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.
My articles this week
include: a story
about good policing;
some thoughtful
research into brains and extremism;
the stupidity of some people who try to turn dogs into guard dogs.
This week: China is using
social media to find
and silence people; I have heard a self-evidently true, accurate
and useful term: toxic
positivity; scams; ways to provide better
retirement; the importance of students understanding
emotions; Norfolk Island is running
out of food; a recently closed wire
service will hinder
future growth and access to accurate information; a suggestion
that the 3rd March, anniversary of the
Australia Act in 1986, when we took away the UK’s power to make legislation for our states, as our National Day; the trauma
of modern medical cures; the need
to “provide students with the future-proof skills of lifelong learning, not
just get them ‘job-ready’ ”; an
article on dyslexia; “three women
whose Indigenous identity and thousands of years of passed down matriarchal
learning is integral
to their cause, be it poetry or the climate”.
In the environmental
arena: “Summers are now twice
as long as winters in all Australian capital cities”; logging
in and near fire affected regions is underway . . . ; a reminder that humans can
become extinct; 80% of dolphins in the
Indian Ocean appear to have been killed
by commercial fishing; traditional water harvesting in Peru; the
ethics council of Norway’s wealth fund may ban four companies
over environmental impact; Australia’s
fire risk continues
. . . and cyclones
will move south; sand mining for
Singapore causes loss of land in burma;
“Egyptian architects seek antidotes to rising heat”; logging is reversing
the ability of tropical forests to store carbon; my home state is
helping more households get solar power batteries; Indigenous
forest defenders in Brazil are using drones to find loggers;
airline industry offsets.
On human and animal rights: fighting
the stupidity over menstruation; how
to fight domestic violence more effectively;
racism
and domestic violence were discussed on a TV panel show as more past sexist
abuse (and sexist discrimination in the workplace) emerge as Queensland police show just how profound their problems
[Guardian Australia exclusive] with misogyny are . . . and
present day sexism in a senior government official’s office,
in Saudi Arabia
(against women playing sport),and online; sexual abuse survivors are being forced
to take their quest for compensation to court;
the EU’s economy is losing 2% because
of the gender gap in pay; flawed income
protection insurance results in sexist discrimination;
the “unseen”
(ignored) economic input from women;
Dubai’s ruler has been found
by a British court to have abducted his two daughters and threatened his ex-wife; misogyny in diagnoses
by doctors; “despite decades of
progress closing the equality gap between men and women, close to 90 percent of men and women hold some
sort of bias against women”; inadequate legal
protection against “sextortion”;
the growing problem of adolescent domestic violence; after truly appalling acquittal of self-admitted rapists, Spain looks at joining the late 20th century by improving its laws on sexual assault; a notorious church that enabled child abuse has rejected a recommendation of the Royal Commission to continue being misogynist; pregnant women “nesting” is apparently a myth;
appalling bastardry by Australia against a disabled person; concerning allegations that “jobseekers with disabilities have been hired to ensure companies meet diversity targets but then promptly fired”; more privacy concerns;
violent religious discrimination in Pakistan as protestors in the UK call for India’s home minister to resign over the recent fatal religious violence, and a call is made for Australia to remember that human rights outweigh diplomatic niceties and do more to protect democracy in India - see also these recommendations on strengthening democracy; racists in New Zealand are making threats near the anniversary of a major racists attack;
“I implore my non-Indigenous friends to give a genuine damn”; following a recent court decision, another Indigenous man has left “immigration” detention - and a score more may follow;
after a former, traumatised guard dies by suicide (after Australia’s neoliberal “government” dithered on his compensation claim) and the company running the privatised refugee scheme (according to the Guardian Australia, several of their guards have boasted about the ineffectiveness of refugee complaints) being forced to release their manual, more on Australia’s abuse of refugees; the Greek coastguard indulges in behaviour that looks to me to be perilously close to endangering life as the UN reminds Greece that international human rights obligations outweigh EU policies; for contrast, an article on the Jews who were rescued by the Philippines’ president in early World War Two;
the Royal Australian College of Physicians has said “withholding treatment for transgender youth [is] ‘unethical’ “ and “would cause ‘further harm’ ”; finally a reasonable response to an anti-transphobia petition; “Participation in sport is a human right, even for trans women”; Nepal has completely stuffed up an attempt to count LGBTIQ+ people by (a) conflating sexuality and gender identity, and (b) thinking M2F/F2M people would tick “others” - what absolute, complete and utter morons (this sort of stupidity is something I and others have been fighting for two decades);
a UK bank scheme giving survivors of trafficking accounts may be adopted elsewhere; disturbing unprofessional conduct puts the privacy and dignity of victims of a fatal accident at risk; a Chinese company is cyber-incompetent, thus putting its customers’ privacy at risk; “smart” cameras and baby monitors are vulnerable to hacking; as Australia’s Chief Ultra-Conservative Cop plans to let overseas cops also invade our privacy, Australian police are using a facial recognition system without authorisation; a reminder that the harm AI can do means as much should be taken with it as with flying; a ban on robocalls in the USA has been upheld;
mental health support after the recent bushfires - which will be eight times more likely if global average temperatures rise 2˚C (key numbers from the fires here); as the aftereffects of bushfires - which include out-of-sight river creatures - shows that trauma can and DOES affect pets, I’ll also point out that morons trying to turn dogs into guards dogs is also traumatising, but an Indigenous group is planting food for fauna ahead of rebuilding; a reminder of the potential value of “earthships” in rebuilding after bushfires; more homelessness in the USA; the perils of being stateless in India; China’s genocide in Tibet includes trying to kill off the language; more on China’s brainwashing (aka “social re-education”); rats laugh, have and show empathy, and experience emotions such as fear and distress - so why are we continuing to abuse them in experiments run by unfeeling, incredulous ****head scientists who show incompetence as human beings?; hate speech is on the rise in burma - again, and in contravention of court orders.
