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Azerbaijan, Israel discuss military cooperation


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Baku, September 18, AZERTAC

Azerbaijan’s Minister of Defense, Colonel General Zakir Hasanov has met with a delegation led by Israel Defense Ministry’s Director General Eyal Zamir, who is on an official visit to the country, the Ministry of Defense told AZERTAC.

Colonel General Zakir Hasanov hailed the current high level of Azerbaijani-Israeli relations.

Eyal Zamir thanked the Azerbaijani side for the warm reception, and emphasized the importance of such meetings and mutual visits in terms of further expansion of existing cooperation.

During the meeting, the sides exchanged views on defense cooperation between Azerbaijan and Israel.

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Satan in the Vatican


It is in the best interest of Christianity that Satan remains alive. For so long as the Devil survives, the Church will also thrive. If Satan dies, Christianity will fade way. And what safer place for the Devil to live in, than the House of God itself. This is my story today.
Adam Smith, the most celebrated economist of our times, described “churches as enterprises similar to butchers…” How apt! Of whatever little I read about the Church, the Vatican network, its working, expansion and outreach, I am convinced that it runs the most ruthless and opaque business empire in the world, one that could beat any criminal syndicate or mafia.


What is Mafia? An organized crime network which earns quick money through illicit trades, in collusion with corrupt and friendly officials and governments. It has an organizational hierarchy. There is one supreme commander, no vice-captain. It hires, trains and exploits foot soldiers, launder its earnings via a legit business front and keeps safe havens abroad for an emergency exit. Above all, it is a law unto itself.


And how does the Church function? It peddles Opium of the Masses. It hob nobs with political powers, there is no vice-Pope and the ascension in hierarchy remains shrouded in dark; it builds an infantry by proselytization; it has investments in real estate across the world. It owns a bank, which is periodically in news for wrong reasons. It has safe havens in nearly every country of the world, where the ‘tainted’ Cardinals can retire peacefully. Laundering, murder, drugs, child abuse… nothing sticks to its Teflon skin. For, above all, the Church is the law.



Over the next few minutes, I will present the facts to prove what you may, right now, call my assumptions.
If we go into the history of the Roman Catholic Church and its leaders, we first find them in conflict with the monarchies and later in cahoots with the State. It owned massive land, got one tenth of people’s income. It even created innovative ways of making money, such as Indulgences, where if you have committed a crime, or sin, you need to pay a sum to be absolved of it, much like blood money. All these are documented facts in history books, Catholic encyclopedias and open resources.


The tide, however, turned against Church as western societies grew increasingly secular in the early 20th century. Their resources dwindled. By some accounts, the Lateran Palace where Pope lived required repair. Then, in 1929, the Church struck a Faustian deal with the Devil, better known to the world as Benito Mussolini, the Fascist dictator second only to Adolf Hitler.


Pope Pius XI signed what is known to the world as the Lateran Treaty with Mussolini’s government, affirming Il Duce and netting him the political capital necessary for a secure Fascist future in exchange for $90 million in cash, a new tax-exempt papal state on Vatican Hill, government salaries for Italian parish priests, and the promise of both power and financial security. In return, the Church lent legitimacy to Mussolini’s fascist regime.


Today, the Vatican owns over $50 billion in securities, plus gold reserves that exceed those of some industrialized nations, real estate holdings that equal the total area of many countries, and opulent palaces and museums. Many economists believe the Church’s wealth is not countable, law enforcers believe it is also unaccountable.


