Linkage

Things Katy is reading.

COVID cases are rising across Australia. Here's a rundown of the latest advice

in ABC News  

Australia appears to be on the cusp of an eighth COVID-19 wave, with an increase in cases across the country. 

Victoria's acting chief health officer has suggested all Melburnians consider donning masks again as community transmission surges, while NSW chief health officer Kerry Chant says case numbers will likely rise in the lead-up to Christmas.

via Daniel Bowen

Melbourneā€™s most liveable suburbs arenā€™t in the CBD or the outer fringe

for The Age  

Her firmā€™s research, she argued, showed it was clear that it was not the highest skyscraper-dominated areas nor sprawling, car-dependent greenfield developments where people were most content but somewhere in between; neighbourhoods with multiple local centres, parks, green streets and a mix of apartment buildings from three to 12 storeys, terraces, townhouses and some larger stand-alone homes, too.

ā€œEverything theyā€™re asking for us is all good stuff ā€“ thereā€™s nothing crazy. We want green, walkable, compact and well-maintained neighbourhoods,ā€ she said.

via Tim Richards

14 big landlords used software to collude on rent prices, DC lawsuit says

in Ars Technica  

The complaint, filed earlier today by Attorney General Brian Schwalb, focuses on the multifamily landlords' use of software from Texas-based firm RealPage, which suggests rental prices based on a pricing algorithm. Key to those models, according to the suit, is the data fed in from the landlords and the pressure RealPage puts on them to stick to the code-derived rental rates.

"RealPage and the defendant landlords illegally colluded to artificially raise rents by participating in a centralized, anticompetitive scheme, causing District residents to pay millions of dollars above fair market prices,ā€ Schwalb said in a release tied to the complaint.

via Sam Floreani

What gives Israel the right to annihilate Gaza?

in openDemocracy  

As researchers both specialising on Palestine, we've taken a keen interest in what they've been saying. And on the side of Israel's apologists, weā€™ve seen two main narratives at work.

Both are deeply flawed. The first ignores all context to portray Israel as the undeniable victim of a brutish neighbour. The second draws selectively on context to portray Hamas and Israel as more or less equal adversaries tragically unable to come to an accord. This narrative, designed to appeal to moderates and confound pro-Palestinian messaging, argues that everyone has blood on their hands in this endless cycle of violence ā€“ meaning no easy condemnation of Israel is possible.

[ā€¦] 

When the capacity of one side to exert violence over the other is so overwhelmingly disproportionate, surely even to the most moderate of moderates, something rings discordant here.

via Naked Capitalism

ā€˜Hostile architectureā€™ vs. beautification: Sidewalk planters are flashpoint in homelessness crisis

in San Francisco Chronicle  

Advocates for homeless people refer to the planters as ā€œhostile architectureā€ meant to push the homeless population out of sight. The strategy is far from new: For years, frustrated residents and business owners in San Francisco, and even the city itself, have turned to architecture to prevent encampments on the street ā€” things like planters, boulders or rocky pavement, windowsill spikes, curved or slanted or segmented benches, or even loud music or sprinklers meant to prevent the unhoused from sleeping, sitting or setting up camp in certain public spaces. 

via Otis White

Zionist Keir Starmer At Odds With His Own Party

in CounterPunch  

Starmer, like Biden, insists that ā€œIsrael has the right to defend itselfā€. On the specific matter of international law, this is not a legal right. Israel, an aggressor because of its two-decade-long siege/blockade of Gaza, cannot claim ā€œself-defenseā€ to justify its violence against armed resistance to this illegal siege/blockade. When a Nazi claimed that Germany attacked Russia in ā€œself-defenseā€ during WW2, a judge at the Nuremberg Tribunal said:

ā€œOne of the most amazing phenomena of this case which does not lack in startling features is the manner in which the aggressive war conducted by Germany against Russia has been treated by the defense as if it were the other way around. ā€¦If it is assumed that some of the resistance units in Russia or members of the population did commit acts that were in themselves unlawful under the rules of war, it would still have to be shown that these acts were not in legitimate defense against wrongs perpetrated upon them by the invader. Under International Law, as in Domestic Law, there can be no reprisal against reprisal. The assassin who is being repulsed by his intended victim may not slay him and then, in turn, plead self-defenseā€. (Trial of Otto Ohlendorf and others, Military Tribunal II-A, April 8, 1948)

