s going to become a question of: Do I want to live here anymore?”

    Despite those concerns, Graphite One is gathering local support: Earlier this month, the board of the region’s Indigenous-owned, for-profit corporation unanimously endorsed the project.

    The Nome-based corporation, Bering Straits Native Corp., also agreed to invest $2 million in Graphite One, in return for commitments related to jobs and scholarships for shareholders.

    The tensions surrounding Graphite One’s project underscore how the rush to bolster domestic manufacturing of electric vehicles threatens a new round of disruption to tribal communities and landscapes that have already borne huge costs from past mining booms.

    Across the American West, companies are vying to extract the minerals needed to power electric vehicles and other green technologies. Proposed mines for lithium, antimony and copper are chasing some of the same generous federal tax credits as Graphite One — and some are advancing in spite of objections from Indigenous people who have already seen their lands taken and resources diminished over more than a century of mining.

    The Seward Peninsula’s history is a case in point: Thousands of non-Native prospectors came here during the Gold Rush, which began in 1898. The era brought devastating bouts of pandemic disease and displacement for the Iñupiat, and today, that history weighs on some as they consider how Graphite One could affect their lives.

    “A lot of people like to say that our culture is lost. But we didn’t just go out there and lose it: It was taken from us,” said Taluvaaq Qiñuġana, a 24-year-old Iñupiaq resident of Brevig Mission. A new mining project in her people’s traditional harvesting grounds, she said, “feels like continuous colonization.”

    But other Indigenous residents of Brevig Mission and Teller say the villages would benefit from well-paying jobs that could come with the mine. Cash income could help people sustain their households in the two communities, where full-time work is otherwise scarce.

    Graphite One executives say one of their highest priorities, as they advance their project toward permitting and construction, is protecting village residents’ harvests of fish, wildlife and berries. They say they fully appreciate the essential nature of that food supply.

    “This is very real to them,” said Mike Schaffner, Graphite One’s senior vice president of mining. “We completely understand that we can’t come in there and hurt the subsistence, and we can’t hurt how their lifestyle is.”

    U.S. produces no domestic graphite

    Graphite is simply carbon — like a diamond but far softer, because of its different crystal structure. Graphite is used as a lubricant, in industrial steelmaking, for brake linings in automobiles and as pencil lead.

    It’s also a key component of the high-powered lithium batteries that propel electric cars.

    Once mined and concentrated, graphite is processed into a powder that’s mixed with a binder, then rolled flat and curled into the hundreds of AA-battery-sized cylinders that make up the battery pack.

    America hasn’t mined any graphite in decades, having been undercut by countries where it’s extracted at a lower cost.

    China currently produces more than half of the world’s mined graphite and nearly all of the highly processed type needed for batteries. The country so dominates the supply chain that global prices typically rise each winter when cold temperatures force a single region, Heilongjiang, to shut down production, said Tony Alderson, an analyst at a price tracking firm called Benchmark Mineral Intelligence.

    Some forecasts say graphite demand, driven by growth in electric vehicles, could rise 25-fold by 2040. Amid growing U.S.-China political tensions, supply chain experts have warned about the need to diversify America’s sources of graphite.

    Last year’s climate-focused Inflation Reduction Act, written in part to wrest control of electric vehicle manufacturing from China, is accelerating that search.

    For new electric cars to qualify for a $3,750 tax credit under the act, at least 40% of the value of the “critical minerals” that go into their batteries must be extracted or processed domestically, or in countries such as Canada or Mexico that have free-trade agreements with the United States.

    That fraction rises to 80% in four years.

    Graphite One is one of just three companies currently advancing graphite mining projects in the United States, according to the U.S. Geological Survey. And company officials are already marketing their graphite to global electric vehicle makers.

    But when they presented their preliminary plans to Tesla, “they said, ‘That’s great, we are interested in buying them, but we would need to write 40 contracts of this size to meet our need,’” Schaffner, the Graphite One vice president, said at a community meeting this year, according to the Nome Nugget.

    In response, Graphite One is now studying a mine that could be substantially larger than its original proposal.

    It’s too early to know how, exactly, the mine’s construction could affect the surrounding watershed. One reason is that the level of risk it poses is linked to its size, and Graphite One has not yet determined how big its project will be.

    While graphite itself is nontoxic and inert, the company also hasn’t finished studying the acid-generating potential of the rock that its mine could expose — another key indicator of the project’s level of risk. Stronger acid is more likely to release toxic metals into water that Graphite One would have to contain and treat before releasing back into the environment.

    One fish biologist in the region has also said he fears the mine’s construction could negatively affect streams flowing out of the Kigluaik Mountains, though Graphite One officials disagree. The streams’ cool water, according to Charlie Lean, keeps temperatures in the shallow Imuruk Basin low enough to sustain spawning salmon — a critical source of abundant, healthy food for Brevig Mission and Teller residents.

    Graphite One plans to store its waste rock and depleted ore in what’s known as a “dry stack,” on top of the ground — rather than in a pond behind a dam, a common industry practice that can risk a major breach if the dam fails.

    But experts say smaller-scale spills or leaks from the mine could still drain into the basin and harm fish and wildlife.

    “There is always a possibility for some sort of catastrophic failure. But that doesn’t happen very often,” said Dave Chambers, president of the nonprofit Center for Science in Public Participation, which advises advocacy and tribal groups across the country on mining and water quality. “There’s also a possibility there will be no impact. That doesn’t happen very often, either.”

    Anthony Huston, Graphite One’s chief executive, said his project will incorporate local knowledge and protect residents’ subsistence harvests.

    “We are completely focused on making sure that we create a stronger economy, and the entire Bering Straits region, and all of Alaska, for that matter. And that’s something that this project will bring,” he said in an interview. “But it will never bring it at the expense of the traditional lifestyle of Alaska Native people.

    A way of life at stake

    There are no Teslas in Brevig Mission or Teller, the two Alaska Native villages closest to the proposed mine.

    To get to the communities from the nearest American Tesla dealership, you’d first board a jet in Seattle. Then, you’d fly 1,400 miles to Anchorage, where you’d climb on to another jet and fly 500 more miles northwest to Nome, the former Gold Rush town known as the finish line of the Iditarod sled dog race.

