Connect with us

News

Exposing the Jewish National Fund and Radioactive Fracking

Published

on

Exposing the Jewish National Fund and Radioactive Fracking

The Project Censored Show

The Official Project Censored Show

Exposing the Jewish National Fund and Radioactive Fracking



Loading




Advertisement


/

Advertisement
Advertisement

The Jewish National Fund sounds nice enough, especially with their quaint tree-planting campaigns, but as our guest, Palestinian organizer Abdullah Elagha points out, this greenwashed front hides a myriad of atrocities, from ecocide to ethnic cleansing. Elagha outlines the history and present of the organization, a recent fundraising for Israel conference in Colorado, the growing movement for Palestine, and more.

Next up, you might know that fracking stinks – but did you also know that it’s highly radioactive? Investigative journalist and author Justin Nobel joins the show to talk about his nearly decade-long research project quite literally digging to the dark and toxic depths of radioactive fracking waste, what this means for communities and workers, and the vital collaboration between investigative journalists and frontline activists.

Advertisement

Please consider becoming a patron of our work at Patreon.com/ProjectCensored

Eleanor Goldfield: Thank you so much for joining us at the Project Censored Radio Show. We’re very glad right now to be joined by Abdullah Elagha, a Palestinian organizer with the CPC, Colorado Palestine Coalition.

The CPC is a group of organizations local to Colorado that work together to educate the public on the issue of Palestine and to advocate for the liberation of Palestinians.

Abdullah, thanks so much for joining us.

Advertisement

Abdullah Elagha: Yeah. Thanks Eleanor for having me, appreciate it.

Eleanor Goldfield: Yeah, absolutely. So I’d like to start off with the Jewish National Fund, the organization who hosted this global conference for Israel in Colorado this past weekend. For folks listening, we’re recording this on Thursday, December 7th.

As it notes on the CPC Instagram page, “the Jewish National Fund is a Zionist organization with 120 year plus history of dispossession and theft of Palestinian lands, ethnic cleansing and entrenching Israeli apartheid.”

So I was wondering if you could extrapolate more on that and walk us through some more context regarding the JNF, and what that global conference this past weekend was all about.

Advertisement

Abdullah Elagha: Sure. Yeah, I’d love to. So yeah, as you mentioned, the JNF is almost 50 years older than the state of Israel. So the JNF has been around for quite some time and it’s really taken on a lot of different shapes over that time.

I know that a lot of the responses from folks who were attending the conference and folks who are setting up the conference were saying that, you know, the JNF is just a nonprofit. Well, maybe the US branch of the JNF is just a non nonprofit, and the Canadian branch, and the British branch, as they have branches in many different countries. But the JNF at its core has really existed to displace Palestinians and acquire Palestinian land through any means necessary for the 120 years that it’s existed.

Now it’s attempted different strategies to achieve that goal over the past 120 years, but really the goal has always been the same. I think their latest strategy or the latest shape that they have taken is that they’re an environmental organization. As a matter of fact, they tout that they are the world’s oldest environmental organization, which is really hilarious because even their environmental initiatives are not only detrimental to the Palestinian people, but detrimental to Palestinian land as well. And even land that is now considered to be Israeli land, it’s detrimental to that too.

A phrase that’s used here very often is greenwashing and really what greenwashing is, is using things like environmental initiatives to sort of hide more nefarious goals behind it. In this case, they use, for example, the fact that they plant forests, which seems like a great thing, in Israel to hide the fact that they’re planting these forests atop the ruins of ethnically cleansed Palestinian villages.

Advertisement

I don’t know if folks are familiar with the blue Tzedakah boxes that seem to be quite common among a lot of Jewish households. It was the kind of thing that like little kids kind of went from door to door with these blue boxes saying, Oh, hey, donate some money to help plant a tree in Israel.

Oftentimes those trees were planted in these forests that were used to hide these Palestinian villages and prevent Palestinians from ever returning to them. You know, I heard a lot of interesting stories from a lot of my Jewish friends who grew up with these boxes just sitting in their homes and they really had had no idea what the idea behind them was other than, Oh, we’re just planting trees. And as they grew up and came to learn more about the JNF, came to realize what the idea behind them actually was and how horrible it was.

So, I know I jumped around a lot there, but that’s kind of the idea behind our whole campaign against the JNF is just to educate people on what it is.

Eleanor Goldfield: Yeah, absolutely. And I want to get into the greenwashing a bit more in a minute, but I also want to focus on the power of the JNF because I grew up Jewish and I remember seeing those little boxes, particularly at the Jewish Community Center. We didn’t have one in our home, thankfully. But, they are ubiquitous and in terms of the JNF being ubiquitous outside of just the greenwashing campaign, y’all also note that it’s the largest private landowner in the state of Israel, owning 13 percent and effectively controlling 80 percent of what is considered Israeli land.

Advertisement

So what does that translate to in terms of the political power of the JNF as that Zionist organization?

Abdullah Elagha: Yeah, sure. I mean, in terms specifically of the political power, the Israeli Land Management Bureau, I think about 50 percent of their members are also members of the Jewish National Fund.

So they have a direct hand in managing this land, all of which was stolen from Palestinians. So let’s just be very, very clear on that. You know, today it’s considered Israeli land, but before 1947, this was all Palestinian land.

For them to call themselves an environmental organization or a nonprofit is really just an absolute farce.

Advertisement

When you look at their practices on the ground, when you look at their plans for the future, you know, such as a Blueprint Negev where they’re trying to basically terraform, the Naqab, well, they call it the Negev, the Naqab desert in the south of what is now Israel, which has led to the displacement of dozens of Palestinian Bedouin villages who have lived in that desert for hundreds, hundreds, thousands of years.

