Archive for May, 2020

Iraq: COVID-19 Camp Vulnerability Index (As of 17 May 2020) – Iraq – ReliefWeb

The aim of this vulnerability index is to understand the capacity of camps to deal with the impact of a COVID-19 outbreak, understanding the camp as a single system composed of sub-units. The components of the index are: exposure to risk, system vulnerabilities (population and infrastructure), capacity to cope with the event and its consequences, and finally, preparedness measures. For this purpose, databases collected between August 2019 and February 2020 have been analysed, as well as interviews with camp managers (see sources next to indicators), a total of 27 indicators were selected from those databases to compose the index.

For purpose of comparing the situation on the different camps, the capacity and vulnerability is calculated for each camp in the country using the arithmetic average of all the indicators (all indicators have the same weight). Those camps with a higher value are considered to be those that need to be strengthened in order to be prepared for an outbreak of COVID-19. Each indicator, according to its relevance and relation to the humanitarian standards, has been evaluated on a scale of 0 to 100 (see list of indicators and their individual assessment), with 100 being considered the most negative value with respect to the camp's capacity to deal with COVID-19.

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Iraq: COVID-19 Camp Vulnerability Index (As of 17 May 2020) - Iraq - ReliefWeb

British Army veteran who fought in Iraq handed 27,000 bill by NHS hospital bosses – Express

Fiji-born Taitusi Ratucaucau was told he did qualify for free NHS treatment as had been classified as an overseas patient by hospital bosses. The 49-year-old is recovering in a London hospital after an operation to remove a brain tumour on April 30. Friends say he is meant to be focusing on his physical rehabilitation but was spending most of his time worrying about how he would meet the demand for payment.

He has no savings, is the main breadwinner for his family and is currently too unwell to work.

And the hospital bill is increasing by around 1,500 for every day he remains an inpatient.

He told the Guardian: Where can I get money to pay for this treatment when Im in hospital?

He said he had felt proud to be accepted into the British army, after officers visited Fiji to sign up new recruits in 2001.

He said: I gave up years of my life to fight for this country. We cant believe that the Home Office could be like this. I feel sad and angry.

In a witness statement given to his lawyer, Vinita Templeton of Duncan Lewis, before he became ill, he said: As I had served for 10 years, I expected that I would be able to remain in the UK after being discharged.

"I feel that the position I have had to endure since being discharged from the army is very unfair.

"The army let me down badly by not giving me enough notice about steps that needed to be taken in order for me and my family to remain in the UK, and also about the cost of the Home Office applications.

"I feel that the fees that the Home Office charge foreign national veterans for the right to remain is extremely unfair, considering the committed service we have given to this country.

READ MORE:UKs army veterans let down as vital helpline closed due to COVID-19

Mr Ratucaucau served for more than a decade in the British army after joining up in 2001.

He has lived in the UK continuously with his wife and three daughters since being discharged from the military in 2011 and insists he has always paid tax and national insurance.

Mr Ratucaucau is one of a group of Commonwealth-born military veterans who launched legal action against the Home Office and the Ministry of Defence earlier this year.

The ex-servicemen claim there was a systemic failure to advise them of the need to apply for settlement in the UK on discharge and a failure to assist them with complex, expensive immigration rules.

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British Army veteran who fought in Iraq handed 27,000 bill by NHS hospital bosses - Express

Why Michelle Malkin Is Den Mother of the Alt-Right Dipsh*ts – The Daily Beast

What do far-right blogger Michelle Malkin, conspiracy nuts, and Trumps racist fanboys have in common? Theyre like political herpesno matter what you do, theyre always going to reappear, somewhere.

In Episode 9 of The New Abnormal, The Daily Beasts podcast for a world gone off the rails, Rick Wilson explains why hes avoiding sushi, tea, helicopters, and, perhaps, knives. And Molly Jong-Fast mulls over what is going on in Michelle Malkins mind, and unexpectedly wins an alt-right prize.

