≈ Comments Off on THE BEADY EYE SAY’S: TAKING REVENGE IS PROHIBITED IN JUSAISM. BUT WHAT IS OR WHO IS A JEW?
( Six minute read)
The diversity of beliefs and practices has led to different definitions of “Who is a Jew.”
Judaism is a religion as well as a nation and culture. Approximately 14.7 million people worldwide identify as Jewish. Today, Judaism is comprised of four major movements: Orthodox, Conservative, Reform and Reconstructionist.
The above question is not just philosophical, it has political and legal ramifications.
Defining who is and is not Jewish is a contentious issue.
In Israel, questions of Jewishness have implications for immigration, conversion, marriage, divorce, and the allocation of government money.
Is it determined by heritage? By an individual’s choice of whether or not to identify as Jewish? Whether one “looks” or “feels” Jewish?
Or is the defining issue whether anti-Semites, such as the Nazis, would consider one to be Jewish?
All of these factors have been used at different times and places to determine who is and who is not Jewish.
Both the Kingdom of Israel and the Kingdom of Judah were formed by 12 tribes of Hebrew people. While there is historical evidence of the tribes of Judah and Benjamin (which formed the Kingdom of Judah and are considered the ancestors of modern Jews.
In Israel, where there is no civil marriage, marrying a Jew and being buried in a Jewish cemetery can be done only if the person in question is considered legally Jewish. In a synagogue, in order to be counted in a minyan, a prayer quorum, one must be Jewish, and so too if one wants to be called up to the Torahfor an aliyah.
The Israeli Chief Rabbinate controls the marriage process for Jews in Israel, and their definition of Jewishness accords with traditional halacha. Thus, it is common to find people who are granted citizenship as Jews under the Law of Return, but are unable to legally marry as Jews (or marry Jews) in Israel.
Historically, Judaism has held that a Jew is anyone born to a Jewish mother or converted to Judaism in a halakhic manner (that is, according to Jewish law) Anyone with a single Jewish grandparent or a Jewish spouse is eligible to move to Israel and become a citizen under the Law of Return.
So who decides who is a Jew?
The original name for the people we now call Jews was Hebrews.
The word is apparently derived from the name Eber, one of Abraham’s ancestors. Another tradition teaches that the word comes from the word “eyver,” which means “the other side,” referring to the fact that Abraham came from the other side of the Euphrates or referring to the fact Abraham was separated from the other nations morally and spiritually.
The word “Jew” (in Hebrew, “Yehudi”) is derived from the name Judah, which was the name of one of Jacob’s twelve sons. Originally, the term Yehudi referred specifically to members of the tribe of Judah, as distinguished from the other tribes of Israel.
Another name used for the people is Children of Israel or Israelites, which refers to the fact that the people are descendants of Jacob, who was also called Israel.
In common speech, the word “Jew” is used to refer to all of the physical and spiritual descendants of Jacob/Israel, as well as to the patriarchs Abraham and Isaac and their wives, and the word “Judaism” is used to refer to their beliefs. Technically, this usage is inaccurate, just as it is technically inaccurate to use the word “Indian” to refer to the original inhabitants of the Americas. However, this technically inaccurate usage is common both within the Jewish community and outside of it.
Judaism thus begins with ethical monotheism:
The belief that God is one and is concerned with the actions of mankind. According to the Hebrew Bible, God promised Abraham to make of his offspring a great nation. Most ancient societies were polytheistic—they believed in and worshiped multiple gods.
When Jews have been at risk from the surrounding culture or from political persecution, they have turned inward and focused on the particularist elements of Jewish law and practice — the unique, defining rituals and institutions — in an effort to survive as a people.
Of course a country is entitled to defend itself when attacked. Killing is good for preventing a future offense, but not for avenging one already done. It is a deed more of fear than of bravery.
You shall not take revenge… Leviticus 19:18
The duty to respect the commands of the government is clearly stated and emphasized in Jewish law.
After the Hamas barbaris attack in Israel today’s society vengeance is at the forefront with an an eye for an eye making the whole world blind.
If Israel wants peace and to be respected by its muslim Arabic neighbours in this time of sorrow it must give thought to do what is honorable in the sight of all.
Deeply traditional Jews and the founders of the Jewish state alike understood that the foundation of Jewish values and identity is the Bible. Yet both the Torah of Israel and rabbinic tradition had very different ideas about authentic Jewishness and how Jews should live.
The Torah demands that we keep far away from lies and falsehood (Exodus 23:7), root out corruption from among us (Deuteronomy 19:19), not defile the land by spilling innocent blood (Deuteronomy 19:10), and not allow murderers to go free (Numbers 35:31).
The Torah also teaches that all human beings are created in the Divine Image (Genesis 1:26-27). This means that every human person has intrinsic dignity and must be accorded transcendent value.
Yet, all these fundamental traditional Jewish values are in peril in Israel today – undermined by so many leaders, the government, rabbis, and by militant hypernationalists.
These values rarely pass the lips of today’s religious Zionists.
Zionism will evolve into just another materialistic amoral, sometimes immoral, coarse struggle for a place in the sun, no different from other nationalisms/ or terrorist group with large hats, kippot, tzitzit, or payot as markers of Jewishness, or by jingoistic calls for wiping out those who are not like us.
These are not Jewish values, only superficial facades and expressions of the vulgar abuse of power that is antithetical to the spirituality of the Bible and our religious tradition.
Below prehaps a better understanding of what or who is a Jew.
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≈ Comments Off on THE BEADY EYE SAY’S. IF YOU ARE SEARCHING FOR A PROGNOIS FOR OUR PLANET LOOK NO FURTHER THAN RIGHT NOW.
( Three minute read)
There is no prognosis execept uncertanity and barbarism.
Six thousand bombs on the defenceless, is turning Israel into a phria of vengance.