    A 70-mile gravel road winds northwest through tundra and mountains before dipping back down to a narrow spit on the Bering Sea coast. The road ends in Teller, population 235, where most residents lack in-home plumbing — let alone own electric cars.

    If you need a bathroom here, you’ll use what’s known as a honey bucket.

    Brevig Mission, population 435, is even more remote than Teller. It sits across a narrow strait and is accessible only by boat or plane.

    The region’s Indigenous history is memorialized in the 1973 book “People of Kauwerak,” written by local elder William Oquilluk. It documents the founding of Kauwerak, an Iñupiaq village by a sandbar near the Imuruk Basin’s innermost reaches.

    The area was chosen, according to the book, for the same reasons it’s treasured now: abundant fish and birds, berries and moose, even beluga whales. Kauwerak became one of the Seward Peninsula’s largest villages before it was abandoned in the 19th century, as residents left for jobs and schools.

    Whalers, then gold miners, brought profound changes to the Indigenous way of life on the Seward Peninsula, especially through the introduction of pandemic diseases. One outbreak of measles and flu, in 1900, is thought to have killed up to one-third of residents in one of the region’s villages. In Brevig Mission, 72 of 80 Native residents died from the 1918 Spanish flu.

    Today, the miners and whalers are gone. In Teller, the population of 250 is 99% Alaska Native.

    Four in 10 residents there live below the poverty level, and a typical household, with an average of three people, survives on just $32,000 a year, according to census data.

    At the community’s main store, the shelves are completely barren of fresh fruits and vegetables. A box of Corn Chex costs $9.55, and a bottle of Coffee-Mate runs $11.85 — more than twice the Anchorage price.

    Residents can buy cheaper groceries in Nome. But gas for the 70-mile drive costs $6.30 a gallon, down from $7 in July.

    The high cost of goods combined with the few available jobs helps explain why some Teller and Brevig Mission residents are open to Graphite One’s planned mine, and the cash income it could generate.

    As Ayek, the 82-year-old subsistence fisherman, pulled his skiff back into Teller with a cooler of fish, another man was slicing fresh sides of salmon a little ways down the beach.

    Nick Topkok, 56, has worked as a contractor for Graphite One, taking workers out in his boat. As he hung his fish to dry on a wood rack, he said few people in the area can find steady jobs.

    “The rest are living off welfare,” Topkok said. The mine, he said, would generate money for decades, and it also might help get the village water and sewer systems.

    “I’ll be dead by then, but it’ll impact my kids, financially,” he said. “If it’s good and clean, so be it.”

    Topkok also acknowledged, however, that a catastrophic accident would “impact us all.”

    Many village residents’ summer fishing camps sit along the Tuksuk Channel, below the mine site. Harvests from the basin and its surroundings feed families in Brevig Mission and Teller year-round.

    “It’s my freezer,” said Dolly Kugzruk, president of Teller’s tribal government and an opponent of the mine.

    Researchers have found all five species of Pacific salmon in and around the Imuruk Basin. Harvests in the area have hit 20,000 fish in some years — roughly 30 per fishing family, according to state data.

    At a legislative hearing several years ago on a proposal to support Graphite One’s project, one Teller resident, Tanya Ablowaluk, neatly summed up opponents’ fears: “Will the state keep our freezers full in the event of a spill?”

    Gold Rush prospector’s descendants would reap royalties

    Elsewhere in rural Alaska, Indigenous people have consented to resource extraction on their ancestral lands on the basis of compromise: They accept environmental risks in exchange for a direct stake in the profits.

    Two hundred miles north of the Imuruk Basin, zinc and lead unearthed at Red Dog Mine have generated more than $1 billion in royalties for local Native residents and their descendants, including $172 million last year. On the North Slope, the regional Iñupiat-owned corporation receives oil worth tens of millions of dollars a year from developments on its traditional land.

    The new Manh Choh mine in Alaska’s Interior will also pay royalties to Native landowners, as would the proposed Donlin mine in Southwest Alaska.

    No such royalties would go to the Iñupiaq residents of Brevig Mission and Teller, based on the way Graphite One’s project is currently structured.

    The proposed mine sits exclusively on state land. And Graphite One would pay royalties to the descendants of a Gold Rush-era prospector — a legacy of the not-so-distant American past when white settlers could freely claim land and resources that had been used for thousands of years by Indigenous people.

    Nicholas Tweet was a 23-year-old fortune seeker when he left Minnesota for Alaska in the late 1800s. His quest for gold, over several years, took him hiking over mountain ranges, floating down the Yukon River by steamboat, walking hundreds miles across beaches and, finally, rowing more than 100 miles from Nome in a boat he built himself.

    Tweet settled in Teller with his family, initially prospecting for gold.

    As graphite demand spiked during World War I, Tweet staked claims along the Kigluaik Mountains, and he worked with a company that shipped the mineral to San Francisco until the war ended and demand dried up.

    Today, Tweet’s descendants are still in the mining business on the Seward Peninsula. And they still controlled graphite claims in the area a little more than a decade ago. That’s when Huston, a Vancouver entrepreneur, was drawn into the global graphite trade through his interest in Tesla and his own graphite-based golf clubs.

    News of a possible deal with Huston’s company arrived at one of the Tweets’ remote mining operations via a note dropped by a bush plane. They reached an agreement after months of discussions — sometimes, according to Huston, with 16 relatives in the room.

    So far, the Tweet family, whose members did not respond to requests for comment, has received $370,000 in lease fees. If the project is built, the family would receive additional payments tied to the value of graphite mined by Graphite One, and members could ultimately collect millions of dollars.

    Bering Straits Native Corp., owned by more than 8,000 Indigenous shareholders with ties to the region, recently acquired a stake Graphite One’s project — but only by buying its way in.

    The company announced its $2 million investment this month. The deal includes commitments by Graphite One to support scholarships, hire Bering Straits’ shareholders and give opportunities to the Native-owned corporation’s subsidiary companies, according to Dan Graham, Bering Straits’ interim chief executive. He declined to release details, saying they have not yet been finalized.

    As it considered the investment, Bering Straits board members held meetings with Brevig Mission and Teller residents, where they heard “a lot of concerns,” Graham said. Those concerns “were very well thought through at the board level” before the corporation offered its support for the project, he added.