That desert is, it’s a difficult environment to survive in. If you look at population maps in the area, you will see that the desert is almost completely deserted, save for these Bedouin villages.

Actually, I think it was just a couple of weeks before October 7th, Ben Gvir, who’s the security minister of Israel, he shared a photo where he was at, I don’t know what you would call it, but it was the process of the Israeli military literally ethnically cleansing a Bedouin village, which is part of this Blueprint Negev the JNF is carrying out.

And he posted a photo and he was very excited about it. He was very excited about the fact that these people who lived there for hundreds of years, they’re probably the only people who actually know how to survive in that desert without destroying the environment, which really is what… you know, you can call it terraforming, you’re destroying a native environment, you know, they’re the only people who can live there and he was just sharing his glee in the fact that they had been permanently removed from their homes. And, this just lines up with exactly what the JNF is trying to do.

Advertisement

Eleanor Goldfield: Yeah. And as you’re speaking, it reminds me of, you said that they consider themselves, or they say that they’re the oldest environmental organization, which is that colonial language too, because of course Indigenous peoples across the planet have been in what one might consider an environmental organization if you consider just living with, in concert with the environment. But then colonialism comes in, destroys a place and says that they’re being environmentalists about it.

And just picking from some of the things that y’all have shared, just the language that was used, y’all shared a poster from the JNF from the 50s that said that what they were doing was a “conquest of the desert.” I mean, and just thinking about that language, how could that possibly keep be conflated with something environmental or constructive for that area?

And as you also noted in that post, this also is part of that colonialist mentality that like, oh, this land was uninhabited or at the very least uncared for and needs these Zionists to tend to it.

So I’m, I’m curious if you can share any more, you mentioned this Negev or Naqab project, are there others, particularly like the tree planting, with regards to ignoring native growth and trying to literally put in European, plantations of trees and other such ecocidal practices?

Advertisement

Abdullah Elagha: I think their favorite line is a land without a people for a people without a land. And then their other favorite line is that they made the desert bloom as if the land of Palestine hasn’t been fertile and blossoming for thousands of years.

Their environmental practices are – to call them environmental practices is almost hilarious, you know, the trees that they plant, you kind of mentioned it, are very often European fir trees, which are not native to the environment, which I think is a great parallel.

But, you know, these trees, they plant them, often on top of ethnically cleansed Palestinian villages, but other times they plant them on top of pre existing forests that were covered with native flora. And so when they plant these invasive species, very often wildfires will break out in these areas.

And I’ve seen some incredibly devastating photos that show a wildfire that broke out in one of these forests that were made up of these European fir trees. And then once the fire had cleared out, underneath it you can see the remains of Palestinian villages. You can see the remains of Palestinian farms that had been there, you know, for hundreds, probably thousands of years that were replaced by these invasive trees.

Advertisement

So it sounds surprising, but it’s very much in line with their practices, which their practice is just displace and erase. That’s really the goal of the Jewish National Fund.

Eleanor Goldfield: Yeah, absolutely. And I want to get to the events of this past weekend in particular, because it was the so called Global Conference for Israel. And y’all took part in an action #shutdownJNF.

And I’m curious if you could talk about what the goals of the conference were, and about some of the actions that y’all took to either disrupt or raise awareness about this.

Abdullah Elagha: Yeah, so the global conference is a yearly event that happens in a different city every year. Last year, it was in Boston. The year before, and the year before that, I think it was canceled due to covid.

Advertisement

But really, what it is is it’s an international gathering of Zionists to discuss the Israeli project and to discuss furthering the Israeli project.

Last year in Boston, it was just one day. We had the mispleasure of them doing it here for four days. But, you know, since they did that, we were able to kind of get creative with our counteractions. And, you know, we did have a couple of direct actions and protest because obviously, we would protest the Global Conference for Israel coming to Denver in the best of times.

But right now in the midst of Israel committing genocide in Gaza, where over 20,000 have been killed, over 6,000 of them children. Personally, I’ve lost over 80 family members over the past two months. I’m from Gaza.

So, given the fact that they’re coming here now to network and fundraise in our city, while Israel is committing these atrocities is just absolutely unacceptable.

Advertisement

So, the plan was always to have our counteractions, but you know as I mentioned one of the goals of the CPC is to educate people on Palestine. So we actually had a number of educational events. We had folks fly in from all over the country. We had folks from the Palestinian Youth Movement fly out from the Bay Area and from the D.C. area to give a talk. We had folks from PSL National fly out from New York to give talks. We had someone from the Palestine Solidarity Working Group fly out from New Orleans to give a talk.

So really, we really focused on education here. And they gave just incredible talks, which we called the Global Conference for Palestine, sort of a parallel to that. You know, they love to steal our verbiage, so we figured we’d take some of theirs for the weekend.

But it was a very successful weekend, I think. We saw some photos of the inside of the conference. It seemed to be very sparsely attended, to say the least. The opening night was supposed to be the big night. That was the night where entry was free, open to the public, as long as you just registered, and videos from inside of the lecture hall where the UN ambassador, Gilad Erdan, and our governor, Jared Polis, gave the opening remarks for the conference. There were a lot of empty seats in there.

I think that our march on Saturday easily had more attendees than their conference. So I would call their conference a fail. I don’t think we were able to shut it down. But, I think it made them look very bad. I think it made our governor look very bad.

Advertisement

On Sunday during our car rally, somebody spotted that there was somebody who had been attending the conference wearing an extremely racist T-shirt that called for the murder of Arabs.

I’m happy to send you that photo. It’s kind of been making the rounds online. But he was standing right next to someone wearing a Global Conference for Israel lanyard. So it seems like these are the people who our governor decided to align himself with and spend the weekend with, which is very shameful.

