Showing posts with label West Bank. Show all posts
Showing posts with label West Bank. Show all posts

Friday, June 27, 2025

News roundup, 27 June 2025

- A 49 year old Canadian citizen has died in ICE custody in Florida. He had been a permanent resident since 1991 and was in custody pending deportation, having been convicted of drug offenses; he suffered from epilepsy and needed a medication to control his seizures, though it is not yet known if this is the reason for his death.

- Even as the IDF continues to demolish Gaza, their irregulars (the nominally civilian West Bank settlers) held a vicious pogrom in the town of Kafr Malik. When the locals responded by throwing stones at the attackers, the official wing of the army opened fire, killing three people. It's stuff like this that has led many to question whether the settlers should be considered to be civilians (and thus whether killing them counts as terrorism).

- The so-called "revenge tax" provision of the "One Big Beautiful Bill", which would have taxed US investment income for residents of countries that had annoyed Trump, has been removed by Republican senators following a recommendation from Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent. Evidently the prospect of foreign investors divesting from US securities en masse didn't seem like such a good thing after some consideration.

- New York City's establishment, including the likes of hedge fund manager Daniel Loeb, are freaking out over Zohran Mamdani's victory in the Democratic primary for mayor, and are getting in line behind incumbent mayor Eric Adams, who is running as an independent. Better a crook than a lefty in their minds, I guess.

- Winnipeg's most famous intersection, Portage and Main, is reopening to pedestrian traffic after 46 years. 

- A report submitted to Winnipeg's Public Works Committee has recommended the installation of bike lanes and the lowering of the speed limit to 40 km/h on the part of Wellington Crescent where a cyclist was killed last year. The proposal is for the changes to be in place by next spring, to give time for consultations; activists think a better approach would have been to provisionally make the changes and then see what people think of the reality of it rather than the idea of it, but that would make too much sense I guess.

- Trump Mobile, the president's venture into cellphone services, has removed the phrase "made in the USA" from its website, though they still insist that the phones are "brought to life" in the US, and that there will be "American hands behind every device". A cynic might wonder if the hands in question are the users' hands; if that were the case it would probably be technically accurate (who but an American would be fool enough to buy one?)

- Chinese authorities have declined a request for information about the crash of a China Eastern Airlines Boeing 737 in 2022 that killed 132 people, citing "national security". Based on information that has already leaked out about the crash, there are suspicions that it may have been a case of pilot suicide; perhaps the authorities don't want to have to answer any hard questions about that.

Thursday, January 23, 2025

News roundup, 23 Jan 2025

- Many of Donald Trump's promised changes would require a major overhaul of how government works. In particular, the political independence of various government agencies is in the firing line, including the Securities and Exchange Commission, the Federal Communications Commission, and the Federal Trade Commission, and potentially the military as well. This could potentially enable the Trump regime to, for instance, follow through on hints that he might get the FCC to pull the licenses of broadcasters that are insufficiently loyal to the regime (which might explain why a CBS affiliate in Wisconsin just fired their meteorologist for calling Musk out on his Nazi salute), or to purge the military of generals that are too "woke". And, of course, Trump has ordered all federal staff devoted to anything that he lumps under "DEI" to be put on administrative leave (with permanent dismissal expected to follow).

- One of the prisoners pardoned by Trump is Ross Ulbricht, the creator of the Silk Road website on the "dark web". Ulbricht had been sentenced to life in prison in 2015 on charges related to facilitating drug trafficking, hacking, and money laundering; he was also alleged to be involved in up to six homicides. But he's a hero to the crypto bros, so obviously he had to be released.

- The White House has removed the US Constitution from its website; they insist that it will be back soon. No word on whether the new page will say "no animal may kill another without cause", though.

- Despite the new administration's attack on clean energy, many in the industry say that progress is unstoppable. Whether this is true or just an attempt to put on a brave face, one thing is clear - China is moving full steam ahead on solar and wind power in any case; in addition to the climate costs of delays in the US, the Americans will risk permanently ceding the industry to the Chinese if they don't change course.

- Germany's parliament will be debating a bill to ban the far-right AfD. Under Germany's constitution, for such legislation to be legal it must be shown that the party is "aggressively opposed" to the constitution itself. The bill is supported by the Social Democrats, Greens, and Left Party. Some members of the centre-right Christian Democrats also favour the move, but not all - one senior CDU MP fears that this could "allow the AfD to represent itself as martyrs".

- The ceasefire in Gaza was followed shortly thereafter by a major military operation in the West Bank; in addition to the above-board operations there are reports of rampages by Israeli settlers in Palestinian villages in the territory.

- A planned ecological corridor along the Little Saskatchewan River in western Manitoba has been cancelled following an outburst of populist rage from the locals.

- Amazon is closing its warehousing facilities in Quebec and laying off around 1,500 people. The company is returning to the contracted-out delivery model that they used in the province before 2020. They insist that it's not because the facility recently unionized, but not too many people believe them.

- A US border patrol agent was fatally shot in Vermont close to the border with Quebec during a traffic stop; the killing is under investigation.

Wednesday, January 22, 2025

News roundup, 22 Jan 2025

- Donald Trump has issued pardons for over 1,500 rioters who participated in the Jan 6 coup attempt, as well as commuting the sentences of several leaders of the Oath Keepers and Proud Boys who were imprisoned for their part in the putsch.

- European leaders are not giving up on the Paris agreement despite the US withdrawal. This is reassuring, but it should be noted that Europe is not immune to the kind of madness that has swept the US (some may recall that they had problems of that kind before). And those problems just keep threatening to come back. Austria's centre-left, centrist, and centre-right parties just failed to piece together a coalition following last September's election, meaning that the far right Freedom Party (FPÖ) will have a crack at forming government. There are fears that Germany could be at risk of a similar takeover.

- French President Emmanuel Macron is concerned at the possibility of the US withdrawing forces from Europe, perhaps to focus on China, and called for EU countries to increase their defense spending. That in itself would be fair enough; more worrisome is the fact that Macron, who is in command of the world's third largest combat-ready nuclear arsenal, is talking about possibly sending troops to Ukraine, which while easy to sympathize with would pose unacceptable escalation risks. Evidently too many people have forgotten the lessons of Cold War era war simulations like Proud Prophet, which among other things concluded that "relying on escalation as a means of conflict resolution" would likely lead to all-out nuclear war.

- Another of Trump's executive orders blocks the leasing of any federal land for wind farms, and could potentially even lead to the removal of existing ones by not renewing their leases.

- For all you can say about Joe Biden's handling of the Israel-Palestine situation, he did at least impose sanctions on far-right settler leaders in the West Bank. Yet another of Trump's executive orders has lifted those sanctions, though.

- The Manitoba RCMP has deployed a Black Hawk helicopter to the Canada-US border to monitor the smuggling of people and other commodities across the border, perhaps in an attempt to placate the US.

- A Winnipeg man has pleaded guilty to several offenses, including dangerous operation of a motor vehicle, mischief over $5,000, and assaulting a police officer following a crack- and meth-fuelled rampage with an excavator at a water treatment plant, which caused damage to 5 buildings, as well as several vehicles and pieces of heavy equipment.