Monday, November 9, 2015

Canada Military News: A Guide To The Worst Refugee Crisis Since WWII/ War and Refugees versus UN's War Machines and Climate Change $$$ versus Refugee nightmare- EUROPE'S GONNA CLIMATE CHANGE PARTY ON THE FACES OF 2 MILLION POOR REFUGEES AND EUROPEANS -40% youth unemployed /IDLE NO MORE CANADA LAUNCHES CROWDFUNDING FOR HOMES AND WATER FOR FIRST PEOPLES/Black on Black killing in Toronto must stop! /DID U KNOW- 40% less Nato youngbloods joining military or serving police etc.- rather be techs/Harper's out-Trudeau's In and the struggle continues



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BLOGSPOT:

CANADA MILITARY NEWS: Most Militaries of Nato 65% retirement age- and youth aren't interested/ Pope Francis/ Global News/Military News/F**KING PAEDOPHILES/if colonization was such a bitch, why are so many children, aged, disabled all nationalities still worse off 2da/Environment matters folks/Mexico steals First Peoples-Indigenous lands/O Canada/july 15-JUST IN WIKILEAKS Pacific Rim

http://nova0000scotia.blogspot.ca/2015/07/canada-military-news-most-militaries-of.html

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We can't keep tiptoeing around black-on-black violence ...

www.theglobeandmail.com › News › Toronto
Feb 20, 2013 - “At no point did the government say, 'We have to tackle this problem inToronto and the GTA of African-Canadian youth killing each other,” said ...

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Harper’s Gone, Trudeau Is In — The Struggle Continues

Screen Shot 2015-10-23 at 11.48.24 AM By No One Is Illegal (Toronto) for ROAR Magazine – Over 16 million Canadian citizens voted in Monday’s election, the highest voter turnout since at least 1997. The result: Stephen Harper’s decade of conservative, anti-immigrant and racist rule comes to an end, and the Liberal Party’s Justin Trudeau is now Prime Minister. While many rejoice at the end of the Harper government, we also know that the new Liberal government must be met with radical, collective, strategic organizations and mobilizations if we are to improve the lives of our communities. 

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We Must Start ‘Shaming’ Those Who Lie To Us, Destroy Our Climate

A depot used to store pipes for TransCanada Corp.’s planned Keystone XL oil pipeline is seen in Gascoyne, N.D., in this file photo taken Nov. 14, 2014. (Reuters) By Nick Fillmore in Rabble – Today, when people are being treated unfairly, I see nothing wrong with us expressing our anger. It’s the powerful in society who have engineered the belief that expressing anger over social issues is, well, not nice. Remember when the Occupy movement scared the hell out of them? Unfortunately, as individuals we have felt there is nothing we can do to help bring change. But, if thousands of people join in, there is one way we can have an impact. We can begin shaming and embarrassing those in powerful positions who lack decent values and who are ruining our country. Many of them know they are guilty.

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REFUGEE WAR OF GREED VERSUS CLIMATE CHANGE $$$$ WHILST BILLIONS STARVE ON $2.50 A DAY   - USA AND THEIR WARS-    

QUOTE: WhoWhatWhy argued at the time that, yes, even a Democratic president could be made to wage an aggressive war for self-serving purposes. And, yes, a Hillary Clinton could be a key cheerleader for that war. That was the “humanitarian” mission against MuammarHYPERLINK "http://whowhatwhy.org/2011/08/31/now-that-were-celebrating-qaddafis-end-can-we-get-a-little-truth/" Qaddafi in Libya. No mention of Goldman Sachs’s feud with Qaddafi or any of a plethora of other reasons this independent-minded figure “had to go.”
Then, not long after, those same Democrats, under pressure from the same coalition of interests — Middle Eastern allies, fossil fuel and financial corporations, the voracious military-industrial complex, and others — targeted Bashar al-Assad in Syria.

USA- Who Caused Europe’s Refugee Mess? Why, We Did!


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Canada’s Oil Country To Become ‘World Leader’ On Climate Change

CREDIT: AP PHOTO/JEFF MCINTOSH By Emily Natkin in Think Progress – Last month, the historically ultra-conservative and oil-rich province of Alberta, Canada, did the unthinkable: It elected a left-wing government. And that new government just made one of its first big moves: It announced a serious clamp-down on climate change. “We need a climate change plan that is bold, ambitious, and will bring Alberta into a new era of responsible energy development and environmental sustainability,” Environment Minister Shannon Phillips said Thursday. “If we get it right, our environmental policy will make us world leaders on this issue, instead of giving us a black eye around the world.” According to Phillips, the province will double its carbon tax. In other words, it will ask oil companies and other high-emitting industries to pay double what they’re paying now for pumping greenhouse gases into the air. 
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The global refugee figures 2014:
AMERICA - improved economy, more violence


Key findings 2013: AMERICAS


In total, 6.9 million people are displaced.