(Source: THE VATICAN EXPOSED, a book by Journalist and FBI consultant Paul L. Williams)


Birds of the same feather flock together. The Vatican Bank veiled operations drew attention of the US mafia. Matteo de Lorenzo, one of the New York mob’s top earners in the 1960s and 70s, traveled to Europe to discuss a plan to launder millions of dollars’ worth of phony securities. The plot involved Archbishop Paul Marcinkus, the president of the Vatican Bank. But, the New York Police Dept was already on the case—thanks to the legendary Detective Joseph Coffey. Three years later, The New York Times reported, Lorenzo was arrested by the police for tax evasion. However, the Archbishop remained unharmed and, in a few years, was promoted to be the governor of the Vatican City. (Source: The Vatican Connection: A Billion Dollar Conspiracy between Church and Mafia by Richard Hammer. This book won ‘Edgar Award for Best Fact Crime’ and can be corroborated with New York Times news reports)
I will now quote from news stories published in The Economist, Forbes, The Week and FATF (the global watchdog on money laundering and terror financing). Kindly hear me out till the concluding lines from a Book Review published in The Guardian presented in the end.


Forbes magazine in June 2012 described the Vatican Bank as the world’s most secret bank. It was reporting on the detention of the bank’s former head over financial bungling.


In July 2012, The Economist, in a report titled God’s Bankers, wrote: “A beleaguered papacy is embroiled in intrigue. Some scent a succession struggle. Few things annoy Vatican officials more than lurid novels that depict the papacy as the secretive heart of a global conspiracy. But it is Pope Benedict XVI’s most senior official, his secretary of state, Cardinal Tarcisio Bertone who put the papal butler, Paolo Gabriele, in a four-by-four-metre cell, accused of leaking a stream of confidential letters. The next day, he fired the head of the Vatican Bank, Ettore Gotti Tedeschi, and published a blistering statement accusing him of failing to do his job. An Italian police investigation, in which documents were seized from Mr Gotti Tedeschi on June 5th, has stoked fears of more scandal.”


The Week in January 2015 reported Vatican’s links with Italian mafia, doubting the real cause of death of Pope John Paul I. It wrote: “In The Godfather: Part III, a shady deal between the Mafia and the Vatican leads to the murder of the Pope. Was this based on a true story? Possibly. On the morning of September 29, 1978, Pope John Paul I was found dead, sitting up in his bed, after only 33 days in office. Although Vatican officials claimed the 65-year-old pope died of a heart attack, there was never an autopsy, and at the time, the Vatican definitely had ties to organized crime. Sure enough, in 1982, Vatican Bank president Father Paul Marcinkus resigned from his post after a series of scandals exposed the bank’s ties to the Mafia.”


In its September 2020 report on Vatican Finances, The Economist reported that the Vatican will be visited by inspectors from Moneyval-FATF, the organisation set up to fight money-laundering and terrorist funding in Europe.


The journal called it a “Holy Mess”. Later, FATF seized two assets worth over one million Euros. And here is what FATF wrote in its report dated April 2021, available on their site: “ML (money laundering) activities investigated and prosecuted so far are, in general, consistent with risks identified by the jurisdiction. Actual sanctions imposed in ML cases where there have been convictions are below the statutory thresholds for the ML offence and appear rather minimal. Arguably, they are not proportionate and dissuasive.”


In 2003, a journal called Boston Globe won Pulitzer Prize for publishing a series of investigative reports on sex abuse in Churches. The incidents later were adopted into an Oscar winning movie The Spotlight.


The magnitude of this abuse, and the Church’s reaction is best presented in an October 2021 report by The Economist: “As many as 330,000 children (Yes, you heard it right, Three lakh thirty thousand in France alone) were sexually abused by clergy and lay members of the Catholic church in France between 1950 and 2020. A two-year independent investigation, published in recent days, revealed the extent of the scandal. But France is not alone in facing up to the Church’s history of abuse. Accusations against Catholic priests around the world have surged since the 1990s. Thousands of cases have emerged across dozens of countries, including America, Australia, Germany, Ireland, Mexico, the Philippines and Poland.”
The Economist concluded that the Vatican’s response was at best “erratic”. The Church has been rocked by drugs, gay parties in office, murder and child abuse many times but it held fort. And, like any powerful Mafia syndicate, it will continue to do so. Why? Because Religion considers itself above Law.


I shall conclude with a book review in The Guardian. Reviewing In The Closet of Vatican: Power, Homosexuality, Hypocrisy in March 2019, The Guardian wrote: “After reading this book, I suspect God didn’t die of elderly enfeeblement but committed suicide in remorse, aghast at the crimes and un-Christian sins of organized religion.”
I rest my case.






