Podcaster
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28.06.2021
4 Minuten
Folks! The AM Quickie podcast is taking a break. Take a listen
for some important updates from Sam and Lucie about what the AMQ
team will be doing to bring you the news in the meantime. Thanks
so much for listening and for all your support! #leftisbest
AM QUICKIE
HOSTS - Sam Seder & Lucie Steiner
WRITERS - Jack Crosbie & Cory Pein
PRODUCER - Dorsey Shaw
EXECUTIVE PRODUCER - Brendan Finn
Mehr
25.06.2021
9 Minuten
Welcome to Majority.FM's AM QUICKIE! Brought to you by
justcoffee.coop
TODAY'S HEADLINES:
The Biden administration strikes its first significant deal with
Republican members of Congress, and it’s for an infrastructure
package. But progressive Democrats say the deal doesn’t offer
enough to win their support.
Meanwhile, the search for answers begins after a
terrifying and sudden residential building collapse in Surfside,
Florida. The death toll is uncertain but as many as ninety nine
people are missing.
And lastly, a new analysis of government data
shows that almost everyone who’s dying of the coronavirus in the
United States now is unvaccinated. Which means those deaths don’t
need to happen at all.
THESE ARE THE STORIES YOU NEED TO KNOW:
This report from the political sausage factory comes from the
Washington Post. President Joe Biden signed off yesterday on a
bipartisan agreement crafted by ten senators that would pump
hundreds of billions of dollars in new spending into
infrastructure projects across the country. We have a deal, Biden
said alongside the five Democrats and five Republicans who had
negotiated for weeks on a package to revitalize the nation’s road
and transit systems, while upgrading broadband and investing in
other public-works projects. The proposal was crafted by Senators
Rob Portman, Republican of Ohio; Kyrsten Sinema, Democrat of
Arizona; and eight others in the Senate. The new agreement is
nowhere near as expansive as the $2.2 trillion American Jobs
Plan, Biden’s own infrastructure measure that he detailed in
April. But Democratic leaders have made it clear that they hope
to push through a separate package encompassing priorities such
as climate initiatives, paid leave and expanded education.
The Post says the bipartisan agreement will spend $973 billion
over five years, with $579 billion of that being new spending.
That includes $312 billion for transportation projects, $55
billion for water infrastructure and $65 billion for broadband.
The Congressional Progressive Caucus polled its ninety five
members on the infrastructure package and found a strong majority
prepared to vote against the bill without a separate package that
moves simultaneously and includes key priorities, such as funding
for eldercare, expanding Medicare, and affordable housing.
Because bipartisanship for bipartisanship’s sake helps no one –
except a few politicians.
Cause Unknown In Florida Condo Collapse
This report of crumbling infrastructure comes from the Miami
Herald. Lightning streaked the skies yesterday afternoon as
search-and-rescue teams picked their way through a pile of rubble
nearly two stories high – the remains of a collapsed twelve-story
condo – hoping to hear the cries of survivors. As many as ninety
nine people are reported missing. The oceanfront Champlain Towers
South Condo crumpled with a bang a little after 1:30 am, trapping
an unknown number of sleeping residents inside the wreckage.
Miami-Dade County Mayor Daniella Levine Cava called it, "a
terrible, terrible nightmare." Footage of the sudden collapse
looked eerily similar to a demolition, minus the flash of
explosives. The cause is unknown, with one expert deeming it "an
oddity of biblical proportions."
According to the Herald, nearly twelve hours after the collapse,
the death toll was uncertain. Officials confirmed at least one
death, and said thirty five people were pulled from the wreckage,
with ten injured people treated at the scene and two sent to a
hospital. Officials estimated that fifty five units were involved
in the collapse. Surfside Commissioner Eliana Salzhauer said the
building was undergoing a required forty-year recertification to
ensure its structural integrity, and that the building’s roof was
being redone. It is unknown if any construction activity
contributed to the disaster. President Biden said it’s up to
Florida Governor Ron DeSantis to declare a state of emergency so
federal resources, including FEMA help, can be deployed. Here’s
hoping they find more survivors.