600,000 are refugees and 6.3 million are internally displaced.

42 of the world’s 50 most dangerous cities can be found in Latin America.

The conflict in Colombia, drug violence and climate change are the primary causes of displacement in Latin America.

Colombia is one of the countries with the highest number of internally displaced persons in the world - over five million people. A glimmer of hope can be found in the continued peace talks between the FARC guerrilla and the Colombian government in Cuba.



GLOBALLY


51.2 million people are displaced across the world. This is the highest number registered since the massive displacements following the Second World War.

The numbers of internally displaced increased from 28.8 million in 2012 to 33.3 million in 2013. The number of refugees also increased from 16.4 million to 17.9 million.

Syria, the most dramatic displacement crisis in recent times, and Nigeria, where information on internally displaced is presented for the first time, are the main causes of the increase.

63 per cent of all internally displaced in 2013 can be found in just five countries: Syria, Colombia, Nigeria, the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) and Sudan.

In a global perspective, the negative developments outweighed the positive ones in 2013. So far this year, there has been a dramatic deterioration in countries such as South Sudan, the Central African Republic (CAR) and Nigeria.

In 2013, an average of 62 per cent of the identified needs in humanitarian appeals was financed.



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NORWEGIAN REFUGEE COUNCIL
Global displacement trends
The global displacement trends 2014



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A Guide To The Worst Refugee Crisis Since WWII




CREDIT: Yannis Behrakis / Reuters
The world is witnessing the largest refugee crisis since the horrors of World War II.
Today there are close to 60 million war refugees, according to the UN High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR)—an all-time high, as violence and persecution around the world are on the rise.
Screen Shot 2015-09-10 at 9.29.16 AMCREDIT: UNHCR
The Middle East, North Africa, and Western Asia are particularly hard hit. Millions of refugees from Syria, Iraq, Libya, Afghanistan, and Yemen are fleeing violence and war in their countries.
In all of 2014, approximately 219,000 people tried to cross the Mediterranean to seek asylum in Europe. In just the first eight months of 2015, over 300,000 refugees tried to cross the sea, according to the UNHCR. More than 2,500 died.
Human rights organizations warn the Gulf states, Israel, Iran, and Russia—all of which have taken zero refugees—along with the US, Canada, and Europe—which have taken few—are not doing enough to provide refuge to the asylum-seekers.
Screen Shot 2015-09-10 at 9.29.23 AM
CREDIT: Sakis Mitrolidis / AFP
The majority of the refugees are from Syria. More than four million Syrian refugees are registered with the UN. Another seven million have been internally displaced. Over half of the entire population of the country has been uprooted since 2011.
Because Syrians comprise the bulk of refugees, the plights of other refugees have scarcely been reported on. Governments are essentially only considering taking asylum-seekers from war-torn Syria, embroiled for over four years now in intense violence.
The Syrian Civil War has resulted in what is often referred to as “the worst refugee crisis of our generation.” Using statistics from the UN, news reports, and the University of California, Berkeley, Statista details how the Syrian refugee crisis compares to other refugee crises in the past few decades:
Screen Shot 2015-09-10 at 9.29.28 AM
Credit: Statista
In terms of sheer scale, the Syrian refugee crisis is significantly worse than those resulting from the US and Soviet wars in Afghanistan, the Gulf War, the genocide in Rwanda, the NATO bombing of Kosovo, and more.
Most of the refugees from Syria are youths. Middle East Eye reports 51% of Syrian asylum-seekers are under age 18, and 39% are under age 11. In other words, two out of every five Syrian refugees are children under age 11.
The story that brought much of this suffering to the attention of the Western media was that of Aylan Kurdi, a three-year-old Syrian Kurd refugee whose lifeless body washed up on a Turkish beach. The photo of his tiny figure went viral, and has become a symbol of the refugee crisis.
Kurdi’s family say they applied for asylum in Canada, yet the Canadian government denied their application. The immigration ministry says the family’s application “was returned as it was incomplete.”
The crisis has also emboldened racists to be open with their anti-Arab bigotry. German neo-Nazis have attacked refugees and shelters created for asylum-seekers. “Europe responds to desperate refugees with razor wire and racism,” the Washington Post writes.
Here is a guide to the worst refugee crisis since World War II, with information about every country you need to know.

