Rishi Sunak has given Britainâs full approval to the flattening of Gaza.
Late on 7 October, the prime minister tweeted âwe stand unequivocally with Israelâ. Sunak had expressed âfull solidarityâ to Benjamin Netanyahu, the tweet added.
As Netanyahu had promised âmighty vengeanceâ following the Hamas-led offensive that morning, there was no room for doubt about the signal which Sunak was sending.
In a few words, Sunak took Britainâs foreign policy to a new extreme.
Israelâs âmighty vengeanceâ is shaping up to be its most destructive bombardment ever of Gaza and its 2.3 million inhabitants.
A âmighty vengeanceâ endorsed by 10 Downing Street.
Linkage
Things Katy is reading.
Using a free browser is now more important than ever. We've written recently on this topic, but the issue we wrote about there was minor compared to the gross injustice Google is now attempting to force down the throats of web users around the world. The so-called "Web Environment Integrity" (WEI) is the worst stunt we've seen from them in some time. Beginning its life as an innocuous, if worrying, policy document posted to Microsoft GitHub, Google has now fast-tracked its development into their Chromium browser. At its current rate of progress, WEI will be upon us in no time.
By giving developers an API through which they can approve certain browser configurations while forbidding others, WEI is a tremendous step toward the "enshittification" of the web as a whole. Many of us have grown up with a specific idea of the Internet, the notion of it as a collection of hyperlinked pages that can be accessed by a wide variety of different machines, programs, and operating systems. WEI is this idea's antithesis.
I don't think Jeremy wrote the headline for this.
We should condemn the targeting of all civilian life, no matter who does it. That this is apparently controversial is testament to the depravity of a media and political class that shuts down, distorts and denounces calls for peace. The heinous attacks on civilians in Israel by Hamas were utterly deplorable.
This cannot justify the indiscriminate killing of Palestinians, who are paying a price for a crime they did not commit. All human life is equal. Why is it so difficult for our politicians to be consistent in this basic moral principle?
This is the question that many people in this country are asking when they express solidarity with the Palestinian people. They are not expressing support for Hamas. To deliberately conflate the two is a disgusting, cynical and chilling attempt to further erode our democratic rights, and wilfully ignores a very basic demand: to stop the killing of innocent people.
Blaming Russia, or third party candidates who never poll in significant numbers for the election of Trump and the rise of Christian fascism, is infantile. The Libertarian Party received 1.2 percent of the vote in the last presidential election. The Greens, 0.26 percent. The death blow to democracy is not those who vote for fringe parties, but apathy. Eighty million eligible voters did not vote in the last presidential election, no doubt because they did not expect much to change in their lives whoever was in office. And they were probably right.
The root cause of our political distress lies with a liberal class that places corporate and personal profit above the common good. Liberals have conspired, since the presidency of Bill Clinton, to strip the country of manufacturing, and with it, jobs that sustained the working class. They have been partners in the transformation of democratic institutions into tools to consolidate the power and wealth of corporations and the ruling oligarchs. They forgot the fundamental lesson of fascism. Fascism is always the bastard child of bankrupt liberalism. This was true in Weimar Germany. It was true in Italy. It was true in the former Yugoslavia with its warring ethnic factions. And it is true in the United States.
The LGBTQ movementâfirst the campaigners for gay and lesbian rights, and now for transgender rightsâdeserve credit for shaking up our thinking. Theyâve made a compelling case that most of the old beliefs about gender were arbitrary taboos, trapping people in lives that confined them and made them miserable. Just as weâve rejected stereotypes about how women or people of color were âmeantâ to live, weâre now confronting these stereotypes in turn.
However, every step forward provokes a backlash from those who benefitâor seek to benefitâfrom oppression. The Catholic church (and, sad to say, Richard Dawkins) are clinging to the notion that all the old beliefs about gender were fine as they were and nothing needs to be questioned or changed. They continue to insist that people should be compelled into roles determined at birth, with no regard for what those people want for themselves.
âI want to be clear. Trans kids arenât considering or attempting suicide because of who they are, but because of who we are in this building right now,â he said.
âThe authors of this garbage are responsible for trans suicides, for trans attempted suicides. It isnât the kids and their identities. Itâs a society in which actual adults sit down in a room and put pen to paper to try to codify their hatred to try to mask their intolerance as concern and to cover their ignorance with a thin veneer of junk science.â
Today, the ownership of digital books is routinely denied to libraries. Many books are offered to libraries in electronic form only, under restrictive temporary licenses; libraries can never own these e-books, but must pay for them over and over, as if they were Netflix movies.
Some publishers have even explicitly named libraries as direct economic competitors.
Digital books have been removed from libraries and edited without librariansâ knowledge or consent. Library patrons who borrow digital books can no longer have the expectation of privacy, with large publishers, distributors and e-book retailers snooping over the shoulder of every reader to build databases that can be sold or shared with advertisers, law enforcement, landlords or immigration agents.
Isnât it strange seeing the same oddly specific word choice inserted over and over and over again about the same event in statements by politicians and pundits, regardless of their political affiliation? When you lay them all out together it starts to sound highly suspicious, like someone always referring to his car as âmy car, which I did not steal,â or always introducing his spouse as âmy wife, whom I do not beat.â Itâs clear by now that whenever you see the word âunprovokedâ being forcefully repeated in a uniform way across the entire political/media class, whatever theyâre talking about was definitely massively provoked.
Last September, New York resident Tara Rule posted a raw, emotional video on Tiktok saying she had been denied a medication to treat a debilitating condition called cluster headaches, because her neurologist told her she was of âchildbearing ageâ and the medication could cause birth defects to a hypothetical fetus.
Rule said that as she sat in her neurologistâs office at Glens Falls Hospital, she told him she never planned to have kids and would have an abortion if she became pregnant; referencing the overturning of Roe v. Wade, he responded that getting the care she was seeking is âtrickier now with the way things are going.â He also said she should bring her partner âin on the conversationâ on her medical care. Rule asked if the issue preventing her from getting the âhighly effectiveâ medication was solely that she could become pregnant and, âIf I was, like, through menopause, would [the medication] be very effective for cluster headaches?â The doctor affirmed it would. He also asked about her sex life and whether sheâs âwith a steady person.â Rule shared audio recordings of the appointment on TikTok at the time.
Five years ago, the Labour Partyâs conference was a sea of Palestinian flags. Delegates voted overwhelmingly to support suspending the sale of arms to Israel, in solidarity with the people of Palestine. As this yearâs Labour conference convenes in Liverpool, those very weapons manufacturers will be welcomed with open arms. Boeing â who earlier this year agreed to supply the Israeli Air Force with twenty-five fighter jets â will sponsor the New Statesmanâs fringe events. They will be joined by an array of fossil fuel companies, banks, and industry lobbyists determined to woo the âgovernment in waiting.â The days when an antiwar activist led the party will feel like a long time ago.