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11/30/19

USA: Donald Trump: is there anything sadder than a chump who thinks he’s a champ? by Barbara Ellen

USA: The president’s Rocky fantasy doesn’t project power – it just reveals his insecurities

Read more at;
https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2019/nov/30/donald-trump-is-there-anything-sadder-than-a-chump-who-thinks-hes-a-champ?CMP=Share_AndroidApp_Add_to_Firefox

Spain-US Reations: Spain blasts 'absolutely irresponsible' US attitude on climate change

Spain's environment minister on Friday blasted the "absolutely irresponsible attitude" of US President Donald Trump's administration regarding climate change, just days before an annual climate change conference opens in Madrid.

Read more at:
https://www.thelocal.es/20191130/spain-blasts-irresponsible-us-attitude-on-climate-change

The Netherlands: Man arrested for teen stabbings on Hague shopping street

Police in the Netherlands arrested a 35-year-old man in connection with the stabbings of three teenagers on the Grote Marktstraat in Den Haag. The man, with no fixed address, was being taken to a police station where investigators planned to interrogate him, Den Haag police said in a statement. No suspected motive was released immediately after the arrest. Earlier on Saturday,

Read more at
https://nltimes.nl/2019/11/30/man-arrested-teen-stabbings-hague-shopping-street

Google: EU antitrust regulators say they are investigating Google's data collection

GOOGLE: EU antitrust regulators are investigating Google's collection of data, the European Commission told Reuters on Saturday, suggesting the world's most popular internet search engine remains in its sights despite record fines in recent years.

Read more at:
https://uk.reuters.com/article/us-eu-alphabet-antitrust-exclusive/exclusive-eu-antitrust-regulators-say-they-are-investigating-googles-data-collection-idUKKBN1Y40NX

11/29/19

China-Ghana Relations: Ghana goes ahead with US$2 billion Chinese bauxite barter deal that has conservationists up in arms

Ghana is going ahead with a controversial US$2 billion deal where China will build roads and bridges in exchange for bauxite ore mined in part of West Africa’s Upper Guinean Rainforest.

Beijing has released a first tranche of funds worth US$649 million under the Sinohydro deal, Ghanaian Vice-President Mahamudu Bawumia said on Monday.

The agreement also included a 300 million yuan (US$42.7 million) grant and debt forgiveness worth US$35.7 million to help with Ghana’s infrastructure development, he said.

Read more at: Ghana goes ahead with US$2 billion Chinese bauxite barter deal that has conservationists up in arms | South China Morning Post

USA: Chaos and contagion: How Trump accelerates democratic dysfunction - by David Harden

The impeachment hearings last week demonstrated the rising risk of American polarization and democratic dysfunction. This political divide is undermining the integrity of the American experiment and its political, economic and values-based leadership of the global order. While dysfunction and chaos can be contagious, President Donald Trump is an accelerant.

Dr. Fiona Hill warned in her testimony last Thursday, “Some of you on this committee appear to believe that Russia and its security services did not conduct a campaign against our country — and that perhaps, somehow, for some reason, Ukraine did. This is a fictional narrative that has been perpetrated and propagated by the Russian security services themselves.”

And yet, the following day, President Trump championed this very discredited narrative by pinning election interference on Ukraine in a rambling interview on Fox & Friends. Trump’s continued embrace of conspiracy theories, his nativistic leadership style, and his ability to exploit rather than bridge divides is helping to fuel xenophobic nationalism not only in America but also amongst some of our closest allies abroad.

The sun set on the British empire long ago; now Brexit and its ensuing political chaos is what defines Britain. While the American people try to grapple with Trump’s tweets and the national embarrassment of the impeachment hearings, consider the challenges our cousins are facing across the Atlantic.

On Dec. 12, British voters will go to the polls to elect a new parliamentary government, which is the country's fourth national vote in five years. While only prime minister for four months, Prime Minister Boris Johnson is gambling that he can break the country's crippling political deadlock over Brexit two weeks before Christmas. The controversial Prime Minister has adopted Trump’s playbook, he is purposefully divisive and has trouble telling the truth. Unbelievably, this vote comes in the aftermath of Johnson’s unlawful suspension of the British Parliament in September.

In a foreshadowing of the upcoming 2020 U.S. Democratic primaries, the British election next month presents a stark choice as well. Jeremy Corbyn, the most left-wing leader the Labour Party has seen in decades, has pledged to oversee a revolution of the British economy, complete with the nationalization of public services. Similar to the calls of Senator Bernie Sanders, Corbyn’s platform constitutes “a fundamental redistribution of income, assets, ownership and power.” Come mid-December, there will be one certainty in London: The polity will be divided, the British will still be negotiating their divorce from Europe, and the United Kingdom will remain in a state of political dysfunction.

At nearly every step, President Trump has repeatedly advocated for a hard British turn away from Europe. In so doing, his administration is encouraging an ill-considered political outcome that inflicts enormous risk on the British people with the potential disruption of the United Kingdom itself.

Israel, too, is in a state of political sclerosis. Last week was tumultuous in a country that prides itself on weathering turmoil. The leader of the centrist Blue and White party, former IDF Chief of Staff Benny Gantz informed Israeli President Rivilin on Wednesday that he had failed to form a governing coalition. A few weeks earlier, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu also failed to assemble the required 61-member majority to form a Likud government. Israel is now in unprecedented political territory as its faces the likelihood of a third election in 12 months.

If those events were not enough, on Thursday, Israel’s attorney general formally charged Netanyahu with bribery, fraud and breach of trust. In a nod to President Trump, Netanyahu claimed that Israelis were “witnessing an attempted government coup against the prime minister through blood libels and a biased investigation process.

Then, on Friday in the Washington Post, Israel’s former director of the Shin Bet security services, Ami Ayalon, acknowledged that the Palestinian occupation is tearing Israeli apart. Specifically, Ayalon argued that Israel was engaged in an unjust war of aggression because of its continual expansion of its border, its decision to build more settlements, and its refusal to allow the establishment of a Palestinian state.

The former Shin Bet head, no peacenik, believes that the Trump administration's unqualified support for Netanyahu, total Israeli control over Jerusalem and the Golan Heights and continued West Bank settlement undermines the nation’s viability as a Jewish, democratic state.

The liberal West is witnessing a global shift away from the post-World War II order and toward great power competition marked by an ascending China and resurgent Russia.

Globalization, elite excess, and widespread middle- and lower-middle-class grievances have fueled nationalism in Britain and Israel, just as it has given rise to Trumpism in the United States. These trends are concerning.

The West is witnessing rising risks of conflict, a breakdown of alliances, growing anti-semitism, unsustainable wealth inequality, and rapid technological change. These historical shifts require the hope of America led by a president who embodies soaring American values and integrity — a leader who can chart a path of stability, predictability and vision.

Instead, the Trump administration stokes chaos and dysfunction at home and abroad.

Read more at: Chaos and contagion: How Trump accelerates democratic dysfunction | TheHill

Britain’s Dirty Election - by Peter Geoghegan and Mary Fitzgerald

A serial liar. A campaign of online disinformation. The risk of foreign meddling. Sound familiar?

Not because they face a choice between two historically unpopular candidates for prime minister — Boris Johnson and Jeremy Corbyn — on Dec. 12. Nor that they are being forced to trudge to polling stations for the third general election in five years, this time in the depths of the miserable British winter.

Pity British voters because they are being subjected to a barrage of distortion, dissembling and disinformation without precedent in the country’s history. Long sentimentalized as the home of “fair play,” Britain is now host to the virus of lies, deception and digital skulduggery that afflicts many other countries across the world.

In this as in other respects, Prime Minister Boris Johnson — a serial liar who lost his first job as a journalist for inventing quotes — resembles President Trump. And Britain, whose election is breaking down under the pressure of manipulation, increasingly looks like the United States. Truth and falsehood have become malleable concepts. Anything goes.

