Stay safe - wash your hands,
practice social distancing, and follow informed medical advice - and be considerate towards those at risk or in
situations of vulnerability (including economic) while the COVID-19
pandemic is a problem.
This is a new, very
cut down series of posts based on some observations on matters that struck a
personal note: unlike the former “Gnwmythr’s News”, it is not
trying to convey key events.
Content Warning: the linked articles and their descriptions here may be
about violence, abuse, hate, and other problems.
On personal /
spiritual matters: common sense advice
to Pagan priests; plant
familiars; alternative
thoughts on the “three element” view of the “soul”.
Reading I found
interesting this week included: on our inherent
connectivity.
In this week’s
news: the drought in southeast
Australia may
be ending; a survivor’s experience with
suicide is being used to make approaches more effective;
the staggering and gravely concerning impact of this week’s High Court decision - and advice
on coping with the distress caused by coverage; a social media
platform is limiting forwarding to restrict the spread of fake
news; in the same way that a brand name
became ubiquitous for GRP, a tech company’s name became nearly ubiquitous for
“internet search”, and Tupperware now often represents other manufacturer’s
plastic products, word changes have led to some regional names becoming
generic. Where those places try to “fight back”, they look petty. In this
instance, they have been petty; a rebuttal
of some of the idiotic comments this week about press reporting; the activism
of grandmothers.
In the environmental arena: zoonotic diseases show the NEED for better human-wildlife conflict laws; worst ever (most extensive) coral
bleaching of the Great Barrier Reef;
koalas may be endangered; Russia’s policy in the Arctic - which has
a record
size hole in the ozone layer - is the
same; the current
state of Africa’s Green Belt project; improved visibility of the Himalayas; a Peruvian village is still feeling the
effects of a mercury spill after
20 years; the “doughnut” alternative to economic growth; suggestions
on improving compliance with international environmental treaties; an opinion that the strategic
threats of supporting coal may be more effective at causing change than
environmental arguments; “women in the
Solomon Islands are raising awareness of deforestation and standing up to loggers”.
On human and animal rights:
as the Union of Soviet Socialist Russia’s Grand Tsar Putin clearly intended, an official determination has been made that the Assad regime made a chemical attack in 2017 - so late that it is UTTERLY USELESS, notwithstanding that it is the first time a specific allocation of responsibility has been “allowed” by Putin;
the Inter-American Court of Human Rights has found Peru tortured a trans woman;
my home state’s coroner has referred a “preventable” death in custody of an Indigenous woman to prosecutors; the USA has, for the first time, declared a (Russian) white supremacist group a terrorist group;
a critique of the need for police to have community trust and consent in the context of the COVID-19 pandemic;
despite claims to the contrary, India IS targeting Muslims;
criticism of Australia for keeping a man in illegal detention because it didn’t agree with the tribunal order to release him;
an utterly insane idea to put medical cameras in toilets.
racism matters (good and bad) have occurred in: US Census;
trafficking/slavery/child abuse matters (good and bad) have occurred in: Australia; Australia; Brazil;
LGBTIQ+ matters (good and bad) have occurred in: Australia;
sexism matters (good and bad) have occurred in: Afghanistan (misogyny), Saudi Arabia (why misogyny not reported); Tanzania (good news); Ethiopia (good news); West Asia; Europe; and
other matters (good and bad) have occurred in: the chocolate industry.
as the Union of Soviet Socialist Russia’s Grand Tsar Putin clearly intended, an official determination has been made that the Assad regime made a chemical attack in 2017 - so late that it is UTTERLY USELESS, notwithstanding that it is the first time a specific allocation of responsibility has been “allowed” by Putin;
the Inter-American Court of Human Rights has found Peru tortured a trans woman;
my home state’s coroner has referred a “preventable” death in custody of an Indigenous woman to prosecutors; the USA has, for the first time, declared a (Russian) white supremacist group a terrorist group;
a critique of the need for police to have community trust and consent in the context of the COVID-19 pandemic;
despite claims to the contrary, India IS targeting Muslims;
criticism of Australia for keeping a man in illegal detention because it didn’t agree with the tribunal order to release him;
an utterly insane idea to put medical cameras in toilets.
racism matters (good and bad) have occurred in: US Census;
trafficking/slavery/child abuse matters (good and bad) have occurred in: Australia; Australia; Brazil;
LGBTIQ+ matters (good and bad) have occurred in: Australia;
sexism matters (good and bad) have occurred in: Afghanistan (misogyny), Saudi Arabia (why misogyny not reported); Tanzania (good news); Ethiopia (good news); West Asia; Europe; and
other matters (good and bad) have occurred in: the chocolate industry.
In the governance, politics, and society arena: analysis of
Jacinda Ardern’s leadership; the savage, malicious and inhuman
neoliberals have ordered
“debt recovery” staff to “keep raising debts against people who have
died and to undertake a range of debt recovery activities”; another large banking organisation has self-reported
potential money laundering breaches; a
critique of the motivations
of CEOs; a call for Burundi to end
its forced “contributions” scheme; a
quarter century of longitudinal
research on Australian youth; building
transport safety capacity in the Pacific; the lockdown has
reopened a
debate about opening golf spaces to public use.