Syria’s Neighbors

The vast preponderance of Syrian refugees have been taken by Syria’s neighbors.
Screen Shot 2015-09-10 at 9.30.37 AM
CREDIT: Mercy Corps
Turkey has taken the most, close to 2 million.
The tiny nation of Lebanon has accepted over 1.1 million Syrian refugees, who now comprise almost one-fifth of its entire population.
Jordan has accepted around 630,000. Approximately one in every 13 people in Jordan is a Syrian refugee.
Lebanon and Jordan now have the most refugees per capita in the world.
In spite of the war behind waged inside of its borders and the growth of ISIS, Iraq has also taken in almost 250,000 Syrian refugees. Most were welcomed by Iraqi Kurdistan, in the north.

US

The US has fueled the conflicts in all five of the Middle Eastern nations from which most refugees are fleeing, and it is directly responsible for the violence in Iraq, Afghanistan, and Libya.
The US’ over a decade-long war in and occupation of Iraq resulted in the deaths of at least a million people, greatly weakened the government, brought al-Qaeda into the country, and led to the rise of ISIS. Over 3.3 million people in Iraq have been displaced because of ISIS.
In Afghanistan, US occupation is ongoing and the war is escalating, in spite of Obama’s constant insistence that it would end by 2014. There are 2.6 million Afghan refugees, according to the UN.
The US-led NATO bombing of Libya destroyed the government, fomenting chaos that led to the rise of ISIS affiliates in northern Africa. Many thousands of Libyans are now fleeing the country, often on dangerous smuggler boats and rafts. The UN estimates there are over 360,000 displaced Libyans.
A coalition of Middle Eastern nations, led by Saudi Arabia, has pummeled Yemen for half a year, leading to the deaths of over 4,500 people. The US has steadfastly backed the coalition, in spite of human rights organizations accusing it of war crimes, including the intentional targeting of civilians and aid buildings. As a result, the UN says there are over 330,000 displaced Yemenis.
In Syria, from which most of the refugees are coming, the US has provided weapons to rebels fighting the government. Since the rise of ISIS, however, the US government has talked much less about toppling Assad, and some have reported “the US and the government of President Bashar al-Assad have even reached an uncomfortable tacit alliance.”
Despite the US role in the Syrian war, it is taken very few refugees. The government has given asylum to just 1,500 Syrians. Secretary of State Kerry says the US is “committed” to taking more, but refused to give a specific number.
Politicians from both major parties agree the US needs to step up and do its part. Even Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump, whose campaign relies heavily on anti-immigrant racism and xenophobia, said the government should take more Syrian refugees. “I hate the concept of it, but on a humanitarian basis, you have to,” Trump stated.

Gulf States

Saudi Arabia, Qatar, the United Arab Emirates (UAE), Bahrain, Oman, and Kuwait are by far the richest nations in the region, because of the gargantuan oil reserves they reside on. Yet they have not taken any refugees.
The Gulf states have funded rebels in the Syrian war. Wealthy donors from Saudi Arabia, Qatar, and Kuwait have funded many extremists, including those linked to al-Qaeda and ISIS.
Analysts say the Gulf states fear political instability if they accept refugees. All the Gulf nations are authoritarian monarchies in which citizens have little-to-no say about their governance. Moreover, the vast majority of the workforce in the Gulf states—including 99.5% of workers in the UAE—consist of foreigners, largely from South Asia, who are only given temporary residency. An influx of refugees could reinvigorate the protests that shook the nations during the Arab Spring, or could anger the exploited workers who are not granted citizenship.
The refusal of the rich Gulf states which have helped fund the war in Syria to take any refugees led to widespread outrage. Omani artist Salim al-Salami released a painting depicting Gulf men looking over the dead body of three-year-old Syrian Kurd refugee Aylan Kurdi:
Critics have also pointed out hypocrisy in spending and accused Gulf nations of inhumane priorities. For his three-day visit to the US to meet with President Obama, Saudi King Salman booked an entire luxury DC hotel—all 222 rooms, which he had covered in gold, at the cost of $1 million per night. That is to say, Saudi Arabia spent over $3 million just on a hotel, but claims it does not have resources for refugees.
Saudi Arabia also pledged $500 million to help Gaza rebuild after Israel’s summer 2014 attack that left 2,310 dead—over two-thirds of whom were civilians—and more than 100,000 homes damaged or destroyed. Other Gulf states pledged millions to aid Gaza reconstruction efforts as well, yet only a fraction of the money promised by Saudi Arabia, Qatar, and others was ever delivered.