But yeah, we would consider our actions a huge success for this weekend. And we also plan to follow them wherever they might go, whatever city they end up in next year. We definitely plan to connect with the organizers there and make sure that the JNF knows that they’re not welcome anywhere they go here.

Eleanor Goldfield: Yeah, absolutely. And I think, again, like you said, I think so much of it is just raising that awareness with people in the community to know that the JNF is not some benign organization.

Advertisement

And I’m curious, too, because we’ve talked about on this show in the past, in particular, projects like Operation Butterfly which, the whole goal was, you know, Netanyahu working with Americans like Adelson to ensure that there was a crackdown on any kind of critique of Israel, both in thought and an action.

And we see this happening across the country. Also, we see it happening in Europe. Waving a Palestinian flag in Germany is basically illegal. So I’m curious, with this collective effort by Israel and the United States and indeed many parts of Europe to make anti Zionism illegal and solidarity with Palestine illegal, especially on college campuses, what is the status now of y’all’s organization and how are you looking ahead and organizing, understanding that it’s getting to the point where it’s not even safe to be in support of Palestinian liberation?

Abdullah Elagha: Eleanor, well, that’s one way to look at it. The way I look at it is that there has never been this much energy around the liberation of Palestine ever before. There has never been this big of a collective shift of how the world sees Palestine, ever.

Sure, you can look at dying institutions like the mainstream media and the programs that they peddle, and it might look like we’re getting buried or we’re losing. But the framing has shifted big time. And, and I think that we are starting to win the information war, despite the fact that there is a huge machine working against us.

Advertisement

Sure, it’s scary to be a student on a college campus and have your future threatened for speaking out about Palestine. I’m not a student, I’m a professional, but I had a complaint filed against me at work because of my activism and because of how outspoken I am. But we’re not deterred.

You know, if the people of Gaza can survive this genocide for two months, we won’t be deterred. If the people of Palestine can survive ethnic cleansing for 75 years, we won’t be deterred. So, we see these as the dying breaths of a colonial empire, and just their last attempts to save themselves.

It’s funny that you mentioned Netanyahu and his efforts to silence dissent here in the United States. I’m not sure if you or your listeners know this, but I think 31 states have laws on the books that make it in some way, shape or form illegal to boycott Israel.

They’re anti BDS laws. BDS is boycott divest sanction. So there are anti BDS laws in 31 states that essentially prevent you from boycotting Israel, which this is the most peaceful type of protest that one can have. There are zero laws that prevent you from boycotting American products.

Advertisement

So, it’s really interesting to see this. I know just here in the Colorado legislature, so many of our representatives have Israeli flags sitting on their desks in the House of Representatives. Many people have pulled up with Israeli flag pins.

You know, what would be the consensus if these were Russian flags, if these were Chinese flags? I think people would be losing their heads. You know, we have this foreign flag that’s flying in almost every single one of our legislative halls. It’s illegal to speak out against this foreign country.

Their lobby is probably the most powerful lobby here in America. And yet we just accept that as normal. I find that very disturbing to say the least. And I think that people are kind of waking up and starting to realize that all these pieces fit together.

And the picture that is becoming clearer and clearer by the day is one of apartheid, is one of ethnic cleansing, and is one of genocide.

Advertisement

And I do think that millions of people have been woken up to these truths, and millions more continue to wake up to them every day.

Eleanor Goldfield: Yeah, that’s incredibly well put. And, we’ve just recently had on the show, Abby Martin, who was able to shoot down one of those such laws when she was asked to sign that before speaking. I mean, she was literally asked to sign something that said that she was not going to speak ill of Israel.

This is absurd. If you again, like you said, if you replace that with any other country, China, Russia, even like a random one, like Venezuela, it’d be so arbitrary and absurd. And yet we we are expected as Americans to have this kind of loyalty to a country that we supposedly have no ties to.

But as you’ve mentioned, with colonialism, basically, Israel cannot support itself without the support of the United States. And of course, that’s why it’s so important that we as Americans, whether we’re citizens or residents, it’s so important for us to fight the state of Israel because we as these children of Empire have a role and an opportunity to topple apartheid.

Advertisement

Abdullah Elagha: And just yesterday Netanyahu put out a statement where he said, I have three requests for President Joe Biden: munitions, munitions, munitions. If it was not for the material support of the United States, this genocide would have been over within the first week. Israel does not have the capacity to carry out like this.

This is hysterical bombing. This is absurd. Bombing, it literally does not stop. Talking to my family in Gaza they say that it literally does not stop. There is not a moment of peace, and they simply cannot keep this up without the support of the United States.

So when people see us in the streets, very often, they say, you know, why are you out here protesting? How does this affect us? Even UN ambassador for Israel, Gilad Erdan, while he was here, he gave an interview and he said, he basically was addressing us. He basically was addressing protesters and saying, why are you protesting? Do you not enjoy freedom? Well, I would say we’re protesting because we very much love freedom.

And people in Palestine are not free and their struggle is completely intertwined with ours. So that’s why it’s imperative for us to continue using our voices and continue being out in the streets, and trying to change what is something that is very changeable for us.

Advertisement

Joe Biden can pick up the phone tomorrow and say that this is over and it would be over. Ronald Reagan did it in the eighties. When Israel was bombing south of Lebanon, he literally picked up the phone and he said, stop and they stopped. Joe Biden has the power to do this. He chooses instead to enable it. So that’s why we do what we do.

Eleanor Goldfield: Yeah, absolutely. Thank you for that context as well.

And so, Abdullah, wrapping up here, I’m curious, how do you feel that people can best get engaged, even folks that are not in Colorado, of course, get engaged with this, and what is the best way to follow what y’all are doing and, keep in touch with regards to perhaps next year’s, conference and things like that?