Vaccines Drive Down Covid Fatalities
We’re in a new phase. The Associated Press reports that nearly
all Covid-19 deaths in the US now are in people who weren’t
vaccinated. It is a staggering demonstration of how effective the
shots have been. It’s also an indication that deaths per day –
now down to under three hundred – could be practically zero if
everyone eligible got the vaccine. An AP analysis of government
data from May shows that breakthrough infections in fully
vaccinated people accounted for fewer than twelve hundred of more
than eight hundred and fifty three thousand Covid-19
hospitalizations. That’s about zero point one percent.
The AP analyzed figures provided by the Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention. CDC Director Doctor Rochelle Walensky
said on Tuesday that the vaccine is so effective that nearly
every death, especially among adults, is, at this point, entirely
preventable. She called such deaths particularly tragic. About
sixty three percent of all vaccine-eligible Americans – those
twelve and older – have received at least one dose, and fifty
three percent are fully vaccinated, according to the CDC. Experts
predict the preventable deaths will continue, with unvaccinated
pockets of the nation experiencing outbreaks in the fall and
winter. In Arkansas, which has one of the lowest vaccination
rates in the nation – with only thirty three percent of the
population fully protected – hospitalizations and deaths are
rising. To the extent that people aren’t getting vaccinated
because they can’t get paid time off, that must be addressed, so
we can beat Covid once and for all.
AND NOW FOR SOME QUICKER QUICKIES:
The Guardian reports that a First Nation in Canada’s Saskatchewan
province is treating a defunct residential school as a crime
scene following the discovery of seven hundred and fifty one
unmarked graves. The total of unmarked graves discovered in the
past month is about one thousand, with experts predicting more
will come as provincial governments announce funding to help
Indigenous communities conduct their own searches. This reckoning
is long overdue.
Politico reports that the Biden administration unveiled a raft of
measures to prevent people who lost income during the pandemic
from losing their homes yesterday, including by extending
nationwide eviction and foreclosure bans until July 31st. Maybe
it’s time to commit to keeping everyone in their homes
permanently – sound good?
According to the Washington Post, Speaker Nancy Pelosi announced
yesterday that the House will form a select committee to
investigate the January 6th attack on the Capitol by a pro-Trump
mob, one month after Senate Republicans blocked an effort to form
a bipartisan commission. The panel will provide recommendations
to prevent similar attacks in the future. Keeping Donald Trump’s
movement far from power should help.
The New York Times reports that Rudy Giuliani faces the
possibility of disbarment after a court ruled yesterday that he
made demonstrably false statements while fighting the results of
the 2020 election on behalf of Trump. The New York State
appellate court suspended Giuliani’s law license after finding he
had sought to mislead judges, lawmakers and the public. Better
late than never!
AM QUICKIE - JUNE 25, 2021
HOSTS - Sam Seder & Lucie Steiner
WRITER - Corey Pein
PRODUCER - Dorsey Shaw
EXECUTIVE PRODUCER - Brendan Finn
Mehr
24.06.2021
8 Minuten
Welcome to Majority.FM's AM QUICKIE! Brought to you by
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TODAY'S HEADLINES:
The wheels of justice keep turning for those charged in the
January 6th assault on the US Capitol. An Indiana woman has
become the first to be sentenced, and a member of the Oath
Keepers pleads guilty while agreeing to cooperate with
prosecutors.
Meanwhile, following the grim discovery of
hundreds of buried Indigenous children at residential schools in
Canada, the United States government will investigate what
happened to Native American children in this country. Interior
Secretary Deb Haaland announced the historical probe this week.
And lastly, a socialist nurse has defeated an
entrenched Democratic machine candidate in the race for mayor in
Buffalo, New York. Don’t call it a miracle – it’s a sign of the
times.
THESE ARE THE STORIES YOU NEED TO KNOW:
This courtroom update comes from the Associated Press. An Indiana
woman yesterday became the first of nearly five hundred
defendants to be sentenced for the January 6th insurrection at
the Capitol – and she avoided time behind bars. Anna Morgan Lloyd
of Indiana was ordered by a federal judge to serve three years of
probation, perform one hundred and twenty hours of community
service and pay $500 in restitution after admitting to entering
the Capitol. She pleaded guilty to a single misdemeanor charge
under a deal with prosecutors. Lloyd, forty nine, apologized to
the court, the American people, and her family. At her
sentencing, Lloyd said she was ashamed the day became "a savage
display of violence." In seeking probation for Lloyd, prosecutors
noted that she was not involved in any violence and destruction.