However humanity is not just waging war on each other but on nature also.
Creating a a crisis for the entire life-support of our civilation and our species
As with all wars nature is strikes back – and it is already doing so with growing force and fury.
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We can not avert climate cataclysm and restore our planet without trillions, that are now being spent on Wars, nor can we use resources to lock in policies that burden poorer countries with a mountain of debt on a broken planet.
It is time to flick the “green switch”.
As nearly every inch of our planet has been affected by human activity now is the time to transform humankind’s relationship with the natural world – and with each other.
We have a chance to not simply reset the world economy but to transform it. It is time in a race against time to put a price on carbon.
IF NOT CLIMATE CHANGE WILL BECOME MORE COMPLICATED BEFORE IT IS FINISHED.
RESULTING IN MASS MIRTATION WITH THE OUT BRAKE OF MORE WARS THAN WE ARE WITINESSING TO DAY.
Here is a list of concerns.
The earth climate system seems chaotic, with the potential to head off in many different directions.
Melting ice will have a huge impact, either by raising sea levels or amplifying global warming itself.
The whole western Antarctic ice sheet could fall apart.
El Nino may get stuck on or off, triggering megadroughts or superhurricans.
The Amazon could dissaper in a furness of wild fires.
The oceans could become lifeless acid baths.
Smog may strangle the Asian monsoon.
Methane could be waithing to explode.
The gulf stream could change direction with North Atlantic freez over.
None of these will happen in isolation and past climate history does not provide a blueprint for the future. There are no easy anologues.
The distinctive nature of our predicament goes a long way beyond the current wars.
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≈ Comments Off on THE BEADY EYE ASK’S APART FROM THE OBVIOUS LOSS OF INNOCENT LIVES WHERE WILL THE OUTBRAKE OF ANOTHER WAR WITH PALESTIAN AND ISREAL GO?
( Four minute read)
All wars are unpredictable.
Israel has the military capability to wipe out Hamas, but doing so could perhaps be even riskier than not, given that an even more extreme organization could come into power — or that Israel could be put into the position of governing the territory itself.
Is this the final solution to the holocaust?
The dispute is rooted in pre-biblical times. Though its borders have shifted over the years, Palestinian territories used to be what is now Israel, Gaza and the West Bank.
The Israeli-Palestinian conflict so far has claimed tens of thousands of lives and displaced many millions of people and has its roots in a colonial act carried out more than a century ago.
More than 100 years ago, on November 2, 1917, Britain’s then-foreign secretary, Arthur Balfour,
He committed the British government to “the establishment in Palestine of a national home for the Jewish people” and to facilitating “the achievement of this object”.
In essence, a European power promised the Zionist movement a country where Palestinian Arab natives made up more than 90 percent of the population.
Both Israeli Jews’ and Palestinian Arabs’ history, culture and identity are linked to the Palestinian territories. Jewish migration from eastern and central Europe surged from 1922 to 1947 as Jews fled persecution and the destruction of their communities, most notably during World War II.
As the number of Jewish immigrants increased, many Palestinians were displaced. They began pushing back and violence resulted.
Israel was declared a state in 1948, though the land is still referred to as Palestine by those who do not recognise Israel’s right to exist. Palestinians also use the name Palestine as an umbrella term for the West Bank, Gaza and East Jerusalem.
Hamas is an acronym for Harakat al-Muqawama al-Islamiya, or Islamic resistance movement, now designated a terrorist group by Israel, the United States, the European Union and the UK, as well as other powers.
Hamas is a Palestinian militant group which rules the Gaza Strip. It is sworn to Israel’s destruction and wants to replace it with an Islamic state.
Hamas has fought several wars with Israel since it took power in Gaza in 2007.
About 80% of the population of Gaza now depends on international aid, according to the UN, and about one million people rely on daily food aid.
Hamas is backed by Iran, which funds it and provides weapons and training.
As one of Israel’s most implacable foes, Iran clearly has a vested interest in seeing the Jewish state suffer.
If it emerged that Iran was behind the attacks, it could widen the conflict into a regional confrontation.
Just five days into the war, what comes next is impossible to predict, but given what’s known about previous conflicts and the capabilities of both sides, the coming weeks are likely to be bloody.
Extreme religious nationalists who are part of Israel’s right-wing coalition government have repeatedly called for the annexation of Palestinian territory so it is hard to see how there can be a positive outcome for Hamas or Gaza from the events this weekend. The Hamas operation is a reality-changing event in the Middle East that may oblige Iran to move from the phase of ongoing support and co-ordination to a more direct involvement.
The conflict pits Israeli demands for security in what it has long regarded as a hostile region against Palestinian aspirations for a state of their own.
Israel’s founding father David Ben-Gurion proclaimed the modern State of Israel on May 14, 1948, establishing a safe-haven for Jews fleeing persecution and seeking a national home on land to which they cite deep ties over generations. In the war that followed, some 700,000 Palestinians, half the Arab population of what was British-ruled Palestine, fled or were driven from their homes, ending up in Jordan, Lebanon and Syria as well as in Gaza, the West Bank and East Jerusalem.
The simultaneous use of rockets, drones, vehicles and powered hang-gliders suggested that the operation’s planners had studied other recent examples of hybrid warfare, perhaps including Ukraine.
Iran and Hamas staunchly oppose the growing prospect of a historic peace deal between Israel and Saudi Arabia – something which might be thwarted if Israel’s military response to the attacks provokes widespread anger in the Arab world. The violence will scupper any deal between Israel and Saudi Arabia.
Up to now the war is limited to battles between Israeli and Hamas forces but as the war continues it could compel Arab nations to choose a side.
A worst-case scenario is that it could draw in the powerful Lebanese militant group, Hezbollah.