Abdullah Elagha: Yeah. So for folks in Colorado, I would say to follow our Instagram page at coPalestineco that’s coPalestineco, all one word. That’s our instagram page. That’s our twitter. All of our constituent organizations are also linked there. I think we’re up to 25 constituent organizations, which is amazing.

Advertisement

We’ve grown so much over the past few months, and we definitely will have a lot more things planned. We don’t plan on stopping anytime soon.

For folks outside of Colorado, you know, the beautiful thing about what has otherwise been an absolute horror and tragedy is that the Palestinian movement really has grown in the United States.

There are organizations popping up everywhere. So I guarantee you wherever you are, there’s an organization nearby. And I would really just implore people to get involved and get organized, join a local organization, even if it’s not strictly a Palestinian organization. Lots of human rights organizations and more left leaning organizations are very much in support of all liberation.

So I would recommend that people just get organized and get more connected with their community. Our division is their strength. So we really need to be as united as ever, as connected as ever this struggle.

Advertisement

Eleanor Goldfield: Yeah, absolutely. And, for my fellow Jews out there, I know that I’ve mentioned this on the show before, but Jewish Voice for Peace does great work, and they have chapters all over the place, so check that out. And, Abdullah, thank you so much for taking the time, for putting all this in context, and for sitting down with us. I really, really appreciate it.

Abdullah Elagha: Thank you so much, Eleanor. And I am going to shout out Jewish Voice for Peace Denver Boulder chapter. They are absolutely incredible people. They held an amazing action this past weekend. It was actually at the exact same time that the JNF was holding a press conference here in Denver at the convention center, where they were calling us anti Semites and saying that we were attacking Jews.

Right outside of that, 16 Jews were arrested for protesting for Palestine. So, the writing is on the wall and I just really want to shout out my Jewish siblings. Y’all have been doing incredible work, especially in the arena of decoupling Zionism and Judaism. So thank you to all my Jewish siblings and thank you to you, Eleanor for taking the time today to chat with me. I really appreciate it.

If you enjoyed the show, please consider becoming a patron of our work at Patreon.com/ProjectCensored

Advertisement

 

Please consider becoming a patron of our work at Patreon.com/ProjectCensored

Eleanor Goldfield: Thanks everyone for joining us back at the Project Censored radio show. We’re very glad right now to be joined by Justin Nobel who writes on science and environment for U.S. magazines, literary journals, and investigative sites.

His seven year investigation into the radioactivity brought to the surface in oil and gas production and the various pathways of contamination posed to the industry’s workers, public, and communities and the environment is entitled Petroleum 238: Big Oil’s Dangerous Secret and the Grassroots Fight to Stop It, and will be published in April 2024.

Advertisement

Justin, thanks so much for joining us.

Justin Nobel: Thank you, Eleanor. I really appreciate it.

Eleanor Goldfield: So, at Project Censored, we’re all about uncovering secrets, as the name suggests. And as your forthcoming book points out, this could very well be the secret of the century. So, let’s start with this.

I mean, it’s no secret to those even partially in the know that fracking is incredibly destructive to people and planet: the fact that pipelines are essentially ticking time bobs that can cause miles wide explosions, methane gas emissions. Fracking causes earthquakes, et cetera, uses millions of gallons of precious fresh water. But what isn’t known, and therefore not discussed, even in smaller anti fracking circles, is the issue of radioactive waste linked to fracking.

Advertisement

So, let’s discuss that. How did you first find out about this issue?

Justin Nobel: Yeah, first let me say I really appreciate Project Censored. I appreciate all projects that really attempt to go at the media landscape in the world in a creative, investigative way. There’s really like two elements necessary here, an artistic kind of risk taking element and then the guts and grit of investigative journalism.

And I think the lack of that in the general media landscape is in part why this issue has remained below the surface for so long. A beat reporter at the big newspapers in the United States, like the New York Times or Washington Post, sometimes can get close to this topic, but really, they scratch the surface, and you need to just have the energy to just keep going and keep digging and keep digging.

So I, I had lived in Louisiana for some time and reported on the petrochemical industry and offshore oil and gas industry. And, in Louisiana, you really become aware quite quickly of how complicated oil and gas is, right? It’s not just like this stuff comes up and goes to a plant and then it’s in your car.

Advertisement

There’s all sorts of really complex, and when I say complex, I mean also massively polluting infrastructure that is involved with it. And it’s planted right there next to humans. And in Louisiana, that’s particularly evident.

And when I moved up to the Northeast and became aware of fracking I assessed oil and gas with those same eyes, and that was the big environmental issue in the Northeastern part of the US: unconventional oil and gas development, fracking in the Marcellus Utica.

And the early revelation is that there is a lot more that comes to the surface than just the oil and gas. And that has been the way since the industry first started, which in Pennsylvania, the first commercial oil well was 1859.

You have this really salty, toxic waste stream that comes up with oil and gas. The industry refers to that as oilfield brine. It’s a kind of innocent sounding name. But oilfield brine is filled with not just toxic levels of salt, but heavy metals, including radium, which is a naturally occurring heavy metal.

Advertisement

And in the early days of the industry, that waste stream was just literally discharged right into an unlined pit next to the well, into streams, onto farm fields.

In North Dakota, which is a state where like 90 percent of the land is farmland, there still is massive contamination from oilfield brine during the 1950s. I mean, this is biblical. You salt your neighbor’s land, you destroy your neighbor’s land. And this is what the industry has done with conventional, before we even get to fracking.

The problem now is that there’s a lot more waste. There’s a lot more drilling, and there’s also a lot more drilling happening closer to human beings. And so this waste which the industry never had a handle on, even before the fracking boom, the industry is now trying to grapple with something they didn’t know how to do well before, that is coming in greater and greater amounts, and also more and more toxic.