Lloyd was invited by her hairdresser to drive to Washington to
hear Donald Trump speak. US District Court Judge Royce Lamberth
said he was giving her a break, but didn’t want others to think
that probation – and not a stiffer sentence – would be the norm.
Also yesterday, the AP reports, Graydon Young, a member of the
Oath Keepers extremist group, pleaded guilty to charges in the
insurrection and agreed to cooperate with prosecutors in a major
step forward for the massive investigation into the insurrection.
It was also the first guilty plea in the major conspiracy case
brought against members of the Oath Keepers. Something tells me
their sentences will be a bit stiffer.
U.S. Will Probe Native Schools Abuses
This look at our national traumas comes from the New York Times.
The United States will search federal boarding schools for
possible burial sites of Native American children, hundreds of
thousands of whom were forcibly taken from their communities to
be culturally assimilated in the schools for more than a century,
the interior secretary announced on Tuesday. The initiative is
likely to resemble a recent effort in Canada, where the discovery
of the remains of two hundred and fifteen children at the site of
a defunct boarding school rekindled discussion of the traumatic
history and treatment of Native populations. Addressing a virtual
conference of the National Congress of American Indians,
Secretary of the Interior Deb Haaland said the program would
"shed light on the unspoken traumas of the past, no matter how
hard it will be." The forced removals were a result of the
Civilization Fund Act of 1819. In the years after the law was
enacted, residential boarding schools were established across the
nation and used to house relocated Indigenous children,
suppressing American Indian, Alaska Native and Native Hawaiian
cultures.
The Times says the new program, called the Federal Indian
Boarding School Initiative, will identify the facilities and
sites where there may have been student burials. It will also
mine records that were kept by the department, which had
oversight of the facilities. A final report will be sent to
Secretary Haaland by April 1. And there’s no question it will
make for painful but necessary reading.
Socialist Victorious In New York
Amazing news here, in case you missed it on the Majority Report.
NBC News reports that a socialist candidate in Buffalo, New York,
defeated the city’s four-term mayor in a major upset in Tuesday's
Democratic primary. India Walton beat Mayor Byron Brown, fifty
two percent to forty five percent, with one hundred percent of
precincts reporting. The Associated Press called the race late
yesterday morning. Walton told MSNBC yesterday, "I believe we won
because we organized. We have a message of care love and hope
that is resonant with working class Buffalo." If Walton, thirty
nine, wins the general election in November, she will become the
first socialist mayor of a large American city since 1960, when
Frank Zeidler left office in Milwaukee. Her chances of winning
are high since Buffalo hasn’t had a Republican mayor since 1965.
According to the Rochester Democrat and Chronicle, Walton is a a
nurse and community organizer. She had the backing of the
Democratic Socialists of America as well as the Working Families
Party. She campaigned on a platform of boosting affordable
housing in the city and reforming the criminal-justice system.
Brown, a former state senator, had been entrenched as Buffalo's
mayor since he was first elected in 2005. A longtime ally of
Governor Andrew Cuomo, Brown served a stint as the chairman of
the state Democratic Party before relinquishing the post in 2019.
Now that’s one hell of an upset – and a big win for the American
left!
AND NOW FOR SOME QUICKER QUICKIES:
The Guardian reports that the antivirus software entrepreneur
John McAfee has been found dead in his cell in Spain, hours after
the country’s national court approved his extradition to the
United States. He was wanted on tax-related criminal charges that
carry a prison sentence of up to thirty years. The Spanish
authorities say it was suicide.
The Tampa Bay Times reports that Governor Ron DeSantis on Tuesday
signed legislation that will require public universities to
survey students, faculty and staff about their beliefs. The
measure does not specify what will be done with the survey
results. But DeSantis suggested budget cuts could be looming if
universities are found to be "indoctrinating" students. As if he
needed an excuse to make cuts!