    “Graphite One is very committed to employing local workers from those villages, to being as transparent as possible on what the development is,” Graham said.

    Graphite One officials say they have work to do to ensure the region’s residents are trained for mining jobs in time for the start of construction. The company had a maximum of 71 people working at its camp this summer, but Graphite One and its contractors hired just eight people from Teller and Brevig Mission. Sixteen more were from Nome and other villages in the region, according to Graphite One.

    Company officials say they have no choice but to develop a local workforce. Because of graphite’s relatively low value in raw form, compared to gold or copper, they say the company can’t afford to fly workers in from outside the region.

    Graphite One says it’s also taking direction from members of a committee of local residents it’s appointed to provide advice on environmental issues. In response to the committee’s feedback, the company chose not to barge its fuel through the Imuruk Basin earlier this year; instead, it flew it in, at an added cost of $4 a gallon.

    Since Graphite One acquired the Tweets’ graphite claims, progress on the development has been slow. But now, escalating tensions with China and the national push to Americanize the electric vehicle supply chain are putting Huston’s project on the political fast track.

    ‘We don’t have a choice’

    In July, U.S. Sen. Lisa Murkowski boarded a helicopter in Nome and flew to Graphite One’s remote exploration camp overlooking the Imuruk Basin.

    A few days later, the Alaska Republican stood on the Senate floor and brandished what she described as a hunk of graphite from an “absolutely massive,” world-class deposit.

    “After my site visit there on Saturday, I’m convinced that this is a project that every one of us — those of us here in the Congress, the Biden administration — all of us need to support,” she said. “This project will give us a significant domestic supply, breaking our wholesale dependence on imports.”

    U.S. Sen. Dan Sullivan, R-Alaska, U.S. Rep. Mary Peltola, D-Alaska, and GOP Gov. Mike Dunleavy have all expressed support for the project.

    Graphite One has enlisted consultants and lobbyists to advance its interests, according to disclosure filings and emails obtained through public records requests.

    They include Clark Penney, an Anchorage-based consultant and financial advisor with ties to the Dunleavy administration, and Nate Adams, a former employee of Murkowski and Sullivan who’s worked as a lobbyist in Washington, D.C.

    Murkowski has said the mine will reduce dependence on foreign countries that lack America’s environmental and human rights safeguards.

    “Security of supply would be assured from day one, and the standards for the mine’s development and operation would be both exceedingly high and fully transparent,” Murkowski wrote in a letter to the Biden administration in 2022.

    The Defense Department, meanwhile, announced its grant of up to $37.5 million for Graphite One in July. This month, the company also announced it had received a $4.7 million Defense Department contract to develop a graphite-based firefighting foam.

    In a statement, a department spokesman said the July agreement “aims to strengthen the domestic industrial base to make a secure, U.S.-based supply of graphite available for both Department of Defense and consumer markets.”

    In Teller and Brevig Mission, Graphite One’s opponents have noticed how the electrical vehicle transition seems to be driving interest in the mine planned for nearby.

    As the project gathers outside political support, some village residents said that local attitudes have been shifting, too, in response to the company’s offers of jobs and perks.

    Tocktoo, the chief of Brevig Mission’s tribal council, said resistance in his community has diminished as Graphite One “tries to buy their way in.”

    The company awards door prizes at meetings and distributes free turkeys, he said. Two years ago, the company gave each household in Brevig Mission and Teller a $50 credit on their electrical bills.

    The project, though, remains years away from construction, with production starting no earlier than 2029.

    Before it can be built, Graphite One will have to obtain an array of permits, including a major authorization under the federal Clean Water Act that will allow it to do construction around wetlands.

    And the project also faces geopolitical and economic uncertainties.

    At least last year, Graphite One was tight on cash. It had to slightly shorten its summer exploration season because it didn’t have the money to finish it, company officials said at a public meeting this year.

    And while Graphite One is counting on a partnership with a Chinese business to help set up its graphite processing and manufacturing infrastructure, the partner company’s top executive has said publicly that U.S.-China political tensions may thwart the transfer of necessary technologies.

    Murkowski, in an interview at the Nome airport on her way home from her visit to Graphite One’s camp, stressed that the project is still in its very early stages.

    The permitting process and the substantial environmental reviews that will accompany it, she added, will give concerned residents a chance to pose questions and raise objections.

    “There’s no process right now for the public to weigh in. And it’s all so preliminary,” she said. “When you don’t know, the default position is, ‘I don’t think this should happen.’”

    But opponents of the project in Brevig Mission and Teller say they fear their objections won’t be heard. Lucy Oquilluk, head of a Teller-based tribal government, said she feels a sense of inevitability.

    “It just feels like we have nothing to say about it. We don’t have a choice,” Oquilluk said. “They’re going to do it anyways, no matter what we say.”

    https://alaskapublic.org/2023/09/29/tesla-needs-graphite-alaska-has-plenty-but-mining-it-raises-fears-in-n

    #Tesla #graphite #extractivisme #terres_rares #voitures_électriques #mines #peuples_autochtones #USA #Etats-Unis #Canada #Graphite_One #Brevig_Mission #Teller

  • Le #New_York_Times dans ses très basses œuvres (encore une fois).
    https://www.nytimes.com/2024/01/22/briefing/israel-gaza-war-death-toll.html

    Il faut présenter les chose non pas telles qu’elles sont, mais comme Biden avait annoncé qu’elles le seront.

    #obscène effectivement

    Adam Johnson sur X 
    https://twitter.com/adamjohnsonCHI/status/1749425455864729606

    Truly the most evil and misleading thing Leonhardt has written and this is saying something. No mention of deaths caused by disease, birth complications or starvation. Also ignores limits of Gaza officials’ count since every hospital, and thus their capacity, has been destroyed

    Leonhardt is a craven partisan hatchet man and the genocide-lite narrative is the only one the White House can plausibly try and push and here he is carrying out his disagreeable task. Absolutely shameful, intellectually and morally dishonest

    Coincidentally episode on Leonhardt and his bullshit “data driven” schtick dropping Wednesday

    This is beyond obscene. Again,

    (A) the death count is incomplete due to Israel destroying nearly every hospital in Gaza.