the growing problem of adolescent domestic violence; after truly appalling acquittal of self-admitted rapists, Spain looks at joining the late 20th century by improving its laws on sexual assault; a notorious church that enabled child abuse has rejected a recommendation of the Royal Commission to continue being misogynist; pregnant women “nesting” is apparently a myth;
appalling bastardry by Australia against a disabled person; concerning allegations that “jobseekers with disabilities have been hired to ensure companies meet diversity targets but then promptly fired”; more privacy concerns;
violent religious discrimination in Pakistan as protestors in the UK call for India’s home minister to resign over the recent fatal religious violence, and a call is made for Australia to remember that human rights outweigh diplomatic niceties and do more to protect democracy in India - see also these recommendations on strengthening democracy; racists in New Zealand are making threats near the anniversary of a major racists attack;
“I implore my non-Indigenous friends to give a genuine damn”; following a recent court decision, another Indigenous man has left “immigration” detention - and a score more may follow;
after a former, traumatised guard dies by suicide (after Australia’s neoliberal “government” dithered on his compensation claim) and the company running the privatised refugee scheme (according to the Guardian Australia, several of their guards have boasted about the ineffectiveness of refugee complaints) being forced to release their manual, more on Australia’s abuse of refugees; the Greek coastguard indulges in behaviour that looks to me to be perilously close to endangering life as the UN reminds Greece that international human rights obligations outweigh EU policies; for contrast, an article on the Jews who were rescued by the Philippines’ president in early World War Two;
the Royal Australian College of Physicians has said “withholding treatment for transgender youth [is] ‘unethical’ “ and “would cause ‘further harm’ ”; finally a reasonable response to an anti-transphobia petition; “Participation in sport is a human right, even for trans women”; Nepal has completely stuffed up an attempt to count LGBTIQ+ people by (a) conflating sexuality and gender identity, and (b) thinking M2F/F2M people would tick “others” - what absolute, complete and utter morons (this sort of stupidity is something I and others have been fighting for two decades);
a UK bank scheme giving survivors of trafficking accounts may be adopted elsewhere; disturbing unprofessional conduct puts the privacy and dignity of victims of a fatal accident at risk; a Chinese company is cyber-incompetent, thus putting its customers’ privacy at risk; “smart” cameras and baby monitors are vulnerable to hacking; as Australia’s Chief Ultra-Conservative Cop plans to let overseas cops also invade our privacy, Australian police are using a facial recognition system without authorisation; a reminder that the harm AI can do means as much should be taken with it as with flying; a ban on robocalls in the USA has been upheld;
mental health support after the recent bushfires - which will be eight times more likely if global average temperatures rise 2˚C (key numbers from the fires here); as the aftereffects of bushfires - which include out-of-sight river creatures - shows that trauma can and DOES affect pets, I’ll also point out that morons trying to turn dogs into guards dogs is also traumatising, but an Indigenous group is planting food for fauna ahead of rebuilding; a reminder of the potential value of “earthships” in rebuilding after bushfires; more homelessness in the USA; the perils of being stateless in India; China’s genocide in Tibet includes trying to kill off the language; more on China’s brainwashing (aka “social re-education”); rats laugh, have and show empathy, and experience emotions such as fear and distress - so why are we continuing to abuse them in experiments run by unfeeling, incredulous ****head scientists who show incompetence as human beings?; hate speech is on the rise in burma - again, and in contravention of court orders.
Immigration and
refugee matters (good and bad) have occurred in: China;
trafficking/slavery/child abuse matters (good and bad) have occurred in: DR Congo (minerals for smartphone), China, Ethiopia, Mexico (breaking cycles);
LGBTIQ+ matters (good and bad) have occurred in: Poland; a challenge to sexuality based bigotry in blood collection (this topic also applies to TGD people); and
other matters (good and bad) have occurred in: China (misogyny); Sydney (stand against sexism); South Africa (self defence for women), Africa (helping potential women leaders), India (Dalits seeking land rights).
trafficking/slavery/child abuse matters (good and bad) have occurred in: DR Congo (minerals for smartphone), China, Ethiopia, Mexico (breaking cycles);
LGBTIQ+ matters (good and bad) have occurred in: Poland; a challenge to sexuality based bigotry in blood collection (this topic also applies to TGD people); and
other matters (good and bad) have occurred in: China (misogyny); Sydney (stand against sexism); South Africa (self defence for women), Africa (helping potential women leaders), India (Dalits seeking land rights).