Disclaimer

Views expressed above are the author’s own.





END OF ARTICLE




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For Some Journalists, Climate Change Coverage Brings Harassment, Threats


Thousands of protesters marched through New York City Sunday demanding that President Joe Biden and other world leaders at the United Nations General Assembly end the use of fossil fuels.

As climate change has become more urgent and polarizing, the scientists researching it and the journalists who report on it find themselves harassed.  

Meteorologist Chris Gloninger says he had been excited to tie climate change into his weather forecasts when the CBS affiliate KCCI hired him in 2021.

“I decided that I wanted the opportunity to talk about climate change in a part of the country where there was this massive void,” said Gloninger, who moved to Des Moines, Iowa, for the job. “It seemed to me like a no-brainer.”

But his reporters were met with harassment and eventually some death threats, he said.

“There were tons of harassing, nasty emails from other viewers that were cruel and filled with hate,” he told VOA.

KCCI was supportive, Gloninger said, even assigning a security detail to the meteorologist. And a man was later convicted of harassment and fined.

But eventually, the harassment and anxiety became too much. Gloninger resigned and moved to Massachusetts this year.

Gloninger’s experience is extreme and rare, but journalists who cover climate change are finding themselves on the front lines of what has become a culture war issue.

“Climate change for many families has joined sex, religion and politics at the Thanksgiving Day table as topics you don’t bring up,” said Anthony Leiserowitz, director of the Yale Program on Climate Change Communication.

The experiences of these reporters, climate analysts say, mark the confluence of several different forces: the existential threat that climate change poses for Earth, a decline of trust in science and the media, a rise in disinformation and misinformation, and a surge in far-right authoritarianism.

A 2021 study by the Yale Program on Climate Change Communication found that while 72% of adults in the United States believe global warming is happening, a little over 10% do not.

And of that small group, most also believe conspiracy theories about climate change.

“They’re only 10%, but they’re a really loud 10%,” Leiserowitz told VOA. An even smaller percentage of that 10% are actually active in harassing journalists, he said, adding that he, too, has received death threats over his work.

VOA spoke with seven journalists and academics focused on climate change, all of whom said they had experienced varying degrees of harassment including social media posts and aggressive emails to cyberstalking and hacking attempts.

Some of that harassment came from climate change deniers or fossil fuel companies, and sometimes people on the left accused reporters of not moving fast enough or bemoaned any action as futile, the journalists said.

“If you do investigative journalism in the climate space, where you’re looking at governments or corporations, you’re going to be upsetting some very powerful interests,” Neela Banerjee, a climate editor at NPR, said.

Banerjee previously worked at InsideClimate News where she worked on the Pulitzer Prize-nominated investigation on how Exxon ignored its own research on the effect of fossil fuels and sought to misinform the public about the risks. 

When the outlet launched its series, Banerjee said, it was notified of attempts to hack the group’s emails. They never confirmed the perpetrator, she added.  

Exxon is now accused in a lawsuit alongside other oil and gas companies of misleading the public. The company denies any wrongdoing.

According to Meaghan Parker, executive director of the Society of Environmental Journalists, “Climate journalists are just collateral damage of the very concerted, organized, well-funded effort to attack climate scientists.”

The challenges mirror broader trends. A 2022 study by professors at George Washington University found that science journalists in general are experiencing more online harassment.

“It’s just basically delegitimizing anyone reporting on science,” said Anneliese Palmer, a longtime climate journalist and research professor for science communication at George Washington University. “It doesn’t really matter what the topic is.”

Palmer added that women who report on science often face disproportionately more harassment over their work, which is consistent with trends across the media.

A couple decades ago, there weren’t many journalists working on the climate change beat, reporters who spoke with VOA said. Back then, climate coverage had to also cite climate change deniers — “sort of in a false balance narrative,” said Andrew Freedman, who covers the climate at Axios.