Oh, and, of course, they have to talk about the Trump kids creep-tweeting over the weekend.

All this signaling from this weekend [made it] very clear to me that they were trying to reestablish some of that [alt-right] relationship and to reboot some of that love of the green frog army, Rick says.

Then our dynamic duo talk to Daily Beast reporter Olivia Messer about her new story involving Ashton Kutcher, Joe Exotic, and some rather suspect coronavirus tests.

No other country has the same testing problem, Messer explains. Diagnostic kits are available at the White House in 15 minutes and they're still costing Americans more than that. Welp.

Plus! Molly and Rick debut two new features: Breaking Dumb, and Trump Those Fuckbros (or is it the other way around?).

Listen to The New Abnormal on Apple Podcasts, Spotify and Stitcher.

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Why Michelle Malkin Is Den Mother of the Alt-Right Dipsh*ts - The Daily Beast

‘We are seeing a wave of very young Nazis’: Alt-right expert explains why this year will be a ‘key turning point’ on the path from democracy to…

The U.S. government hasthe official publicpolicy of never negotiating with terrorists, paying them ransomor otherwise surrendering to their demands. The logic is simple: to give in to terrorists is to encourage moreviolence and other attacks.

It would appear that the state of Michigan does not follow the same policy.

Last Thursday, the Michigan state legislatureannounced it would not convene because of threats of violence and chaos by armed right-wing militiasand other paramilitaries, as previously seen during the recent anti-lockdown protests.

In what could be construed as an act of treason,President Trump recently ordered suchparamilitary groups and right-wing thugsto take up arms and to threaten Democratic-led state governments such as Michigans in order to force them to reopen their state.Such behavior is part of a broader pattern of right-wing terrorism and violence in the United States where armed militias and paramilitaries haveallied with the Republican Party in its effort to delegitimize and undermine democracy. Such an alliance is common to failing democracies and rising fascist movements. The example offered bythe Nazi Partyand Adolf Hitler in the 1930sis perhaps the most ominous.

Right-wing terrorism is and will be a future template for Trump and his movement against their perceived or real enemies.White neo-fascist violence, and the threat of such violencehave consistentlyescalatedduring the Age of Trump.

Matters are now so direthat even the New York Times, which views itself as a neutral journal of record,is sounding the alarm about Trumps armed paramilitary groups. Last Friday, columnist Roger Cohen published anop-ed entitled The Masked versus the Unmaskedin which he issued this warning:

So much for those resilient checks and balances I lauded to my Colorado neighbor.

Back then, in the bygone era, he wrote to me: No wonder Republicans are laughing at us. The billionaire politicians have complete control (besides the military at this point), no oversight, and most of their constituents are armed, some heavily, and ready to defend them. Roll over and die? What the hell? Time to even things up. To save this country. Hopefully, guns will always be a deterrent, but they may be our last hope to save this country. Time to gun up, liberals!

If you prefer, think of gun up as get real, get tough, get registered, get mobilized, get implacable and vote Trump out. Or you may just want to go down to the range.

Ultimately, the upcoming presidential election in November will be a test of the United Statesability to have a peaceful transfer of power assuming the election take place, and assumingTrump is somehow defeated, an outcome that seems increasingly unlikely.

How are the anti-lockdown protestsin Michigan and elsewhere connected to the history of the Tea Party movement and its network of right-wing plutocrats and other backers? What is the role of white supremacists and other right-wing extremists in Trumps coronavirus protests? How are right-wing militias and other paramilitary groups trying to plan for and incite a second American civil war and armed insurrection which they call the boogaloo? If Donald Trump loses in November,how will thesearmed militiaslikely react?

Is Trump actively encouraging right-wing violence through stochastic terrorism? And if so,why arent the American people mobilizing against such anti-democratic behavior?

In an effort to answer these questions I recently spoke with investigative journalist David Neiwert, a contributing writer for the Southern Poverty Law Center. Neiwertis also the author of several books, including the recentAlt-America: The Rise of the Radical Right in the Age of Trump, Eliminationists: How Hate Talk Radicalized the American Right and the forthcoming Red Pill, Blue Pill: How to Counteract the Conspiracy Theories That Are Killing Us.