Read more: Opinion | Britain’s Dirty Election - The New York Times

USA: Dow Jones Today: Stocks Drop On China Turmoil; Apple Algorithm Probed - by A.R. Elliot

Stocks came off their early lows in Monday's Veterans Day trading session, as political unrest in Hong Kong upended confidence across global markets. A slow start to a big earnings week left analyst actions and company news driving early trade. Cisco Systems (CSCO) and Home Depot (HD) lagged on the Dow Jones today, following downgrades. Apple (APPL) traded lower as New York regulators announced a company probe.

Read more at: Dow Jones Today: Stocks Drop On China Turmoil; Apple Algorithm Probed | Investor's Business Daily

ESA: European Space Agency approves record budget | News | DW | 28.11.2019

The ESA is to invest €14.4 billion ($15.8 billion) in space exploration including a moon mission up to 2022. Germany is now the largest contributor to the agency's biggest ever budget.

Read more at:
https://www.dw.com/en/european-space-agency-approves-record-budget/a-51457014

11/28/19

A revitalized EU after Brexit? EU gears up for post-Brexit renovation - by Eszter Zalan

Member states, MEPs and the new EU commission are all gearing up to launch a discussion on the future of post-Brexit Europe early next year.

On Wednesday (27 November) EU ambassadors are expected to discuss a German-French proposal that attempts to set out "guiding principles" for the conference on the future of Europe.

Read more at: EU gears up for post-Brexit renovation

11/27/19

EU parliament approves, von der Leyen, commission team,Presidency

Brussels’ next top official Ursula von der Leyen will take office on Sunday after winning a comfortable parliamentary majority for her plan to build a green superpower.

Read more at:
https://www.france24.com/en/20191127-eu-parliament-approves-new-commission-team-von-der-leyen

U.S. life expectancy being driven down by middle-aged deaths, study suggests

After rising for decades, life expectancy in the U.S. decreased for three straight years, driven by higher rates of death among middle-aged Americans, a new study suggests.

Read more at:
https://www.cbc.ca/news/health/us-life-expectancy-jama-1.5374066

Mexico rejects US intervention after Trump outlines drug cartel plan

 President López Obrador reacts to Donald Trump's decision to designate drug cartels as terrorist groups.

Read more at:
https://www.bbc.com/news/world-latin-america-50577522

Israel: Benjamin Netanyahu fights to preserve power in Israel | Middle East

In addition to charges of bribery, fraud and breach of trust, Israel's prime minister is battling challenges to his leadership from within his Likud party. Is this the end of Benjamin Netanyahu's political career?

Read more at
https://www.dw.com/en/benjamin-netanyahu-fights-to-preserve-power-in-israel/a-5140

USA Trump Impeachment Probe: Trump denies sending Rudy Giuliani to Ukraine to push Biden, election probes - by Christina Wilkie

President Trump tried to distance himself from his personal lawyer Rudy Giuliani's efforts related to Ukraine on Tuesday in an interview with radio host Bill O'Reilly. In the interview for BillOReilly.com, O'Reilly asked the president what Giuliani was, "doing in Ukraine on your behalf."

"Well, you have to ask that to Rudy, but Rudy, I don't, I don't even know," said Mr. Trump. "I know he was going to go to Ukraine, and I think he canceled a trip," the president continued. "But, you know, Rudy has other clients, other than me. I'm one person."

Mr. Trump then denied that he had ever directed Giuliani to go to Ukraine on his behalf. However, in May the New York Times reported that Giuliani had planned to go to Ukraine that month, to urge the government there to open several investigations that could aid the president.

Read more:Trump denies sending Rudy Giuliani to Ukraine to push Biden, election probes

11/26/19

USA-Student Loans In reality are bad for the Economy: Forgiving Student Debt Would Boost Economy, Economists Say - by Chris Arnold

The reason debt forgiveness could have a big impact on the overall economy is that a generation of Americans is making major life decisions differently because of student loans.

"Children, it's not about if you want them," says Laura Greenwood in Montpelier, Vt. "It's about can you afford them?"

Greenwood works for the state education agency. She's 30 years old and makes $63,000 a year. "I make probably a better salary than a lot of my peers."

But after paying for college and grad school, Greenwood owes $96,000 in student loans. And she says that's got her and her partner feeling frozen. "Yeah. It's always, we're interested in having kids, but just cost of living and all our other bills and then the student loans, it's just like the final straw." She says it makes starting a family feel impossible.

So if people like Greenwood suddenly had this millstone of debt lifted from their necks, it stands to reason that would unleash pent-up desires and spending that would be good for the economy. A lot more people would have kids, or start businesses, or buy houses.

"In the short term, it would be very positive for the housing market," says Lawrence Yun, the National Association of Realtors chief economist. He says his group's surveys show that student debt has people delaying homeownership by five to seven years.

He's not endorsing any particular plan, but he estimates that broad loan forgiveness would push up the number of home sales quite a bit. "Home sales could be, say, 300,000 higher annually if people were not saddled with large student debt." Yun says that would be "a boost to the housing sector as well as the economy."

The effects would go beyond the housing market. William Foster is a vice president with Moody's, which just did a report on student debt forgiveness.

"There've been some estimates that U.S. real GDP could be boosted on average by $86 billion to $108 billion per year," which is "quite a bit," he says. "That's if you had total loan forgiveness." Foster says it wouldn't have to be total forgiveness to see significant results. And he says it could also help address rising income inequality.

"Student loans are now contributing to what's perceived as lower economic prospects for younger Americans," Foster says. After all — millions of people are delaying homeownership. And that's the most powerful way for most working and middle class people to build wealth.

"A typical homeowner has net worth about $230,000, while a typical renter has only $5,000," Yun says.

But while the idea of loan forgiveness is enticing, it would not be free. And this is a big reason plenty of politicians and policy experts are not on board. This would be expensive. Foster says Americans owe a lot of money on those student loans. "About 1.5 trillion. And that's more than auto loans and credit cards. They're the second-biggest debt item for households."

Foster says most of these loans are from the federal government, and it could forgive them. But that would mean giving up the $85 billion in annual revenue it's currently collecting on these loans. And, he says, "That would result in a wider fiscal deficit."

Foster says there could also be what's called a moral hazard factor here for future students. "Those students might expect future loan forgiveness and therefore they'll take out even more money than they might have otherwise."

That could create even greater levels of student debt. So there are plenty of potential pitfalls in all this. But policymakers who are pushing for loan forgiveness say they have plans to make it both fair and good for the economy and to do it in a way to make education more affordable for future students so they wouldn't have to take on so much debt.

Note EU-Digest: Bottom line, education and healthcare, are not. and must never be seen as marketable commodities. They are a democratic right for everyone, poor and rich, and must be free and widely available to all citizens. The present privatized health and educational programs, applied by the US Government and several other Governments in the EU and around the world, are not only undemocratic, they are also proving to be a barrier in providing proper education and health care to every level of the population, benefiting the overall economy, in all those countries, which presently have turned these basic human rights, as to education and health, into marketable commodities.  

Read more at: Forgiving Student Debt Would Boost Economy, Economists Say | Vermont Public Radio

Turkey - Freedom of the Press Continues Under Assault: Kurdish journalist arrested after raid on her home in Ankara - by Steve Sweeney

Journalists in Turkey today vowed to continue to “write the truth” and expose to the world the scale of state oppression after journalist Berivan Altan was detained following a raid on her Ankara home.

Special forces, “holding long-barrelled guns” and with their faces covered by black ski-masks, broke into the Mesopotamia Agency reporter’s apartment, which she shares with journalist colleagues.

Jin News editor Habibe Eren, who was present during the raid, told the Star: “They seized our notes, books and technical equipment illegally while they were threatening us and insulting us.

“The extortionist mentality that has been going on for a long time is spreading to every aspect of our lives.”

Along with notebooks and computers, police also took copies of books by Idris Baluken and jailed former Peoples’ Democratic Party (HDP) co-leader Selahattin Demirtas as evidence.

Ms Eren said that, amid the clampdown on democracy in Turkey, people wake up every day to detention operations with “not even a crumb of freedom of thought or expression left.”

