Sunday, December 3, 2017

Honduras, the #MeToo Movement, the OFL & more -- The Left Chapter Sunday Reading List November 26 - December 3



This week's list of articles, news items and opinion pieces that I see as must reads if you are looking for a roundup that should be of interest to The Left Chapter readers.




This list covers the week of  November 26 - December 3. It is generally in order of the date of the article's release.

1) Nepal: A New Democracy or a New Oligarchy?

David Seddon, Jacobin

Recent elections in Nepal may further entrench divisions that have stalled democratic progress for a decade.

Read the full article.

2) This is How Cubans Run, Campaign and Vote in Elections

Telesur

The Cuban electoral process doesn't allow discriminatory or demeaning political campaigning and no organization can pay for any campaign.

Read the full article.

3) Women from Brazil's MST Occupy Farm Owned by Condemned Rapist

Telesur

Brazil's Landless Workers' Movement marked this year's International Day for the Elimination of Violence against Women by occupying a farm owned by Dr. Roger Abdelmassih, condemned in 2010 to 278 years in prison for raping 39 women, most of whom were his patients.

Read the full article.

4) 'Every refuge will close': what funding changes could mean for women

Jamie Grierson, The Guardian

Freya fled her partner after being raped and beaten; without eventually finding a refuge place, she might have had to go back to him.

Read the full article.

5) Sexual violence in war zones at ‘worst ever’ as drive to protect women falters

Rebecca Ratcliffe, The Guardian

The head of UN Women has condemned the inadequate response to the widespread use of rape and sexual violence in conflicts, and warned that the amount of money dedicated to fighting such war crimes is shrinking.

Read the full article.

6) The trouble with bitcoin and big data is the huge energy bill

John Naughton, The Guardian

The consequences are astonishing but predictable. According to one estimate, bitcoin mining is now consuming more electricity than 159 countries, including Ireland, Bahrain and the Slovak Republic. The same source reckons that it’s currently taking as much electricity as would be required to power 2.7m US households and that it’s responsible for 0.13% of global electricity consumption. If things go on like this, bitcoin mining will require all of Denmark’s electricity consumption by about 2020.

Read the full article.

7) Ontario sees rise in single-person households using food banks: report

CBC News

A new report by the Ontario Association of Food Banks (OAFB) says nearly 500,000 people in the province turned to a food bank last year, with a growing number of those clients being single-person households and renters.

Read the full article.

8) Finance Minister Bill Morneau silent on stock sell-off before tax changes

Bruce Campion-Smith, The Toronto Star

Finance Minister Bill Morneau is refusing to say whether he sold millions of dollars worth of company stock days before introducing tax changes that may have caused share prices to drop.

Read the full article.

9) Joe Ceci says 'recession behind us,' wants unions to agree to wage freeze

Emma Graney, Edmonton Journal

The public sector needs to pitch in and reject raises in current contract negotiations if Alberta’s economy is going to continue its path to recovery, the finance minister says.

Read the full article.

10) Israel's Attempts to Preserve a Racist Heritage

Haaretz Editorial

It would be interesting to see Israel’s response if some other country passed a constitutional amendment letting communities that exclude Jews be established. Under the radar of public attention, robust committee discussions continue on a new Basic Law on Israel as the nation-state of the Jewish people. On Tuesday a committee will discuss a particularly scandalous clause under the heading “preservation of heritage.” The clause states: “The state may permit a community, including the members of a single religion or the members of a single nationality, to establish separate community settlements.”


Read the full article.

11) Labour’s review of candidates is not a purge: it’s what’s known as democracy

Owen Jones, The Guardian

Construing grassroots internal elections as an authoritarian cleanse is part of the smear campaign against Momentum by those terrified by its success.

Read the full article.

12) Rape victim arrested on immigration charges after going to police

Haroon Siddique and Kevin Rawlinson, The Guardian

Pregnant woman, who had also been kidnapped, was being cared for in recovery centre in London when arrest took place.

Read the full article.

13) Human Rights Commission launching inquiry into racial profiling by Toronto police

Wendy Gillis, The Toronto Star

The commission has asked for seven years’ worth of data — from January 2010 to June 2017 — to examine whether there is racial profiling and discrimination against members of the Black community during specific interactions.

Read the full article.

14) The Franken case is our moment of truth as progressives

Ruth DeFoster and Marta Shore, The Star Tribune

Too many are casting aspersions on Leeann Tweeden and making excuses for the senator. This is hypocrisy, and we need to respond differently.

Read the full article.

15) Why Is There No “Saudi-Gate”?

Branko Marcetic, Jacobin

For decades, the DC establishment has been on the payroll of a foreign terror state. But because it's Saudi Arabia, you won't hear a peep.

Read the full article.