    (B) starvation and disease are currently the preferred weapon of mass death which are not included in these totals

    (C) the evidence of maximizing civilian deaths wasn’t parsing relative reported deaths (?) it was based on Israeli officials own genocidal comments, explicit policy of collective punishment, and reporting that showed deliberate targeting of civilians and civilian infrastructure

    #génocide #Gaza #états-unis #délire #post_vérité

  • Selon ce sondage, en Asie orientale la Chine est considérée comme la plus grande menace, ce qui ne veut pas dire que les #Etats-Unis sont bien vus.

    In East Asia, most consider U.S. power and influence at least a minor threat | Pew Research Center
    https://www.pewresearch.org/short-reads/2023/12/05/in-east-asia-many-people-see-chinas-power-and-influence-as-a-major-threat/sr_23-12-05_east-asia-threats_4

    En fait la majorité considère les #etats-unis comme une « menace majeure »

  • Adam Johnson sur X :
    https://twitter.com/adamjohnsonCHI/status/1745541816512888912

    Deeply embarrassing puff piece at the worst time possible. Continues promoting discredited liberal mythology that the US is some mitigating humanitarian force rather than the primary protector and weapons supplier for a brutal killing, disease, hunger and displacement machine

    #criminels #sans_vergogne #états-unis

  • #Etats-Unis : le Congrès s’accorde sur un budget fédéral de 1 600 milliards de dollars
    https://www.lemonde.fr/international/article/2024/01/08/etats-unis-le-congres-s-accorde-sur-un-budget-federal-de-1-600-milliards-de-

    L’accord comprendrait une augmentation des dépenses du #Pentagone à hauteur de 886,3 milliards de dollars, soit bien plus de 100 milliards de dollars au-delà du niveau de dépenses non militaires définies par les démocrates.

  • Norman Finkelstein on South Africa’s Case Against Israel - YouTube
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=17q8b-xKu_E&pp=ygUPZmlua2Vsc3RlaW4gaWNq

    Analyse de Finkelstein au sujet de la CIJ : parmi les juges, il y a les 5 membres du conseil de sécurité. Il dit que les #états-unis et le Royaume-Uni vont bien sûr voter contre, que les Russes et les Chinois ne voudront pas courir le risque de créer un précédent qui pourrait se retourner contre eux (Ukraine pour les uns, et ouïgours pour les autres), et la France est le « point d’interrogation ».

  • Anatomie de la droite conservatrice
    https://laviedesidees.fr/Anatomie-de-la-droite-conservatrice

    La droite conservatrice américaine est en plein renouveau. Son idéologie très éclectique mêle anti-modernité et démocratie, religion et capitalisme – ce qui fait en partie son succès. À propos de : Matthew McManus, The Political Right and Equality : Turning Back the Tide of Egalitarian Modernity, Routledge

    #Politique #États-Unis #conservatisme
    https://laviedesidees.fr/IMG/pdf/20240108_charrayre.pdf
    https://laviedesidees.fr/IMG/docx/20240108_charrayre.docx

    • Enfin, il convient de noter que cette nouvelle action de l’Afrique du Sud devant la CIJ s’ajoute à une autre action intentée devant la même CIJ par l’Assemblée Générale des Nations Unies, demandant un avis consultatif sur la colonisation israélienne illégale et ses effets du point de vue du droit international public. Il s´agit d une résolution qui a été votée il y a exactement un an, le 30 décembre 2022 (réunissant 87 votes pour, 26 contre et 53 abstentions) et qui n’a recueilli que deux voix contre elle de la part de l’Amérique Latine : celle du Guatemala et celle Costa Rica (Note 5). La France pour sa part, s´est abstenue, et comme à l’accoutumée, le Canada a voté contre. Les audiences orales concernant cette procédure consultative sur la colonisation isarélienne au regard du droit international public comenceront le 19 février 2024 (voir communiqué officiel de la CIJ).

  • #Chowra_Makaremi : « Le #viol devient le paradigme de la loi du plus fort dans les #relations_internationales »

    En #Ukraine, Poutine revendique de faire la guerre au nom du genre. En #Iran, le régime réprime implacablement la révolution féministe. Dans d’autres pays, des populistes virilistes prennent le pouvoir. Une réalité que décrypte l’anthropologue Chowra Makaremi.

    IranIran, Afghanistan, invasion russe en Ukraine, mais aussi les discours des anciens présidents Donald Trump ou Jair Bolsonaro ou du chef de l’État turc, Recep Tayyip Erdogan : tous ont en commun de s’en prendre aux #femmes, comme l’explique l’anthropologue Chowra Makaremi.

    L’autrice de Femme ! Vie ! Liberté ! Échos du soulèvement en Iran (La Découverte, 2023) fait partie des chercheuses sollicitées par Mediapart pour #MeToo, le combat continue, l’ouvrage collectif publié récemment aux éditions du Seuil et consacré à la révolution féministe qui agite le monde depuis l’automne 2017 et le lancement du fameux mot-clé sur les réseaux sociaux. Depuis, toutes les sociétés ont été traversées de débats, de controverses et de prises de conscience nouvelles. Entretien.

    Mediapart : « Que ça te plaise ou non, ma jolie, il va falloir supporter. » Cette phrase a été prononcée le 7 février 2022 par le président russe, #Vladimir_Poutine, devant Emmanuel Macron. Elle était adressée à l’Ukraine et à son président, Volodymyr Zelensky, qui venait de critiquer les accords de Minsk, signés en 2015 pour mettre fin à la guerre dans le Donbass. Quelle lecture en faites-vous ?

    Chowra Makaremi : Le viol devient le paradigme de la #loi_du_plus_fort dans les relations internationales. La philosophe #Simone_Weil souligne dans un texte combien la #guerre relève de la logique du viol, puisque sa matrice est la #force qui, plus que de tuer, a le pouvoir de changer l’être humain en « une #chose » : « Il est vivant, il a une âme ; il est pourtant une chose. [L’âme] n’est pas faite pour habiter une chose ; quand elle y est contrainte, il n’est plus rien en elle qui ne souffre violence », écrit-elle.