But she remained defiant and vowed that journalists would continue writing the truth “no matter the price we have to pay,” and despite describing the whole country as a prison with pressure increasing every day.

“As a matter of fact, this is why they fear us. We write the facts with no fear whatsoever. Journalists who do not swear allegiance to [the Turkish state] and defend freedom will always exist.”

Mesopotamia Agency editor Deniz Nazlim condemned the detention of Ms Altan and said: “No form of pressure is strong enough to prevent a journalist from writing the truth.”

He told the Star: “We believe that the Turkish state’s policy of silencing journalists and hiding the facts cannot succeed. On the contrary, it will bring them closer to their end.”

Ms Beritan had been blocked from seeing her lawyers, while the charges against her are unknown.

Turkey under Erdogan's leadership has become the world’s biggest jailer of journalists, with a third of the world’s total.

Read more at: Kurdish journalist arrested after raid on her home | Morning Star

EU-US Relations On Life Support: Donald Trump has dragged America's global reputation to an all-time low: by Simon Tisdall

Atlantic Alliance On Life Support
Europeans, if they can bear to watch, are observing US politics with a mixture of fascination and horror – and it’s all down to Donald Trump. Each week seems to bring another democracy-shattering rumpus, scandalous revelation or shocking tweet. The depth and evident bitterness of America’s public divisions are unsettling for friends and allies who count on dependable US leadership.

It is hard to overstate how badly Trump has hurt America’s worldwide reputation. US presidents have been internationally unpopular before – George W Bush over Iraq, for example, or LBJ over Vietnam. But Trump has sunk to an all-time low.

Opinion surveys reveal the negative impact on US global standing. A 25-nation Pew survey last year found, overall, that 70% of respondents had no confidence in Trump’s leadership. While a majority still held a favourable view of the US, unfavourable views were up sharply from the Obama era. About 70% said the US under Trump did not take sufficient account of the interests of other countries and was doing less to address international problems.

Trump won’t be around forever. But this collapse in trust may have lasting, long-term implications for transatlantic ties. A survey of 60,000 people in 14 EU member states published this fall by the European Council on Foreign Relations found most Europeans “no longer believe the US can serve as a guarantor of their security”. Europe and America risk drifting even further apart in 2020.

Not all this angst can be laid at Trump’s door. But his personal hostility to the EU and individual European leaders, his denigration of Nato, his bypassing of his own intelligence agencies and state department, his collaboration with Russia’s Vladimir Putin, and his willingness to betray staunch allies such as Syria’s Kurds are undoubtedly stoking fears about US reliability in security matters. Trump’s hope of scoring a big pre-election foreign policy “success” adds to the general nervousness.

Some of these fears are structural. Europeans, including Britons, are alarmed by Trump’s disdain for the UN and other multilateral decision-making bodies, and his readiness to ignore international treaties. His go-it-alone chauvinism weakens US leverage. It also shows ingrained disrespect for the global rules-based order that has sustained western liberal democracy in the postwar era.

Trump’s admiration for authoritarian regimes and “strongman” leaders such as Putin and China’s Xi Jinping, when set alongside his electoral shenanigans at home, has strengthened the view that he is no friend to democracy – at a time when democracies everywhere are under sustained attack.
The US under Trump’s baleful tutelage is not only losing influence and respect. It is also, increasingly, a source of and contributor to global woes and instabilities. His unilateral, nationalistic, self-defeating approach threatens deepening trouble across the board next year.

Read more at: Donald Trump has dragged America's global reputation to an all-time low | Simon Tisdall | Opinion | The Guardian

EU Security Concerns EU Executve Travel: "Spy-air? EU warned on VIP jet leasing

Flying EU and Nato VIPs on jets from a part-Chinese firm could be a security risk, a Belgian aviation company has said.

Its warning was lambasted as a "James Bond" fantasy, by reference to the fictional British spy.

But if there is a risk, then top EU officials have already been exposed on other "air-taxis".

And the Belgian aviation company which raised the China alarm has its own security questions to answer on Russia.
 
Read more at: Spy-air? EU warned on VIP jet leasing

11/25/19

EU INTL.TRADE: EU needs to 'toughen up' on trade - by Urmas Paet

The European Union needs to step up its game to support the interests of EU businesses, to counteract the increasingly agressive China and the at times more self-centred United States.

Despite its size and wealth in the global context, the EU has not managed to play itself out as a strong global power. In order for the EU businesses to compete on a greater equal footing with companies from other countries the EU has to toughen up, reach a coherent foreign policy, harmonise its various foreign policy instruments and have stronger rules.

Currently, the EU is not ready to effectively face the significant changes in the world.

May it be a more forceful and aggressive China, Russia that raises security concerns or the increasingly isolationist United States. For instance, negotiations with China to open the Chinese market for European investments have been very slow.

And this example is only one of many where the EU has failed to use political power to achieve its economic goals and strengthen the position of its businesses.

To achieve its objectives, the EU must take use of all its foreign policy instruments.

Read more at: EU needs to 'toughen up' on trade

Gobal Warming: We'll see an ice-free Arctic this century, latest research says - by Walter Strong

We can expect to see an ice-free Arctic Ocean within 50 years, according to researchers at the University of California's Center for Climate Science, who say they've improved and narrowed past projections of when the Arctic might be free of sea ice.

Projections have varied from as early as 2026 to as distant as 2132. Now, according to research published in the journal Nature Climate Change, the Arctic could be "functionally ice-free" by September 2044 — and no later than 2067 — assuming no changes to global carbon emissions.
September is when the Arctic sea ice pack is at its thinnest.

 That's when the effect of summer's heat shows up in the ice pack.

We'll see an ice-free Arctic this century, latest research says | CBC News

The Netherlands becomes World's Biggest Importer of Chocolate

 In 2018, Dutch cocoa bean imports stood at 1.1 billion kg, more than half of which came from Ivory Coast. This makes the Netherlands the largest importer of cocoa beans in the world. Approximately three-quarters are destined for domestic industrial processing while around one-quarter are resold directly to other countries. This is reported by Statistics Netherlands (CBS) on the basis of new research into destinations of Dutch goods imports.

The Netherlands is a major importer of some important agricultural commodities such as cocoa beans, palm oil (third largest country in the world in terms of import value), soybeans (fourth largest) and coffee (fifth largest). In terms of total volume, the Netherlands is the fourth largest importer of palm oil and eighth largest of coffee.
 
Read more at: The Netherlands becomes World's Biggest Importer of Chocolate

Global Economy:The Calm Before the Economic Storm - by John Mauldin

The Friday after Thanksgiving is known for heavy spending in retail stores, but it’s clear that consumers are increasingly turning to the Internet to make their holiday purchases,” said Comscore Chairman Gian Fulgoni at the time. “Online spending on Black Friday has historically represented an early indicator of how the rest of the season will shake out. That the 22-percent growth rate versus last year is outpacing the overall growth rate for the first three weeks of the season should be seen as a sign of positive momentum.

The Great Recession began one month after this “sign of positive momentum.” A strong holiday shopping season won’t mean we are out of the woods and could mean we are just entering them.

Read more at:The Calm Before the Economic Storm | Equities.com

EU: Turkey’s Economy Recovered Faster Than Expected

The European Union changed its forecast for Turkey’s economic growth, raising its growth expectation for the country’s GDP from minus 2.3 percent to 0.3 percent.

The report entitled “Autumn 2019 Economic Forecast” expected the Turkish economy will grow 3.1 percent in 2020 and 3.5 percent in 2021.

The economy recovered faster than expected from last year’s currency crisis, supported by a large fiscal stimulus and strong growth contribution of net exports, according to the report.

The report also forecasted the unemployment rate to drop to 13.7 percent this year, 13.3 percent next year and 12.9 percent in 2021.

Read more at: EU: Turkey’s Economy Recovered Faster Than Expected | Asharq AL-awsat

11/24/19

TURKEY: Zehra Dogan's prison paintings fight for the Kurdish cause

The Kurdish artist, activist and journalist Zehra Dogan was imprisoned for 600 days in Turkey as part of the crackdown on journalists in the wake of the failed 2016 military coup.