In the governance,
politics, and society arena: conservative
politicians in Israel admit to being united
by hate; Luxembourg has made public transport FREE; Centrelink has made another
batch of mistakes; as the RBA reaches
the limits of what it can do, the onus will shift to our surplus-obsessed neoliberal
government . . . we’re doomed;
another joys of outsourcing problem: having personal details put at risk through a cyberhack
. . . ; an Australian state government is planning to use the best teachers across
the entire state to improve struggling schools; the
provider of an outsourced diplomatic service has been sacked for misconduct
(corruption); another example of governmental
cyber incompetence.
Internationally: ethical responses
to Russia’s increased - but seemingly forgotten by the world - aggression
against Ukraine; as a call is made for
the UN’s General Assembly to
do more, Syria and Erdoğan-(mis?)led
Turkey are moving closer
to all-out war (reports
of a ceasefire at the end of the week), and Erdoğan takes revenge
against
the EU by unleashing
refugees, but the USA indicates support
for a fellow despot; incredibly,
Malaysia no
longer has Mahathir as Prime Minister - but, as it moves even
further to the right, Anwar has missed
out yet again; despite angry
Arab voters in Israel after POTUS45’s “plan”, Israel appears
to have kept the same PM - subject to a coalition
being formed; a stumbling
block in Afghanistan, where the
misogynistic violent extremists have resumed violence (leading to retaliation)
. . . but some good suggestions here; North Korea is back to launching
missiles; seven Rohingya who were suspected
gangsters have been shot dead by police;
the USA has responded
to response to authoritarian mainland China’s suppression of international
media; Russia’s Tsar-President is
trying to limit
negotiation on border disputes; more
than twenty people have been killed by tornadoes in the USA; another warning that Iran’s stockpile of
uranium has increased
- thanks for nothing, POTUS45; an examination
of China’s thinking processes.
In Africa: more
election concerns in Guinea,
Guinea-Bissau,
Togo
(Togo appears
to be going back
towards suppression - and there’s some concern
about Nigeria, where poverty
is driving migration, the military is restricting
aid, hundreds of children have been released
from jail, and police
corruption is an issue), and Uganda,
where one million first time voters have been blocked; the truce in Libya appears to further
weaken; an
Algerian court has acquitted a protest leader; as the Malawi
army is praised for protecting protestors, people with albinism in Malawi will be given
protective
alarms; violence
in South Sudan, leading to more
violence, which appears to have been spending
in advance of receiving oil revenues . . . ; the effects of fake
news; South Sudanese refugees in
Uganda won’t
return yet; Uganda
takes steps to eliminate land fraud, is developing an injectable
anti-HIV drug, and baseball appears to be growing; concerns
over the conflict
in Cameroon; South Africa’s economy is
in recession; Kenyan-Somali border
tensions are growing, but a team has been forced
to address these; work is underway
to prevent
a second wave of locusts; Algeria wants
to jail a protest leader; a mental
health crisis in the
CAR, and mental health is key
to rebuilding Somalia.
On COVID-19: as the DR Congo discharges its last Ebola
patient and a fortnight has passed since the last new case, giving a
reminder that epidemics can be dealt with, washing hands (and not
touching one’s face) remains key
on COVID-19; as deaths
spread
(but most survive),
as one airline collapses,
the crisis is exposing the economic
risks of current,
excessive business debt - but there are some considerations
on protecting the global economy, and preparations include potentially compulsorily isolating
people (how do
they feed themselves – and why doesn’t anyone ask about that?)
and reducing
public
events - but the WHO says it is possible to stop
this becoming a pandemic; concerns
about nursing homes; infected Chinese are returning
to China; the POTUS45-like problems
in Iran; in Thailand a factory was selling
used face masks as new . . . it has
been raided by police; “Your
health is as safe as that of the worst-insured, worst-cared-for person in your
society”; some workers cannot adapt to changed economic and working
conditions under COVID-19; travel
insurance seems to be wriggling
out of providing their service; violent
racism; a panic about toilet paper shows
the lack of information about self-isolation in Australia; the global flow of medicine is being disrupted; the epidemic shows how “state censorship weakens
government legitimacy and induces alternative information-seeking”; identification of two
strains; as responses increase surveillance/privacy
risks, South Korea’s attempts to provide information have been totally
mucked up; US-China distrust is facilitating
conspiracy nut jobs on this topic; concerns
about religious festivals in Senegal; and
actions in Indonesia, Indonesia,
Africa, Italy, Singapore, Italy, USA, Japan
(criticised), and the WHO says
many nations are not
doing enough;
Reading I found
interesting this week included: common
sense comments on assessing the results of magic; “Daylight
Saving Time Must Die” - no argument here :)