Saturday, November 27, 2021

Saturday Headlines

 

Friday, November 26, 2021

Covid Aftershocks

So once again there is a new Covid-19 variant, B.1.1.529, that has been detected in Southern Africa, and it has been described as “heavily mutated.” The good news about this, if there is any, is that it was detected early and therefore may be easier to contain.

The bad news is we don’t know much about it yet, so the markets are reacting negatively. As I write this, the stocks app on my cellphone is all red as investors scurry for safety.

If the first wave of Covid represented a major earthquake with Wuhan, China as its epicenter, the subsequent emergence of dangerous variants are the aftershocks that remind us that the terror could return, that we are not necessarily free of this scourge yet.

The problem, from a global perspective, is only a tiny proportion of the populations of the poorer parts of the world are vaccinated, giving the virus plenty of hosts to continue mutating and adapting to the vaccines deployed against it.

I’ve long assumed that humans will win this war, ultimately, but like in the final stages of any war, the enemy can still achieve major victories and inflict major damage before VC Day. (Victory over Covid)

***

FRIDAY’s HEADLINES:

 

Thursday, November 25, 2021

To Persistence

 

If you were to ask me the one trait that characterizes the best investigative reporters I’ve worked with, it would be persistence bordering on stubbornness. To get the kinds of stories others miss requires an unwillingness to give up just because the process becomes difficult.

By the same token, muckrakers often encounter resistance inside their own media organizations, because investigative stories take a long time, consume resources, and raise all sorts of internal concerns including legal issues.

So staying the course requires a certain type of individual, one that sadly is becoming more scarce in today’s media environment. There still are great stories being produced here and there but they are rarer now.

But this Thanksgiving I’m grateful for the ones who remain.

***

Like many older people, the pandemic enforced an unwanted disruption of my so-called “golden years.” I couldn’t go anywhere or see anyone and the only color that readily comes to mind for those months is “gray.”

Some of that gloom has lifted now, as in measured steps I am getting out a bit and seeing a few people now and then.

But the world has changed and I am no longer as sure how to navigate it as I was in the past. I no longer live where I lived for 17 years, work where I worked for 7 years, or drive a car.

On Wednesday I decided to walk southeast through the hills to the pharmacy where a prescription was waiting for me. I was uncertain of the route, and Google seemed uncertain as well.

I’d never walked the route before and it was challenging. Google claimed the walk should take me about 18 minutes but in the end with many course corrections it required an hour and a half. Along the way, I got booted out of a construction site I’d inadvertently stumbled onto and barely avoided getting hit by a bicyclist on what I’d presumed was a walking path.

He, at least, was apologetic. And I figure pedestrians must have become scarce commodities during the worst of the pandemic.

***

THURSDAY’S HEADLINES:

Wednesday, November 24, 2021

The Torture of Uncertainty

 

Afghan Conversation #18


NOTE: Ever since the Taliban took over power in Afghanistan, I have been exchanging messages with a young friend who lives in Helmand Province. This is our 18th conversation to date. We are keeping his identity secret in order to protect his safety.

***

Dear David:

When we last spoke, my little brother was being escorted by smugglers across the border to Iran. What followed was a harrowing week of not knowing whether he was safe, or even alive. 

If you’ll recall, it was Wednesday night last week when I talked to him for what I thought might be the last time. By four o'clock on Thursday, he was approaching the border. If caught, he might be arrested, which would likely result in severe harm. I knew that when the Iranian police detain someone, they will not refrain from violence. They’ve shot many people and broken many arms and legs with the butts of their rifles. Recently, as the number of Afghan refugees seeking to reach Iran has gone up, the torture has also increased. 

My brother called me before he knew whether he would get across the border. After our call ended, I checked my Facebook news feed. Two passenger cars in the west of Kabul, where my other brother and millions of others Hazara live, had been blown up by bombs. As common as this is, it’s always unnerving, and of course added to my anxiety – which by now has grown to include a new fear for the fates of both brothers.