Read more at:
https://www.france24.com/en/20191124-kurd-turkey-zehra-dogan-art-artist-kurdistan-syria-media-coup-pen-erdogan-prison-painting-rojava

EU Gulf Naval Mission: Abu Dhabi picked as HQ for European naval mission to Gulf

A French naval facility in the United Arab Emirates is to be the base for a European mission to protect Persian Gulf shipping lanes, France has said. Attacks on oil tankers in the Strait of Hormuz have been blamed on Iran by the US Trump Administration. It must be noted, however, that the US was the sole co-signer of the International Nuclear Agreement Treaty with Iran. which pulled out of this agreement, which has resulted in the present confrontations and  hostilities with Iran. 

Read more at: https://www.dw.com/en/abu-dhabi-picked-as-hq-for-european-naval-mission-to-gulf/a-51391144

Netherlands Headed For Unprecedented Crisis?: Millions Of Retirees Face Pensions Cuts Thanks To The ECB - ""This Report is Questionable say Dutch Government insiders"" - by Tyler Durden

When one thinks of pensions crisis, the state of Illinois - with its woefully underfunded retirement system which issues bonds just to fund its existing pension benefits - usually comes to mind. Which is why it is surprising that the first state that may suffer substantial pension cuts is one that actually has one of the world's best-funded, and most generous, pension systems.

According to the FT, millions of Dutch pensioners are facing material cuts to their retirement income for the first time next year as the Dutch government scrambles to avert a crisis to the country's €1.6 trillion pension system. And while a last minute intervention by the government may avoid significant cuts to pensions next year - and a revolt by trade unions -  if only temporarily, the world finds itself transfixed by the problems facing the Dutch retirement system as it provides an early indication of a wider global pensions funding shortfall, not to mention potential mass unrest once retirees across some of the world's wealthiest nations suddenly finds themselves with facing haircuts to what they previously believed were unalterable retirement incomes.

At the core of the Dutch cash crunch is the ECB's negative interest rate policy, which has sent bond yields to record negative territory across the eurozone, and crippled returns analysis while pushing up the funding requirements of Dutch pension funds.

Ahead of a parliamentary debate on Thursday on this hot topic issue, the Dutch minister for social affairs and employment, Wouter Koolmees, will write to lawmakers to outline his response to the pension industry’s problems, the FT reported.



 Read more: Netherlands Headed For Unprecedented Crisis: Millions Of Retirees Face Pensions Cuts Thanks To The ECB | Zero Hedge

Afrlca-EU Relations: Africa envoy: Europe needs to look beyond migration

Europe risks losing out on the potential of Africa given its fixation on migration, says Ranier Sabatucci, the EU's ambassador to the African Union.

"For me the message is that by not looking at Africa for what it is and for what it is becoming, we risk fixing our gaze at a very narrow thing, this migration debate," Ranier Sabatucci told EUobserver on Wednesday (20 November).

Read more at: EU Africa envoy: Europe needs to look beyond migration

11/23/19

IMF to continue new-loan talks with Ukraine in coming weeks

 The International Monetary Fund said on Saturday it will continue talks with Ukraine about a new support program in coming weeks following significant progress in discussions so far with Kiev.

Read more at
https://uk.reuters.com/article/uk-ukraine-imf/imf-to-continue-new-loan-talks-with-ukraine-in-coming-weeks-idUKKBN1XX0DY

Netherlands-Court decission: Netherlands does not have to help kids from ISIS parents trapped in Syria

The Netherlands will not have to retrieve children of Dutch citizens awaiting their fates in Syrian detention and displacement camps, the kids of Dutch women who left the Netherlands to enter conflict zones in Syria and Iraq. The Appellate Court in The Hague overturned a lower court's ten-day old order on an emergency appeal filed on behalf of the Dutch government.

Read more at:
https://nltimes.nl/2019/11/22/netherlands-help-kids-trapped-syria-appellate-court

WTO: Canada urges U.S. to save WTO from chaos " brought on by the US Trump Administration"

The global trading system that took decades to build is days away from disarray as the U.S. appears keen to paralyze the World Trade Organization's enforcement system.

Read more at:
https://www.cbc.ca/news/world/canada-urges-u-s-to-save-wto-from-chaos-1.5369843

Germany: Thousands demonstrate against right-wing extremist NPD rally

National Democratic Party supporters in Getmany have come together in Hanover to protest against journalists, but they were vastly outnumbered by counterdemonstrators. There were no serious clashes between the groups, police said.

Read more at:
https://www.dw.com/en/germany-thousands-demonstrate-against-right-wing-extremist-npd-rally/a-51382691

11/22/19

Entertainement: Dora Maar: Picasso's lover comes out from his shadow

 Her fame came as Picasso's lover but an exhibition shows Dora Maar was talented in her own right.

Read more at:
https://www.bbc.com/news/entertainment-arts-50434467

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ECB: Christine Lagarde′s first speech as ECB chief: The Main Points

The European Central Bank's new president has urged European countries to invest and innovate as concerns of an economic slowdown intensify. She warned that export growth could no longer be relied upon to boost growth.

Read more at:

USA- the impeachment inquiry: You’ll Never Believe It but Trump, a Pathological Liar, May Have Lied to Mueller

On Monday, the general counsel for the House of Representatives made a shocking statement about the president of the United States that stunned even those who’ve become unimaginably hardened and cynical from the events of the last 34 months.. In requesting that Congress receive access to secret grand jury evidence from Robert Mueller’s Russia probe, for the purposes of the House’s impeachment inquiry, Douglas Letter told a federal appeals court, “There is evidence, very sadly, that the president might have provided untruthful answers…Did the president lie? Was the president not truthful in his responses to the Mueller investigation? The House is trying to determine whether the current president should remain in office. This is unbelievably serious and it’s happening right now, very fast.”

Donald Trump, a liar? Our Donald Trump, people no doubt asked themselves, mouths agape. But how could that be? Sure, he told 13,435 “falsehoods” between January 20, 2017, and October 9, 2019. Yes, entire fact-checking industries have been built around his penchant for basically never telling the truth. But lie to Bob Mueller in order to save his own ass? The Trump we know? Donald J. Trump? The same one born in Queens and currently living in the White House? Look, we accept that he basically can’t go a day without telling a lie, such that doctors believe doing so is an essential part of his biological functioning, similar to how other humans must move air in and out of their lungs. And, yes, he lies about things he said in rooms full of people with cameras running, and redraws maps and hopes no one notices, and claims migrant caravans traveling from South America contain Middle Eastern terrorists, and proclaims that his daughter, Ivanka Trump, created 14 million jobs. And…alright, sure, when the facts are laid out that way, yes, it seems…entirely probable and 150% in character that Trump lied to Mueller.

Letter’s request came days after the president’s longtime associate Roger Stone was convicted of lying to Congress about his contacts with WikiLeaks during the 2016 election, and subsequently attempting to cover it up by concealing evidence from investigators and engaging in witness tampering, which the general counsel cited in his argument. He also included the guilty plea of Trump’s former personal attorney, Michael Cohen, who admitted to lying to Congress. “We have at least two people who have already been convicted of lying to Congress,” he said. “And what are they lying about? They’re lying about things that go directly to the Mueller report,” Letter said, describing the matter as being of “immense” importance and “a key part of the impeachment inquiry.”

Read more at: You’ll Never Believe It but Trump, a Pathological Liar, May Have Lied to Mueller | Vanity Fair

China-US Relations: China Will Make the Rules if America Doesn't - by Abraham Newman, Daniel Nexon

On Oct. 4, Houston Rockets general manager Daryl Morey tweeted his support for pro-democracy protesters in Hong Kong. In that moment, Morey placed in jeopardy the NBA’s success in cultivating an estimated 500 million Chinese basketball fans and may have derailed efforts by Tencent, its Chinese partner, to regain its luster. Tencent paid $1.5 billion for the rights to carry NBA games—games that it may no longer be able to broadcast.