Egypt

Egypt has taken more than 130,000 Syrian refugees, yet has not been as welcoming of asylum-seekers as nations like Lebanon or Jordan. In fact, scores of Syrian and Palestinian-Syrian refugees have been detained, and have gone on hunger strike in protest of their detention.
The family was trying to reach Europe by boat when the young child was shot. “My daughter was bleeding to death but they wouldn’t call an ambulance,” the girl’s father told Amnesty International.While the photo of Aylan Kurdi went viral, completely unreported in the US media is the fact that an eight-year-old Syrian refugee girl was, in front of her family, shot dead by Egyptian soldiers.
Some of the Syrian refugees are themselves Palestinians who were made refugees after the 1947-1948 Nakba, in which Zionist militias ethnically cleansed approximately 80% of historic Palestine in order to create Israel. These asylum-seekers are essentially “double refugees,” and often have nowhere to go.

Israel

Israel has refused to take a single refugee.
Opposition leader Isaac Herzog called on Netanyahu’s hard-line right-wing government “to act toward receiving refugees from the war in Syria, in addition to the humanitarian efforts it is already making.”
“Jews cannot be indifferent while hundreds of thousands of refugees are looking for safe haven,” Herzog added.
Netanyahu, however, refuses to admit any asylum-seekers, arguing Israel “lacks demographic and geographic depth.” “We must control our borders, against both illegal migrants and terrorism,” the prime minister said.
In fact, the Israeli government is going so far as to build a wall on the Jordanian border to prevent refugees from coming into the country. They plan on connecting the wall with those already built on the Egyptian and Golan Heights borders.
Journalist David Sheen shared a racist cartoon published by right-wing Israeli newspaper Makor Rishon. The cartoon depicts a drowning Syrian refugee child crying for help while a white European man “drowning” in a crowd of (literally) brown people also cries for help.
Israel has been notoriously harsh in its treatment of refugees, particularly Africans. The Israeli government has granted refugee status to just 0.07% of African asylum seekers. Thousands of refugees are held in internment camp-like conditions in the Holot detention center. Israeli politicians call African refugees “infiltrators” and “cancer,” and openly use the n-word to refer to them.

Iran

Iran has not given permanent residency to any Syrian refugees, even though it has for years sent weapons, soldiers, and military advisers into Syria to help the Assad government in its fight against rebels.
President Rohani applauded Europe for taking refugees, and implored it to take more, saying “We are happy that some European countries made positive efforts to help refugees and we hope other European countries that do not have this position compensate on shortcomings.” Yet Iran has not taken any refugees.

Russia

Russia has backed Assad from the beginning of the war, providing the government with both heavy artillery like missile systems and small weapons. Yet Putin has not given permanent asylum to any refugees.
In early 2015, over 1,000 Syrians were provided temporary asylum in Russia. More than 1,200 had officially applied for refuge in Russia, yet none were given citizenship. Journalists have reported on the difficulties Syrian refugees in Russia have faced. Given their shaky legal status, the asylum-seekers’ rights as workers are frequently violated; many are exploited by Russian corporations, which tell them to accept low wages or “go back to Syria.”
A Syrian refugee who had tried to swim to Europe, yet was rescued at sea by a Russian ship, was put in a detention center for almost a month. The government planned on deporting him.
The Russian government announced on September 9 it is “ready” for Syrian refugees, but will only take them if they follow the law. The chief of the Federal Migration Service added that, “historically, European countries are more appropriate as refuge for Syrians than the Russian Federation.”

Europe

The European Commission introduced a plan of mandatory quotas for EU states to relocate 120,000 refugees from Hungary, Greece, and Italy. Under the proposal, Germany, France, and Spain will take close to 60% of the refugees.
France agreed to take 24,000 refugees over two years. The French government also said it would host an international conference in Paris in order to discuss the refugee crisis.
The UK announced it would resettle up to 20,000 Syrian refugees, but by 2020, not immediately. Britain will take a maximum of 4,000 Syrians every year. Progressive British politicians criticized the conservative-led government for what they see as its “pitifully small” response.
Under the plan, Germany was requested to take only just over 31,000 refugees, yet the German government says it can take up to 500,000 Syrian refugees per year. Germany says it expects more than 800,000 refugees by the end of 2015. In the first half of the year, it took in 35,000.
Austria has also committed to taking several thousand refugees. Many Austrian citizens have volunteered to help refugees.  It was even reported that citizens had set up free Wi-Fi networks for refugees.
Greece has seen a flood of refugees for the past few months. In a single day, Greek officials registered 15,000 refugees. Thousands of refugees have arrived on the small island nation in hopes of subsequently traveling elsewhere for asylum.
Like Greece, Italy has also seen tens of thousands of refugees arrive via boat on its shores. It has called on other European nations to help take the asylum-seekers.
Sweden has been one of the most generous European countries. Although a relatively small country of just 9.8 million, it has already taken over 50,000 refugees in 2015.
“After the Second World War, we said we would never again discriminate people,” a leftist Swedish politician explained. “Now we must again decide what kind of Europe we should be, and my Europe takes in people who flee from war, my Europe doesn’t build walls.”
In 2013, Sweden also offered permanent residency to all the Syrian refugees in the country, 8,000 people.
Increasingly xenophobic Denmark, where the far-right is on the rise, has been much less accommodating. The Danish government published an anti-refugee ad campaign and has deported asylum-seekers to Germany.
Slovakia, which is also witnessing the resurgence of fascist groups, said it would take 200 refugees, but not Muslims, only Christians. In June, neo-fascists gathered in the capital Bratislava for an anti-Muslim demonstration, chanting “Hang the refugees!” Thousands were also arrested in mass arrests at a violent anti-immigration rally.
Like Slovak leaders, leaders in the Czech Republic are refusing to accept the refugee quotas asked of them. A far-right Czech politician recommended placing the refugees in a concentration camp.
Similarly, Hungary sealed off its southern border in order to prevent refugees from entering. The conservative nation refuses to allow Muslim asylum-seekers to stay. It rounded up refugees, detained them, and transported them to the Austrian border to be taken away.
Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban assured detractors that his government had no plans to shoot the refugees crossing the fence.