While this radical upsurge of violence is fresh, it is just the latest instalment that stems from a deeply unsettled past. Up to now Israel’s asymmetric response is supposed to serve a deterrent purpose, without the country declared war.
What unfolds in the coming days and weeks has its seed in history.
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≈ Comments Off on THE BEADY EYE ASK’S. ARE WE GOING TO WITTNESS A PALESTINIANS HOLOCAUST.
( Two minute read)
Auschwitz, to day is a monument to human depravity, to the end product of hatred, intolerance and dehumanization.
Jewish people call the Holocaust the ‘Shoah’, which means ‘destruction’ or ‘catastrophe’ in which it’s estimated that 6 million Jewish people died.
Jews believe a man called Abraham was the the first person to make a covenant with God. Abraham was a Hebrew. Jews believe God named Abraham’s grandson Israel. After this, the Hebrews became known as the Israelites. Abraham is considered the father of the Jewish people and the Israelites are his descendants.
Jews’ social segregation and their refusal to acknowledge the gods worshipped by other peoples aroused resentment. Unlike polytheistic religions, which acknowledge multiple gods, Judaism is monotheistic—it recognizes only one God.
The founders of Zionism and the leaders of the State of Israel had presumed that the normalization of the Jewish condition—that is, the achievement of statehood and with it a flag and an army—would seriously diminish anti-Semitism. However, from the Yom Kippur War of 1973 onward, the existence of the Israeli state seemed to have the opposite effect, fuelling rather than quenching the long-standing fires of anti-Semitic hatred.
It now appears that we are on the threshold of another Holocaust not a Jewish one but the annihilation of of Palestinians. It is universally believed that such a genocide as the Holocaust must never be allowed to happen again. We can no longer say we do not know that hatred and intolerance lead to war and genocide. We cannot afford to stand still for one moment.
With the out brake of hostility this line has not yet been crossed but current events must serve as a wakeup call.
Today we cannot say that we do not know what happens when hatred in all its forms rears its head.
Even though the vehemence of the anger and attacks against Israel appeared not to differentiate between Israelis and Jews, the United Nations and International Community musts issue a warning that there will be no acceptance of such a course of action by Israel.
The persistence of anti-Semitism into the 21st century and the marked rise in anti-Semitic incidents in the early decades of the century have prompted new consideration of how to define and combat the phenomenon, which has both incorporated old tropes and taken on new forms.
Double standards (judging Israel by one standard and all other countries by another), delegitimization (the conclusion that Israel had no right to exist), or demonization (regarding the Israeli state not merely as wrongheaded or mistaken but as a demonic force in the contemporary world).
Antisemitism is not a Jewish illness.
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≈ Comments Off on THE BEADY EYE SAYS: THE OUTBRAKE OF WAR BETWEEN THE ISRAEL AND PALESTINE WAS INEXHAUSTIABLE INAUDIBLE AND INEVITABLE.
( Three minute read)
The dangers of the situation exploding is a result of the continued occupation [and] the Palestinian people being deprived of their legitimate rights.
Most of the world condemned the attacks on Israel by Hamas but the truth is that this war comes after nearly two decades of the US and world leaders overlooking the more than 2 million people living in Gaza who endure a humanitarian nightmare, with its airspace and borders and sea under Israeli control
Israel’s extreme-right government over the past year has escalated the already brutal daily pain of occupation. Instances of Israeli security forces and Israeli settlers antagonizing Palestinians through violence are on the rise, from the pogrom on the city of Huwara to a new tempo of lethal raids on Jenin.
Israeli far right government ministers have been pursuing annexationist policies and sharing raging rhetoric; both incite further violent response from Palestinians and appear at a time when new militant groups have emerged that claim the mantle of the Palestinian cause.
The now-regular presence of Israeli Jews praying at the Al-Aqsa Mosque in Jerusalem, one of Islam’s holiest sites, have further pressurized the situation.
The question must thus be asked to the Israeli government, the Biden administration, and Arab leaders: How did they forget about Palestinians? How did they so brazenly ignore Gaza?
The last time there was a prolonged clash between Israel and Hamas, in May 2021, the conflict lasted 11 days, resulting in the deaths of about 250 people in Gaza and 13 in Israel.
Yet within hours of the surprise attack launched early Saturday by Hamas against Israel, hundreds had already been killed.
This fight will have far more ramifications than previous clashes.
Image’s of resistance to the occupation will be widely circulated in the Arab world, and will endure long beyond this war. Its symbolic power cannot be underestimated.
Negotiations between Israel and the Palestine Liberation Organization have been frozen since 2014, so the symbolism of Hamas breaking through Israeli security barriers and wreaking havoc on Israel — including the kidnapping of at least one Israeli soldier as well as civilians — will resonate across Palestine, the Arab world, and beyond.
No Arab army has entered the territory of Israel since the 1948 war.
Israel and the United States have wished away Palestinians.
The terrible bloodshed of today’s attacks underscores the cost of doing so.
Because the US has long designated Hamas, the Palestinian militant political group with an Islamist worldview, as a terrorist organization, US officials can’t contact them and must work through third countries. It means that the US knowledge base and expertise on Gaza is not just low — it’s absent.
Gaza is in essence a refugee camp (about 70 percent of those living in Gaza come from families displaced from the 1948 war) and an open-air prison, according to human rights groups.
The United Nations describes the occupied territory as a “chronic humanitarian crisis.” Israel has blockaded Gaza since Hamas assumed control of the territory in 2007, and neighbouring Egypt to the south has also imposed severe restrictions on movement.
The current Israeli government has aggravated these realities, by increasing pressure on the Palestinians on multiple fronts: in Jerusalem, squeezing Gaza, assaults on Palestinian villages by settlers, with settler-politicians leading ministries in the Israeli government; and with annexationist policies like the recent major policy change putting the Israeli civilian government (not the Israeli military) in charge of the occupied West Bank.