The anti-lockdown protests in Michigan and elsewhere appear to bestaged events. In essence they are fake protests which are sponsored and created just like the Tea Party movement from several years ago by rich conservatives or corporate oligarchs. In a series of recent essays, you have suggested that these eventsare more complicated than that. Can you explain?

They are astroturfprotests in the same way that the Tea Party movement was put in place by people who have corporate right-wing money as well as the monetary support of very rich families such as that of BetsyDeVos [Trumps education secretary]. But the lockdown protests are a movement that has taken on a life of its own. This has a great deal to do with structure and organization.

The Tea Party initially was backed by right-wing corporations, interest groups and private money,which is why it had so much support from Fox News. But within about six to eight months the Tea Party had its ranks swell with far-right extremists from the Patriot movement. Over the next few years the Tea Party became a conduit for the revival of the Patriot movement, where right-wing extremist groups such as the Oath Keepers and the Three Percenters becameclosely associated with the later iterations of the Tea Party.

The full integration of these right-wing extremist militia groups and the Tea Party took some time to happen, but with Trump it is complete. With individuals and groups such as the DeVos family having set up the structure, it is easy for these anti-public health protests to spread across the country. The right-wing backers of the Tea Party created their astroturf machine and now it is a type of Frankenstein monster that rampages across the country.

Who are the various elements at these coronavirus rallies? What should the public and the news media really be focusing on?

Nothing about this is that invisible. So much of it is visible. It is a matter of understanding its context.

Men wearing camouflage and carrying guns are not there for the purpose of defending gun rights.They are at protests inMichigan and other states to threaten the legislators and the governor. These men with guns are at these proteststo threaten anybody who tries to stop them when they go marching into the state house in Michigan.What we saw in Michigan was seditious. If black people had behaved the same way with these guns, wearing camouflage and threatening legislators and the governor, they would have been shot dead by law enforcement.

How doyou interpreting the symbols and codes being displayed and shared at theserallies?

Confederate flags were ubiquitous. There was also theGadsden flag. The latter is now associated with the Tea Party. The Gadsden flag was associated with the right-wing extremist militants in the Patriot movement in the 1990s, and now they are present at these coronavirus protests and gatherings. The anti-vaxxers havenow joined up with these right-wing extremists at the anti-lockdown rallies. It is a natural alliance of sorts because they are all obsessed with conspiracy theories. One of the defining features of the Patriot movement is conspiracism.

You have talked to people involved in these various right-wing extremist and paramilitary groups and broader movements. How do the people at theserallies make sense of their claims that they are not racist or violent while they are carrying guns, waving Confederate flags, wearing other fascist insigniaand in several cases displaying signs with Nazi slogans?

There is a great amount of cognitive dissonance among these people at the coronavirus rallies. One of my favorite images was that man with the Confederate flag who was wearing a T-shirt that says, America, love it or leave it!. So many of the people at the Michigan rally and elsewhere are enormously confused. But there are also people at these events who are bloodthirsty for the opportunity to use the pandemic to advance their goals. They see the pandemic as societal breakdown and therefore an opportunity to get out their guns and finally shoot all those liberalsthat they have wanted to kill for a very long time.

Now, along with the Confederate flags and Nazi regalia and language there is a hidden symbol operating in plain sight for those who understand its meaning and power. Notice the Hawaiian shirts and the references to something called the boogaloo.Also notice the boogaloo flag, which is blue and has an igloo and a palm tree on it.

These are references to the boogaloo, a term meaning thesecond civil war that the right-wing paramilitaries and other extremists are hoping for and lusting after right now. These right-wing extremists want to replace Americas constitutional democracy with authoritarian right-wing rule. Online, these right-wing extremists spend a great deal of time talking about the boogaloo and killing federal law enforcement agents. They also fantasize about societal breakdown and killing their neighbors for supplies. These people are very serious about their violence.