Other Countries

Venezuela announced it is taking in 20,000 Syrian refugees. It already has an estimated 5.6 million Colombian refugees as well.
Since the beginning of the war in 2011, Brazil has taken over 2,000 Syrians—who now comprise the largest refugee group in the country. President Dilma Rousseff said they welcome Syrian asylum-seekers with “open arms.”
Uruguay and Argentina have also created programs for Syrian refugees.
Australia announced it will take 12,000 Syrian and Iraqi asylum-seekers.
Canada has said it will accept 10,000 Syrian refugees over three years. A popular petition has circulated calling on it to take 50,000.
Even the Vatican, the tiny papal state with a population of just 842 agreed to take in two Syrian refugee families.
In doing so, Vatican City—the smallest internationally recognized independent state in the world—has agreed to provide permanent residence to more refugees than the Gulf states, Israel, Iran, and Russia combined.

Troubling Historical Parallels

The enormity of the refugee crisis, and its status as the largest since World War II, have led some to draw historical parallels to Europe’s and the US’ treatment of Jewish refugees before and during the Holocaust.
The Hungarian government pulled refugees off of trains to Germany, detained them, often separated the men from their wives and children, and wrote numbers on the refugees’ arms.
A video journalist linked to Hungary’s neo-fascist Jobbik party was caught on camera tripping and kicking fleeing refugee children so they and their families could be arrested by Hungarian police. Swastikas are common symbols at Jobbik’s regular anti-Muslim, anti-Semitic, and anti-immigrant rallies.
Scholar Juan Cole argues that “All the same arguments against letting in the Jews are now being deployed to keep out the Syrians.” Right-wing demagogues today warn the Syrian refugees may be Islamist radicals; in the 1930s, right-wing demagogues claimed the Jewish refugees may be Communist radicals. Conservatives now warn of an Islamic conspiracy to take over the world, just as many right-wing leaders in the early 20th century—including politicians as renowned as Winston Churchill—warned of a “Judeo-Bolshevik” conspiracy to take over the world and implement socialism.
During the Shoah, the US did give refuge to some Jewish intellectuals and artists, but turned away many more. In perhaps the most infamous episode of this deadly racism, 900 Jewish refugees who, fleeing fascism, traveled across the ocean on the ship the S. S. St. Louis, hoping to be granted asylum in the Land of the Free, were turned away. The US, in which anti-Semitism was widespread at the time, forced the refugees to return to Europe, where hundreds were then murdered by the Nazis.
Whether Jewish Refugees in ’30s or Syrians today, USA Falls Short of own Ideals,” Cole writes. He notes that the US invasion of Iraq turned approximately one-sixth of the Iraqi population into refugees—roughly four million people. And yet the “US took in only a few thousand Iraqi refugees after causing all that trouble,” Cole adds.
The struggles of refugees from Iraq, Afghanistan, Libya, Yemen, and elsewhere, for the moment, seem to not be given much attention as the media focuses on refugees from Syria and as the international community tries to grapple with the largest refugee crisis since World War II.

