alanjjohnstone

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  • in reply to: Russian Tensions #239834
    alanjjohnstone
    Keymaster

    President of NATO member Croatia criticized Western nations for supplying Ukraine with heavy tanks and other weapons in its campaign against invading Russian forces, saying those arms deliveries will only prolong the war.

    https://apnews.com/article/politics-croatia-government-ukraine-zoran-milanovic-europe-3fbc3daf4bf87c4979ddedc4c00fad98

    Zoran Milanovic told reporters that it’s “mad” to believe that Russia can be defeated in a conventional war.

    “I am against sending any lethal arms there,” Milanovic said. “It prolongs the war…What is the goal? Disintegration of Russia, change of the government? There is also talk of tearing Russia apart. This is mad,” he added.

    in reply to: The Climate Emergency #239833
    alanjjohnstone
    Keymaster

    Researchers at Stanford University and Colorado State University found that 1.5C of warming over industrial levels will probably be crossed in the next decade.

    And a nearly 70% chance that the two-degree threshold would be crossed between 2044 and 2065, even if emissions rapidly decline.

    https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2023/jan/30/climate-crisis-global-heating-artificial-intelligence

    The difference between 1.5C and 2C results in twice the amount of lost habitat for plants and three times the amount for insects.

    Heatwaves will become more severe and more common, occurring 5.6 times more often at the 2C benchmark, with roughly 1bn people facing a greater potential of fatal fusions of humidity and heat.

    Some regions warm faster than others and the effects from global heating won’t unfold equally. The highest toll is already being felt by those who are more vulnerable and less affluent and the devastating divisions are only expected to sharpen.

    “Net-zero pledges are often framed around achieving the Paris Agreement 1.5C goal,” he added. “Our results suggest that those ambitious pledges might be needed to avoid 2C.”

    in reply to: Chinese Tensions #239832
    alanjjohnstone
    Keymaster

    The US government has stopped approving licences for American firms to export technology to Huawei

    https://www.bbc.com/news/business-64461877

    in reply to: Film #239807
    alanjjohnstone
    Keymaster

    in reply to: Tunisia’s Election Boycott #239802
    alanjjohnstone
    Keymaster

    11% of the electorate voted in Tunisia’s parliamentary runoffs. Sunday’s runoff vote was however higher than December’s first round, which had a participation rate of 8.8%.

    887,000 voters cast ballots from a total electorate of 7.8 million, the electoral commission said.

    “We don’t want elections. We want milk and sugar and cooking oil,” said Hasna, a woman shopping in the Ettadamon district of Tunis

    https://www.theguardian.com/world/2023/jan/30/tunisian-election-records-11-turnout-in-rejection-of-presidents-reforms

    in reply to: Russian Tensions #239801
    alanjjohnstone
    Keymaster

    Russia’s new law on “LGBTQ propaganda,” in effect since December, effectively outlaws any public expression of LGBTQ behavior or lifestyle in Russia, and has resulted in book and film bans across the country.

    The law punishes what has been called the promotion of “nontraditional sexual relations.” It prohibits dissemination in any medium, including advertisements, books, films and media. By “nontraditional,” the Russian authorities mean any sort of sexual activity between two men, or two women. “Brokeback Mountain” is on the blacklist. It includes books by Stephen Fry.

    Any person who says something positive about love between two men may be forced to pay a fine. Anybody who praises a film in which two women kiss could end up in court. Anybody who publicly supports a friend who is considering changing gender, especially on social media, is committing an offense.

    These examples, and many others, are now forbidden in Russia and can be punished with a fine of up to 5 million Russian rubles (around €65,000/$70,700).

    https://www.dw.com/en/russia-bans-lgbtq-friendly-content-under-new-law/a-64516061

    in reply to: Chinese Tensions #239800
    alanjjohnstone
    Keymaster

    Michael McCaul, the new chairman of the Foreign Affairs Committee in the US House of Representatives says the odds of conflict with China over Taiwan “are very high” after a US general caused suggested a war would happen in two years’ time. General Mike Minihan, who heads the Air Mobility Command, wrote: “My gut tells me we will fight in 2025.”
    McCaul told Fox News “I hope he is wrong… I think he is right though…The odds are very high that we could see a conflict with China and Taiwan and the Indo-Pacific,”

    https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2023/1/29/odds-of-military-conflict-with-china-very-high-says-us-official

    in reply to: Russian Tensions #239799
    alanjjohnstone
    Keymaster

    Just to clarify, would that be the original CPGB formed in 1920?
    Or the very much later CPGB that publishes the Worker Worker?

    in reply to: The Climate Emergency #239773
    alanjjohnstone
    Keymaster

    ALB – “…the effects of a rise to between 2 and 3 degrees will be worse if it happens under capitalism…”

    I think my point is that under capitalism the effects of even the very modest 1.1 (or thereabouts) rise are being under-reported and it is only “some” parts of the world that are escaping the impact because of the division between “rich” and “poor” nations and the ability to cope.

    And despite the pledges and promises to aid those less developed countries, very little is being done. The funds being made available are in no way near enough, even if in the ideal world they are not being squandered by capitalism’s corrupt governance.

    I think as a world socialist movement it is more incumbent upon us to highlight the disparity being one human family.