I tried to reach my older brother in Kabul, but his phone was off. I tried his roommate, who told me my brother had left with a friend at noon, but he didn’t say where he was going. He said that he would call my brother's friend and get back to me. Half an hour later, he called to say that my brother's friend’s phone was also off. 

I became even more anxious. I tried to distract myself by reading books but that didn’t work. Every ten minutes I would dial his number again, to no avail.. Finally, at eight o'clock, he called me to say he was ok, and for a brief moment in time, I was able to breathe easily again. 

But before long, I returned to worrying about my younger brother. I tried to sleep but couldn’t. Every so often, I would dial his number, but his phone was off. I remained tortured by fears of the unknown. Had he been detained? Was he suffering terribly? Was he alive? 

Finally at 11 o’clock the next morning I reached the smuggler to ask about my brother. He said they had crossed the border into Iran, but were later caught and were now on their way back to Afghanistan. 

Every day here is full of anxiety and disappointment. Worry that something horrible will happen to our family in this country full of malignant events. Disappointed that we are trapped in this hellish country forever.

***

END NOTE: I am publishing these conversations not just to tell my friend's story but to highlight the conditions faced by millions of Afghans, particularly Hazaras and others in the Shia minority. Our hope is that this type of publicity will result in much greater pressure on the Taliban by the international community to respect the human rights of all Afghans.

***

Wednesday’s Headlines:

Tuesday, November 23, 2021

Missing the Big Story


One of the things I like about the news is that it doesn’t stick around. It comes and goes rather quickly; once it loses its shock value, it’s a lot like fish — best when fresh; later on not so much so.

But even though the news itself may come and go, the people who bring it to you remain.

Nieman Reports is out with an opinion piece by HuffPost editor-in-chief Danielle Benton that points out that “The press can’t afford to fall into disarray and depression while reporting on the collapsing world around us.”

This has always been true of journalists but the present context is notable because our own profession — journalism — is stuck in a prolonged state of depression from which some may reasonably conclude it will never recover.

The problem is not just that there are very few jobs for reporters and editors; it is also that the world is flooded with disinformation, lies, conspiracy thinking and outright attempts to undermine those who do seek to tell the truth about important matters.

In public life, virtually no one has enough credibility to be respected as an authority on anything any longer. There really are no “experts” left with a few exceptions here and there. 

In addition, the very companies that employ journalists who seek to get to the root of these issues often seem to not have a clue about just how much the world around them has changed, especially the digital world. Or if they do, they don’t know what to do about it.

Thus, these “legacy” media organizations are seen by many people of all political persuasions as part of the problem rather than a solution. When I curate the news, I rely on what are considered the leading journalism organizations I can locate to pass on each day’s headlines.

But at the same time, I am constantly struck by how little any of those organizations are doing about the Big Story themselves. 

Tuesday Headlines

 

Monday, November 22, 2021

All News Is Local

 Many years after the fact, a friend who was the top editor at a large metro newspaper reminded me that back in the 1990s I had warned him that various websites, including Craigslist, were going to ruin his company’s business model.

“You were right,” he told me. “We should have listened to you.”

I had been right, but since there was no pleasure in being so about the disaster that had by then befallen the field I love — journalism — we hoisted a mournful drink instead. We were meeting in the aftermath of yet another round of layoffs, or “buyouts” as they were charitably called, in the newspaper industry.

Thus ended many a journalist’s career, as a combination of factors including free web-based content, demographic changes, the lack of community roots, and avaricious owners led to the widespread collapse of the print news industry over the past quarter century.

I later chronicled some of the decline in my years as a blogger/media critic for Bnet and 7x7.

But the decline of a robust press in the big cities was partially offset by the emergence of exciting new web-based publications that attracted large audiences. Meanwhile, it was in the small towns and rural areas that the real damage to a robust local press occurred.

As a result, many communities have been left as virtual “news deserts” with no real coverage at all. Here and there, a few efforts have emerged to counter this disturbing trend. One of those efforts, the Local News Network, is headquartered in Durango, Colorado. I serve on its advisory board. 