NBC News reports that the US Supreme Court yesterday limited the
ability of union organizers to enter the private property of
growers in order to reach farmworkers in California. In a
six-three decision, the court said unions violate the
Constitution when they enter a grower's private property without
paying. Which is outrageous, because California enacted its rules
on this because farmworkers often live on their employer’s
property.
According to CBS News, dozens of cows escaped a slaughterhouse in
Southern California and roamed free for over an hour on Tuesday,
injuring four people. One of the animals was fatally shot by
deputies after authorities said it charged at a family. That
ending is sad and somehow predictable, but at least those cows
went down fighting.
AM QUICKIE - JUNE 24, 2021
HOSTS - Sam Seder & Lucie Steiner
WRITER - Corey Pein
PRODUCER - Dorsey Shaw
EXECUTIVE PRODUCER - Brendan Finn
Mehr
23.06.2021
7 Minuten
Welcome to Majority.FM's AM QUICKIE! Brought to you by
justcoffee.coop
TODAY'S HEADLINES:
A leaked U.S. military document describes socialists as
terrorists and lists them alongside neo-Nazis and the far right,
according to a report by the Intercept.
Meanwhile, Motherboard reports that the Teamsters union is about
to announce a coordinated nationwide effort to organize Amazon
workers.
And lastly, the U.S. appears to have seized Iranian news sites
under suspicious circumstances
THESE ARE THE STORIES YOU NEED TO KNOW:
The Intercept has a shocking, yet somehow predictable report from
the U.S. military today.
According to a leaked document, soldiers are being told that
anarchism and socialism both represent so called terrorist
ideologies.
The document, according to military sources interviewed by the
Intercept, is part of a longer training manual designed for the
Navy’s internal police. It’s part of the military’s wider
internal push against extremism inside its ranks.
The Intercept reports that a section of the training document
subtitled “Study Questions” includes the following question:
“Anarchists, socialists and Neo-Nazis represent which terrorist
ideological category? A source told the Intercept that the
correct answer was quote “political terrorists.” endquote.
This is basically the what we all worried about when the military
announced it would crack down on domestic extremists in its own
ranks. Puting socialists, and even anarchists, on the same level
as neo-Nazis and far-right groups who actively wish harm against
other Americans doesn’t make any sense.
But it does help push resources and the power of the status quo
into suppressing leftist thought. As one anonymous military
official told the Intercept::
“It’s just ineffective training because whoever is directing the
Navy anti-terror curriculum would rather vilify the left than
actually protect anything. Despite the fact that the most
prominent threat is domestic, right-wing terror.”
Teamsters Take Aim at Amazon
Motherboard reports that the Teamsters union, one of the largest
and most powerful forces in organized labor, is about to get
serious with Amazon.
The Teamsters are expected to announce publicly today that
they’ll be embarking on a coordinated, nationwide effort to
unionize workers at Amazon.
Randy Korgan, the Teamster’s National Amazon Director, said in a
video obtained by Motherboard that the union would quote “build
the types of worker and community power necessary to take on one
of the most powerful corporations in the world and win. That
video was set to play at the Teamsters convention on Tuesday, and
on Thursday, delegates from Teamsters local unions will vote on a
similar resolution, which Motherboard reports should pass
comfortably.
That resolution will create and fund a specially designed Amazon
Division within the Teamsters, to aid Amazon workers in
unionizing and defend standards in the logistics industry. But
unlike the massive NLRB election in Bessemer, the Teamsters plan
to take on Amazon with a more guerilla warfare strategy.
Motherboard reports that the union is going to try to apply
direct pressure wherever possible, with work stoppages,
petitions, and other collective action.
The hope is that it also cuts down the opportunities Amazon has
to throw its massive pocketbook into anti-union campaigns, like
it did in Bessemer.
Details on the rest of the program are still scarce, but
Motherboard reports that the union says it has committed
“tremendous resources” to the effort.
U.S. Seizes Iranian Websites
The U.S. government seized dozens of American website domains
connected to the government of Iran on Tuesday, saying that they
were connected to disinformation campaigns.
The AP reports that the domains of a handful of sites, including
Iran state television’s English-language arm Press TV, redirected
to a federal notice saying the sites had been seized by the U.S.
Bureau of Industry and Security, Office of Export Enforcement and
the FBI.