Rashid Khalidi: ā€œWe Are Seeing a Horrifying Attempt to Shut Down Speech Around Palestineā€

in Jacobin  

Itā€™s very hard to see a strategy that leads to political change, if you accept a settler-colonial paradigm, in the metropole or in the colony ā€” and more importantly in the metropole. If you look at the wars of independence in Ireland, Algeria, and Vietnam, or the struggle against apartheid in South Africa, what was happening on the battlefield was part of a larger political strategy that also included the metropole.

For example, it meant convincing popular opinion in Britain and the US that Irish independence was a worthy and achievable aim ā€” or at least in the case of England, that it was a war not worth fighting. The Irish Republican Army won, I think, in Manchester, Birmingham, London, New York, and Boston as much as it won in Cork. They were on the back foot in military terms by the middle of 1921. But the British decided that they couldnā€™t sustain the war any longer.

It was the same with Algeria, Vietnam, and South Africa. Without the battle of Algiers or the Tet Offensive or the struggle in the townships, those liberation movements would not have won. But without the demonstrations in the US, you wouldnā€™t have had the US government deciding that it couldnā€™t win the war in Vietnam.

via Michael

English councils seek Ā£100m to avert collapse of homelessness services

in The Guardian  

A letter signed by a cross-party group of local authority leaders in England indicates that some town halls in effect face bankruptcy and describes mounting temporary housing bills for homeless households as a ā€œcritical risk to the financial sustainability of many local authoritiesā€.

It calls for an immediate cash injection of Ā£100m for councils to provide emergency rent support for families at risk of homelessness, together with an end to the four-year freeze on housing allowance rates and long-term investment in social housing.

ā€œWithout urgent intervention, the existence of our safety net is under threat,ā€ says the letter to Hunt, the chancellor. ā€œThe danger is that we have no option but to start withdrawing services which currently help so many families to avoid hitting crisis point.ā€

Tap off: Why Melbourneā€™s public transport system doesnā€™t need ticket cops

in The Age  

Most of the revenue lost in Victoria due to fare evasion comes from the career evaders, who were the smallest group of the four. These people were found to be typically wealthy and chose to evade for the challenge rather than being unable to afford the ride. Of this group, Currie said, ā€œWeā€™ve got this archetypal, old view that itā€™s a young person or a drop-out thatā€™s doing bad stuff. No, thatā€™s not whatā€™s going on.ā€

What is going on, though, is that despite research showing the majority of fare evaders not having criminal intent, they are still being treated as though they do by the Victorian governmentā€™s authorised officers.

via Tim Richards

British police testing women for abortion drugs

in Tortoise Media  

Other reports include requests for ā€œdata related to menstruation tracking applicationsā€ as part of the policeā€™s investigations.

Itā€™s understood these requests have been taking place for at least the past three years. Dr Jonathan Lord, co-chair of the British Society of Abortion Care Providers and an NHS consultant gynaecologist, called searching womenā€™s phones for menstrual data ā€œchilling and deeply intrusiveā€.

ā€œWe already know that police routinely remove phones and computers from women suspected of having an [illegal] abortion and itā€™s even happening following miscarriage and pregnancy loss,ā€ Lord said. ā€œThis is damaging enough as it leaves women frightened and isolated immediately after suffering a substantial trauma.ā€ 

Lord told Tortoise he was aware of cases of blood tests being taken with the womanā€™s consent by NHS staff at the request of police, including, he said, ā€œwhen women knew they were innocent after suffering an unexpected premature deliveryā€.

Even when the test finds no trace of abortion medication women can continue to remain under suspicion ā€œas a negative test does not exclude earlier use of drugsā€, he said. In that event, he argued, ā€œthe only motivation for testing is entrapmentā€. 

via evacide