Because we’re dealing with oil fields that are more radioactive, and also fracking uses a lot of toxic chemicals, and that can also come back up with this waste stream.

Advertisement

That’s just the beginning, but part of why I think it’s remained below the surface for journalists as well.

Eleanor Goldfield: Yeah, and I want to get into several points that you touched on, but starting with just what kind of levels are we talking about here? In one of your articles, you remark on West Virginia’s “Chernobyl,” which is an abandoned fracking site that now hosts teenage raves and parties.

Realistically, what are the radioactivity levels that we’re talking about here and how large then are those areas?

Justin Nobel: Yeah, it’s a really great point. So radioactivity is really interesting. We live on a mildly radioactive planet. We don’t necessarily realize it, but embedded in the rocks of earth are uranium and thorium. These are very long lived radioactive elements, which means it takes them a long time to decay and blast out their radiation.

Advertisement

Other radioactive elements in the earth like radon, a naturally occurring radioactive gas, have much shorter half lives, which just means, think of a radioactive element.

It’s unstable, so at some point it will shoot off a little piece of itself, that’s called radiation, you don’t want to be near it when that happens, and having literally lost a piece of itself, It then becomes a different element. And that element may also be radioactive.

Oil and gas just happens to bring some very worrisome radioactive elements to the surface. So mixed in with that brine is radium. Unlike the uranium and thorium, radium is moderately soluble with water. And high salt content in brine actually helps kick radium out from deep in the earth, pull it into the brine. And when oil and gas is drawn to the surface, you get this potentially radium rich brine coming to the surface as well.

So what are the levels? EPA is so concerned about radium, they have limited the level of radium in drinking water to 5 picocuries per liter. Picocuries per liter, named for Marie Curie. And that’s one of the big units for measuring radioactivity. So you just remember the number five. EPA is really worried about radium. You don’t want it higher than five in drinking water. The average radium levels in Marcellus brine are around 9 to 10,000 picocuries per liter and can be as high as 28,500.

Advertisement

So you think, well, that’s clearly really bad, but you’re not going to drink brine. But again, we can look at other definitions. EPA has defined radioactive waste, the word, what is radioactive waste. And according to each specific isotope of each radioactive element; radium has two, and to get that, those figures I just gave you, you add those two together.

But for each separate one, radium 226 and radium 228, EPA’s limit for radioactive waste is 60, and if we look at the specific isotopes, again, in the Marcellus, the levels are typically in the thousands to even tens of thousands.

So we’re dealing with what clearly has a danger because you don’t even want to drink a drop of that or something much less concentrated than the brine is, and workers, by the way, are constantly getting splashed all over their face with this stuff. But it’s legitimately, it is radioactive waste, according to EPA’s own definition.

Now, what happens is there’s another really, from their perspective, a genius thing the industry did in the late 1970s. The US was dealing with this big industrial waste problem. There was dumping in the oceans, dumping in the rivers, and government wanted to deal with that, so they came up with an act called the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act, and this is really important for everything now with oil and gas.

Advertisement

The Resource Conservation and Recovery Act was going to decide what industrial waste streams were hazardous and what were non hazardous. So if you’re an industry producing a lot of waste, you have a tremendous incentive to make sure your waste is defined as non hazardous. It’s going to keep your costs down immeasurably. And that’s exactly what the oil and gas industry did.

So it doesn’t matter how radioactive the brine is, and some of the even more radioactive waste streams, which I’ll get to in a moment, does not matter how radioactive they are. By U.S. law, they are non hazardous.

So the brine is bad. What happened at that plant in West Virginia is they’re trying to treat the brine, right? And again, an Achilles heel for the industry for decades: brine, how do you deal with it? Right now, what mostly happens is it’s taken via truck or pipeline to injection wells.

Injection wells are highly problematic facilities. In my book, I spent a lot of time completely dismantling them. I mean, there is no grounded science to say you can inject toxic radioactive waste mixed with unknown fracking chemicals deep into the earth at extraordinary high levels and have it not leak all over the place.

Advertisement

And that is what’s happening now in Oklahoma, in Texas, in Ohio, and really anywhere where there are injection wells. That’s a problem. So the industry recognizes that’s a problem. And injection wells are actually one of the few things where if you go to oil and gas country, people will say, you know, I’m for the drilling, that’s good jobs.

But I don’t like the injection wells. I don’t like the waste. And the asterix to me is like, well, that’s inevitable with the oil and gas, but people don’t like them. And the industry has recognized that.

And so they try to quote, treat the waste, which means you’re going to take it to a facility where you’re going to process it in some way. And you’re going to try to remove the contaminants, remove the bad stuff. And, you know, then you have quote, distilled water, which can be maybe reused to frack new wells, or can be discharged after some tests are taken to get a certain EPA permit, discharged right back into rivers, the same rivers we rely on for drinking water.

Now, the problem there is, brine, again, is really complex. It has a very complicated geochemical signature. It’s not like aking like taking a Brita and you pour water that maybe has a weird smell and then it kind of tastes better. Like it’s so complex that anytime you try and treat it, it’s going to really gunk up the treatment equipment. And that’s what I’ve seen time and again across the oil fields from Texas to Oklahoma.

Advertisement

But there’s this weird union with this entrepreneurial cowboy American spirit where you got these guys, and it often is guys, saying, I can treat brine. I know how to do that. You know, I know Buck and he knows engineering and like this could happen at a bar, and literally probably often does, and Joe as a company and we’re going to put together a company.

We’re going to get some funders and we’re going to process oil field waste. And these things come together in small ways, which is kind of like Fairmont Brine, it’s a local Pittsburgh engineering company that was involved.

And sometimes major ways. Another story I recently wrote about was a project of Veolia, which is a very savvy, multinational firm based in Paris. Their office has won design awards and has all these courtyards and probably free croissants everywhere.