    Cette comptine vulgaire de malfrats que cite #Poutine dit la culture criminelle qui imprègne sa politique. Elle me fait penser à ce que l’anthropologue Veena Das nomme la dimension voyou de la souveraineté étatique : la #truanderie comme n’étant pas seulement un débordement illégitime du pouvoir mais, historiquement, une composante de la #souveraineté, une de ses modalités.

    On le voit avec le pouvoir de Poutine mais aussi avec ceux de #Narendra_Modi en #Inde (dont parle Veena Das), de #Donald_Trump aux #États-Unis, de #Jair_Bolsonaro au #Brésil, de #Recep_Tayyip_Erdogan en #Turquie. Quand Poutine a dit sa comptine, personne n’a quitté la salle, ni Emmanuel Macron ni la presse, qui a cherché, au contraire, à faire parler la symbolique de cette « remarque ». Tout le réseau de sens et de connexions qui permet à cette cruelle boutade de tenir lieu de discours guerrier intuitivement compréhensible et audible montre que le type d’#outrage dont elle relève est une #transgression qui appartient, à la marge, à l’#ordre.

    On parle de la #masculinité_hégémonique au pouvoir avec Poutine, mais elle fait écho à celle de nombreux autres chefs d’État que vous venez de citer. Quelles sont les correspondances entre leurs conceptions de domination ?

    Il n’y a pas, d’un côté, les théocraties comme l’Iran et l’Afghanistan, et, de l’autre, les populismes virilistes de Trump, Erdogan, Bolsonaro, qui s’appuient sur des « #paniques_morales » créées par la remise en cause des rôles traditionnels de #genre, pour s’adresser à un électorat dans l’insécurité. Bolsonaro, très lié à l’armée et à l’Église, s’est appuyé sur je ne sais combien de prêcheurs pour mener sa campagne. Dimension religieuse que l’on retrouve chez Poutine, Modi, Erdogan.

    La #religion est un des éléments fondamentaux d’un #pouvoir_patriarcal très sensible à ce qui peut remettre en question sa #légitimité_symbolique, sa #domination_idéologique, et dont la #puissance est de ne pas paraître comme une #idéologie justement. Cette bataille est menée partout. Il y a un même nerf.

    Quand l’anthropologue Dorothée Dussy parle de l’inceste et de sa « fonction sociale » de reproduction de la domination patriarcale, son analyse est inaudible pour beaucoup. C’est ainsi que fonctionne l’#hégémonie : elle est sans pitié, sans tolérance pour ce qui peut en menacer les ressorts – et du même coup, en cartographier le pouvoir en indiquant que c’est là que se situent les boulons puisque, précisément, la puissance de l’hégémonie est dans l’invisibilité de ses boulons.

    Si on prend le #droit_de_disposer_de_son_corps, en Occident, il s’articule autour de la question de la #santé_contraceptive et du #droit_à_l’avortement et dans les mondes musulmans, autour de la question du #voile. De façon troublante, une chose est commune aux deux situations : c’est le viol comme la vérité des rapports entre genres qui organise et justifie la #contrainte sur les femmes à travers leur #corps.

    En Occident, le viol est le cas limite qui encadre juridiquement et oriente les discussions morales sur l’#avortement. Dans les sociétés musulmanes, la protection des femmes – et de leur famille, dont elles sont censées porter l’honneur – contre l’#agression_masculine est la justification principale pour l’obligation du voile. Il y a de part et d’autre, toujours, cet impensé du #désir_masculin_prédateur : un état de nature des rapports entre genres.

    C’est ce qu’assènent tous les romans de Michel Houellebecq et la plupart des écrits du grand Léon Tolstoï… « L’homme est un loup pour l’homme, et surtout pour la femme », dit un personnage du film Dirty Dancing. Cette population définie par ces rapports et ces #pulsions, il s’agit de la gouverner à travers l’#ordre_patriarcal, dont la domination est posée dès lors comme protectrice.

    L’Iran et l’#Afghanistan figurent parmi les pays les plus répressifs à l’encontre des femmes, les régimes au pouvoir y menant un « #apartheid_de_genre ». Concernant l’Afghanistan, l’ONU parle même de « #crime_contre_l’humanité fondé sur la #persécution_de_genre ». Êtes-vous d’accord avec cette qualification ?

    Parler pour la persécution de genre en Afghanistan de « crime contre l’humanité » me semble une avancée nécessaire car elle mobilise les armes du #droit pour désigner les #violences_de_masse faites aux femmes et résister contre, collectivement et transnationalement.

    Mais il me paraît tout aussi important de libérer la pensée autour de la #ségrégation_de_genre. À la frontière entre l’Iran et l’Afghanistan, au #Baloutchistan, après la mort de Jina Mahsa Amini en septembre 2022, les femmes sont sorties dans la rue au cri de « Femme, vie, liberté », « Avec ou sans le voile, on va vers la révolution ». Dans cette région, leur place dans l’espace public n’est pas un acquis – alors qu’il l’est à Téhéran – et elles se trouvent au croisement de plusieurs dominations de genre : celle d’un patriarcat traditionnel, lui-même dominé par la puissance étatique centrale, iranienne, chiite.

    Or, en participant au soulèvement révolutionnaire qui traversait le pays, elles ont également renégocié leur place à l’intérieur de ces #dominations_croisées, chantant en persan, avec une intelligence politique remarquable, le slogan des activistes chiliennes : « Le pervers, c’est toi, le salopard, c’est toi, la femme libérée, c’est moi. »

    C’est en écoutant les femmes nommer, en situation, la #ségrégation qu’on saisit le fonctionnement complexe de ces #pouvoirs_féminicides : en saisissant cette complexité, on comprend que ce n’est pas seulement en changeant des lois qu’on les démantèlera. On se trouve ici aux antipodes des #normes_juridiques, lesquelles, au contraire, ressaisissent le réel dans leurs catégories génériques. Les deux mouvements sont nécessaires : l’observation en situation et le #combat_juridique. Ils doivent fonctionner ensemble.

    https://www.mediapart.fr/journal/international/040124/chowra-makaremi-le-viol-devient-le-paradigme-de-la-loi-du-plus-fort-dans-l

  • Ishaan Tharoor sur X : https://twitter.com/ishaantharoor/status/1743007877185319219

    Appalling that a nation would give another nation the armaments to bomb civilians

    CSPAN sur X :
    https://twitter.com/cspan/status/1742980763887272314

    John Kirby: “Our information indicates that the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea recently provided Russia with ballistic missile launchers and several ballistic missiles...Russian forces launched at least on of these North Korean missiles into Ukraine.”