Risks of
atrocities this week in: Syria,
burma, and Sudan.
On humanitarian aid: Yemen remains
the world’s largest case of humanitarian aid (I thought it had got better),
but at least a ceasefire
appears to be happening.
Internationally: the new leader of the UK’s Labour party will
address
anti-Semitism; the US military wants more
money to deter China in the Indo-Pacific region following the
pandemic; Viêt Nám has objected and may
take legal action after a Chinese vessel sank
a Vietnamese fishing vessel (so much for SOLAS);
Senator
Sanders has stopped running, but
will remain on ballots to “amass influence” . . . ; after ten years, the New START treaty is working.
In Africa: the potential value of drones;
Guinea’s strongman president is still
trying to cling to power; conflicts and
state repression are fuelling
human rights violations; corruption allegations
in the DR Congo; separatists have resumed
fighting in Cameroon.
On the COVID-19 pandemic caused by the SARS-CoV-2
novel coronavirus (there are other novel coronaviruses) (seven
major risks to watch here,
and seven sins of thought to avoid here):
the USA has STOLEN masks that were on their way to Germany, and the feds have stolen state supplies (how can any person with any decency vote for or support POTUS45 - who has also removed the watchdog appointed to oversee spending of the financial aid package - after all this, on top of everything else?); vandalism over false 5G claims; lessons from those idiot religious groups still holding public events; what we have learned about our capacity to change quickly ; spreading myths about 5G is destructive (I would say evil); a reminder that Nelson Mandela stayed fit while exercising in a jail cell (and there are programmes such as the XBX/5BX programmes); the need to match messaging to the cultural context; a review of how Parliaments across the world have been adapting to the CLOVID-19 pandemic - including, in some cases, using prior technological adaptations; the working from home “revolution” means the world could be better after the pandemic - particularly for women; an opinion the pandemic will accelerate, rather than reshape, history;
the USA has STOLEN masks that were on their way to Germany, and the feds have stolen state supplies (how can any person with any decency vote for or support POTUS45 - who has also removed the watchdog appointed to oversee spending of the financial aid package - after all this, on top of everything else?); vandalism over false 5G claims; lessons from those idiot religious groups still holding public events; what we have learned about our capacity to change quickly ; spreading myths about 5G is destructive (I would say evil); a reminder that Nelson Mandela stayed fit while exercising in a jail cell (and there are programmes such as the XBX/5BX programmes); the need to match messaging to the cultural context; a review of how Parliaments across the world have been adapting to the CLOVID-19 pandemic - including, in some cases, using prior technological adaptations; the working from home “revolution” means the world could be better after the pandemic - particularly for women; an opinion the pandemic will accelerate, rather than reshape, history;
good
stories of people coming
together: a COVID version of a song from Les Misérables by a family; here (including pen pals across generations); urban farming; a vet on the
Faroe islands adapted his salmon testing lab and human testing was used to
limit the spread and prevent fatalities;
using time alone to reset; Singapore;
medical
aspects: as Israel
adopts wearing them, some stupid
comments about face masks (I think the problem is not enough for all,
which is what should be said, if that is so, rather than stupid advice that
will have to be walked back if [when!] masks are recommended); those at risk includes
those with diabetes and heart disease; there
is no
hard evidence that a drug “touted” by POTUS45 actually works; air pollution increases
death rates from COVID-19; a notorious transphobe
is spreading medical BS; a review
of “second wave” infections; the importance
of the GROWTH FACTOR in understanding the spread of the pandemic; scapegoating
of a doctor; almost one third of infected
children under nine are asymptomatic; heart
damage; medical waste workers are doing
overtime;
resources:
for journalists; debunking
myths; guidance
on the best long term options around rent relief; how to keep
Zoom meetings safer; a mental health tool
is now available free (NOTE: I have not
checked the too, and cannot vouch for it);
human rights aspects:
another Chinese whistleblower has disappeared; an utterly STUPID proposal to have teachers, no matter how homophobic/transphobic/racist/misogynistic/otherwise
bigoted they may be, ESTIMATE
Year 12 students’ results . . . ; at least one
new committee will monitor
the government on COVID-19, but there is still pressure
to keep Parliament sitting; recommendations to protect
privacy and data; another article
on power
grabs; an academic publication on
the likelihood
of violence against women and children;
a global review by HRW; lack of PPE has stopped
testing in some Indigenous areas; press
freedom is at
risk; “autocrats’ quandary:
you can’t arrest a virus”; concerns in Zimbabwe
(where food markets have reopened), and
Cambodia; the risks of surveillance are not known; xenophobia,
against Asians in other nations, is now surfacing in China against
foreigners; Australia’s
multiculturalism may
be damaged; South
and Central America; Mexico;
Australia:
as
14 police recruits may
face being sacked for breaching social distancing rules and after a stupid fine is withdrawn, police
are warned
to exercise restraint over possibly
unnecessary powers - see here
on your rights; business renters are stressed; the particular crisis facing homeless
people - a group which international
students may find themselves in soon . . . ; a warning on superannuation scams; mental health concerns