  • truthseeker2436577@yahoo.com
    Thank you for this crucial information.
  • rgaura
    A few inaccuracies in the article; Russia has accepted 2.5 million refugees from the NATO destabilization of Ukraine. She has housed them, put the children in schools, and given jobs and refuge to many fleeing the fascist army of the illegitimate government.
    Instead of a list of numbers, we might look at context and responsibility. Russia, and other countries have worked for stability and peace, and national sovereignty in the Middle East region. US, UK, and NATO have inflicted wars of choice on the region for decades, resulting in horrors and mass migrations.
    Greece has been the country where most illegal refugees have been dumped from EU countries, without any social support, for decades. As they have the most porous border, Greece was always assumed to be the point of entry. This has overwhelmed the ability of this small country to deal with the social services necessary, increased poverty and crime, and contributed to the destabilization of Greece. Greece has been dealing with hundreds of thousands of refugees for quite a while.
    I can´t help but see this media frenzy about `poor refugees´ as a diversion, sort of a red herring, to get the populations ready for another war. Much like what was done when the international bankers decided to use NATO to open up Yugoslavia for exploitation; there were scenes of `poor refugees´, `people just like us´, with the irrational argument that carpet bombing would somehow `help´ them. The result was and still is ugly, with foreign companies in control of their national resources, unions broken, an economy in ruins, and peoples divided against one another. The crime of Yugoslavia was to not open its country to financial exploitation. They went down before the western hegemony, to be followed by Iraq, Libya, Sudan, Yemen, now Syria.
    Syrians are a well educated lot, and Europe needs new blood due their shrinking demographics. Still, the shrill media campaign should be viewed with suspicion. The point rarely made is that this was a NATO created disaster, and they have not changed direction or tactics, and are set to destabilize the world in another world war in order to keep control of international finance. Criminal finance, I would say.
    Russia is dealing with west inspired color revolutions and their fascist allies all around her borders. Another thing your tax dollars and the black budget are financing. Under the circumstances, her diplomacy is admirable.
  • AlanMacDonald
    Yes, Ben, I fully agree with all this that you accurately report, and with these extra thoughts on culpability:
    Appreciating that this may only be the “First Phase” of Global Empire ‘blowback’ is important, but really diagnosing the CAUSE (and “Final Phase of Empire”) is essential to our survival.
    As massive as the refugee problem is and as reprehensible as the people smugglers are, there is absolutely no comparison with the lying, ‘empire-thinking’, sociopathic bastards of PNAC and the Bush administration war schemers and war criminal plotters like; William Kristol, Robert Kagan (Nuland), Paul Wolfowitz, Richard Perle, Elliot Abrams, John Bolton, Donald Rumsfeld, Dick Cheney, George Bush, and the neoliberal-con enablers who share insane leadership of this dual-party Vichy facade of the Disguised Global Crony-Capitalist Empire that is HQed in, and merely ‘poses’ as, our former country, which is the cancerous CAUSE of all this destruction, slaughter, and mutilation of civilians and children of the Middle East — for which each of them and their partners in crime of Wall Street, weapon making corporate ‘merchants of death’, and oil whores should be hung a hundred times by God for every child they murdered.
    [Not that I would hold a grudge against these ruling empire bastards]
    BTW, a special spot in hell should be reserved for the media/propaganda-sector of the DGCC Empire which shilled and sold this insane set of war crimes to the American people as being necessary for national security reasonable sounding lies!
    As Zygmunt Bauman hauntingly puts it, “In the case of an ailing social order, the absence of an adequate diagnosis…is a crucial, perhaps decisive, part of the disease.”13
    Berman, Morris 2007 “Dark Ages America; The Final Phase of Empire”
  • Pingback: Newsletter: Peace Defeats War | PopularResistance.Org()
  • badkitty61
    When I remember how the US took in Hungarian refugees in 1956, I really wonder about Hungary.
  • truthseeker2436577@yahoo.com
    We want the refugees to have their human rights protected.
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Crowdfunding To Build Homes In First Nations Communities

Screen Shot 2015-10-16 at 11.16.43 AM By Ishmael N. Daro for BuzzFeed News, A co-founder of Idle No More, the grassroots indigenous rights movement, has launched a crowdfunding campaign to build homes in First Nations communities. Sylvia McAdam told CBC News she decided to act after seeing how dire the housing situation was in Big River First Nation in Saskatchewan, where she was born and raised. “You don’t realize what is in your own backyard until you go door-to-door and actually go visit the people in their own homes,” McAdam said. The campaign is called One House, Many Nations. Organizers are looking to raise $15,000 to build a log cabin on a Saskatchewan First Nation, with more campaigns planned to build more homes later. 