Welcome to the world of Chinese market power. Beijing’s response to the NBA may appear particularly crude, but it fits a broader pattern. China routinely conditions market access, most notably by requiring foreign firms to partner in joint ventures with Chinese businesses. U.S. firms complain about how this requirement facilitates the theft of their intellectual property, but many simply cannot resist the allure of China’s large and growing domestic market.

Even with slowing growth, China’s market will remain a powerful force in international affairs. The Chinese internal retail market has already overtaken, or will soon overtake, that of the United States. But even the fact of such comparisons underscores the degree to which the U.S. market—clocking in at roughly $5.5 trillion this year—remains large and lucrative. The United States, however, is becoming less effective at using its market power to pursue crucial policy goals. Washington has, particularly under Republican leadership, degraded the regulatory infrastructure necessary to make the most of that market power. The result is that, in too many areas, Washington is starting to punch below its weight.

Read more : China Will Make the Rules if America Doesn't

EU-US Relations -Tariffs: Trump weighs new trade investigation to justify tariffs on EU

Trump administration officials are considering whether to start a new trade investigation against the European Union as the window closes for hitting Brussels with automobile tariffs, according to multiple people briefed on the issue.

Such a move would mean that European auto imports wouldn't be subject to duties out of national security concerns, but the trading bloc would be subject to a much broader inquiry, the people said.

Read more at: Trump weighs new trade investigation to justify tariffs on EU – POLITICO

11/21/19

Tourism: Spain set for tourism record as U.S. visitors counter Brexit blues

Spain is on track for a record year of tourist arrivals, the seventh straight year of new highs, with U.S. and Asian visitors countering the disruption of Brexit and collapse of tour operator Thomas Cook, the industry minister said on Wednesday.

Read more at:
https://uk.reuters.com/article/uk-spain-economy-tourism/spain-set-for-tourism-record-as-u-s-visitors-counter-brexit-blues-idUKKBN1XU20E

China-US relations: Hong Kong: China slams US bill backing protesters

In a nod to pro-democracy protesters, US Congress has passed two bills supporting human rights in Hong Kong. China has threatened unspecified countermeasures if the bills become law.

Read more at:
https://www.dw.com/en/hong-kong-china-slams-us-bill-backing-protesters/a-51342263

Germany - average wages: This is how much employees earn in Germany

This is what the average person  working in Germany take home every month? These figures shed some light on average incomes.

Read more at:
https://www.thelocal.de/20191121/this-is-how-much-employees-earn-in-germany

The Netherlands - Hospital Personnel Strike: Hospitals nationwide only treating emergencies as healthcare workers strike

General hospitals throughout the Netherlands are running on so-called Sunday service today as hospital workers strike for better employment conditions. Only emergency care will still be provided. According to the trade unions, around 75 percent of all general hospital employees will strike at 119 locations. The university hospitals are not participating in this strike.

Read more at; 
https://nltimes.nl/2019/11/20/hospitals-nationwide-treating-emergencies-healthcare-workers-strike

Israel: PM Benjamin Netanyahu indicted for bribery and fraud

Attorney general announces charges against Netanyahu as crisis deepens for longest-serving leader

Read more at:
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2019/nov/21/israeli-prime-minister-benjamin-netanyahu-indicted-for-bribery-and?CMP=Share_AndroidApp_Add_to_Firefox

USA: Trump impeachment hearings: Witness denounces 'fictional' Ukraine theory promoted by Republicans

 A former White House analyst denounced as "fictional" the contention from some Republicans that Ukraine interfered in the 2016 election, as she testified Thursday in the presidential impeachment inquiry on Capitol Hill.

Read more at:
https://www.cbc.ca/news/world/impeachment-1.5367569


11/20/19

EU-Singapore free trade agreement comes into force - by Choo Yun Ting

The landmark trade agreement between the European Union and Singapore, which removes nearly all Customs duties between the two jurisdictions, comes into force today.

The reduction of tariff and non-tariff barriers under the EU-Singapore Free Trade Agreement (FTA) provides Singapore companies with greater market access to all EU member states.

It also containsrules on trade and sustainable development, including the protection of labour rights and the environment.

Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong noted that it has been almost a decade since negotiations began.

Mr Lee added that Singapore hopes that the agreement will eventually lead to an EU-Asean FTA, enhancing region-to-region connectivity between the EU, the world's largest single market, and Asean, which is slated to become the fourth-largest economic bloc in the world by 2030.

Read more: EU-Singapore free trade agreement comes into force, Economy News & Top Stories - The Straits Times

Democracy: The Shocking Paper Predicting the End of Democracy - by Rick Shenkman

Everything was unfolding as it usually does. The academics who gathered in Lisbon this summer for the International Society of Political Psychologists’ annual meeting had been politely listening for four days, nodding along as their peers took to the podium and delivered papers on everything from the explosion in conspiracy theories to the rise of authoritarianism.

Then, the mood changed. As one of the lions of the profession, 68-year-old Shawn Rosenberg, began delivering his paper, people in the crowd of about a hundred started shifting in their seats. They loudly whispered objections to their friends. Three women seated next to me near the back row grew so loud and heated I had difficulty hearing for a moment what Rosenberg was saying.

What caused the stir? Rosenberg, a professor at UC Irvine, was challenging a core assumption about America and the West. His theory? Democracy is devouring itself—his phrase — and it won’t last.
As much as President Donald Trump’s liberal critics might want to lay America’s ills at his door, Rosenberg says the president is not the cause of democracy’s fall—even if Trump’s successful anti-immigrant populist campaign may have been a symptom of democracy’s decline.

We’re to blame, said Rosenberg. As in “we the people.”
Democracy is hard work. And as society’s “elites”—experts and public figures who help those around them navigate the heavy responsibilities that come with self-rule—have increasingly been sidelined, citizens have proved ill equipped cognitively and emotionally to run a well-functioning democracy. As a consequence, the center has collapsed and millions of frustrated and angst-filled voters have turned in desperation to right-wing populists.

His prediction? “In well-established democracies like the United States, democratic governance will continue its inexorable decline and will eventually fail.”

Read more: The Shocking Paper Predicting the End of Democracy - POLITICO Magazine

The Netherlands -Airport Security: Test at Amsterdam Airport Schiphol: quick and easy boarding using facial recognition

Together with KLM, Amsterdam Airport Schiphol has started a trial with voluntary ‘biometric boarding’, involving boarding without having to show your boarding pass and passport. Passengers can board quickly and easily via a separate gate that identifies passengers using facial recognition.

Schiphol and KLM are assessing facial recognition technology with this trial, testing the speed, reliability and user-friendliness of the system. The boarding process and passenger experience will also be evaluated. The ultimate goal is to make the boarding process as easy and quick as possible for passengers. The trial period will last at least three months.

The trial will take place at a selected gate at the airport. To use facial recognition for boarding, passengers must register first. There is a special registration kiosk in the waiting area at the gate. KLM staff will assist with the procedure.

To register, passengers must scan their passports and boarding passes, as well as their faces. To ensure privacy is protected, the personal data will only be used for the trial. The data will automatically be deleted after boarding.

Read more at: Test at Amsterdam Airport Schiphol: quick and easy boarding using facial recognition

Meteor Storm: ‘Unicorn’ meteor storm triggered by mysterious comet could spark 400 shooting stars an hour on Thursday

Scientists Esko Lyytinen and Peter Jenniskens believe there is a “good chance” to spot the first Alpha Monocerotids meteor storm since 1995.

But you will have to be quick to see the outburst, as the storm may only last between 15 and 40 minutes.

"Unlike most meteor outbursts, which last for several hours, strong activity from the Alpha Monocerotids is over within an hour and easily missed," the American Meteor Society said.

The outburst is forecast to reach its climax around 11.50pm EST on November 21.

Read more at:  ‘Unicorn’ meteor storm triggered by mysterious comet could spark 400 shooting stars an hour on Thursday – The Sun

EU: Tusk pledges 'fight' for EU values as new EPP president - by Elena Sánchez Nicolás

The EU's largest political party's congress gathered in Zagreb on Wednesday (20 November) to nominate outgoing EU Council president Donald Tusk as their new president - as Poland's former prime minister was the only candidate for the position.