The Courier Newsroom is another, also located in at least eight states, including Michigan, Florida, and Arizona. And the family-owned Storm Lake Times in Iowa is yet another.

Some days, such innovative businesses give me hope that a new age of local journalism may be dawning in the heartland to quench the thirst for reliable information in the news deserts that are also home to many of the conspiracy theories and disinformation campaigns that are dividing the country politically and threatening our democracy.

Some believe that paywalls are the answer for these new local news companies; I’m not so sure. People are able and willing to pay for only so many information sources, which is one of the reasons so many of our colleagues lost their jobs once the Internet came along.

We may need a new national initiative whereby some sort of an annual content “pass” is available for purchase, sort of like the one you get to visit our national parks. This may seem like a crazy idea, and it probably is, but it might just work if enough powerful forces got behind it.

There are a lot of details that would have to be worked out. How can we possibly determine what is a legitimate press outlet or independent journalist in a world filled with bloggers good and bad, publications real or fake, stories fact-checked and un-fact-checked?

Who gets to decide all this stuff?

Which code of conduct do journalists need to adhere to?

What about censorship, government or private sector? What about Section 230?

There are too many questions to go into in a daily essay but perhaps if my blood pressure recedes enough in the coming months I will flesh out this crackpot idea. Somebody has to start addressing the crisis in journalism.

Anyway, if anyone has a better idea, I’m all ears, as they say.

Thanks to David Bank (re:Courier) and Steve Rhodes (re:Storm Lake) and the folks at LNN for help on this piece. Thanks to Jackie Ross for some of the Afghanistan headlines below.

***

Tim Redmond, one of the talented local journalists still able to operate independently in San Francisco, has published a blistering look at a vicious pro-recall ad in the right-wing-funded battle to unseat progressive DA Chesa Boudin. I’ve linked to the article below.

MONDAY HEADLINES

* Is Delta the last Covid ‘super variant’? (Guardian)

With poor nations only 5 percent vaccinated, wealthy nations need to look in the mirror (Edit Bd/WP)

* Covid: Huge protests across Europe over new restrictions (BBC)

* European protests against Covid-19 curbs spread to Brussels (Financial Times)

* Riots broke out in cities across the Netherlands, the third night in a row that police clashed with mobs of angry youths who set fires and threw rocks to protest COVID-19 restrictions. There were also clashes in Brussels with police firing water cannon and tear gas at demonstrators throwing rocks and smoke bombs. (Reuters)

* How will the Covid Pills Change the Pandemic? (New Yorker)

Americans should get boosters ahead of possibly ‘dangerous’ winter spike, Fauci says (WP)

How COVID shots for kids help prevent dangerous new variants (AP)

How the U.S. Lost Ground to China in the Contest for Clean Energy (NYT)

* Republicans have fundraising edge in battle for control of US Congress (Financial Times)

The Dangerous Experiment on Teen Girls — The preponderance of the evidence suggests that social media is causing real damage to adolescents. (Atlantic)

Vancouver Is Marooned by Flooding and Besieged Again by Climate Change (NYT)

Colombia is pitting two vulnerable groups against each other. At stake is the Amazon. (WP)

Eight years old and sold for marriage: Desperate Afghan families sell their daughters for cash (MSN) 

Jobs lost, middle class Afghans slide into poverty, hunger (AP)

* On Helmand’s bleak wards, dying children pay the price as western aid to Afghanistan is switched off (Guardian)

* The United Nations pushed for urgent action to prop up Afghanistan's banks, warning that a spike in people unable to repay loans, lower deposits and a cash liquidity crunch could cause the financial system to collapse within months. (Reuters)

Hidden books, secret meetings, precious hope: In Afghanistan, girls risk it all for an education (USA Today)

In Hard Times, Afghan Farmers Are Turning to Opium for Security (NYT)

The Guardian view on Afghanistan: a fast-developing disaster (Guardian)