    #chutzpah #états-unis #civils #victimes_civiles

  • Périple autour du #vernaculaire américain
    https://metropolitiques.eu/Periple-autour-du-vernaculaire-americain.html

    Comment décrire, encore, les architectures et paysages américains ? Trois architectes françaises ont mené une exploration écrite et graphique de l’est des #États-Unis, dont rend compte l’ouvrage richement illustré What about vernacular ?. En 2023, est paru aux éditions Parenthèses What about vernacular ?, ouvrage de 384 pages dont les autrices sont les architectes Justine Lajus-Pueyo, Alexia Menec et Margot Rieublanc. D’emblée le titre What about vernacular ? positionne la proposition de Lajus-Pueyo, #Commentaires

    / #architecture, vernaculaire, États-Unis, #voyage, #photographie, #dessin, #paysage

  • La #censure_littéraire s’accentue aux États-Unis

    Quelque 3362 références de livres ont été interdites et retirées des établissements publics. Du jamais-vu en vingt ans.

    (#paywall, mais quelques titres ici :
    figurent « Tricks », d’Ellen Hopkins, ..., « L’œil le plus bleu », de la Prix Nobel Toni Morrison,..., le roman dystopique « 1984 », de George Orwell, « Les cerfs-volants de Kaboul », de Khaled Hosseini, ou encore « Ne tirez pas sur l’oiseau moqueur », de Harper Lee.
    https://tooting.ch/@Swiss_Pepita/111682913813083498)

    https://www.tdg.ch/phenomene-inquietant-la-censure-litteraire-s-accentue-aux-etats-unis-22109189427

    #censure #livres #USA #Etats-Unis #littérature #interdiction

    • Spineless Shelves. Two years of book banning

      A July 2021 to June 2023 Cumulative Data Summary

      The last two years have shown an undeniable and unprecedented attack on free expression in public education.

      As 2023 comes to a close, the following data summary examines the insidious trend of book banning in public schools over the last two academic years, drawing from data collected in PEN America’s Index of School Book Bans.
      Key Takeaways

      - The past two school years have demonstrated a mounting crisis of book bans. From July 2021 to June 2023, PEN America’s Index of School Book Bans recorded 5,894 instances of book bans across 41 states and 247 public school districts.
      - “Copycat bans” have emerged as a key component of the book ban movement, with a portion of titles removed seemingly because another district removed it elsewhere.
      - Relatedly, some authors have faced a “Scarlet Letter” effect, where several works from an author’s collection were subsequently targeted after at least one of their works was banned.
      - There has been a sustained focus on banning books written for young adults, especially when those books are about “difficult topics” – like violence and racism – or include historically marginalized identities – mainly, people of color and LGBTQ+ individuals.
      - Florida and Texas have continued to lead the country in number of bans, but the crisis has spread to 41 states.
      - A significant increase in the number of books “banned from classrooms and libraries” indicates that not only have there been more bans, but the bans themselves have been more comprehensive and potentially more permanent.


      https://pen.org/spineless-shelves

      via @freakonometrics

  • ‘Our country has lost its moral compass’ : #Arundhati_Roy

    From Arundhati Roy’s acceptance speech at the P. Govinda Pillai award function held in Thiruvananthapuram on December 13.

    Thank you for bestowing this honour on me in the name of P. Govinda Pillai, one of Kerala’s most outstanding scholars of Marxist theory. And thank you for asking N. Ram to be the person who graces this occasion. I know he won this prize last year, but he also in many ways shares the honour of this one with me. In 1998 he, as the editor of Frontline—along with Vinod Mehta, the editor of Outlook—published my first political essay, “The End of Imagination”, about India’s nuclear tests. For years after that he published my work, and the fact that there was an editor like him—precise, incisive, but fearless—gave me the confidence to become the writer that I am.

    I am not going to speak about the demise of the free press in India. All of us gathered here know all about that. Nor am I going to speak of what has happened to all the institutions that are meant to act as checks and balances in the functioning of our democracy. I have been doing that for 20 years and I am sure all of you gathered here are familiar with my views.

    Coming from north India to Kerala, or to almost any of the southern States, I feel by turns reassured and anxious about the fact that the dread that many of us up north live with every day seems far away when I am here. It is not as far away as we imagine. If the current regime returns to power next year, in 2026 the exercise of delimitation is likely to disempower all of South India by reducing the number of MPs we send to Parliament. Delimitation is not the only threat we face. Federalism, the lifeblood of our diverse country is under the hammer too. As the central government gives itself sweeping powers, we are witnessing the sorry sight of proudly elected chief ministers of opposition-ruled States having to literally beg for their States’ share of public funds. The latest blow to federalism is the recent Supreme Court judgment upholding the striking down of Section 370 which gave the State of Jammu and Kashmir semi-autonomous status. It isn’t the only State in India to have special status. It is a serious error to imagine that this judgment concerns Kashmir alone. It affects the fundamental structure of our polity.

    But today I want to speak of something more urgent. Our country has lost its moral compass. The most heinous crimes, the most horrible declarations calling for genocide and ethnic cleansing are greeted with applause and political reward. While wealth is concentrated in fewer and fewer hands, throwing crumbs to the poor manages to garner support to the very powers that are further impoverishing them.

    The most bewildering conundrum of our times is that all over the world people seem to be voting to disempower themselves. They do this based on the information they receive. What that information is and who controls it—that is the modern world’s poisoned chalice. Who controls the technology controls the world. But eventually, I believe that people cannot and will not be controlled. I believe that a new generation will rise in revolt. There will be a revolution. Sorry, let me rephrase that. There will be revolutions. Plural.