A U.S. official anonymously told the AP that these sites were
linked to disinformation campaigns, but otherwise the reasons for
their seizure is unclear. Iran tightly controls much of its state
media, as do many other countries. And though it’s not a perfect
comparison, there’s plenty of disinformation coming out of our
own news sources as well.
What that means is this action is most likely a shot in a broader
conflict with the Iranian government. Actions like this don’t
usually happen in a vacuum, especially considering the ongoing
international talks about Iran’s nuclear program and the
country’s new hard-line president.
This story was still developing as of script time on Tuesday
evening, but we may have a clearer picture of what this means for
Iran’s relationship to the U.S. in the coming days.
AND NOW FOR SOME QUICKER QUICKIES:
The Daily Beast reports that back in 2019, Donald Trump asked his
advisors and lawyers what the FCC, courts, and the DOJ could do
to mess with or mitigate SNL, Jimmy Kimmel and other TV hosts,
proving that once again that he was the thinnest skinned
president we’ve ever had.
The LA Times reports that a top aide to LA’s mayor Eric Garcetti
mocked labor icon Dolores Huerta in a private facebook group, and
has been placed on administrative leave -- just in case you’re
wondering what people in the halls of power think of activists
and social justice leaders.
BuzzFeed News reports that The Biden administration will let
immigrants sent or deported to Mexico without a court appearance
under a Trump-era policy seek entry into the U.S., a major change
for some families stuck in immigration limbo for months if not
years.
Joe Manchin said on Tuesday that he would vote to open debate on
the Democrats Voting Rights bill, which he previously said he
didn’t support. This isn’t an endorsement of the bill, just a
vote to move procedure along, however, so we’re really not far
from where we were last week.
AM QUICKIE - JUNE, 23, 2021
HOSTS - Sam Seder & Lucie Steiner
WRITER - Jack Crosbie
PRODUCER - Dorsey Shaw
EXECUTIVE PRODUCER - Brendan Finn
Mehr
18.06.2021
8 Minuten
Welcome to Majority.FM's AM QUICKIE! Brought to you by
justcoffee.coop
TODAY'S HEADLINES:
The Supreme Court yesterday struck down another challenge to the
Affordable Care Act, also known as Obamacare. But it also said
American companies can benefit from child slavery in Africa, so,
you know, hold your applause for the honorable Justices.
Meanwhile, audio recordings reveal that
Bolivia’s right-wing coup leaders were organizing yet another
plot against the pro-democracy politician who won last year’s
election. And this time they planned to go big, and bring in
hundreds of mercenaries from the United States.
And lastly, US health officials announced a $3
billion program to speed up research on a pill to fight the
coronavirus in people who’ve already been infected. The research
could also help stop future pandemics in their tracks, which,
after all we’ve been through, is an obvious win.
THESE ARE THE STORIES YOU NEED TO KNOW:
This legal news comes from the Washington Post. The Supreme Court
yesterday said US chocolate companies cannot be sued for child
slavery on the African farms from which they buy most of their
cocoa. But the court stopped short of saying such a lawsuit could
never go forward. Six African men sought damages from Nestlé USA
and Cargill, alleging that as children they were trafficked out
of Mali, forced to work long hours on Ivory Coast cocoa farms and
kept at night in locked shacks. Their attorneys argued the
companies should have better monitored their cocoa suppliers in
West Africa, where two-thirds of the world’s cocoa is grown and
child labor is widespread. The companies asked the Supreme Court
to toss the lawsuit, arguing that courts in the United States are
the wrong forum and that the applicable law permits such cases
against individuals but not corporations. The court’s splintered
decision was written by Justice Clarence Thomas.
Also yesterday, the Post reports, the Court dismissed the latest
challenge to the Affordable Care Act, saying Republican-led
states do not have the legal standing to try to upend the law.
Justice Stephen Breyer wrote the court’s seven-to-two decision,
which preserves the law that provides millions of Americans with
health coverage. Health and Human Services Secretary Xavier
Becerra called the court’s decision, "a victory for all
Americans, especially people with a preexisting condition." It’s
a bittersweet victory, though, because I can’t stop thinking
about those child slaves.
