Monthly Archives: August 2024

Brazilian Judge Orders Total Suspension of Elon Musk’s X Social Network

“Elon Musk showed his total disrespect for Brazilian sovereignty and, in particular, for the judiciary,” said Brazilian Supreme Federal Court Justice Alexandre de Moraes.

By Brett Wilkins. Published 8-30-2024 by Common Dreams

Brazilian Supreme Federal Court Justice Alexandre de Moraes. Photo: TSE – Tribunal Superior Eleitoral/flickr/Public domain

Brazilian Supreme Federal Court Justice Alexandre de Moraes on Friday ordered the nationwide suspension of Elon Musk’s X social media platform in response to the billionaire’s failure to comply with the judge’s directive to appoint a legal representative in the South American country.

Moraes ordered the “immediate, complete, and total suspension of X’s operations” in the nation of 215 million people, “until the court’s judicial decisions are complied with and the fines applied are paid” and “until a representative of the company in the country is appointed.”

Continue reading
Share Button

Tribes Celebrate as Dam Removals Set Klamath River ‘Free’ for First Time in a Century

“The biggest thing for me, the significance of the dam removal project, is just hope—understanding that change can be made,” a Yoruk activist said as the largest dam removal project in U.S. history neared completion.

By Edward Carver. Published 8-29-2024 by Common Dreams

The Klamath River. Photo: Bureau of Land Management Oregon and Washington/flickr/CC

Crews breached the final of four dams on a key stretch of the Klamath River on Wednesday, letting salmon run freely there for the first time in over a century and garnering tears from Indigenous activists who had campaigned for the dam removals for decades.

Together the four demolitions mark the largest dam removal project in U.S. history.

The Klamath, which runs from south-central Oregon into northwestern California, has long been bordered by Native American tribes—”Salmon People,” as they call themselves—that once relied on the protein-rich fish for about half of their caloric intake but were impoverished by the institution of the dams, among other white settler colonialist initiatives.

Continue reading
Share Button

Progressive International Slams Macron for ‘Authoritarian Efforts to Repress the Will of the French People’

The president’s rejection of a center-left coalition’s prime minister candidate “is not merely a political maneuver to hold onto power, but a direct attack on French progressive forces.”

By Jessica Corbett. Published 8-28-2024 by Common Dreams

French President Emmanuel Macron. Photo: Remi Jouan/Wikimedia Commons/CC

Progressive International on Wednesday issued a scathing critique of French President Emmanuel Macron and backed calls for protests next month over his rejection of a leftist alliance’s candidate for prime minister following recent snap elections.

Nouveau Front Populaire (NFP), a coalition of left-of-center parties formed to counter the far-right in this summer’s elections, won the most seats, beating out Macron’s centrist alliance and Marine Le Pen’s right-wing Rassemblement National (RN), but lacks an absolute majority.

Continue reading
Share Button

‘Historic Victory’ as Biden BLM Restores Protections for 28 Million Acres in Alaska

“Tribal consultation must be treated as a requirement—not an option—when the federal government is making decisions that could irrevocably affect tribal communities,” said Interior Secretary Deb Haaland.

By Julia Conley. Published 8-27-2024 by Common Dreams

Moose visiting the coast, Yukon Delta National Wildlife Reserve. Photo: Michele Kuter/Public domain

Indigenous tribes and conservation groups applauded the Biden administration on Tuesday for listening to the demands of Alaska Natives, who have called on the federal government to protect 28 million acres of land in the state from mining—warning that failing to do so would threaten food security and cultural identity for tens of thousands of people.

U.S. Interior Secretary Deb Haaland’s announcement that the land would be protected from mining interests—reversing a decision by former President Donald Trump, the Republican presidential nominee—”is a big deal for the communities and wildlife who call Alaska home,” said Dan Ritzman of the Sierra Club.

Continue reading
Share Button

Report Exposes ‘Systemic Abuse’ at For-Profit Migrant Detention Centers in Louisiana

“These individuals have fled persecution and violence only to be thrown in ‘civil’ detention and left to fend for themselves in an abusive, profit-driven, and manipulative system.”

By Edward Carver. Published 8-26-2024 by Common Dreams

The River Correctional Center in Ferndale, LA. Photo: ICE

A coalition of rights groups on Monday released a report documenting “systemic human rights abuses” at migrant detention centers in Louisiana and called for an end to the use of for-profit facilities by U.S. agencies.