But starting in the late 2000s, with nearly all scientists in agreement that climate change is real and humans are the cause, journalists were no longer citing pseudoscience from deniers for the sake of showing both sides.

“That is when you can start to see, I think, the tide turning to attacking journalists,” Parker said.

Freedman, for one, said that although he has never been targeted with an orchestrated harassment campaign, the threat of one “definitely crosses my mind on almost a daily basis.”

“I’m not really thinking of climate contrarians whenever I sit down to write a story. That used to be the case, but it’s not the case anymore,” he added.    

Journalists are broadly grappling with the challenge of distrust in media being at an all-time high in the United States. But climate change journalists are dealing with the additional challenge that comes with covering a topic as polarizing as global warming.

Other concerns include how disinformation affects audiences, and how to connect with those who don’t trust science in general.

There’s so much climate disinformation out there, that Freedman, from Axios, said it isn’t worth trying to debunk every piece of it. “We face a deluge of sorting through misinformation and disinformation,” he said.

Due to declining trust in media and the polarization of climate change, “folks who don’t accept the realities of human-driven climate change — both the fact that it’s human-driven, and it’s profoundly urgent — by and large, they’re not our audience,” NPR’s Banerjee said.

“Piercing that information bubble that they might live in with misinformation, conspiracy theories — that has to be done by a trusted messenger,” Banerjee said. 

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Health Check: Vaccinations International Students Need for the US


Telangana Today, an Indian news outlet, has a rundown on the immunizations international students must receive to study in the U.S.

“Vaccination is mandatory for students of all levels, including undergraduates, graduates, and doctoral candidates, regardless of their residential status,” the story notes. Get the full list here. (August 2023) 

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UAW and automakers GM, Ford and Stellantis try to reach deal before strike widens


2023-09-18T15:30:11Z

Hakeem Jeffries, Democratic Minority Leader of the U.S. House of Representatives, walks the picket line with striking United Auto Workers members outside the Ford Motor Michigan Assembly Plant in Wayne, Michigan U.S., September 17, 2023. REUTERS/Rebecca Cook

The United Auto Workers and Chrysler-parent Stellantis resumed bargaining talks on Monday as a strike against the Detroit Three automakers entered its fourth day.

Union negotiators and representatives of General Motors (GM.N), Ford (F.N) and Stellantis (STLAM.MI) held talks over the weekend in an attempt to end one of the most ambitious U.S. industrial labor actions in decades.

The coordinated strike, which has seen the union strike at all three automakers simultaneously for the first time, comes at a time when approval of labor unions among Americans is at its highest point in decades even as membership in unions fell for years before plateauing more recently.

About 12,700 UAW workers are on strike as part of a labor action targeting three U.S. assembly plants – one at each of the Detroit Three – after the prior four-year labor agreements expired. Analysts and industry executives question how long it will be before the UAW strikes at additional plants in a move to raise pressure on the automakers.

UAW President Shawn Fain told NPR Monday there were “minimal conversations over the weekend so the ball is in their court …. We have a long way to go.”

He said the UAW is ready to do what was necessary when asked whether it would extend the strike to other plants this week.

In a separate MSNBC interview, Fain said talks were moving slowly: “We’ll see how things progress the next few days and if we have to amp up pressure that is what we’re going to do.”

Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen said it was premature to forecast the strike’s impact on the economy, which would depend on how long the action lasted and what was affected.

“President Biden has made clear he expects them to work hard – to negotiate 24/7 – to get to a solution,” Yellen said in the interview with CNBC. “And so we’re hoping that will happen soon.”

The strikes have halted production at plants in Michigan, Ohio and Missouri that produce the Ford Bronco, Jeep Wrangler and Chevrolet Colorado, alongside other popular models.

Ford on Friday indefinitely laid off 600 workers that are not on strike at the Michigan Bronco plant because of the impact of the work stoppage. GM says it expects to halt operations at its Kansas car plant this week because of the strike at its nearby Missouri plant, affecting 2,000 workers.