    I said we, as a country, have lost our moral compass. Across the world millions of people—Jewish, Muslim, Christian, Hindu, Communist, Atheist, Agnostic—are marching, calling for an immediate ceasefire in Gaza. But the streets of our country, which once was a true friend of colonised people, a true friend of Palestine, which once would have seen millions marching, too, are silent today. Most of our writers and public intellectuals, all but a few, are also silent. What a terrible shame. And what a sad display of a lack of foresight. As we watch the structures of our democracy being systematically dismantled, and our land of incredible diversity being shoe-horned into a spurious, narrow idea of one-size-fits-all nationalism, at least those who call themselves intellectuals should know that our country too, could explode.

    If we say nothing about Israel’s brazen slaughter of Palestinians, even as it is livestreamed into the most private recesses of our personal lives, we are complicit in it. Something in our moral selves will be altered forever. Are we going to simply stand by and watch while homes, hospitals, refugee camps, schools, universities, archives are bombed, a million people displaced, and dead children pulled out from under the rubble? The borders of Gaza are sealed. People have nowhere to go. They have no shelter, no food, no water. The United Nations says more than half the population is starving. And still they are being bombed relentlessly. Are we going to once again watch a whole people being dehumanised to the point where their annihilation does not matter?

    The project of dehumanising Palestinians did not begin with #Benyamin_Netanyahu and his crew—it began decades ago.

    In 2002, on the first anniversary of September 11 2001, I delivered a lecture called “Come September” in the United States in which I spoke about other anniversaries of September 11—the 1973 CIA-backed coup against President Salvador Allende in Chile on that auspicious date, and then the speech on September 11, 1990, of George W. Bush, Sr., then US President, to a joint session of Congress, announcing his government’s decision to go to war against Iraq. And then I spoke about Palestine. I will read this section out and you will see that if I hadn’t told you it was written 21 years ago, you’d think it was about today.

    —> September 11th has a tragic resonance in the Middle East, too. On the 11th of September 1922, ignoring Arab outrage, the British government proclaimed a mandate in Palestine, a follow-up to the 1917 Balfour Declaration which imperial Britain issued, with its army massed outside the gates of Gaza. The Balfour Declaration promised European Zionists a national home for Jewish people. (At the time, the Empire on which the Sun Never Set was free to snatch and bequeath national homelands like a school bully distributes marbles.) How carelessly imperial power vivisected ancient civilisations. Palestine and Kashmir are imperial Britain’s festering, blood-drenched gifts to the modern world. Both are fault lines in the raging international conflicts of today.
    –-> In 1937, Winston Churchill said of the Palestinians, I quote, “I do not agree that the dog in a manger has the final right to the manger even though he may have lain there for a very long time. I do not admit that right. I do not admit for instance, that a great wrong has been done to the Red Indians of America or the black people of Australia. I do not admit that a wrong has been done to these people by the fact that a stronger race, a higher-grade race, a more worldly wise race to put it that way, has come in and taken their place.” That set the trend for the Israeli State’s attitude towards the Palestinians. In 1969, Israeli Prime Minister Golda Meir said, “Palestinians do not exist.” Her successor, Prime Minister Levi Eschol said, “What are Palestinians? When I came here (to Palestine), there were 250,000 non-Jews, mainly Arabs and Bedouins. It was a desert, more than underdeveloped. Nothing.” Prime Minister Menachem Begin called Palestinians “two-legged beasts”. Prime Minister Yitzhak Shamir called them “grasshoppers” who could be crushed. This is the language of Heads of State, not the words of ordinary people.

    Thus began that terrible myth about the Land without a People for a People without a Land.

    –-> In 1947, the U.N. formally partitioned Palestine and allotted 55 per cent of Palestine’s land to the Zionists. Within a year, they had captured 76 per cent. On the 14th of May 1948 the State of Israel was declared. Minutes after the declaration, the United States recognized Israel. The West Bank was annexed by Jordan. The Gaza Strip came under Egyptian military control, and Palestine formally ceased to exist except in the minds and hearts of the hundreds of thousands of Palestinian people who became refugees. In 1967, Israel occupied the West Bank and the Gaza Strip. Over the decades there have been uprisings, wars, intifadas. Tens of thousands have lost their lives. Accords and treaties have been signed. Cease-fires declared and violated. But the bloodshed doesn’t end. Palestine still remains illegally occupied. Its people live in inhuman conditions, in virtual Bantustans, where they are subjected to collective punishments, 24-hour curfews, where they are humiliated and brutalized on a daily basis. They never know when their homes will be demolished, when their children will be shot, when their precious trees will be cut, when their roads will be closed, when they will be allowed to walk down to the market to buy food and medicine. And when they will not. They live with no semblance of dignity. With not much hope in sight. They have no control over their lands, their security, their movement, their communication, their water supply. So when accords are signed, and words like “autonomy” and even “statehood” bandied about, it’s always worth asking: What sort of autonomy? What sort of State? What sort of rights will its citizens have? Young Palestinians who cannot control their anger turn themselves into human bombs and haunt Israel’s streets and public places, blowing themselves up, killing ordinary people, injecting terror into daily life, and eventually hardening both societies’ suspicion and mutual hatred of each other. Each bombing invites merciless reprisal and even more hardship on Palestinian people. But then suicide bombing is an act of individual despair, not a revolutionary tactic. Although Palestinian attacks strike terror into Israeli citizens, they provide the perfect cover for the Israeli government’s daily incursions into Palestinian territory, the perfect excuse for old-fashioned, nineteenth-century colonialism, dressed up as a new-fashioned, 21st century “war”. Israel’s staunchest political and military ally is and always has been the US.
    –-> The US government has blocked, along with Israel, almost every UN resolution that sought a peaceful, equitable solution to the conflict. It has supported almost every war that Israel has fought. When Israel attacks Palestine, it is American missiles that smash through Palestinian homes. And every year Israel receives several billion dollars from the United States—taxpayers’ money.

    Today every bomb that is dropped by Israel on the civilian population, every tank, and every bullet has the United States’ name on it. None of this would happen if the US wasn’t backing it wholeheartedly. All of us saw what happened at the meeting of the UN Security Council on December 8 when 13 member states voted for a ceasefire and the US voted against it. The disturbing video of the US Deputy Ambassador, a Black American, raising his hand to veto the resolution is burned into our brains. Some bitter commentators on the social media have called it Intersectional Imperialism.