    And remind those who aren’t as yet feeling the effects that it is only a matter of time before they too will be dispensible victims.

    We witnessed the callousness of capitalism during the Covid pandemic where life and death decisions were imposed on the vulnerable elderly in care homes.
    Those classed as “essential” workers were being sacrificed to take risks to keep the system running.

    Human extinction is a wildly exaggerated scenario, but perhaps the once often-quoted dichotomy “socialism or barbarism” is not so far-fetched that we should not raise its possibility if action is not taken immediately, sharing a similar grave concern as Greta Thunberg and XR that we may be too late to stop the tipping points and feedback loops.

    Share the World – Spare the Planet.

    in reply to: The Climate Emergency #239722
    alanjjohnstone
    Keymaster

    My concern is that some may have a parochial view of the consequences of climate change in that the effects are being measured by the impact upon the developed economically advanced nations that can so far ‘weather’ much of the changes (pardon the pun).

    The hurricanes, floods and droughts are compensated by rather generous state-underwriting insurance. Various government spending programmes are being put in place to provide climate-resilient infrastructure. When supply chains are broken, the Western-based corporations can put in place alternative ones, with the costs passed on to the consumers who although suffering from a cost of living assault, still do not spend the same higher proportion of income on necessities as those in the lesser developed countries do and in addition, have assistance form a welfare-state to act as a buffer.

    In all, it leads to a more complacent attitude to what is happening, a situation is seen as less urgent, something that has not yet been fully felt…or appreciated

    Compare this with what is taking place and is linked to climate change if the scientific consensus is to be accepted.

    The Horn of Africa suffering the fifth season of failed rains. Pakistan is subjected to both drought and floods. The Sahel the increasing desertification. Southern Africa extreme weather events. Caribbean islands facing intensifying hurricanes. Central America, the expansion of the Dry Corridor, as it is called. Amazon to Argentina climate influenced disruption. Increasingly regular typhoons in the islands of Indonesia and the Philippines. China was also inflicted with both drought and floods.

    Farming and agriculture fail because they cannot adapt crops quickly enough. Energy outages because of the water shortages for hydropower plants.

    The result is the breakdown of vulnerable societies with bloody civil wars, mass movements of peoples, widespread hunger and famine, of rising disease. Not in the thousands. Not in the tens of thousands. But in the millions of victims.

    Climate change refugees are something that is now occurring, not the future

    And as Mike Brown has just said on Spintcom, we have not even reached 1.5C much less 2.0 or the reliably predicted 2.5-3.0C for the year 2100.

    Is it alarmist? Is it catastrophism? No, I don’t think so. For the media and the politicians and, yes, I dare say also for some of the climate scientists, out of sight, out of mind.

    Today those who are suffering are the expendable poor.

    As world socialists, we do not turn a similarly blind eye. If we do not stand with those who are helpless, who will? Wall St? The City of London? The stock exchanges and commodity markets around the world?

    We aren’t exaggerating the misery of millions. We are giving them their voice.

    And we are forewarning those others who still have the belief that they will be immune to the devastation that is very likely still to come to their relatively secure and comfortable lives.

    in reply to: The Climate Emergency #239693
    alanjjohnstone
    Keymaster

    XR Japan suggest we do face a catastrophic future. Is it climate alarmism?

    https://www.commondreams.org/reaching-1-5c-global-heating

    in reply to: Russian Tensions #239670
    alanjjohnstone
    Keymaster

    FYI, Once again, this thread is straying into a breach of forum etiquette

    7. You are free to express your views candidly and forcefully provided you remain civil. Do not use the forums to send abuse, threats, personal insults or attacks, or purposely inflammatory remarks (trolling). Do not respond to such messages.

    in reply to: Russian Tensions #239662
    alanjjohnstone
    Keymaster

    A few questions for you

    TS – Your confused interpretation of socialism is as nonsensical as the claim that you have a “party”.

    Can you define what YOU mean by socialism?

    TS -…an ineffectual and irrelevant “party”

    What political party are you a member of?
    If not a member of any, what political party (past or present) do you judge to be the closest to your own political beliefs?

    TS – At least the ideas I hold are reality based and allow me to make accurate predictions about the world

    What were those accurate predictions and when were they made and what political-economic ideas were they based upon?

    in reply to: Syria again #239660
    alanjjohnstone
    Keymaster

    OBCW places guilt upon the Syrian government for the 2018 Douma chlorine gas attack based on 70 environmental samples as well as 66 witness statements and technical data that simulated the trajectory of the cylinders and disbursement of gasses.

    https://www.theguardian.com/world/2023/jan/27/syrian-regime-found-responsible-for-douma-chemical-weapons-attack

    in reply to: Palestine-Israel Conflict #239659
    alanjjohnstone
    Keymaster

    In retaliation to recent Israeli killings in the West Bank, a Jerusalem synagogue was attacked and several worshippers killed. Rockets fired from Gaza resulted in an Israeli air strike.

    Does the violence bring the prospect of peace any closer? Does it increase the possibility of victory for either side?

    Or does it merely polarise the communities and continue the tit-for-tat killings?

Viewing 15 posts - 256 through 270 (of 12,551 total)