A number of high-profile lawmakers have visited picket lines in support of the UAW, including House Democratic Leader Hakeem Jeffries on Sunday in Michigan.

Analysts expect plants that build more profitable pickup trucks like Ford’s F-150, GM’s Chevy Silverado and Stellantis’s Ram to be the next strike targets if the walkout continues.

Shares of BlueScope Steel (BSL.AX) slipped to an over three-month low as the strike weighs on its North American business. The Australian steelmaker generated nearly 42% of its fiscal 2023 sales revenue from North America.

The three automakers have proposed 20% raises over the four-and-a-half year term of their proposed deals, though that is only half of what the UAW is demanding through 2027. The UAW at one point during the talks offered to lower its demand to 36%.

Besides higher wages, the UAW is also demanding shorter work weeks, restoration of defined benefit pensions and stronger job security as automakers make the shift to electric vehicles.

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Yellen: No signs US economy in downturn, warns against gov“t shutdown


2023-09-18T15:26:46Z

U.S. Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen delivers remarks on “Next Steps in the Evolution of Development Finance” at a Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS) in Washington, U.S., February 9, 2023. REUTERS/Leah Millis/File Photo

U.S. Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen on Monday said she saw no signs the U.S. economy is entering a downturn but warned that failure by Congress to pass legislation to keep the government running risked slowing momentum in the economy.

“I don’t see any signs that the economy is at risk of a downturn,” Yellen told CNBC, noting that the U.S. labor market also remained strong and inflation was coming down.

“There’s absolutely no reason for a shutdown,” she said. “Creating … a situation that could cause a loss of momentum is something we don’t need as a risk at this point.”

Yellen said it was premature to gauge the impact of a strike by the United Auto Workers against the Detroit Three U.S. automakers, one of the most ambitious U.S. industrial labor actions in decades, noting that would depend on how long it lasts and who was affected.

She underscored President Joe Biden’s commitment to collective bargaining and ensuring that workers “come out ahead as well” since the industry had been doing well.

She said the labor market remained strong, but it was cooling and was “not quite as hot as it was,” which was important given the objective to lower inflation back down to 2%.

Yellen, the former chair of the Federal Reserve, said the central bank’s moves to raise interest rates had begun to impact the housing market, but consumer spending remained “quite robust.”

She said the Biden administration was keeping a close eye on gasoline prices after recent surges, and Biden was committed to ensuring that prices remained affordable for Americans.

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China halted spy balloon program some time after US downed device: report


(The Hill) — China has reportedly stopped its spy balloon operations seven months after one of its balloons was spotted in skies above the U.S.

Sources familiar with China’s spy balloons told CNN that Chinese leaders have made the decision to not launch additional balloons after one was shot down by the U.S. in February. Since then, US officials have not seen any new launches, CNN reported. 

Chinese embassy spokesperson Liu Pengyu told CNN that the incident in February was “unexpected” and “isolated.”

“Since the incident happened, China has stated repeatedly that the balloon is found to be an unmanned civilian airship used for meteorological and other research purposes, and that its accidental entry into US airspace is entirely an unexpected, isolated incident caused by force majeure,” Liu told CNN. 

US intelligence officials said they think the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) didn’t intend for the balloon to cross skies in the United States. The balloon took off from the small Chinese province of Hainan and crossed into Alaska, Canada and downward toward Idaho and Montana. 

American fighter jets shot down the balloon off the coast of South Carolina on Feb. 4. The FBI conducted an analysis of the balloon remnants and the Pentagon announced that no intelligence was gathered. 

CNN reported that it is not known how long China will suspend its spy balloon operations. Christopher Johnson, a former senior China analyst at the CIA and current senior fellow at the Center for Strategic and International Studies, said it might be dependent on how a potential meeting between President Biden and CCP leader Xi Jinping goes. 

They’re each expected to be at the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation summit in San Francisco in November. 