Hamas’s attacks on Israel won’t change life for Palestinians, and Israel’s government will now use the full force of its advanced military in response. And given Israel’s state of emergency, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is now in talks with the opposition parties to pull together a unity government for the country.
But even if some of the most extreme settler voices currently in the Israeli cabinet are replaced by more mainstream Israeli voices, harsh policies against Palestinians across the West Bank and Gaza will continue.
The dread Israelis are feeling right now, myself included, is a sliver of what Palestinians have been feeling on a daily basis under the decades-long military regime in the West Bank, and under the siege and repeated assaults on Gaza,”
The only solution, as it has always been, is to bring an end of apartheid, occupation, and siege, and promote a future based on justice and equality.
In my opinion just like Northern Ireland there is no two state solution.
The state of Israel was established in 1948 on land that was at that time part of the British mandated territory of Palestine.
Northern Ireland emerged in 1920–22 as a constituent part of the United Kingdom with its own devolved parliament. There are differing views because of the history of conflict over the decision to divide up the island of Ireland, a political and cultural argument which is still going on today, with a one state for all, with equality, the only solution.
It is not in spite of the horror that we have to change course — it is exactly because of it.
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≈ Comments Off on THE BEADY EYE LOOKS AT RACISM: All LIVES MATTER IS TRUE OR FALSE?
( Ten minute read)
I often wonder if I was of African decent what I would think or feel hearing a raciest song sung in support of the English RUBGY team – Swing Low swing Hight, while the other game Football is taking the knees to say black lives matter.
Nobody is born racist, but if you grow up in a society where you have advantages over people from other groups, the like hood is that you will become raciest not even know you are being racist in how you are acting.
Racism is built into society and is “the product of centuries of history.”
We to day focus on the individual racist attitudes rather than the bigger problem because it’s harder to pin down the wider problem. However the twentieth century is termed the “century of genocide” because of the high number of cases of genocide. The genocide of the Armenians, the Holocaust and the genocide in Rwanda are the three genocides of the twentieth century.
The Rwandan Civil War—in which armed militias of Hutu people had slaughtered members of the Tutsi ethnic minority at least 800,000 are thought to have been murdered in just a hundred days.
It is a modern idea that everything can be measured and classified, even a “race” and its character (Bauman 1989: 68). This classification of races, coupled with the modern idea of a constantly improvable society, leads to Social-Darwinist ideas of the survival of the fittest (Kaye and Stråth 2000: 15).
An important indicator for the potential of future genocide is a difficult life condition, such as war or an economic crisis. migration. People were transformed into commodities, a condition in which a “surplus population” could simply be eliminated.
As with war, during times of a recession, people are inclined to find someone to blame for their misfortune. Humans feel the need to blame an out-group and eliminate that threat to society.
Russia’s 2022 invasion of Ukraine has rekindled modern debates about the definition and prosecution of genocide. The existing laws of war are inadequate to handle the new forms of political violence afflicting the world. Crimes against humanity, meanwhile, can take place in times of peace and include murder, enslavement, and persecution based on factors like gender, ethnicity or religion, race.
Racism can not be most simply understood as someone behaving differently to another person based on the colour of their skin or culture. For example, Islamophobia is when Muslims are the victims of attacks just because of their religion.
Racism reflects an acceptance of the deepest forms and degrees of divisiveness and carries the implication that differences between groups are so great that they cannot be transcended.
At least 24 million Africans were sold to slave traders around the world.
The word Nigger can be traced back in history to slavery, but it is far from the only word to describe racism. The full word was a nickname British scientist Charles Darwin and his wife Emma used in their letters to each other in the 1840s.
It was also the name given to a black Labrador which was the mascot of the Royal Airforce 617 Squadron – famously known as the Dam busters – during World War Two. In July this year, the name of the Dam busters’ dog was removed from its gravestone as RAF Scampton “did not want to give prominence to an offensive term.
After World War Two, the racism directed at black and Asian people who had emigrated to the UK from Commonwealth countries saw the word come to be used as a racial slur in everyday life – and politics.
At the 1964 election, Conservative MP Peter Griffiths won the Smethwick seat in the West Midlands after a campaign which used the slogan: “If you want a [N-word] for a neighbour, vote Liberal or Labour. The slogan spelt out the full word. That election was more than 50 years ago – but the word is still used in that derogatory way today.
The word survives is an act of redemption by black folk. The word survives on the conditions that black folks have inscribed for it and nobody else can take that. And it becomes violent when other people try to take it and use it.
I would hope most people would understand why that is deeply offensive and problematic because it still is used in that context now.
For that reason, most human societies have concluded that racism is wrong, at least in principle, and social trends have moved away from racism, but there are many dimensions to racism.
We have to understand the connection between slavery, colonialism and racialised capitalism, which creates the conditions for the climate crisis.
Why climate change is inherently racist.
Climate change and racism are two of the biggest challenges of the 21st Century. They are also strongly intertwined. Climate change is a multiplier of all forms of social disadvantage, with divisions along class lines, gender, age, and much else besides.
There is a stark divide between who has caused climate change and who is suffering its effects.
Climate change is often understood as an environmental issue, one that we are all in together, and therefore not something that could be in any way construed as racist.
However the Global North is responsible for 92% of all excess global emissions, while the Global South is responsible for only 8%. The nations of the Global North have effectively colonised the atmospheric commons. They’ve enriched themselves as a result, but with devastating consequences for the rest of the world and for all of life on Earth.
Here is where energy use and resource consumption are highest – and therefore where carbon footprints are largest. It is not difficult to see that a racial disparity is at play here. The European colonial powers, and the European settler colonies, are disproportionately responsible for causing excess emissions.
