Organisations such as the Muslim Council of Britain and protest groups such as Palestine Action are among those that could be affected by the non-statutory move to block groups from funding or accessing venues if they are regarded as promoting an ideology that undermines âBritish valuesâ. The plan was reported by the Observer last year.
A minister said on Tuesday that he would not be happy if, for example, gender-critical feminists were labelled as extremists by a change of government policy.
The trade minister Greg Hands told Times Radio that the prime minister had talked about taking on extremism and the government needed to work on definitions.
âThe communities secretary, Michael Gove, is doing that right now. More work is being done. But obviously we need to target real extremism and not just a difference of views, honestly held views about these things,â he added.
In The Guardian
No 10 faces Tory backlash over plans to broaden extremism definition
in The GuardianThe Zone of Interest is about the danger of ignoring atrocities â including in Gaza
in The GuardianâGenocide becomes ambient to their livesâ: that is how Glazer has described the atmosphere he attempted to capture in his film, in which his characters attend to their daily dramas â sleepless kids, a hard-to-please mother, casual infidelities â in the shadow of smokestacks belching out human remains. Itâs not that these people donât know that an industrial-scale killing machine whirs just beyond their garden wall. They have simply learned to lead contented lives with ambient genocide.
It is this that feels most contemporary, most of this terrible moment, about Glazerâs staggering film. More than five months into the daily slaughter in Gaza, and with Israel brazenly ignoring the orders of the international court of justice, and western governments gently scolding Israel while shipping it more arms, genocide is becoming ambient once more â at least for those of us fortunate enough to live on the safe sides of the many walls that carve up our world. We face the risk of it grinding on, becoming the soundtrack of modern life. Not even the main event.
Glazer has repeatedly stressed that his filmâs subject is not the Holocaust, with its well-known horrors and historical particularities, but something more enduring and pervasive: the human capacity to live with holocausts and other atrocities, to make peace with them, draw benefit from them.
When it comes to Australiaâs homelessness deaths, we canât change what we donât measure
in The GuardianThis is a disturbing but largely invisible national crisis, with Guardian Australiaâs investigation revealing an average age of death of a mere 44 years after examining 10 yearsâ worth of coronial death notifications where homelessness was documented. These deaths are the tip of an iceberg as they only include those notified to a coroner and where homelessness or itinerant living was mentioned. From our tracking of deaths among people who have experienced homelessness in Perth, we know the true death toll is much higher. Since 2017 our research team based at the University of Notre Dame has recorded and verified more than 600 deaths in Perth alone, with an average age of 49 years.
âIt will be the end of democracyâ: Bernie Sanders on what happens if Trump wins â and how to stop him
in The GuardianIt is âbeyond patheticâ, he writes in the book, that a phoney corporate hack like Trump should be able to present himself as the âchampion of the working classesâ, while the Democratic party stands back and cedes territory to him. He caricatures the Democratic promise to voters as, âWeâre pretty bad, but Republicans are worseâ, and warns that is simply not good enough.
Which brings us to Biden.
Sanders describes Biden, whom he has known since he was elected to the Senate in 2007, as a likable and decent man. But he has a clear message for the sitting president: step up to the plate or the future of the United States, of the world, is in peril. âThe challenge we face is to be able to show people that government in a democratic society can address their very serious needs. If we do that, we defeat Trump. If we do not, then we are the Weimar republic of the early 1930s.â
In a world built by plutocrats, the powerful are protected while vengeful laws silence their critics
in The GuardianWhy are peaceful protesters treated like terrorists, while actual terrorists (especially on the far right, and especially in the US) often remain unmolested by the law? Why, in the UK, can you now potentially receive a longer sentence for âpublic nuisanceâ â non-violent civil disobedience â than for rape or manslaughter? Why are ordinary criminals being released early to make space in overcrowded prisons, only for the space to be refilled with political prisoners: people trying peacefully to defend the habitable planet?
Thereâs a simple explanation. It was clearly expressed by a former analyst at the US Department of Homeland Security. âYou donât have a bunch of companies coming forward saying: âI wish youâd do something about these rightwing extremists.ââ The disproportionate policing of environmental protest, the new offences and extreme sentences, the campaigns of extrajudicial persecution by governments around the world are not, as politicians constantly assure us, designed to protect society. Theyâre a response to corporate lobbying.
REDcycleâs collapse and the hard truths on recycling soft plastics in Australia
in The GuardianFormed in 2011, REDcycle was a national soft plastics collection and recycling program. It operated across 2,000 Coles and Woolworths supermarkets and some Aldi stores, with customers able to drop off used soft plastics for processing.
Before its collapse in November 2022, the program claimed to collect 5m items a day. Prior to 2018, most of those were sent to China. After that, some were mechanically recycled into road surfacing, bollards, benches and paths in Australia. But a mid-2022 fire at Close the Loopâs Melbourne plant â where soft plastics were turned into an asphalt additive â took away a key recycling pathway. The fire was largely blamed for REDcycleâs suspension along with a âdownturn in market demandâ exacerbated by the Covid pandemic.
Coles and Woolworths said in April 2023 that REDcycle had been stockpiling soft plastics without their knowledge while the scheme itself claimed it had been holding on to the waste while trying to ride out problems.