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Idle No More Launches The One House, Many Nations Campaign

Screen Shot 2015-10-08 at 6.54.18 AM By Staff of Idle No More, “The story of Neeve Nutarariaq is heartwrenching. We cannot stand idly by – we have to take action on the issue of housing.” – Anna Lee-Popham, Idle No More organizer. Housing is a basic human right, one that should be readily available in a wealthy country such as Canada. However due to a series of past and present governmental policy decisions to move toward austerity rather than addressing the impacts of an ongoing housing crisis, federal and provincial governments have cut back on housing support, women’s shelters and other social programs that support families. As a result, Canada is experiencing a growing housing crisis that encompasses all people; it’s particularly affecting Indigenous women, two-spirit people and their families.
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Black Lives Matter Takes Back The Night & Shuts Down Toronto

Screen Shot 2015-09-30 at 10.37.42 AM By Al Donato in The Huffington Post – Black lives were the focus at Take Back The Night on Saturday, an event that shut down Toronto streets and highlighted sexual violence. Hundreds rallied against police brutality and in solidarity with marginalized black lives, with particular attention to the lives of black individuals who are cis women, trans, queer, on the gender spectrum, with disabilities, and are sex workers. Take Back The Night, an international feminist event since 1976, has featured protests, marches and vigils against sexual violence. For this year’s 35th annual protest, the Toronto Rape Crisis Centre (TRCC)/Multicultural Women Against Rape partnered with Black Lives Matter Toronto Coalition for the theme “All Black Lives Matter: Black Communities Take Back the Night.”

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Canada Bans Off-Grid Living

Screen Shot 2015-09-04 at 9.34.10 AM By Daniel Jennings in Off The Grid News – It is illegal for Cheryl Smith to live in her own home because it doesn’t have electricity. Officials in Clark’s Harbour, Nova Scotia, are refusing to give Smith a certificate of occupancy to live in her new house because it has no power. She since has stopped working on the home. “Why am I being forced to rely on electricity or fossil fuels or whatever if I don’t want to?” Smith asked CTV. Smith cannot get a certificate of occupancy because national building codes in Canada require new homes to have wiring for smoke detectors and ventilation systems. Smith’s 14-by-20-square-foot dream “tiny home” has been sitting empty with signs that say “Freedom of Rights Denied” and “Work Stopped” tacked to the door for a year. 
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The Climate Movement Needs To Move Beyond ‘Big Tent’

More than 10,000 gathered in Toronto on July 5 for the largest and most diverse climate mobilization in Canadian history. (Project Survival / Robert van Waarden) By Cam Fenton in Waging Non-Violence – Earlier this summer I helped to organize the March for Jobs, Justice & the Climate — an action that brought more than 10,000 people to the streets of Toronto in one of the largest and most diverse climate mobilizations in Canadian history. More than 100 organizations supported the march — from national environmental groups to labor unions to the indigenous rights’ movement Idle No More to Toronto-based groups tackling poverty, food justice and migration. It was, as Naomi Klein put it, the “first steps of a new kind of climate movement” that reached beyond the traditional boundaries of the environmental movement. The march was a “big tent” approach to climate organizing being put to practice, the same approach that helped the People’s Climate March bring over 400,000 people to the streets of New York City last September.

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Canada Takes Major Step To Affordable Internet

Screen Shot 2015-08-01 at 7.29.26 AM By Open Media – A major ruling today from the Canadian Radio-Television and Telecommunications Commission (CRTC) signals a significant step forward for Canadians’ ability to access affordable Internet options independent of Canada’s large telecom providers, says OpenMedia.ca. In late 2014, OpenMedia delivered crowdsourced inputfrom over 30,000 Canadians as part of the hearing that informed today’s decision–and is claiming victory. The ruling is the first step towards ensuring small independent ISPs are able to sell fibre Internet in Canada, which should expand access and affordability for users. 
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US Soldiers Opposed To War Now Find Canada Less Hospitable

FILE - In this July 14, 2008, file photo, members of the War Resisters Support Campaign hold a demonstration in support of U.S. Army deserter Robin Long outside Federal Court in Vancouver, B.C. Canada has developed a much less hospitable reputation than it once had, and supporters say that no U.S. soldier who has filed a claim to legally stay in Canada over the past 10 years has been successful. (AP Photo/The Canadian Press, Darryl Dyck, File) By Carolyn Thompson in Associated Press – When Army Sgt. Patrick Hart decided a decade ago that he would not serve in the war in Iraq, he expected to follow the same path as thousands of American war resisters during the Vietnam era and take refuge across the border. But after five years of wrangling with the Canadian immigration system, he came back to the U.S. — and ended up in a military prison. The country that once welcomed war resisters has developed a much different reputation during the conflicts in Iraq and Afghanistan: Supporters say no U.S. soldier who has sought legal residence in Canada, either as a refugee or on humanitarian grounds, has been successful. “Nobody’s won,” said Hart, a Buffalo native who exhausted his legal options then turned himself in to the Army, was court-martialed for desertion and sentenced to two years in prison.