Centuries of unequal power relationships have embedded this structural injustice, so that climate change echoes the power relationships of colonialism and empire.
Independence may have brought political freedom, but many structural injustices remain.
The flow of wealth is the same as it was under empire, with rich white countries extracting what they need from other countries. People from ethnic minorities are more likely to have persistent low incomes and among young people unemployment rates are high.
Without taking into account those most affected, climate solutions will turn into climate exclusion and there is worse to come.
For example the home of slavery in the USA the Mississippi River basin because of drought is now filling with salt water.
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The most visible is inter-personal racism, which is ugly and all-too familiar. At its most obvious, this would include racist graffiti, online abuse, or racist chanting at football matches. Much of it is less overt than that, a matter of prejudice and stereotyping.
There are deeper levels to racism.
It can be institutional, where people of colour receive an inferior level of service or care. When dealing with institutional racism, there may not be any one specific event or person that can be identified as the problem. The difference in how people are treated is buried away in processes and systems – “racism without racists” as it is sometimes described.
When racism becomes structural in this way, it can operate without obvious intent.
This is certainly the case with climate change – there is no secret committee of white people plotting to impose climate disaster on the Global South. And yet people of colour still find themselves at a disadvantage, and experience differences in outcomes that are visible in the statistics.
Coming from a colonial past means it is from a period when one country invaded another, took control and forced their laws on the native people in order to exploit them. An example of this is that Britain colonised India, Ireland and North America, to name a few.
The idea of race was invented to magnify the differences between people of European origin and those of African descent whose ancestors had been involuntarily enslaved and transported to the Americas.
In North America and apartheid-era South Africa, racism dictated that different races (chiefly blacks and whites) should be segregated from one another; that they should have their own distinct communities and develop their own institutions such as churches, schools, and hospitals; and that it was unnatural for members of different races to marry.
Despite constitutional and legal measures aimed at protecting the rights of racial minorities the private beliefs and practices of many remained racist, and some group of assumed lower status was often made a scapegoat. That tendency has persisted well into the 21st century.
By the 19th century, racism had matured and spread around the world.
Those seen as the low-status races, especially in colonized areas, were exploited for their labour, and discrimination against them became a common pattern in many areas of the world.
It is quite challenging to determine if a person is racist or not based on a simple questionnaire.
In fact modern evolutionary biology is making enormous contributions to our understanding of how our ideas of race, racism, gender and sexism arise.
There is absolutely no basis for thinking in terms of “races”; The theory has been disproved in genetics, biology, anthropology (the study of human societies), geography and all of the sciences.
Racism is a social construct, which means it was created by people.
It was essentially propaganda to justify mass enslavement and dehumanisation. It also exploited fear that people can have of others who look or behave in ways they view as dissimilar to them.
Historically Irish people were “racialised” through the process of British conquest and colonialism in Ireland, although they have the same skin colour as the British. British colonial writing has labelled Irish people as drunken, as animals, treacherous, primitive, and illiterate. Today, many other groups of people (mostly “non-white” and non-European, but also including white-skinned groups like Irish Travellers or eastern European migrants in Ireland) still experience similar processes of racialisation.
In many parts of the world, migrants are racialised for being migrants. Jews are racialised for being Jews and Muslims are racialised for being Muslims.
Racism is one of many expressions of our evolved capacity to live and work in groups. Religious bigotry, ethnic mistrust and even an intense dislike.
A recent example is a group of fundamental Jews spiting at Christian in Israel. The world could wake up on Tuesday to a more religious-nationalist, belligerent and less tolerant Israel, turning into a democtatorship. The Jewish state will be more corrupt, religious-nationalist, less tolerant and liberal, and more belligerent at the expense of the Palestinians.
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How we might use an improved understanding of the origins of racism to elevate societies when we often conceal our attitudes and biases from others – and even from ourselves?
We all know that with the coming climate change people (not immigrants) are on the move and will do so in their billions as their homes become un – liveable.
The Question therefore is with the emerging understanding of race is it likely to lead to a more equitable society.
Not on your nelly – I am alright Jack is already prevalent, with Walls, Barbwire fences, Deportation to Rwanda, It’s really its tied into the idea that people aren’t really human beings.
The problems, in short, are not about race: they are fundamentally social and economic, better seen in terms of social class and economic inequality than in racial terms.
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The main question posed by immigration is whether you are comfortable living near neighbours of a different race.
India ranks as the most racist of the countries. India has little immigration and few international residents. As a result, most of its people are of Indian descent themselves. This detail is considered to be a major contributing factor to racism in India.
Lebanon is another country comprised primarily of people who share a similar ethnic background. This low level of diversity means Lebanon’s citizens are typically opposed to mingling with people of other races for the sole reason that they are not used to doing so in a day-by-day setting.
Italy has a serious problem with racism. The racism isn’t restricted to right or left, old or young, rural or urban: it is noticeable everywhere.
The conundrum of Italian racism is that Italy, ever a country of contradictions, is also a place of remarkable generosity and hospitality.
Britain has made huge progress in countering discrimination against black people. No landlord any more could put up a sign in his window saying ‘No blacks or Irish’. In 1993, a black teenager called Stephen Lawrence was killed by a group of white men in an unprovoked racist attack in London.
The killing of an unarmed black man, George Floyd, at the hands of a white American police officer has sparked outrage and protest in the United States and throughout the world.
Qatar the most racist country, a “de facto caste system based on national origin.
It’s this: why it is that black lives don’t seem to matter so much.
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What is the abiding poison of white privilege, and for which blacks themselves have no responsibility?
How worried are you about the prospect of racial polarisation on our streets? And what’s your answer to the underlying question: Is Britain racist?
It’s starkly evident that major ethnic and racial inequalities persist in employment, housing and the justice system.