This organizing is being done online on Facebook and elsewhere. Facebook thinks this isfine and has not taken it down. There are not that many members in these right-wing militias and other extremist groups, but they can create a lot of havoc and hurt and kill many people. Their boogaloo fantasy of a second civil war and mass violence has no chance of succeeding, in my opinion. But their shared fantasies of violence have the potential to cause great harm if acted upon even by a small number of its adherents.

What would the boogaloo or other acts of right-wing civil war and insurrection look like, if it actually took place? Anti-government is usually code for white supremacy and racism against nonwhites, especially black people.

Obviously the first targets are going to be people of color and LGBT folks. In this boogaloo and other right-wing civil war fantasies, those groups would be rounded up and put in concentration camps or otherwise disposed of. Jews would probably all be assassinated or otherwise killed. The way that these right-wing extremists talk among themselves is very graphic in terms of the violence.

How are these individuals and groups using the pandemic for their recruitment efforts?

They have been intensely recruiting among their usual demographic. They radicalize disaffected young white people mostly men but not exclusively, of course by infiltrating every online platform, including the various message boards and forums to YouTube. They want to radicalize impressionable young people between the ages of 13 and 30. The result is that we are seeing a wave of very young Nazis.

How is the pandemic specifically being used in the recruitment and radicalization process?

It usually consists of some story about white genocide and apocalypse. They say that there is a plot to commit genocide against white people,white males in particular,and to destroyWestern civilization.This is a plot led by Jewish people who are manipulating immigrants and people of color. This conspiracy is not really much different from what Nazis and other white supremacists were preaching in the 1920s. It has just been updated for thesocial media age with the use of memes, ironic humor and the like. That makes it attractive to young people.

Another way that the pandemic is being used by these bad actors is through eco-fascism, where the recruiting is done by talking about how the virus has created cleaner air and animals are taking back the planet from human beings and that nature is healing. Many of these nature is healing posts are being spread by some of the most dangerous fascists who believe that human beings have contaminated the Earth and need to be eliminated. These fascists are pro-genocide and they have been trying to co-opt the logos of legitimate environmental groups such as Extinction Rebellion.

What are these right-wing terrorists waiting for, in terms of beginning their boogaloo attacks? What will the signal be?

Theyre waiting for a spark. It would be something such as an incident where law enforcement decides to finally crack down on right-wing militia,paramilitaries and those in league with them. In the 1990s these right-wing groups retaliated with truck bombs.

If Donald Trump loses the 2020 presidential election, will that be a signal for right-wing militias and paramilitaries to launch attacks against theirenemies?

It is possible that these right-wing extremists and other boogaloo types will attack locations that they believe are vulnerable and will make a difference in their civil war.Oneof the wildcards to consider is the ominous presence of Erik Prince, the former head of Blackwater, who is alsoBetsy DeVos brother,and his private army of mercenaries. Prince commands a very skilled group of commandos and other ex-military and paramilitary operatives. Such a group of people could cause great harm to the country if so ordered.

Donald Trump and theright-wing mediahave been using stochastic terrorism to encourage violence against Democrats, liberals, progressives, journalistsand anyone he or they deem to be an enemy.On Twitter, Trump actually told the pandemic protesters to take up arms and force the Michigan state government and others to cease public health measures designed to slow down the coronavirus pandemic. Trump has been threatening to put Barack Obama and other prominent Democratsin prison for participating in a conspiracy to overthrow him. He continues to call Democrats and journalists human scum.Where is the outragefrom the American people at this vilebehavior? Are they just numb to it?

The American people have been conditioned to such language by decades of relentless propaganda from Fox News, the other parts of the right-wing machine, and now Russian bots on social media. The right-wing echo chamber propaganda machine has normalized that violent language and authoritarianism. The right-wing media machine is so powerful it has intimidated and cowed networks such as CNN and MSNBC. The latter are afraid to tell the truth about Trump and the far rights threats of violence.