With new leadership, the centre-right European People's Party (EPP) said it was ready to work on a concrete political strategy to tackle the challenges of the EU's enlargement process and climate change - the two main concerns of the political group at their congress, amid their unfinished battle against Hungary's ruling party Fidesz.

"I am ready to fight" for Christian-Democratic European values and against populism, said Tusk.

"I deeply believe that only those who want and are able to give people a feeling of safety and security, preserving at the same time their freedoms and rights, have a mandate to run for power," he added.

Read more atL Tusk pledges 'fight' for EU values as new EPP president

N.Korea-US relations: North Korea says no interest in Trump summit until 'hostile policy' removed

A senior North Korean official said on Wednesday that the United States must drop its “hostile policy” towards Pyongyang in order to restart stalled denuclearisation talks, South Korea’s Yonhap news agency reported.

Vice Foreign Minister Choe Son Hui told reporters after meeting Russian officials in Moscow it would be “impossible” to hold another summit between North Korean leader Kim Jong Un and U.S. President Donald Trump if he maintains his current stance towards the North.

“To negotiate with the United States going forward, we would be able to discuss nuclear issues again when it withdraws all of its hostile policy against us,” Choe said, according to Yonhap.

Note EU-Digest: Looks like the "Great Dealmaker" failed again !

Read more: North Korea says no interest in Trump summit until 'hostile policy' removed - Reuters

11/19/19

Israel-USA-Palestine Relations: Is the US Trump Administration starting to embrace international lawlessness?

The US Trump Administration’s declaration that it no longer considers Israeli settlements in the West Bank illegal marks another step away from the principles of international law.

The illegality of the settlements by Israeli citizens on Palestinian land is quite clear from Article 49 of the Fourth Geneva Convention: “The occupying power shall not deport or transfer parts of its own civilian population into the territory it occupies.”

The 600,000 Israeli settlers in the West Bank and East Jerusalem have already colonized much of Palestine, fragmenting its territory — over which the Israeli occupier retains complete military control — criss-crossing it with roads barred to Palestinian users, stealing much of the most fertile land and depriving the Palestinian population of most of the available water.

The Israeli towns that have been planted across Palestinian territory are a serious barrier to the independent Palestine to which almost all countries, including the US and Israel, remain technically committed — though Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has shown up how hollow this commitment is by repeatedly stating explicitly that there will never be a Palestinian state on his watch.

The pro-forma international condemnation has not halted the settlement programme nor prompted any Israeli government to consider meeting its obligations towards Palestine under the Oslo Accords.

The US has also regularly used its veto to block UN resolutions condemning the settlements even while officially viewing them as illegal.

It’s also against international law to apply sanctions with the aim of changing the government in the targeted country.

The US Trump Administration decision to recognize Jerusalem as Israel’s capital, is in fact encouraging ever more reckless and aggressive ethnic cleansing of Palestinians by the Israeli Right-Wing authorities and assures them that racist legislation such as the Nation State Law, reducing Israeli Arabs to second-class citizens, will not affect the enormous economic and military sponsorship they receive from the US.

Relying on Israeli allies to rein in its expansionist government has never worked. A US thumbs-up to illegal settlements makes that clearer than ever.

Nabil Abu Rudeina, a spokesman for Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas, said: "The United States is neither qualified nor is authorised to negate international legitimacy resolutions, and it has no right to give any legitimacy to Israeli settlement."

Palestinian militant groups also weighed in, calling it the official funeral of the Oslo peace process - which laid the foundations for Palestinian self-rule in the West Bank, East Jerusalem and Gaza Strip - and urging stepped-up resistance to the Israeli occupation.

Bottom-line: the US Trump Administration has basically ripped-up the Oslo Agreement of which the US was a co-signer and is now applying the "Trump doctrine of the jungle"

 EU-Digest

Airline Industry: EasyJet plans to offset carbon on all flights

European budget airline easyJet says it will become the first major carrier to operate net-zero carbon flights, offsetting carbon emissions from the fuel used on every flight.

Read more at: 
https://www.cbc.ca/news/technology/easyjet-net-zero-carbon-1.5255977

France: Sudden snowstorm leaves one dead, many without electricity in southeast France

 A man died due to unexpectedly heavy snowfall in the Rhône-Alpes region in France. Rail traffic was also disrupted and 300,000 homes were left without electricity due to the weather.

Read more at :
https://www.france24.com/en/20191115-sudden-snow-storm-leaves-one-dead-140-000-homes-without-electricity-in-southeast-france

11/18/19

Latin America - Going Down The Tubes: Unequal and irate, Latin America is coming apart at the seams

Latin America, which a decade ago harnessed a commodities boom to pull millions out of poverty and offer what many saw as a model of modernization, is in revolt. It’s not another pink tide, nor is it a lurch to the right; the movement is more a nonspecific, down-with-the-system rage. Furious commuters are looting cities, governments are on the run, and investors are unloading assets as fast as they can.

With almost three dozen countries and more than 600 million inhabitants, Latin America defies easy generalization, which makes it difficult to predict what will come next. A few weeks ago, Evo Morales, the longstanding president of Bolivia, seemed headed for reelection. Today, he and his top aides are in exile in Mexico while some in his country have taken to the streets again to protest what they say was the military coup that removed him.

In that sense, there are parallels with the Arab Spring, which began in 2010, and the collapse of the Soviet Union two decades earlier. Both were unforeseen and moved in surprising directions, yet they offer lessons in retrospect. “There were a lot of cracks, but no one saw it coming,” says Javier Corrales, a professor of political science at Amherst College in Massachusetts, of events in Bolivia and across the region.

Read more at: Unequal and irate, Latin America is coming apart at the seams

Britain: Johnson drops corporate tax cut plan in bid to woo voters

British Prime Minister Boris Johnson said on Monday he was putting on hold further cuts in corporation tax and told voters he would use the money for spending on health and other priorities.

Read more at:
https://uk.reuters.com/article/uk-britain-election-corporationtax/johnson-drops-corporate-tax-cut-plan-in-bid-to-woo-voters-idUKKBN1XS1AZ

Midldle East - Israel: US says Israeli settlements in West Bank not illegal in dramatic reversal

US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo said on Monday that Israeli settlements in West Bank are not inconsistent with international law.

Read more at:
https://www.euronews.com/2019/11/18/us-says-israeli-settlements-in-west-bank-not-illegal-in-dramatic-reversal

USA: Gun violence in the United States by state

Saudi Arabia: Prominent Saudi Princess Basmah bint Saud ′missing′

The outspoken royal "fell off the radar" after being denied travel for emergency medical treatment. Those close to the princess want answers over her alleged detainment.

Read more at:
https://www.dw.com/en/exclusive-prominent-saudi-princess-basmah-bint-saud-missing/a-51295817

Britain: Bank of England considered bigger increase to banks' risk buffer last week

The Bank of England considered raising banks' capital requirements lastweek by more than it had previously signalled to tackle risks to the financial system including those from Brexit, the BoE said on Tuesday.

Read more at: Bank of England considered bigger increase to banks' risk buffer last week - World - Chinadaily.com.cn

The Netherlands: Amsterdam wins prestigious award for circular economy

has won the World Smart City Award for circular economy. The price was awarded on Wednesday 15 November at the Smart City Expo World Congress in Barcelona. With the award, the organization shows it’s appreciation for the pioneering Amsterdam bprogram for circular economy and for the city’s efforts to develop policy for urban-level circular economics in several areas: local production of sustainable and seasonal food, local production of electricity, reduction of fuel consumption and the improvement of waste recycling.

Read more at: Amsterdam wins prestigious award for circular economy

11/17/19

USA: President Trump Bet Big This Election Year. Here’s Why He Lost- by Jonathan Martin and Maggie Haberman

When President Trump showed up in Louisiana for the third time in just over a month to try to help Republicans win the governor’s race, he veered off script and got to the heart of why he was staging such an unusual political intervention. His attempt to lift Gov. Matt Bevin of Kentucky to victory this month had failed, Mr. Trump explained, and it would look bad for him to lose another race in a heavily Republican state.