Recordings Expose Bolivia Coup Plot
Here’s some retro Reagan-era intrigue! The Intercept reports that
a top official in the outgoing Bolivian government plotted to
deploy hundreds of mercenaries from the United States to overturn
the results of the South American country’s October 2020
election. The aim of the mercenary recruitment was to forcibly
block Luis Arce from taking up the presidency for MAS, the party
of former Bolivian President Evo Morales. The plot continued even
though Arce, a protégé of Morales, trounced a crowded field,
winning fifty five percent of first-round votes. Disagreements
between ministers and divisions within the armed forces appear to
have undermined the plan. It was never executed.
According to the Intercept, Arce’s eventual victory last fall was
a stunning rejection of the right-wing shift overseen by coup
leader Jeanine Áñez. The Bolivian right wing, however, was not
ready to relinquish power. A recorded call with Áñez’s defense
minister sketches a coup plot even more flagrant than the one in
October 2019. Several of the plotters discussed flying hundreds
of foreign mercenaries into Bolivia from a US military base
outside Miami. These would join forces with elite Bolivian
military units, renegade police squadrons, and vigilante mobs in
a desperate bid to keep MAS from returning to power. Two US
military sources confirmed that Special Operations had gotten
wind of the Bolivia coup plot. But nothing ever came of it, they
said. All those out-of-work Yankee mercenaries will just have to
wait until the next time a leftist wins a Latin American
election.
US Funds Anti-covid Pill Research
This promising health news comes from the New York Times. The US
government spent more than $18 billion last year funding
drugmakers to make a Covid vaccine, an effort that led to at
least five highly effective shots in record time. Now it’s
pouring more than $3 billion on a neglected area of research:
developing pills to fight the virus early in the course of
infection, potentially saving many lives in the years to come.
The new program, announced yesterday by the Department of Health
and Human Services, will speed up the clinical trials of a few
promising drug candidates. If all goes well, some of those first
pills could be ready by
the end of the year. The Antiviral Program for Pandemics will
also support research on entirely new drugs – not just for the
coronavirus, but for viruses that could cause future pandemics.
According to the Times, Doctor Anthony Fauci, a key backer of the
program, said he looked forward to a time when Covid-19 patients
could pick up antiviral pills from a pharmacy as soon as they
develop Covid-19 symptoms. Fauci’s support for research on
antiviral pills stems from his own experience fighting AIDS three
decades ago. In the 1990s, his institute conducted research that
led to some of the first antiviral pills for HIV. Even if the
next generation of pills doesn’t arrive for a few years,
scientists say the research will be a good investment. Imagine a
future where Covid is no big deal. It’s nice!
AND NOW FOR SOME QUICKER QUICKIES:
CBS News reports that the House yesterday approved a bill to
repeal the 2002 authorization for use of military force in Iraq,
a measure which has the backing of the White House. The bill now
goes to the Senate, where Majority Leader Chuck Schumer has said
he will bring it to the floor for a vote this year. Next we need
a bill to make everyone who supported that stupid war publicly
apologize.
The Washington Post says today will be a holiday for federal
employees following President Joe Biden’s signing yesterday of
legislation making Juneteenth a federal holiday. Juneteenth marks
the end of slavery in Texas. Employers who don’t honor this
holiday are now officially on notice.
Speaking of Texas: The Associated Press reports that Texas will
now let people carry handguns without first getting a background
check and training, becoming the latest and largest on a growing
list of states to roll back permitting requirements for carrying
guns in public. Republican Governor Greg Abbott called it a
measure of freedom and self-defense. It’s more like self-harm.
Politico reports that a little-known GOP candidate in Florida was
secretly recorded threatening to send a Russian and Ukrainian hit
squad to a fellow Republican opponent to make her QUOTE disappear
ENDQUOTE. During the call, William Braddock repeatedly warned a
conservative activist to not support Anna Paulina Luna in the
Republican primary for a Tampa Bay-area congressional seat
because he had access to assassins. Look out, Texas – here comes
Florida!
AM QUICKIE - JUNE 18, 2021
HOSTS - Sam Seder & Lucie Steiner
WRITER - Corey Pein
PRODUCER - Dorsey Shaw
EXECUTIVE PRODUCER - Brendan Finn
Mehr
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