And if you go to their website, they talk about we’re really trying to save the world on climate change, ocean pollution. They tried to set up a fracking waste treatment plant and theirs failed as well.

Advertisement

And so the reporting gem of Fairmont Brine is I started to realize in my reporting, I know these things are problematic, I know they’re probably creating major hazards for community, the communities where they are, and the workers, but you don’t really have access to them. Even if they’re failed, there’s security gates around it.

Fairmont Brine was just completely open, and so I was able to go in there with a really great local activist and organizer named Jill Hunkler. She has a group called Ohio Valley Allies and Dr. Uri Gorby, a scientist who used to work on radioactivity with the Department of Energy and is from Northern West Virginia.

So just a really good group. He has a Geiger counter. He knew what precautions to take and we could walk around this place and take samples. You never kind of, you never have that.

The scary thing is other locals, as you mentioned, they’re walking around too. And it really is one of the most outrageous sites I’ve ever seen in oil and gas country. I mean, I could see why kids go there. It’s this weird, rambly, broken down industrial facility. There’s like random pools of water. Someone, I don’t know how they did it, crashed a speedboat into this pit.

Advertisement

But as we test everything, everything is radioactive. And some of the things are wildly radioactive. And to give you an idea of levels, some of the levels found there, the radioactivity levels are so high that just hanging out there for like a couple days, and workers would be hanging out there for half a day, would put you above yearly Nuclear Regulatory Commission radiation limits.

And the workers also get smothered in it, so they bring it home to their families as well. This is a legitimate concern.

Eleanor Goldfield: Yeah, of course. Wow, that’s…phew. I mean, there’s so much there and I’m curious too, so this is specifically the attempt to clean up brine, right?

And so what is the industry response to this then? Like, oh, well, screw it. We’re just not going to worry about it because they end up failing anyway. Like, what’s happening in the industry right now with regards to this?

Advertisement

Justin Nobel: It’s a great question. So right now, this idea of treatment is the new trend.

Again, injection wells are still where most of the oilfield brine is going. And just to give you a quick idea, like oilfield brine, how much? About three billion gallons a day across the U.S. That’s a trillion gallons a year.

If you put that waste water into the standard oil barrel, which is, you know, like waist high and stack those barrels on top of each other, you’d reach the moon and back almost 22 times. That’s one year’s worth of oil filled wastewater. So that’s a lot of stuff to get rid of.

And yes, treatment is the new game. Even though all these other projects have failed, you still have this gusto that we can treat it. I just talked to people in New Mexico with a really great advocacy group out there and I was telling them about the West Virginia story and they’re like, well, New Mexico people are gonna say well that’s West Virginia, we can do it better.

Advertisement

I’ve been to New Mexico. Waste treatment plants are disastrous. And there’s no doubt workers are getting contaminated there. I just haven’t been in that area long enough to build rapport and really dig into what’s happening.

But yes, this is concerning the industry, even if a plant fails, and this again is where you get this interesting psychology of the oil and gas industry, like they think they can fix anything, they think they can do anything.

And even if it’s broken, they’ll just say, well, that guy didn’t know it as well as me. But they don’t change it that much when they try the next iteration. It’s a massive problem.

Eleanor Goldfield: Yeah. And there’s a lot of psychology to dig in there for sure. But I’m also curious because I have done nowhere near as much research as you have, and that’s why I’m curious to hear your perspective on this.

Advertisement

So you mentioned radium specifically, and I know that the fracking industry likes to have their proprietary blends, right? Like, the contents of these proprietary blends of chemicals are kept tightly under wraps under the guise of them being “trade secrets.”

But ultimately this means that then the public, we have no idea what’s actually poisoning us.

So you mentioned radium. Is there any evidence or questions as to what might be involved in this that we don’t know because we’re not allowed to know what’s in these cocktails?

Justin Nobel: Yeah, and radioactivity is something I chose to focus on and do such a deep dive on because you can actually track it in really interesting ways and in ways that you cannot do with other oil filled contaminants like benzene, which is a known human carcinogen, and also in oil filled waste pulled up with oil and gas. It’s hurting oil field workers and people who live nearby.

Advertisement

It’s harder to put a fingerprint on benzene in the way you can do for radium. But what else is in there is a really important question. One of the oil field waste truck drivers I’m in touch with, and much of the best information always is going to come from workers who are like, well, I’m the guy who deals with this in my truck, let me tell you how it’s done.

And he is much more worried about the fracking chemicals because just like you said, they’re unknown and often they can have more immediate effects. Whereas the radium, and this again is this kind of macho culture, that will kill me in 20 years. Well, it actually might be five or 10, but the fracking chemicals can kill you sooner.

One of the first sources on this was an oil field waste hauler named Randy Moyer. So what he had to do, he had this horrible job. He would go into frack tanks, and this is actually his description of it. They would tie a rope around him and give him a squeegee and a shovel and he goes inside these tanks.

And if you picture a brine tank, there’s a lot of sediments in brine so the worst stuff is in the sediments. They settle out to the bottom as a sludge. Eventually that sludge has to be cleaned. That’s a job a human does. Randy goes in and the rope is so if he passes out or dies, his coworker can pull him out.

Advertisement

And Randy got this crazy burn coz at one point he was standing in this stuff, like up to his knees and he got this horrible chemical burn up to his knees. No doctor could tell him what that was. That I do not think was radioactivity. That was some chemical in the fracking waste, and he could not get a valid medical analysis.

And it almost was absurd that the opinions he got were like, maybe you ate some bad take out and you got a rash from that. Randy suffered tremendously. He was in and out of the ER and he passed away two years ago.

So what you mentioned, it’s really serious. I mean, it’s real and there’s no resolution. And a case like Randy should not be a medical mystery, and instead it’s just kind of written off and forgotten.