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Activist arrested in Azerbaijan complains about detention conditions


Ayxan-Israfilov_1.jpg

Political prisoners in Azerbaijan

In Azerbaijan, an activist arrested on charges of drug trafficking complains about the conditions of detention in a detention center. According to him, he is held together with 21 other arrestees in a cell for ten people.

Aikhan Israfilov, a jailed functionary of the Trade Union Confederation “Workers’ Table”, is dissatisfied with the conditions of detention. This was reported by his sister Sevindzh Israfilov. The activist is held in pre-trial detention center № 3.

Aikhan Israfilova’s sister said that the last time she and her brother met on September 16:

“I saw him behind the glass. He said he was dissatisfied with the conditions of detention, there are 21 arrestees in a cell for 10 people. The conditions are very bad. He has no opportunity even to read, the cell is too cramped. We appealed to the administration of the detention center and the Ministry of Justice,” she said.

Sevinj Israfilova also added that Ayhan’s arrest is illegal: “He doesn’t even drink energy and doesn’t smoke. It is absurd to blame him for using and dealing drugs. In our country, a fictitious accusation in connection with drugs is already considered a norm of life.”

The Penitentiary Service did not comment on journalists’ questions about Aykhan Israfilov’s complaint.

Aykhan Israfilov was detained on August 11 this year by officers. A day later by court decision he was sentenced to 4 months of pre-trial arrest. He was charged under Article 234 of the Criminal Code of Azerbaijan (illegal manufacture, production, acquisition, storage, transportation, forwarding or sale of narcotic drugs, psychotropic substances or their precursors).

The Confederation of Trade Unions considered the arrest of Aikhan Israfilov, who works as a courier and is also involved in the defense of workers’ rights, as a political order. As he is not the only representative of the organization who was arrested.

The chairman of the confederation Afiaddin Mammadov served 30 days of administrative arrest. Another member of the confederation Elvin Mustafayev – also a courier – was also arrested on charges of drug trafficking.

The persecution of activists began after a protest of food couriers on August 1. The protesters expressed their dissatisfaction with the seizure of their scooters due to innovations in traffic regulations.

Following changes in the law, the police require category A driver’s licenses from couriers under the pretext that the engine capacity of mopeds exceeds 50 cc. This rule came into effect from December 16, 2022 due to changes in the Road Traffic Act.

After the release of the confederation’s chairman Afiaddin Mammadov, it was announced that the “D18 – Democracy 1918” movement, which included the Confederation of Trade Unions, was dissolved.

The movement’s chairman Ahmed Mammadli said that after the arrests of the chairman and members in the confederation, the lack of local and international reaction to these arrests, the partial withdrawal of some activists from the movement and the lack of resources, it was decided to suspend activities.

“Political stagnation and the impossibility of expanding the ranks of the organization led us to the decision to stop the activities of the movement. The majority of members also supported this idea. By a majority of votes at the extraordinary congress, we decided that the activity should be stopped. We will continue our activities to protect the arrested members of the movement, but now individually,” he said.

The “D18 – Democracy 1918” movement was founded in 2014. The movement was later joined by the Workers’ Table Confederation of Trade Unions, the Center for Student Power, and a number of regional labor groups.

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Caviar Diplomacy


 South Caucasus News #SouthCaucasus #News #SouthCaucasusNews

#CaviarDiplomacy #AZERBAIJANCONNECTION
#Azerbaijan
AZERBAIJAN CONNECTION: Wined and dined, Arizona lawmakers pass resolutions putting themselves in the middle of international conflict | Arizona Capitol Times
azcapitoltimes.com/news/2015/06/1
But the resolutions don’t mention Azerbaijan’s objectionable record on human, political and religious rights, allegations of stolen elections, or accusations of buying the favor of European officials through what critics call “caviar diplomacy.”

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Border Crossings: Bobby Rush


Two-time GRAMMY winner, Blues Hall of Famer, and 16-time Blues Music Awards winner Bobby Rush released his new album “All My Love For You” last month. The newest single “I’m Free,” chronicles Rush’s early life, from carrying water for 15 miles for 50 cents a day to picking cotton in rural Louisiana.

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