    Reading through the bureaucratese, what the US seemed to be saying is: Finish the Job. But Do it Kindly.

    —> What lessons should we draw from this tragic conflict? Is it really impossible for Jewish people who suffered so cruelly themselves—more cruelly perhaps than any other people in history—to understand the vulnerability and the yearning of those whom they have displaced? Does extreme suffering always kindle cruelty? What hope does this leave the human race with? What will happen to the Palestinian people in the event of a victory? When a nation without a state eventually proclaims a state, what kind of state will it be? What horrors will be perpetrated under its flag? Is it a separate state that we should be fighting for or, the rights to a life of liberty and dignity for everyone regardless of their ethnicity or religion? Palestine was once a secular bulwark in the Middle East. But now the weak, undemocratic, by all accounts corrupt but avowedly nonsectarian PLO, is losing ground to Hamas, which espouses an overtly sectarian ideology and fights in the name of Islam. To quote from their manifesto: “we will be its soldiers and the firewood of its fire, which will burn the enemies”. The world is called upon to condemn suicide bombers. But can we ignore the long road they have journeyed on before they have arrived at this destination? September 11, 1922 to September 11, 2002—80 years is a long time to have been waging war. Is there some advice the world can give the people of Palestine? Should they just take Golda Meir’s suggestion and make a real effort not to exist?”

    The idea of the erasure, the annihilation, of Palestinians is being clearly articulated by Israeli political and military officials. A US lawyer who has brought a case against the Biden administration for its “failure to prevent genocide”—which is a crime, too—spoke of how rare it is for genocidal intent to be so clearly and publicly articulated. Once they have achieved that goal, perhaps the plan is to have museums showcasing Palestinian culture and handicrafts, restaurants serving ethnic Palestinian food, maybe a Sound and Light show of how lively Old Gaza used to be—in the new Gaza Harbour at the head of the Ben Gurion canal project, which is supposedly being planned to rival the Suez Canal. Allegedly contracts for offshore drilling are already being signed.

    Twenty-one years ago, when I delivered “Come September” in New Mexico, there was a kind of omertà in the US around Palestine. Those who spoke about it paid a huge price for doing so. Today the young are on the streets, led from the front by Jews as well as Palestinians, raging about what their government, the US government, is doing. Universities, including the most elite campuses, are on the boil. Capitalism is moving fast to shut them down. Donors are threatening to withhold funds, thereby deciding what American students may or may not say, and how they may or may not think. A shot to the heart of the foundational principles of a so-called liberal education. Gone is any pretense of post-colonialism, multiculturalism, international law, the Geneva Conventions, the Universal Declaration of Human Rights. Gone is any pretence of Free Speech or public morality. A “war” that lawyers and scholars of international law say meets all the legal criterion of a genocide is taking place in which the perpetrators have cast themselves as victims, the colonisers who run an apartheid state have cast themselves as the oppressed. In the US, to question this is to be charged with anti-Semitism, even if those questioning it are Jewish themselves. It’s mind-bending. Even Israel—where dissident Israeli citizens like Gideon Levy are the most knowledgeable and incisive critics of Israeli actions—does not police speech in the way the US does (although that is rapidly changing, too). In the US, to speak of Intifada—uprising, resistance—in this case against genocide, against your own erasure—is considered to be a call for the genocide of Jews. The only moral thing Palestinian civilians can do apparently is to die. The only legal thing the rest of us can do is to watch them die. And be silent. If not, we risk our scholarships, grants, lecture fees and livelihoods.

    Post 9/11, the US War on Terror gave cover to regimes across the world to dismantle civil rights and to construct an elaborate, invasive surveillance apparatus in which our governments know everything about us and we know nothing about them. Similarly, under the umbrella of the US’ new McCarthyism, monstrous things will grow and flourish in countries all over the world. In our country, of course, it began years ago. But unless we speak out, it will gather momentum and sweep us all away. Yesterday’s news is that Jawaharlal Nehru University in Delhi, once among India’s top universities, has issued new rules of conduct for students. A fine of Rs.20,000 for any student who stages a dharna or hunger strike. And Rs 10,000 for “anti-national slogans”. There is no list yet about what those slogans are—but we can be reasonably sure that calling for the genocide and ethnic cleansing of Muslims will not be on it. So, the battle in Palestine is ours, too.

    What remains to be said must be said—repeated—clearly.

    The Israeli occupation of the West Bank and the siege of Gaza are crimes against humanity. The United States and other countries that bankroll the occupation are parties to the crime. The horror we are witnessing right now, the unconscionable slaughter of civilians by Hamas as well as by Israel, are a consequence of the siege and occupation.

    No amount of commentary about the cruelty, no amount of condemnation of the excesses committed by either side—and no amount of false equivalence about the scale of these atrocities—will lead to a solution.

    It is the occupation that is breeding this monstrosity. It is doing violence to both perpetrators and victims. The victims are dead. The perpetrators will have to live with what they have done. So will their children. For generations.

    The solution cannot be a militaristic one. It can only be a political one in which both Israelis and Palestinians live together or side by side in dignity, with equal rights. The world must intervene. The occupation must end. Palestinians must have a viable homeland. And Palestinian refugees must have the right to return.

    If not, then the moral architecture of Western liberalism will cease to exist. It was always hypocritical, we know. But even this provided some sort of shelter. That shelter is disappearing before our eyes.

    So please—for the sake of Palestine and Israel, for the sake of the living and in the name of the dead, for the sake of the hostages being held by Hamas and the Palestinians in Israel’s prisons—for the sake of all of humanity—stop this slaughter.

    Thank you once more for choosing me for this honour. Thank you too for the Rs 3 lakhs which comes with this prize. It will not remain with me. It will go towards helping activists and journalists who continue to stand up at huge cost to themselves.

    https://frontline.thehindu.com/the-nation/india-has-lost-its-moral-compass-arundhati-roy-on-israel-palestian-gaza-war/article67639421.ece

    #Gaza #à_lire #Palestine #Israel #boussole_morale #déshumanisation #11_septembre_1922 #responsabilité #occupation #Cisjordanie #USA #Etats-Unis #effacement #anéantissement #génocide #crime_contre_l'humanité #abattage