Exploitation of ethnic, religious and cultural hatreds is probably the most universal feature of fascism/ with racism difficult to eradicate.
In other words, racism is when an individual, group, structure or institution intentionally or unintentionally abuse their power to the detriment (meaning to have a negative impact) on people, because of their actual or perceived “racialised” background.
Defines racism as any action, practice, policy, law, speech, or incident which has the effect (whether intentional or not) of undermining anyone’s enjoyment of their human rights.
Indeed, minds cannot be changed by laws, but beliefs about human differences can and do change, as do all cultural elements.
Black and Muslim minorities have twice the unemployment rate of their white British peers and are twice as likely to live in overcrowded housing. They are also much more likely to be stopped and searched by the police. We could also add to the list the alarming ethnic differences in deaths from COVID-19.
That disparities of the kind demonstrated by the website do not, in themselves, prove that racism and discrimination are the driving forces behind the inequalities. But, when combined with other direct evidence, it’s hard to avoid concluding that they play a role.
Racism is too often used as a “catch-all explanation” for disparities and impediments for people from minority groups. Social media enormously amplifies racist views, to current modern immigration.
African voices are not well represented in climate summits, leaving climate justice out of the equation.
Without a doubt, racism influences the likelihood of exposure to environmental and health risks.
Whether by conscious design or institutional neglect, communities of colour in urban ghettos, in rural ‘poverty pockets’, or on economically impoverished area’s will face some of the worst environmental devastation.
Take wildfire vulnerability it is spread unequally across race and ethnicity.
If you want to understand why 40 years of climate diplomacy has failed to bend the curve on temperature rises, you have to go back and understand racialised capitalism – how race is codified to justify the exploitation and subjugation of people.
Climate justice, social justice and racial justice are all interconnected.
Even though some exploitative practices may be in the past, the legacy of their unjust structures remains, and carries through into decision-making about climate change today.
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≈ Comments Off on THE BEADY EYE OPEN LETTER TO THE DELEGATES OF THE COP28 MEETING IN DUBAI, UNITED ARAB EMIRATES(UAE).
( Four minute read)
The 2023 UN Climate Change Conference will convene from 30 November to 12 December 2023 in Dubai, United Arab Emirates (UAE).
This the 28th meeting with the UNFCCC Secretariat announced that Sultan Ahmed Al Jaber, Minister of Industry and Advanced Technology and UAE Special Envoy for Climate Change, has been appointed to serve as COP 28 President-Designate.
Al Jaber has been Group CEO and Managing Director of ADNOC since 2016. Founded in 1971, it is one of the world’s largest energy producers, with a current production capacity of four million barrels of oil and 11 billion cubic feet of natural gas per day. The group comprises nearly 19 businesses with operations in exploration, production, storage, refining, trading, and petrochemical products development. Al Jaber is also a member of the U.A.E.’s Federal Cabinet, the country’s Minister of Industry and Advanced Technology, and the U.A.E.’s special envoy for climate.
Dr. Al Jaber has previously served on the United Nations Secretary General’s High Level Group on Sustainable Energy for All. He has received various awards including the United Nations flagship award “Champion of the Earth” in 2012, given to outstanding visionaries and leaders in the fields of policy, science and entrepreneurship.
Of course if you Google him (from the info known) you will see that he is no ordinary individual but mandated by his position of Minister of Industry and Advanced Technology to increase industrial competitiveness and help drive economic growth by catalysing the diversification of the UAE’s economy.
So his appointment to serve as COP 28 President-Designate, a vital role in the annual climate talks, acting as an “honest broker” among bickering governments, and with a large degree of latitude in determining the direction of the talks and what issues are given priority and negotiating time is either a breath-taking conflict of interest or is it just what is required, a deep understanding of energy systems.
Remember that the UAE is one of the 10 largest oil producers in the world.
Their state oil company pumped 2.7 million barrels of oil per day in 2021, its Petroleum Exporting Countries (Opec) aims to expand to nearly double output to five million barrels per day by 2027 – a target date brought forward from 2030 two months ago by Jaber.
Is it the equivalent of appointing the CEO of a cigarette company to oversee a conference on cancer cures? He will surely tout the UAE investments in renewable energy but the reality is that the climate talks will be run by the CEO of a company betting on climate failure.
So the Conference will open the floodgates for greenwashing and oil and gas deals to keep exploiting fossil fuels.
These are the worst possible credentials for an upcoming Cop president.
Dear Delegates.
In an era of international tensions, governments need to separate climate from geopolitics..
It is academic to the Climate, whether its a Sultan or a defrocked priest whom presides over the conference. Climate change is indifferent in its causes and its effects.
You dont have be told, that climate has no borders it is a global problem.
You dont have to be told, no matter what is agreed it is going to require trillion annually.
You dont have to be told, that the key actions required to bend the emissions curve sharply downwards by 2030 are well understood,
You dont have to be told, to achieve aglobal pathway to keep the 1.5°C temperature goal alive requires the world to come together quickly with greater ambition, improved implementation, and stronger international cooperation are critical in helping countries achieve global climate goals..
What matters is emissions, regardless of which country produces them, calling for leadership on collaborative efforts to tackle them.
So I would like to underscore that net zero by 2050 globally doesn’t mean net zero by 2050
for every country.
To recognizes the importance of supporting an equitable transition that takes different national circumstances into account, with advanced economies reaching net zero sooner will require trillions, not invested in to greenwashing carbon credits, or profit seeking algorithms, etc.
To deliver a successful COP 28 that drives global transformation towards a low-emission and climate-resilient world, fosters ambitious climate action and facilitates implementation, including the related support let me suggest the following: (Against the back ground of July 2023 which was the hottest month on record – serving up severe wildfires, droughts, floods and storms all further underlined that the climate crisis is with us and that the costs are mounting.)