“You got to give me a big win, please, O.K.,” the president pleaded with a red-hatted crowd last Thursday in Bossier City, La.

But on Saturday night, Mr. Trump’s wager backfired in spectacular fashion.

Not only did Gov. John Bel Edwards, a Democrat, win re-election by more than 40,000 votes, he did so with the same coalition that propelled Governor-elect Andy Beshear to victory in Kentucky and that could put the president’s re-election chances in grave jeopardy next year. Like Mr. Beshear, Mr. Edwards energized a combination of African-Americans and moderate whites in and around the urban centers of his state, building decisive margins in New Orleans, Baton Rouge and Shreveport.

Read more at: President Trump Bet Big This Election Year. Here’s Why He Lost.

11/16/19

USA: Donald Trump visits hospital for unscheduled two-hour medical checkup

White House says president is ‘healthy and energetic’ and tests were part of his routine annual physical.

Read more at:
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2019/nov/17/donald-trump-visits-hospital-for-unscheduled-two-hour-medical-checkup?CMP=Share_AndroidApp_Add_to_Firefox
 

Czech Republic - Prague: Anti-government protests mark Velvet Revolution anniversary

Over 200,000 people took to the streets of Prague on Saturday as part of anti-government protests. Sunday marks 30 years since the 1989 Velvet Revolution that led to the fall of communism in what was then Czechoslovakia.

Hundreds of thousands of people took to the streets in the Czech capital on Saturday as part of major anti-government protests. This comes one day ahead of the 30-year-anniversary of the beginning of the Velvet Revolution, a series of non-violent mass protests which led to the overthrow of communism in what was then Czechoslovakia. The bloodless revolution was the basis for the founding of the Czech Republic as a democratic state.

Police estimated that 200,000 people were on the streets, while organizers put the number at up to 300,000.

Saturday's protest was organized by activist group Million Moments for Democracy, which has staged numerous protests against the government of Czech Prime Minister Andrej Babis, urging him to resign.

Read more at: Prague: Anti-government protests mark Velvet Revolution anniversary | News | DW | 16.11.2019

NATO: Editorial: Good news for anti-imperialists — Nato is falling apart

 THE Nato alliance — set up to hold back the advance of working-class (and Russian dominance) power in Europe — is unravelling.

If US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo thinks that his lightning visit to surf the avalanche of tendentious propaganda celebrating the dismantling of socialism in Europe provides a good opportunity to reinforce US dominance over its European allies he is mistaken.

Pompeo pontificated today on “the need for traditional Western allies to work together in the face of modern threats.”

That he combined this with a defence of Trump’s erratic tariff policies and The Donald’s strictures on the “need” for European states to match US defence spending shows how out of touch he is with European popular opinion.

Pompeo said: “We have a duty, each of us, to use all we have to defend what was so hard-won in 1776, in 1945 and in 1989” name checking the 18th-century end of colonial rule in North America, the 20th-century victory over fascism and the restoration of capitalism in the Soviet republics and the European socialist states.

If either Pompeo, or his astoundingly ignorant president, think these historic turning points form a seamless historical narrative they are mistaken.

Today French President Macron thinks the alliance is “brain dead” and blames Trump’s policies. Nato members Greece and Turkey are periodically on a war footing and Turkey is playing the gangster capitalist regime of Putin off against the US. On a host of foreign policy issues — from Palestine to the Iran nuclear deal, from US extraterritorial demands that constrain European trade with Cuba, Iran and Venezuela to trade tariff wars with China; from policy on Syria to the sponsorship of competing jihadi militias in Libya — the bourgeoisies of European countries are at loggerheads with the US.

Macron is in conflict with the Nato defence and intelligence establishment because he wants an integrated European military force. When he was EU Commission president Jean-Claude Juncker said the EU needed its own army.

Trump wants European states to stump up 2 per cent of their GDP for defence spending whilst complaining that the US forks out 4 per cent. Playing Britain’s traditionally supine role Dominic Raab says that: “… the answer is for all European countries to meet their commitments to spending two per cent of GDP on defence — the surest way to reinforce rather than weaken the transatlantic relationship.”

Read more at: Editorial: Good news for anti-imperialists — Nato is falling apart | Morning Star

France unveils new model for EU enlargement - by Andrew Rettman

Western Balkan countries should still become EU members, but via a new, step-by-step process, France has said.

The "gradual association" idea was the basis for a "reformed approach to the [EU] accession process", set out in an informal, six-page paper circulated to EU diplomats by France on Friday (15 November) and seen by EUobserver.

Read more at: France unveils new model EU enlargement

11/15/19

The Netherlands - Pollution: Road traffic responsible for 17% of CO2 emissions

Last year road traffic accounted for 17 percent of the total amount of carbon dioxide (CO2) emitted in the Netherlands, according to Statistics Netherlands. The total CO2 emissions from road traffic was 2 percent higher in 2018 than in 2017 and 28 percent higher than in 1990. Passenger cars accounted for 62 percent of the CO2 emissions in road traffic.

Read more at:
https://nltimes.nl/2019/11/15/road-traffic-responsible-17-co2-emissions

USA - Impeachment hearings: Trump's live-tweets 'intimidating' - Yovanovitch

Marie Yovanovitch responds to President Trump's tweeted attacks while she testifies to Congress.

Read more at:
https://www.bbc.com/news/av/world-us-canada-50439441/trump-s-live-tweets-intimidating-yovanovitch

The UK election should be about ideas, not polls – Lea Ypi

With the UK facing one of the most important elections in decades, the focus should be on the clear differences between the main parties, not weekly polls.

Read more at:
https://www.socialeurope.eu/the-uk-election-should-be-about-ideas-not-polls

11/14/19

Turkey: Erdogan′s AKP basks in glow of think tank financed by influential family

A Turkish think tank financed by President Recep Tayyip Erdogan's inner circle is a megaphone supporting government policies, DW has found. One of its controversial studies spends 30 pages denouncing DW journalists.

Read more at:
https://www.dw.com/en/erdogans-akp-basks-in-glow-of-think-tank-financed-by-influential-family-dw-finds/a-51258757

USA - Gun Control Legislation: "How many more killings and School Shootings will it take for Mitch McConnell to start debating Gun Control Legislation in the Senate after another 3 students killed in todays California school shooting ?

Stop sitting on your hands McCinnell
Two 14-year-old boys and a 16-year-old girl are dead and two other students are injured after a classmate opened fire at a high school in Southern California Thursday morning, sheriff's officials said.

Detectives reviewed video from the scene which showed the gunman in the quad of Saugus High School in Santa Clarita when he took a gun from his backpack, shot five people and then shot himself in the head, authorities said. The early morning school shooting was on the suspect's birthday, authorities said.  

Read more: 3 students killed in California school shooting, 16-year-old suspect in hospital in 'grave condition' - ABC News

EU's needs to cleanup and reorganize: "Cleaning up both the EU and Western Balkans" - by Valery Perry and Toby Vogel

A recent New York Times investigation into EU-funded corruption related to agricultural subsidies , The Money Farmers: How Oligarchs and Populists Milk the EU for Millions shines a spotlight on one of the most troubling cases of a member state gaming the system.

The case of Hungary is notable for several reasons. Prime minister Viktor Orban openly opposes the EU's policies and values while benefitting handsomely from its money.
Under his leadership, Hungary has moved in a fundamentally illiberal direction as he has captured large swathes of the economy.

Moreover, the rightward turn in Hungary is part of a global struggle over core political values – between independent rule of law and authoritarian rule; between rights-based systems and exclusionary nationalism; and between accountable, citizen-driven governance and strongman rule.

The timing of the Times' investigation provides a chance to highlight another recent development on the continent that underscores the importance of dealing with the EU's present seeming inability to safeguard liberal values – the EU's decision, forced by French president Emanuel Macron, to delay the opening of membership talks with Albania and North Macedonia, even though they both had met the EU's own requirements for doing so.