More Americans say they’re not planning to have a child, new poll says, as U.S. birthrate declines (WP)

* Peng Shuai: Chinese tennis star tells Olympic officials she is safe (BBC)

* Can big tech ever be reined in? (Guardian)

How Tax Credits, Subsidies Have Aided Electric-Vehicle Market (WSJ)

Why is everyone quitting, and how do I know whether it’s time to leave my job? (WP)

* El Salvador Bitcoin city planned at base of Conchagua volcano (BBC)

Two Fox News commentators resign over Tucker Carlson's series on the Jan. 6 siege (NPR)

NASA Prepares to Launch Asteroid Defense Test Mission (VOA)

* Five people were killed and more than 40 injured after an SUV sped through a Christmas parade in Waukesha, Wisconsin, knocking down dozens of people including youngsters waving pompoms and a group of 'Dancing Grannies'. (Reuters)

Adele asked Spotify not to shuffle her carefully-curated album by default. The streaming service listened. (WP)

* Police in California are seeking about 80 suspects who they said swarmed into a Bay Area Nordstrom department store in a coordinated robbery, ransacking as much as they could carry and fleeing in cars they had parked outside. (Reuters)

*Boudin recall ad features paid staffers and a scandal-plagued former DA — Why don't the local media, so happy to attack the DA, fact-check an ad that is blatantly false and kind of ridiculous? (48 Hills)

* Australian small publishers will get a leg up in their fight to secure licensing deals with Google and Facebook after the country's richest person said his philanthropic organization would seek a collective bargaining arrangement for them. (Reuters)

* Biologists Recommend Trees Put Aside A Little Phosphorus For Unexpected Emergencies (The Onion)

***

“Read All About It, Part III”

Song by Emeli Sandé

Songwriters: Adele Emily Sande / Benjamin Alexander Kohn / Peter Kelleher / Iain James / Thomas Andrew Searle Barnes / Stephen Manderson

You've got the words to change a nation
But you're biting your tongue
You've spent a life time stuck in silence
Afraid you'll say something wrong
If no one ever hears it how we gonna learn your song?
So come on, come on
Come on, come on

You've got a heart as loud as lions
So why let your voice be tamed?
Maybe we're a little different
There's no need to be ashamed
You've got the light to fight the shadows
So stop hiding it away
Come on, come on

I wanna sing, I wanna shout
I wanna scream 'til the words dry out
So put it in all of the papers
I'm not afraid
They can read all about it
Read all about it, no oh
Oh oh oh
Oh oh oh
Oh oh oh
Oh oh oh
Oh oh oh
Oh oh oh

At night we're waking up the neighbors
While we sing away the blues
Making sure that we're remembered, yeah
'Cause we all matter too
If the truth has been forbidden
Then we're breaking all the rules
So come on, come on
Come on, come on

Let's get the TV and the radio
To play our tune again
It's 'bout time we got some airplay of our version of events
There's no need to be afraid
I will sing with you my friend
Come on, come on

I wanna sing, I wanna shout
I wanna scream 'til the words dry out
So put it in all of the papers
I'm not afraid
They can read all about it
Read all about it, oh
Oh oh oh
Oh oh oh
Oh oh oh
Oh oh oh
Oh oh oh
Oh oh oh

Yeah, we're all wonderful, wonderful people
So when did we all get so fearful?
Now we're finally finding our voices
So take a chance, come help me sing this
Yeah, we're all wonderful, wonderful people
So when did we all get so fearful?
And now we're finally finding our voices
Just take a chance, come help me sing this

I wanna sing, I wanna shout
I wanna scream 'til the words dry out
So put it in all of the papers
I'm not afraid
They can read all about it
Read all about it, oh
Oh oh oh
Oh oh oh
Oh oh oh
Oh oh oh
Oh oh oh
Oh oh oh

I wanna sing, I wanna shout
I wanna scream 'til the words dry out
So put it in all of the papers
I'm not afraid
They can read all about it
Read all about it, oh