The discovery of 11,000 tonnes of stockpiled soft plastic at 44 storage locations across the country led to the establishment of the Soft Plastics Taskforce under the aegis of the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission and chaired by the Department of Climate Change, Energy, the Environment and Water. Its members â Coles, Woolworths and Aldi â were tasked with ensuring the rubbish would not reach landfill.
In March 2023, the taskforce released a plan titled the roadmap to restart, which detailed a phased restart of soft plastic collections in stores from the end of the year. That deadline was not met. The taskforce has, however, âconsolidated and safeguardedâ REDcycleâs stockpiles and will run a small-scale soft plastics trial collection in the coming months. Just 120 tonnes have been recycled.
âBritish homes for British workersâ is an empty, century-old, xenophobic slogan
in The GuardianNot a day passes but English families are ruthlessly turned out to make room for the foreign invaders.â âThey canât get a home for their children, they see black and ethnic minority communities moving in and they are angry.â âMillions of ordinary people up and down Britain are utterly fed-up with how immigration is driving up house prices, rents and flooding social housing.â
Three quotes spanning 120 years, the first from the Tory MP for Stepney, William Evans-Gordon, speaking in a parliamentary debate in 1902; the second from a newspaper interview in 2006 by New Labour minister and Barking MP Margaret Hodge; and the third from a Spectator article last month by the academic Matthew Goodwin. A century across which the language has changed but the sentiment has remained the same.
And now we hear that the Tories are preparing to launch a scheme to provide âBritish homes for British workersâ, promising to make it more difficult for migrants to access social housing, which most cannot access anyway.
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âBritish homes for British workersâ may be an empty slogan but it is one that Evans-Gordon would have understood. Implicit is a sentiment that echoes across the century, at the heart of which is a concern less for working-class wellbeing than for pinning on immigrants the blame for the failures of social policy to improve working-class lives.
Arctic zombie viruses in Siberia could spark terrifying new pandemic, scientists warn
in The GuardianâAt the moment, analyses of pandemic threats focus on diseases that might emerge in southern regions and then spread north,â said geneticist Jean-Michel Claverie of Aix-Marseille University. âBy contrast, little attention has been given to an outbreak that might emerge in the far north and then travel south â and that is an oversight, I believe. There are viruses up there that have the potential to infect humans and start a new disease outbreak.â
This point was backed by virologist Marion Koopmans of the Erasmus Medical Center in Rotterdam. âWe donât know what viruses are lying out there in the permafrost but I think there is a real risk that there might be one capable of triggering a disease outbreak â say of an ancient form of polio. We have to assume that something like this could happen.â
In 2014, Claverie led a team of scientists who isolated live viruses in Siberia and showed they could still infect single-cell organisms â even though they had been buried in permafrost for thousands of years. Further research, published last year, revealed the existence of several different viral strains from seven different sites in Siberia and showed these could infect cultured cells. One virus sample was 48,500 years old.
âGender ideologyâ is all around us â but itâs not what the Tories say it is
in The GuardianIn December, five years later than promised, the Tories finally delivered draft, non-statutory guidance for schools on âgender questioning childrenâ. It provoked criticism and concerns from all sides, and is open for consultation until March. But whatever its final form, one aspect of the guidance has gone largely unnoticed.
The document doesnât tell us anything we donât already know about this governmentâs hostile stance on trans identities, inclusion and rights; but, unfortunately, what it does do is further solidify in official documentation and language the politicised phrase âgender identity ideologyâ. The government is attempting to bring into the mainstream this contested term, a creation of rightwing sex and gender conservatism that dates back to the 1990s, and which forms a key part of renewed attacks against the LGBTQ+ community.
As used in this context, the phrase âgender identity ideologyâ is actually nothing to do with gender, as in masculinity and femininity, and how this shapes our identities. Instead, it is used to imply that trans, transgender and gender non-conforming identities are a new fad, and that the longstanding social justice movement for trans rights is really a recent conspiracy of nefarious elites.
The use of terms such as âgender identity ideologyâ, âgender identityâ and âsocial transitionâ serve to obscure the ideology of gender that members of this government, like all sex and gender conservatives, merrily adhere to themselves, and enforce on us all. Gender ideology is real, but it wasnât invented by trans men or trans women, and it doesnât just apply to trans or transgender people. The real gender ideology is the binary sex and gender system that requires all of us to be either male-masculine-heterosexual or female-feminine-heterosexual; and which attaches harsh penalties to those who deviate from this script. Almost all of us will have been socialised on to pink or blue paths from birth, if not by our immediate family, then by the books, TV, toys, clothes and adverts that surrounded us in wider society. This socially prescribed gender informs our gender identity.
Senate votes against Sanders resolution to condition Israel aid on human rights
in The GuardianUS senators have defeated a measure, introduced by Bernie Sanders, that would have made military aid to Israel conditional on whether the Israeli government is violating human rights and international accords in its devastating war in Gaza.
A majority of senators struck down the proposal on Tuesday evening, with 72 voting to kill the measure, and 11 supporting it. Although Sandersâ effort was easily defeated, it was a notable test that reflected growing unease among Democrats over US support for Israel.
The measure was a first-of-its-kind tapping into a decades-old law that would require the US state department to, within 30 days, produce a report on whether the Israeli war effort in Gaza is violating human rights and international accords. If the administration failed to do so, US military aid to Israel, long assured without question, could be quickly halted.