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Why Some Arabs States Refuse to Accept Syrian Refugees
Lebanon and Jordan host almost 2 million refugees while the rich Gulf states host none
Syrians fleeing war are driven to board precarious boats to cross the Mediterranean. They crowd onto trains and climb mountains. They risk detention, deportation, and drowning.
There is growing evidence that the people dying to reach the shores of Europe are fleeing not only war in Syria, but oppression in other Middle Eastern states.
As pressure rises for European leaders to resolve the refugee crisis, critics are also asking why Middle Eastern governments have not done more to help the four million Syrians who represent one of the largest mass movement of refugees since World War Two. Much ire has focused on the relatively wealthy states along the Persian Gulf. According to a report by Amnesty International, the six countries of the Gulf Cooperation Council offered zero formal resettlement slots to Syrians by the end of 2014.
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Rights groups point out that those countries — Bahrain, Kuwait, Oman, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, and the United Arab Emirates (UAE) — with wealth amassed from oil, gas, and finance, collectively have far more resources than the two Arab states that have taken in the most Syrians: Jordan and Lebanon. The Gulf states are Arabic-speaking, have historic ties to Syria and some are embroiled in the current crisis through their support for insurgent groups.
“The missing linkage in this tragic drama is the role of Arab countries, specifically the Gulf countries,” says Fadi al-Qadi, a regional human rights expert in Jordan. “These states have invested money, supported political parties and factions, funded with guns, weapons et cetera, and engaged in a larger political discourse around the crisis.”
Supporters of Gulf governments contend that such criticism is unwarranted. The Gulf states have donated tens of millions of dollars to help Syrian refugees in places like Jordan. Saudi Arabia claims it has admitted half a million Syrians since 2011. Syrians are welcome to come, the argument goes, even if they are not legally registered as refugees.
Rights groups are not convinced. Visa restrictions make it difficult for Syrians to enter Gulf countries in practice, and even harder to stay. “These countries are not making clear, logistically and technically, to these people that your destination could be the Gulf,” says Qadi. “They have to make it clear. They have to announce it.”
The logic behind Gulf refugee policies is complex. In smaller Gulf states like Qatar and the UAE, foreigners already far outnumber nationals, a demographic balance that, for some, feeds feelings of anxiety tinged with xenophobia. In the UAE, foreign nationals outnumber citizens by more than five to one.
Elsewhere in the Middle East, Syrians fleeing the slaughter in their country often face a bleak landscape with few opportunities to work, attend school, reunite with their families, and start new full lives.
Lebanon has accepted more than 1.1 million Syrians, the most of any Arab state (Turkey has accepted approximately two million). That means that at least one in five people in Lebanon is a Syrian refugee. Lebanon forbids the construction of formal refugee camps. As a result, more than 40% of refugees in Lebanon live in makeshift shelters including “garages, worksites, one room structures, unfinished housing,” according to U.N. figures cited by Amnesty International. Many Syrians rely on aid agencies whose resources are stretched thin.
In Egypt, state repression is part of what is compelling Syrians to risk the sea route to Europe. Following the military’s overthrow of elected president Mohamed Morsi in 2013, Egypt demand Syrians apply for visas. Morsi’s Islamist government was sympathetic to the rebel cause in Syria, but the new military-backed regime is less sympathetic to Syrian migrants many more have been deported. Coinciding with a tide of Egyptian nationalism, Syrians reported being fired from their jobs, detained by police, and harassed by landlords.
Bassam al-Ahmad, an official with the Violations Documentation Center, a Syrian human rights group, said that tightening restrictions on Syrians’ entry across the region is helping drive the wave of migration to Europe.
“I cannot go to Egypt. It’s kind of like the circle became very, very narrow. In Lebanon it’s similar,” he says in a phone interview from Istanbul. “All of this pushes people to go to the sea. It’s like going to die, going to death.”
Inside Syria, the bloodshed continues, driving more and more Syrians to flee into the unknown. As a result of this carnage, Qadi says, most Syrians are facing a decision to stay or flee. That is the source of what is now understood in Europe as a refugee crisis. “The bomb is coming anyway, and it will destroy this house, and my kids will be gone,” he says. “Would I take another risk by trying to escape before the bomb comes? And go to the unknown? I think most Syrians are making that difficult choice.”

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Gangsta rap contributes to gang violence in Toronto

www.thefreeradical.ca/copycatCrimes/articlesOnRapContributing.html
Articles re gangster rap contributing to gang violence in TorontoOntario ... But at least one man who works with the city's black youth understands better ... On Boxing Day, 15-year-old Jane Creba was killed in a shootout while .... Liberal MP Dan McTeague was scorned when he suggested that Ottawa should stop 50 Cent ...

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