There are a number of reasons behind this decision, most notably Macron's stated interest in improving the EU's own internal governance before welcoming new members.

On the one hand, this sounds sensible, and if implemented could ensure a stronger Union to which western Balkans countries could aspire.

However, there is no reason the EU's own self-improvement cannot happen in tandem with simultaneous efforts in the western Balkans. In fact this would lend credence to the EU's favoured notion, "partnership," by demonstrating to EU hopefuls that they must do as they do, not as they say.

Read more at: Cleaning up both the EU and Western Balkans

The Netherlands: Green party's Jesse Klaver named leader of the future by Time Magazine

Time Magazine included GroenLinks leader Jesse Klaver in its Time 100 Next list - a list of 100 people the magazine expects will shape and change the future. This is the first publication of the Time 100 Next list, in addition to the Time 100 list of the most influential people of the moment. Klaver is the only Dutch person on the list.

Read more at: 
https://nltimes.nl/2019/11/14/green-partys-jesse-klaver-named-leader-future-time-magazine

Italy: Venice floods: Italy to declare state of emergency over damage

The damage from the 1.87m (6ft) high waters is a "blow to the heart of our country", PM Conte says.

Read more at:
https://www.bbc.com/news/world-europe-50416306

The horrible state of US Health Care:: 'I live on the street now': how Americans fall into medical bankruptcy

Having health insurance is often not enough to save Americans from massive debts when serious illness strikes

Read more at:
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2019/nov/14/health-insurance-medical-bankruptcy-debt?CMP=Share_AndroidApp_Add_to_Firefox

11/12/19

EU expands military cooperation with 13 new joint projects - could it mean "bye, bye NATO"

EU defence ministers on Tuesday (12 November) signed off on the third wave of 13 new proposals under the EU’s Permanent Structured Cooperation (PESCO) framework, raising the number of agreed joint military projects to 47 initiatives.

Formally established in December 2017, the PESCO framework is intended to deepen defence cooperation among the 25 participating EU member states, pool and share resources across the bloc and make the EU’s defence

EU expands military cooperation with 13 new joint projects – EURACTIV.com

British elections: Farage's Brexit Party will not stand in Tory-held seats

Nigel Farage, leader of the UK Brexit party, announced his party will not field candidates against the 317 Conservative MPs standing for re-election. "We will concentrate our total effort into all the seats that are held by the Labour party," Farage said in a move designed not to split the pro-Brexit vote at the 12 December election.

 Read More at: Farage's Brexit Party will not stand in Tory-held seats

11/11/19

USA: Transforming the international order: US leadership or bust - by Jasper Gilardi

While many nations have seen new levels of peace and prosperity under the rules-based order that the United States and its allies built in the wake of the Second World War, “not everybody accepts those principles and values that have been the foundation of that system,” according to former US National Security Advisor Stephen J. Hadley. The challenge for the United States in the 21st century, Hadley continued, is to “revise, adapt, and revitalize,” this international system, while building global support for the central tenets of democracy and freedom that underpinned the relative peace of the last half century.

Hadley, who spoke alongside former US Secretary of State Madeleine Albright at the Atlantic Council on October 30, said that there are new signs of hope in this mission. “Whether it is Latin America, whether it is in Africa, whether it is Europe, whether it is in Hong Kong, whether it is in the streets of Moscow, people are demanding accountability from their governments [and] demanding that their governments not be corrupt, that they be responsive to their needs,” he said. “This is a perfect time,” he argued, for the United States and its allies to promote the value of a rules-based international order and “renew our vows to our democratic principles.”

The United States faces an uphill battle, however, as authoritarians abroad question those very principles, as detailed in the Global Risks 2035 Update: Decline or New Renaissance, a report by Mathew J. Burrows, director of the Atlantic Council’s Foresight, Strategy, and Risks Initiative in the Scowcroft Center for Strategy and Security. Burrows warns that the increasing power of authoritarian regimes—chief among them China—threatens to bring back the great power competition that created so much destruction during the first part of the 20th century.

n the face of dissent abroad and disaffection at home, Albright and Hadley are duly concerned that the United States will continue to retreat from global leadership, giving away hard-won power to authoritarian leaders that are happy to take it. As Albright pointed out, the Chinese government is “filling the vacuum” left by a retreating United States, “and where they aren’t filling the vacuum, the Russians are filling the vacuum.” Albright also drew attention to China’s Belt and Road Initiative that seems to expand Beijing’s global reach by the day. “I keep saying the Chinese must be getting very fat, because the belt keeps getting larger and larger, and they have made all kinds of relationships of dependency on that,” she said. 

Read more at: Transforming the international order: US leadership or bust - Atlantic Council

Britain: Brexit impasse takes its toll on British business investment

As uncertainty over Brexit spills into its fourth year, Swiftool Precision Engineering has taken a tough investment decision: it will press ahead with a plan to spend 250,000 pounds ($323,000) on a 3D printer but a new workshop roof will have to wait.

Read more at:
https://uk.reuters.com/article/us-britain-eu-investment/brexit-impasse-takes-its-toll-on-british-business-investment-idUKKBN1XH0KX

The Netherlands: Court orders Netherlands to bring back kids from Dutch ISIS mothers, but not mothers, stuck in Syria

A court in Den Haag ordered the Netherlands to quickly bring 56 children of Dutch parents back to the country from Syrian detention and displacement camps. The case was filed on behalf of 23 mothers living in the camps. In its verdict, the court noted that "the children have not chosen to go to Syria or to stay in Syria. They are sitting there now because their parents have been involved in ISIS.

Read more at:Court orders Netherlands to bring back kids, but not mothers, stuck in Syria | NL Times:



EU- US- Double Citizenship: Europeans scramble for bank access due to US Tax law

A US tax reporting law has created major headaches for thousands of Europeans across the continent. Unless lawmakers find a last-ditch solution, they risk having their bank accounts closed out in the next few months.

11/10/19

Bolivia: Bolivian President Evo Morales resigns after fierce election backlash

Bolivian president Evo Morales has announced his resignation amid unrest over a disputed election he had claimed to win.

The leader faced mounting pressure to resign after the Organisation of American States (OAS) found “serious irregularities” in the 20 October presidential election vote.

Mr Morales said he was stepping down “for the good of the country”, according to reports.

His resignation came hours after the head of the country’s military called on Mr Morales to step down, while appealing to Bolivians to desist from violence.

Read more at: Bolivian President Evo Morales resigns after fierce election backlash | The Independent

Romania -ElectionsPro-EU incumbent Iohannis tops Romania's presidential vote, will face runoff

Romania’s centrist President Klaus Iohannis, who has earned praise in the West for his anti-graft stance, won the first round of a presidential ballot on Sunday and will face former premier.

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Pro-EU incumbent Iohannis tops Romania's presidential vote, will face runoff

The German Wall: A Russian View on the Fall of the Berlin Wall, 30 Years On

A month before the fall of the Berlin Wall, Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev visited East Germany. The diaries of his advisor Anatoly Chernyaev provide a crucial historic record of the scenes:

“The crowds chant ‘Gorby! Gorby!’ and no one is paying any attention to [East German leader] Erich (Honecker). At the rallies, people hold up posters in Russian that read: ‘Gorbachev, you are our hope.’”

Nowadays, it’s hard to imagine the unprecedented scope of “Gorba-mania” at the time, or a situation in which the leader of one country is exponentially more popular abroad than at home.

Chernyaev explained the phenomenon well: “At the time, we didn’t comprehend, and we couldn’t comprehend, the terror with which Europe viewed our military might, our 1968 [invasion of Czechoslovakia] and our [war in] Afghanistan, nor the shock felt by Europeans after the installation of the SS-20 [ballistic missiles]. We didn’t want to know anything about it, as we were busy showcasing the might of socialism. It was Gorby who took away that terror.”

Read more at:  A Russian View on the Fall of the Berlin Wall, 30 Years On - The Moscow Times