I have been writing about these dangers for more than 10years. People said I was alarmist back then. I dont think they would say that about me anymore. Everything that I have warned about has exactly come true. In fact, under Trump things are worse than I predicted. America is at a key turning point right now in terms of surrendering to fascism. America must decide if it is going to become a damned and foul demon of a country by fully surrendering to fascism and Donald Trump in the upcoming election.

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'We are seeing a wave of very young Nazis': Alt-right expert explains why this year will be a 'key turning point' on the path from democracy to...

Guest opinion: McGeachin is abdicating duty to protect Idahoans – Idaho Press-Tribune

Our lieutenant governor is blowing it.

When Janice McGeachin became Idahos lieutenant governor in 2018, she swore an oath to defend Idaho against all enemies, foreign and domestic and to obey the orders of the President of the United States and the governor of the State of Idaho.

McGeachins actions since the outbreak Idahos greatest enemy since World War II when it comes to threatening our public health and prosperity show that she is actively breaching her sworn duties. Under the guise of political courage, McGeachin is actually demonstrating cowardice and incompetence. At his May 14th press conference, Gov. Brad Little said she has been unwilling to speak with him for three weeks. Thats not leadership, and Idahoans deserve better from their second-in-command.

McGeachin is missing an opportunity to be at the table making decisions about how to make Idaho strong. As widely reported in the press, from the beginning of the outbreak, McGeachin has encouraged behaviors that flout the recommendations of physicians and scientists, including the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. By speaking at rallies promoted by the fringe Idaho Freedom Foundation, palling around with the likes of Ammon Bundy, and promoting on social media that Idahoans should disobey Gov. Littles stay-home order, shes encouraging breaking the very laws shes sworn to uphold. Moreover, shes putting all Idahoans health at risk.

In April, McGeachin sent a letter to Gov. Brad Little, lambasting his efforts to balance safety and economic stability. On April 25, she was the keynote speaker at a rally urging defiance of public health recommendations, and on May 1, she attended the opening of a northern Idaho brewery, going against the governors phased reopening plan.

Earlier this week, McGeachin authored a guest opinion that attempts to stoke outrage and politicize the clear directives of Idahos health care leaders about how our state can reopen the economy as quickly as possible while keeping the curve flat. Sure enough, as McGeachins irresponsible rhetoric attracts more attention, cases of COVID-19 are on the rise, with more than 30 new cases on May 12. That fact is troubling because our state had not had any new cases since late April.

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Meanwhile, McGeachin is isolating herself politically by aligning with a vocal minority of Idahoans, many of them alt-right transplants from California, who are more interested in fomenting rage and racism than solving the real problems Idahoans care about. A statewide poll commissioned by the Idaho Association of Commerce & Industry found more than 75% of Idahoans approve of Littles handling of the COVID-19 pandemic. Nearly 80% support the governors four-stage Idaho Rebounds plan for reopening our economy, and the poll found particularly strong support among Republicans.

Idahoans are not yet in the clear from this invisible enemy, and taking personal responsibility for social distancing will be required until there is a vaccine. That may take years. As I write, there are nearly 4.5 million infected people globally, and more than 85,000 deaths in the United States more than the Vietnam War. COVID-19 spreads through respiratory droplets, in highest concentrations when people cough or sneeze, but it can also be transmitted through breathing while talking, or when saliva touches a surface or the air. Because people with no symptoms can carry and spread the virus, until there is a vaccine, no one is safe. We must mitigate our risk by following public health guidelines and working together as communities and as a state. In the meantime, businesses of all sizes should take advantage of the state and federal resources available to them at commerce.idaho.gov/covid-19/.

Luke Malek is a former prosecutor and former Republican lawmaker from 2012-2017, representing North Idaho in the state House of Representatives. He and his wife and business partner, Tara Malek, split their time between Boise and Coeur dAlene.

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Guest opinion: McGeachin is abdicating duty to protect Idahoans - Idaho Press-Tribune