Today much of the momentum is in small, modular clean energy technologies like solar PV
and batteries, these alone are not sufficient to deliver net zero emissions.
Its all comes down to common sense.
Climate change actions will follow where the money goes.
Clean energy investment is paid back over time through lower fuel bills.
The publication of the first Net Zero Roadmap by the International Energy Agency (IEA) in
May 2021 was a landmark moment for the energy and climate world, setting out what would
need to happen in the global energy sector in the years and decades ahead to limit global
warming to 1.5 °C..
It quickly became our most viewed and downloaded publication ever, a sign of the
strong demand for clear and unbiased analysis, translating the temperature goals of the Paris
Agreement into practical milestones for the global energy sector.
Above all, this needs to be a unified effort in which governments put tensions aside and find ways to work together on what is the defining challenge of our time. All of us, and in particular future generations, will
remember with gratitude those who act upon the urgency of now.
This year, more than ever, unity is a prerequisite for success.
If we do the right things now and take them to scale, we will create vast economic potential for everyone.
All countries will need to act, all elements of the energy system will need to be addressed, and we must have an honest conversation about what it will take to deliver a responsible and just transition that empowers climate-positive development everywhere, in particular across the Global South.
Finance is a critical enabler of climate action. But to unleash its power, climate finance must be affordable, available, and accessible to developing countries.
We need to enable the formation and deployment of new private capital to help countries take a path of private sector and technology-led growth that is consistent with the Paris Agreement. To accelerate progress, we need to reform and harmonize regulatory systems, including agreeing on definitions for transition finance and disclosure of climate-related data, and unlock voluntary carbon markets.
So why not all agreed on repayable grants, that could be made available, funded by a Perpetual World Commission of 0.05% on all activities that are not sustainable. ( See previous posts)
There are more than 25,000 pieces of space debris measuring over 10cm long orbiting the earth, if we continue destroying the Earth there will be billions of human’s roaming what left.
IT WON’T BE LONG BEFORE WE NEED TO REINVENT WHAT A STATE/OR COUNTRIES BOARDERS MEANS.
(Fifteen minute read)
It is absolutely essential that we use common sense in many situations, particularly when trying to understand and deal with other human beings. We cannot leave millions of displaced people and their hosts to face the consequences of a changing climate alone.
Just five countries produce 68% of all refugees displaced abroad: the Syrian Arab Republic, Venezuela, Afghanistan, South Sudan, Myanmar and Yemen and the Ukraine.
There are more than 60 million internally displaced people – this has risen to 200 million at the end of 2023.
While there is a general consensus that global warming impacts us all, the role it will play in future human migration is often underestimated. Climate change disproportionately impacts developing countries, and more specifically fragile states.
It is estimated that, by 2050, between 150 to 200 million people are at risk of being forced to leave their homes as a result of desertification, rising sea levels and extreme weather conditions.
Disinformation doesn’t need to be sophisticated to be successful, because disinformation travels faster online than the truth.
This is why we have a plague of greenwashing from both governments and manufacturing industries both using social media and advertising to promote almost every thing as good for the environment.
The last few years may well go down in history as the golden age of greenwashing, but it’s not until very recently that this practice has truly taken off.
Greenwashing is our Pied Piper to climate doom.
Everything, (thanks to the advertising industry) has gone from Non Bio to ECO, BIO and ORGANIC all forms of Greenwashing, when in fact there is no such thing as Bio. (The terms eco, bio or organic denote a product with a mass of at least 95% organic ingredients. The remaining 5% is left in the case of atmospheric pollution.)
The term greenwashing itself seems to have first appeared back in the 1980s, at a time of major environmental disasters and climate science going mainstream.
Having put down the climate denial playbook, many oil and gas firms reached for the greenwash spray gun to create the false perception, that planet-critical problems are and were being tackled, even solved, when they are not.
Greenwashing also comes with an additional twist:
Under this mass hypnosis, public pressure on polluting companies evaporates and the tough decisions needed to cut carbon emissions are kicked into the long grass.
The most recent example of this. Is the UK government granting the go ahead to the development of The Rosebank Oil field, under the pretence that producing Oil rather than importing it, saves Co2 admission.
A single new oil and gas field in the North Sea would be enough to exceed the UK’s carbon budgets from its operations alone. The emissions from Rosebank’s operations alone – not counting any emissions from burning the oil and gas it is likely to produce – are likely to reach 5.6m tonnes of carbon dioxide.
The UK government cannot allow big polluters to use offsetting as an alibi to carry on fuelling the climate emergency while pretending that they’re tackling the problem.
It’s riddled with flaws.
“Morally obscene” and we should worry about it.
Sadly, the way out of the climate emergency is just not simple.
The aim is pretty much obvious. To delay or avoid action to avert catastrophic climate change.
Offsetting schemes provide a good story that allows companies to swerve away from taking meaningful action on their carbon emissions. Offset schemes also serve to make fossil fuels more palatable to increasingly eco-conscious consumers.
If big polluters like oil giants and airlines can have their “carbon-neutral” petrol and flights, what about that other major source of planet-heating emissions, the meat industry?
Why can’t they have their net-zero bacon?
Greenwash is raining all around us, sprayed by an out-of-control garden sprinkler of profit seeking algorithms, before sustainability.
Is there anything we can do to stop it?
And what about the law? Is greenwashing legal?
There’s no specific law banning greenwashing.
If we’re serious about tackling climate change, there is only one answer to the problem: these companies and industries need to put people and planet over profit by completely overhauling their business models.
The threat posed by climate change and its social repercussions dwarf those surrounding national security.
It is a problem that is going to brake the camel back, the redistribution of the world population.
It could not be more global in nature.
No Cop meeting is going to solve this problem.
With up to three billion people expected to be displaced by the effects of global warming by the end of the century, should it lead to a shift in the way we think about national borders?