So that’s the importance of knowing what’s in fracking wastewater means that you can actually then identify in workers. And that’s what the industry doesn’t want. I mean, that’s why they just don’t want you to know anything, because once you know things, you can start to put together the pieces.

Advertisement

Eleanor Goldfield: Yeah, absolutely.

And you also have mentioned in your writing, the supposed overseers of the fracking industry, PHMSA and FERC. And I myself have done quite a bit of protesting outside of FERC. But as you note as well, they’re totally captured agencies.

Has there been any hearings or any kind of movement on this specific issue?

I mean, I remember there have been a couple of times that I went to FERC and people were carrying water, you know, drinking water and showing that it was flammable or just showing that it looked like something you would pull out of a coal slurry. Have there been hearings about this specific issue or is it just dead silence?

Advertisement

Justin Nobel: Yeah, no, really great question there. What is exciting about this journalism is because not a lot of other journalists are so deep in this topic, it puts me in touch with scientists, with community organizers with really great grassroots groups. And then, after the article’s published, they asked me maybe to come back to the community and talk, and I love that. I love these in the real world moments, especially if it’s with a local group like that.

And these groups then carry it forward. So they have educated themselves and there’s, especially in the Marcellus Utica area in Northern Appalachia and Pennsylvania and Ohio, there are really good grassroots groups that are carrying this forward.

Center for Coalfield Justice is one, Mountain Watershed Association, both in Pennsylvania. In Ohio, Buckeye Environmental Network, a really great smaller group called Torch Can Do in rural Eastern Ohio. And these groups are trying to push legislation. They do have some allies, especially in Pennsylvania, in the state house. There is good movement on that.

And you bring up FERC and PHMSA. There is a group in New York several years back called Sane Energy that was really alert to the radioactivity issue. And there’s this kind of amazing forgotten story from their movement back in like 2012 that I tell in the book with major interesting ramifications for New York City. And they did stuff. I mean, they protested and covered themselves with green, radioactive looking paint. I mean, they were hip to it and they really put this topic center, front and center. But it takes the knowledge.

Advertisement

So that’s why I feel like I love this opportunity. I love any opportunity to help get it out there. I think once it is out there and people understand, they do move forward in really effective ways with this issue.

Eleanor Goldfield: Yeah, and I think one of the things that I really appreciate as well is that you focus not just on what this does to communities and ecosystems, but to the workers as well.

Because I think a lot of times that can get lost, and I know that having been on the front lines of environmental fights, it can feel, and sometimes it often is the case that the workers are against you, and yet that’s why we need that important framing of: this is harming all of us and we all have a right to work and live in safe environments.

And so I really appreciate that about your work. And so there are organizations that have it covered from the I don’t want this happening in my community perspective. Are there unions or worker’s groups that you’ve been in touch with that are also bringing this up from the worker’s rights perspective?

Advertisement

Justin Nobel: Yeah, on that issue, first, I just want to say your film did that so well on West Virginia. I mean, I was in tears. The voices of people who can see things from both ends can be very, very powerful. And, the workers did that. And those are often the voices I look for as well. Because you’re right.

I mean, in the end, talking about environmentalism, and you bring this up too in the movie. You know, people in West Virginia know the species of every tree, of all the frogs. They have all the streams named. I mean, they are much more environmentally in tune than most other people in the country.

So they really are in line with the people who care about the environment in a different way and are trying to block some of these toxic projects. But they also, they don’t have what you just mentioned. They don’t have unions. They don’t have support within the workplace to foster that kind of homegrown environmentalism that if they have at home, it isn’t really translated.

And that’s why I think one of the surprising things is when workers realize what is happening they actually do speak out. They reach out and they’re really angry, they’re really alarmed, and they do go against the industry, and they’re really, at times concerned, but they are eager to tell their stories.

Advertisement

And just one example with the West Virginia story. After I published the article we’re talking about all these workers started coming out. Usually there’s like one, maybe two, and no one wants to go on the record. In this case, a whole bunch came out and two are fully on the record and their stories are just astonishing.

And that’s going to be published in a follow up article with truthdig. But one thing most of them told me is like, we were really proud of this plan. We thought we really were cleaning fracking waste and you know, they know oil and gas has problems. They have kids. And were making the world better by helping the industry deal with this problem.

And the article was like this big smack in the face that, well, no, you actually weren’t doing that. And they knew there were problems with the plant. So the article helped synthesize all these issues they were experiencing over the years. But not only that, you contaminated yourself in the process, which is a hard pill to swallow.

Of this specific facility, two of the workers, and there aren’t that many workers who work at plants like this, two of the workers have already died from cancer, one stomach cancer and one brain cancer. And when I learned the process, it makes sense. Again, you’re taking contaminants, radioactive ones, out of a waste stream and the workers are describing to me a work environment that is filled with this salty dust, and they are breathing that in 12 hours a day. I mean, the exposure potential there is outrageous, and then getting splashed with it and contaminated in other ways. So it’s really, they do get hit the hardest.

Advertisement

But, as far as the organizing, I think that is the next step. For example, Center for Coalfield Justice is really, I think, on the front lines of really trying to connect with workers and help tell the story through them and not just step out and say, like, you know, ban oil and gas. They would never say anything like that. But again, the little asterisk point is if you do this well, the industry actually can’t do it. So it would be banned, right?

Eleanor Goldfield: And that kind of leads me to this last question here, which is how do you feel that, I mean, your book hasn’t come out yet, but especially with people reacting and responding to your articles, which I think is so powerful and obviously it shows the importance of investigative journalism.

How have people been feeling about what does the future look like then if we don’t, if we can’t do this in the proper way, what kind of future are we going to have? Has there been conversations about just transitions or what can we look at instead of fracking?