in Australia; calls
to support people here on temporary visas; a criminal investigation
has been launched into allowing infected passengers off a cruise ship; reforms of one state’s youth detention
centres have been reversed,
putting those in them at risk; more Australians
are worried about longer lasting social impacts (including overloading the
health system) and a recession than
the impacts on themselves; time
constraints made the job relief package imperfect; local Councils have a valid
need for help as well; crimes rate
in one Australian state are down - all except domestic
violence, which is up; the pandemic is leading to a changed
demand for, and delivery of, charity; in my home state, people laid off by the COVID-19 lockdown are being hired for other work, such as sorting and delivering food; casual and migrant workers are at
risk; calls for disability
carers to be given the same support as aged care workers (why weren’t
they in the first place?); practical measures in my home state for the (rough
sleeping) homeless; the pattern
of police fines does
NOT match the pattern of COVID-19; reports that immigration department staff
are not
following guidelines; a reminder
to be careful to keep the social distancing this weekend; a refugee advocate was arrested
and others fined for trying to support treating refugees with professionalism,
responsibility and caring;
internationally: Singapore requires
face masks in markets; the loss of
shared economic interests could
result in Asia being less stable after the pandemic - and the Pacific needs
aid; the need
for nations to look after neighbours; a
US navy captain who was sacked
after he tried to save his crew from COVID-19 was cheered by the crew as he
left, and the US Navy Secretary who mocked him has been forced to resign;; a European mayor who has criticised China over human rights abuses
doesn’t want their help; limited resources are restricting
Native American Tribes’ response; no-one
believes Grand Tsar Putin’s claims about the levels of COVID-19 in the Union of
Soviet Socialist Russia; mental
health concerns in Singapore, where basic military training is being suspended; a virus carrier who fled quarantine and was
reported by his family has been arrested; Ireland’s Prime
Minister has re-registered as a doctor and will help one day/week;
a State of Emergency in Japan; exacerbated existential threats to the EU; the EU will (finally) start relocating
child refugees from Greek camps; as
China reports a day with no
deaths, Wuhan starts dealing with the long
term scars; China should
be leading the way on debt relief for poor nations; “China's dilemma
and challenge of jumpstarting economy and keeping lid on cases”; as “hidden” home workers miss
out on aid, India may continue
the world’s biggest lockdown; an Indigenous community in Brazil has banished miners for protection; in
Bangladesh garment workers have been forced
home, but sex workers will be supported
- and moves are now underway
to support the garment workers;
refugee camps quarantined in Greece and Malta and risks in
Libya
as the UN urges
care for all, but there may
be some benefits with some conflicts going into ceasefires; Afghanistan; fears
about getting food in South Africa, and violent
abuse of the poor in several nations who are
trying to get food; prisoner
releases in Morocco,
and Chad,
and calls for same in Eritrea; “empty sport stadiums and train carriages
in India are being converted
into quarantine centres and makeshift hospitals”; a majority of the
US Supreme Court have shown their utter stupidity, irresponsibility and lack of
understanding by putting one state’s voters at
risk of death (Ginsberg dissented); controversy
after a large corporation that received financial aid makes a massive dividend
payout; some religions are continuing
to arrogantly
show disdain
for safety precautions; concerns
in Afghanistan; concerns of a second
wave of infections in Asia; as mass
burials happen in the USA, another
opinion that the USA’s position as world leader is declining as China’s
position rises; China has caught up
with the early 20th Century and reclassified
dogs as pets, rather than livestock . . . ; Spain will use unemployed and
“illegal migrants” to pick fruit; 1.5 million families in the USA are being moved
to the cusp of
homelessness;
Africa: some police are using excessive
force; bracing for an
impact; a robot used for enforcement in
Tunisia; Kenya has closed
off Nairobi; fear
has led to a violent NIMBY response in the Ivory Coast; a caution
not to derail Somali’s moves towards democracy; concerns
and disinformation; South
Africa is extending its lockdown; concerns the pandemic may lead to a relapse
of Ebola in the DR Congo; the UN mission in Mali has been repurposed
to fighting the pandemic; Kenya
is struggling,
but a factory has been transformed
into making surgical masks; refugees
are “sitting
ducks”; ECOWAS has announced a support
package; concerns
over press freedom; extended
curfew in Egypt; Parliamentary quarantine
in Botswana; state
of emergency in Ethiopia; warnings
in Burkina Faso; empty
churches in economically
struggling Nigeria; refugees stranded
in an unsafe port in Libya; voter
registration will continue
in Malawi; xenophobia
in the Central African Republic; stupidity
in Burundi; Gabon has secured
funding;
globally: the poor will be hit
for years by the pandemic; a call for the UN Security Council to support calls for a
global ceasefire; the race
to protect the world’s slums; the virus
has cut off aid; half a billion people are at
risk of poverty;
blame games: USA,
including Florida; Australia; residual
doubt after political scandals; POTUS45
knew
the virus could kill up to half a million in January - which makes that moron’s
threats
about the WHO particularly egregious; Australia
(on the docking of a cruise liner).
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