The 108-page report, drawn from more than 6,000 interviews at Lousiana immigrant detention centers since 2022, was produced by Robert F. Kennedy (RFK) Human Rights, the ACLU, the ACLU of Louisiana, Immigration Services and Legal Advocacy, and the National Immigration Project.

Continue reading
Share Button

US is unlikely to stop giving military aid to Israel − because it benefits from it

By Dov Waxman, University of California, Los Angeles Published 8-22-2024 by The Conversation

Protesters step off for final permitted march of Chicago DNC. Screenshot: ABC 7 Chicago/YouTube

The Democratic National Convention has been packed with prominent speakers and musical interludes that all focus on unity and moving forward into a more hopeful future.

But this cheerfulness is shadowed by a split within the Democratic Party related to Israel’s war in Gaza. There have been calls by some delegates for Democratic presidential nominee Kamala Harris to support a halt in U.S. military aid to Israel.

Continue reading
Share Button

Trump-Appointed Judge Strikes Down FTC Ban on Noncompete Agreements

“Thirty million workers who were trapped by these agreements will now stay trapped thanks to this ruling,” an expert said.

By Edward Carver. Published 8-21-2024 by Common Dreams

FTC Chair Lina Khan. Photo: New America/flickr/CC

A U.S. District Court judge in Texas on Tuesday struck down a Federal Trade Commission ban on noncompete agreements that was set to go into effect nationwide in September, drawing condemnation from workers’ rights advocates who supported the ban.

Judge Ada Brown, who was appointed to the federal bench by then-President Donald Trump in 2019, ruled that the FTC didn’t have the authority to issue substantive rules such as the noncompete ban, which was issued following a 3-2 vote of the agency’s commissioners in April.

Continue reading
Share Button

Federal Judge Gives Louisiana Polluters a ‘Free Pass’ to Harm Communities of Color

“Louisiana has given industrial polluters open license to poison Black and brown communities for generations,” and the new ruling from a Trump-appointed judge will only magnify the problem, a campaigner said.

By Edward Carver. Published 8-23-2024 by Common Dreams

Cancer Alley. Photo: Gines A. Sanchez/flickr/CC

A right-wing federal judge in Louisiana on Thursday permanently blocked two federal agencies from enforcing civil rights legislation that could protect Black communities from disproportionate pollution in the state, drawing condemnation from environmental justice advocates.

The two-page ruling, issued by U.S. District Court Judge James Cain, who was appointed to the federal bench in 2019 by then-President Donald Trump, is a setback in the push for accountability for corporate polluters, most notably in “Cancer Alley,” a roughly 85-mile stretch that runs along the Mississippi River from Baton Rouge to New Orleans.

Continue reading
Share Button

‘Infuriating’: Arkansas Supreme Court Disqualifies Abortion Amendment From Ballot

“This effort has generated a wave of fiercely engaged Arkansas women,” said one organizer. “We are outraged. We will not back down. And we will remember this in November.”

By Julia Conley. Published 8-22-2024 by Common Dreams

Photo: Arkansans for Limited Government/Facebook

Abortion rights defenders in Arkansas said Thursday it was “a dark day” after the state’s Supreme Court ruled a ballot measure that would enshrine stronger reproductive rights protections for people in the state was ineligible for November election ballots.

The court ruled 4-3 in favor of arguments presented by Republican officials including Secretary of State John Thurston and Attorney General Tim Griffin, who said organizers with Arkansans for Limited Government (AFLG)—which submitted more than 101,000 signatures to secure the amendment for the ballot—had failed to correctly submit paperwork verifying that paid canvassers had been properly trained.

Continue reading
Share Button

How Crypto Giants Are ‘Exploiting’ Citizens United to Buy 2024 Elections

A new analysis and call for a constitutional amendment comes as reporting sheds light on Sen. JD Vance’s ties to a right-wing group backed by tech and digital currency investors.

By Jessica Corbett. Published 8-21-2024 by Common Dreams

Image: QuoteInspector.com

report out Wednesday takes aim at how giants of the cryptocurrency industry are using the 2010 Citizens United ruling by the U.S. Supreme Court, which opened the floodgates for dark money in political campaigns, to make a massive deregulatory push ahead of this year’s pivotal election.

Based on Public Citizen research director Rick Claypool’s analysis of federal election data from OpenSecrets, the consumer advocacy group accused the crypto industry of “exploiting” the Citizens United v. Federal Election Commission ruling “to an unprecedented degree, dwarfing direct corporate spending by Big Oil and other corporate sectors in the 2024 elections.”

Continue reading
Share Button