16) OFL UNITY DISRUPTED AS DELEGATES ADOPT CONTROVERSIAL ELECTION PLAN

PV Ontario Bureau, People's Voice

Hundreds of union delegates met in Toronto from November 20-24th to discuss policy resolutions and adopt a plan of work, at the biennial convention of the Ontario Federation of Labour. This was the first convention since the newly elected team of Chris Buckley, Patti Coates and Ahmed Gaied replaced Sid Ryan, Irwin Nanda and Nancy Hutchinson two years ago. This leadership projected a united image claiming that many of the crises plaguing the OFL over the previous four years have been resolved or dealt with.

Read the full article.


17) Kaepernick Wins Sports Illustrated Muhammad Ali Legacy Award

Telesur

Sports Illustrated has announced Colin Kaepernick as the recipient of the 2017 Sports Illustrated Muhammad Ali Legacy Award for his "steadfastness in the fight for social justice, for his adherence to his beliefs no matter the cost."

Read the full article.

18) #MeToo Must Fight For Women In Refugee Camps, Not Just On Red Carpets

Caroline Riseboro, HuffPost

The stories of girls living in the developing world whose rights are being violated don't seem to captivate our attention with the same urgency.

Read the full article.

19) Matt Lauer, Charlie Rose and the Sexism of Morning TV

James Poniewozik and Margaret Lyons, New York Times

For the second week in a row, viewers of a network morning show woke up to a disturbing surprise: Two female hosts reporting, and working publicly through the emotion of, the ouster of their male colleague over allegations of sexual misconduct.

Read the full article.


20) Children of war: Carrying on with babies born of rape

Tanya Birkbeck, The Globe and Mail

In South Sudan's civil war, sexual violence by both government and rebels is a regular occurrence. 'It's no longer a gun,' an orphanage director says. 'It becomes another way of damaging people's morale and their community.' Mothers raising children born of rape must press on in a judgmental society, as Tanya Birkbeck reports from Juba.

Read the full article.

21) The Reckoning at Vice Has Begun

Aimée Lutkin, Jezebel

On Thursday, Vice Media reportedly fired three employees after an investigation into claims of sexual harassment. This follows a report earlier this month from The Daily Beast on a “toxic” culture of abuse at the company, including some public embarrassments at Broadly, Vice’s site for women.

Read the full article.

22) University sexual harassment victim kept in dark over whether professor was punished

CBC News

Véronique Pronovost still lacks closure three years after filing a complaint with her university against a professor who sexually harassed her, because the school is keeping her in the dark about how — or even if  — the professor was disciplined.

Read the full article.

23) Gender pay gap persists, census data shows

Miriam Katawazi, The Toronto Star

New Statistics Canada figures show that women holding a bachelor’s degree have a median income of $68,342 in 2016, while men with the same level of education earned $82,082.

Read the full article.

24) Six in 10 classical music workers harassed, UK survey finds

Nadeem Badshah, The Guardian

Six out of 10 people who work in the classical music sector have been victims of discrimination and sexual harassment, according to a study.

Read the full article.

25) Toronto's #MeToo march gives hundreds of sexual misconduct survivors space to stand together, heal

Amara McLaughlin, CBC News

Hundreds of people gathered in downtown Toronto on Saturday afternoon to transform the pervasive two-word social media discussion #MeToo into action against sexual harassment and assault.

Read the full article.

26) Québec Solidaire members back merger with Option Nationale

CBC News

Québec Solidaire delegates have voted in favour of a proposal to merge with the smaller sovereigntist party Option Nationale.

Read the full article.

27) Left-center opposition looks headed for victory in Honduras

Emile Schepers, People's World

Although Honduras’ incumbent right-wing president, Juan Orlando Hernández, went into Sunday’s vote certain of re-election, it now seems that such confidence may have been misplaced. Unless his ruling National Party comes up with a scheme to rig the results during ballot counting—which it may very well be attempting to do—it looks like the unity candidate of the left-center opposition forces, Salvador Nasralla, will take the presidency.

Read the full article.


28) Honduras suspends rights as violence spreads over delayed vote count

Reuters

The Honduran government has suspended constitutional rights to give the army and police more powers and imposed a dusk-to-dawn curfew to contain unrest triggered by a contested election, a senior government official said on Friday.

Read the full article.

29) Opposition Protests To Continue Amid Curfew, Police Repression

Telesur

Former Honduran president and coordinator of the Opposition Alliance, Manuel Zelaya, called on all Hondurans to take to the streets to defend presidential election preliminary results which showed opposition candidate, Salvador Nasrallah with a comfortable lead over the right-wing incumbent, as the electoral board continues to withhold final results.

Read the full article.

30) Honduras On The Brink: Curfew Enforced By Military, Opposition Calls For New Election

Jose Olivares, NPR

The Honduran government suspended constitutional rights and called for the military to enforce a curfew and disperse protesters over the weekend after a contested election plunged the Central American country into a political crisis.

Read the full article.

See also: Transit, Housing, Climate Change & more -- The Left Chapter Sunday Reading List November 19-26

See also: Polish Nationalist Marches, the Tar Sands, Libya and more -- The Left Chapter Sunday Reading List November 12-19

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