If we dont unavoidable increases in multiple climate hazards, wars will be the net result.
No one country can tackle them on their own no matter how large their population, how strong their economy or how feared their military.
The challenges threatening global cooperation are as clear as the need, which makes it one of the most serious issues of the day. Already record numbers of people are being forced to flee their homes with each passing year. In 2021, there were 89.3 million people, double the number forcibly displayed a decade ago, and in 2022 that number reached 100 million, with climate disasters displacing many more people than conflicts.
Back to Borders:
Borders define our fate, our life expectancy, our identity, and so much more.
Our borders don’t exist as immutable facets of the landscape, they are not natural parts of our planet, and were invented relatively recently. Most of these imaginary lines with our soaring populations, dramatic climate changes and resource scarcity are not fit for the world of the 21st Century.
The conditions are changing.
An estimated 279 million people are packed into a thin band of land, which cuts through countries including India, Pakistan, Bangladesh, China, the United States and Mexico.
On average, climate niches – the range of conditions at which species can normally exist – around the world are moving pole wards at a pace of 1.15m (3.8ft) per day.
As global temperatures increase, causing climate change, sea level rise and extreme weather over the coming decades, large parts of the world that are home to some of the biggest populations will become increasingly hard to live in. Coastlines, island states and major cities in the tropics will be among the hardest hit, according to predictions by climate scientists.
With so many people on the move, will this mean that invented political borders, ostensibly imposed for national security, become increasingly meaningless?
Today just over 3% of the global population are international migrants. However, migrants contribute around 10% of global GDP or $6.7tn (£5.9tn) – some $3tn (£2.6tn) more than they would have produced in their origin countries.
The main barrier is our system of borders – movement restrictions either imposed by someone’s own state or by the states they wish to enter.
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Close to 193 million people were experiencing acute food insecurity, which is an increase of almost 40 million since 2020.
The World Bank updated the International Poverty Line from $1.90 to $2.15. This means anyone living on less than $2.15 is in “extreme poverty.” 62% of the global population lives on less than $10/day.
And we wonder why we are having problems with migration.
The conversation about migration has become stuck on what ought to be allowed, rather than planning for what will occur.
Everyone could be offered an official form of United Nations citizenship in addition to their birth citizenship.
For some people, such as those born in refugee camps, lacking papers, or citizens of small island states that will cease to exist later this century, UN citizenship may well be their only access to international recognition and assistance, even though citizenship is a human right.
Passports could be issued on the back of this.
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The main problem with refugees and migrants is identification and this problem is only going one direction.
What if refugees and migrants were issued with a Digital United Nations Statues Cards ( allowing temporary residence till its feasible to return to their countries of origin.)
Green for Genuine refugees, Red for Economic migrants.
Such a card could record the date of entry, date of birth, name, country of origin, and be used as Id.
Each card has a ping number, that has to be activate yearly TO ADVOID AN EXPIRY DATE, also in order to received any service or work.
After all lots of countries need migrant labour’s, it being one of biggest economic resource.
With the card it could be managed far more effectively and efficiently.
THEY WOULD GO A LONG WAY TO HELP TO ADVOD A HUMANITY ARMAGEDDON DUE TO CLIMATE CHANGE / MIGRATION.
There are, however, true human borders set not by politics or hereditary sovereigns, but by the physical properties of our planet. These planetary borders for our mammal species are defined by geography and climate. Humans cannot live in large numbers in Antarctica or in the Sahara Desert, for instance.
The war in Ukraine has sparked the fastest-growing refugee crisis since WWII.
Combined with current war’s all undermine global efforts to combat climate change the possibilities that any one conflicts can spin out of anyone’s control remains high.
The greatest danger to humanity came from nuclear weapons” if NATO stepped in to help Ukraine.
The continuing stream of disinformation about bio weapons laboratories in Ukraine raises concerns that Russia itself maybe thinking of deploying such weapons.
Compounding this, the global population is still growing. and with the advent of social media Global democracy is eroding. Rapid digitalization comes with many issues like the world is becoming complacent about the potential risks to the plant.
Restoring trust and fostering cooperation within and between countries will be crucial to addressing the challenges from cybersecurity threats to humanitarian emergencies, to protecting democracy.
Strong cooperation between countries, preventing the world from drifting further apart.
So where are we.
Today, we are experiencing a planetary crisis and I believe it is time to see ourselves as members of one globally dispersed species that must cooperate to survive. The scale of the climate crisis requires new global cooperation and, I believe, new international citizenship with global bodies for migration and for the biosphere – new authorities that are paid for by our taxes and to which nation states are accountable.
Try, if you will, to clear from your mind the idea of people being fixed to a location they were born in, as if it affects your value as a person or your rights as an individual. As if nationality were anything more than an arbitrary line drawn on a map. See instead these lines as fusions of cultural richness, transitions rather than barriers across the possibilities that Earth’s lands offer us all.
Currently, the United Nations has no executive powers over nation states, but that may well need to change if we are to bring down global temperatures, reduce the concentration of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere and restore the world’s biodiversity.
When it comes to addressing poverty, climate change, healthcare, gender equality, and more, corruption gets in the way. Because corruption is a global problem, global solutions are necessary. Reform, better accountability systems, and open processes will all help.
Science/ Technology’s must pair with equity or they will actually make inequalities worse.
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It will take work to reinvent the concept of the nation state so it becomes more inclusive so that it strengthens local connections while forging greater and more equitable global networks.
The Green New Deals proposed in the European Union and the US are examples of policies aimed at restoring economies, providing jobs and boosting dignity while helping unite people in a bigger social project of environmental transformation.
Finally the debt crises will become one of the most pressing issues over the next decade
All human comments appreciated. All like clicks and abuse chucked in the bin.