Justin Nobel: Yeah. I mean, I think again, West Virginia is a good place to examine that. When I was there reporting on Paula Jean Swearengin’s campaign which was some years back, this woman running a grassroots campaign against Joe Manchin. A coal miner’s daughter, and I got to see a really cool grassroots side of the state.

Advertisement

And yeah, there’s interesting things people are trying to do on mountaintop removal sites in terms of products they can grow that can make energy, that can make food. There’s really good conversations happening, I think, across Appalachia. They might not rise to the surface, and they don’t have the money behind them.

You know, the problem when you report enough is you realize like, oh, the people with the best ideas aren’t the guys on Wall Street who are chucking the projects around.

Where I live now, there’s all these solar plants coming in, I think which is good. Like farming has diminished in this area, there’s all these open spaces and we need energy. And I think, all the country has to take a little bit of the burden of supplying it, not just Appalachia and places like that anymore. But it’s like, who are these companies? And then you see they’re these kind of like shady companies coming in from Texas.

So that’s a systemic problem. It’s a structural problem that somehow these people smell the money and the funds, and they’re the ones who jump in and the person with the cool idea on how to turn mountaintop removal mining into different fields of hemp that can be grown and a million beautiful things can happen with it, they can’t get the funding.

Advertisement

And so, it’s something that has to be worked on on many levels, but I think ideas are there. It’s just helping make sure they’re the ones that get put into practice and not just another version of an extractive economy, even if it’s slightly greener.

Eleanor Goldfield: Yeah, green capitalism, as it stands.

Well, Justin, thank you so much for taking the time and outlining this. This is horrifying, but also, of course, as we like to say on Project Censored, if you don’t know about it, you can’t fight it. So, where is the best place for people to follow your work?

Justin Nobel: Yeah, I gotta be more out there, I guess.

Advertisement

I still am on Twitter, and I write regularly for Rolling Stone, for Truthdig, and for DeSmog. And the book, it’s going to be a major way. That’s going to be all of this tied together across the country. And that comes out April 24th.

It was going to be published by Simon and Schuster, but then they were bought by a private equity company called KKR with massive investments in oil and gas.

So I pulled the book and we’re now doing it ourself. But yeah, the title, you just Google that and get an advanced copy or go to your local bookstore and make sure they order it. That is a super way to make sure that you’re going to be there and get the information.

The title is Petroleum 238, Big Oil’s, Dangerous Secret, and the Grassroots Fight to Stop It.

Advertisement

Eleanor Goldfield: Awesome. Well, yes. Go to your local bookstore, folks.

Justin, thank you so much again for taking the time, and for covering this topic.

Justin Nobel: Yeah. Thank you Eleanor. Really nice to talk.

If you enjoyed this show, please consider supporting our work at Patreon.com/ProjectCensored

Advertisement

Source link

Continue Reading
Advertisement
Click to comment

You must be logged in to post a comment Login

Leave a Reply

Money

Rare 50p coin based on an iconic children’s character goes on sale – and it could be worth up to £1,000

Published

on

Rare 50p coin based on an iconic children's character goes on sale - and it could be worth up to £1,000

A NEW commemorative 50p coin based on an iconic children’s character has launched – and one day it could be worth £1,000, experts say.

The Gruffalo’s Child 50p coin has gone on sale to celebrate the 20th anniversary of the popular children’s book by Julia Donaldson, first published in 2004.

The new Gruffalo's Child coins are available in original and coloured editions.

1

The new Gruffalo’s Child coins are available in original and coloured editions.Credit: Royal Mint

The new release follows that of two 50ps, unveiled in 2019, to celebrate two decades since the release of the first Gruffalo book.

Advertisement

The Gruffalo by Julia Donaldson and Axel Scheffler has sold more than 13million copies and is a favourite with children around the world.

It follows the tale of a little mouse who goes out for a walk and convinces different predators, including a scary monster called a Gruffalo, to let him continue his journey rather than eat him.

The Gruffalo, who has knobbly knees, turned out toes and a poisonous wart on the end of his nose, has been loved by generations of kids.

The authors followed the original book’s release with that of the Gruffalo’s Child five years later and had another smash hit on their hands.

Advertisement

The new Gruffalo’s Child coin shows the Gruffalo’s Child (holding a Stick Man toy), with the story’s mouse protagonist sporting a sneaky smirk.

The scene on the coin is an original illustration by Axel Scheffler set in the wintery deep dark wood.

The new coins were designed with Magic Light Pictures, which has made the films of many of Julia Donaldson and Axel Scheffler’s books.

The first of the two 2019 Gruffalo coins, also both designed by Magic Light Pictures, featured a close up of the Gruffalo’s head – warts and all.

Advertisement

The second, showed the entire beast standing in front of the mouse – in the deep, dark forest.

The Royal Mint sold the 2019 Gruffalo coins for £10.

The Hidden Treasure In Your Wallet

But how much could they be worth?

The coins have already gained value and can now be found for around £15 on eBay, with one going for £26 in August.

Tenishia McSweeney, appraiser at Prestige Pawnbrokers, which is featured in Channel 4’s Posh Pawn, has also seen two silver-proof Gruffalo coins sell for £137.70 on eBay.

Advertisement

Oliver Miller, managing director of Bishop & Miller auctioneers, added: “With the release of the new Gruffalo 50p, people will ask me whether it’s an investment or not.

“What it comes down to is how many are minted – if it’s a low mint it’s worth more as the rarity goes up, if a huge amount are minted, these are worth less.

“The other factor is how popular will they be. I would say as a father of two fans of the Gruffalo these will be popular and could prove to be a nice little investment.”

The new Gruffalo’s Child standard coin is available for £12 from the Royal Mint, while a coloured version is available for £21.

Advertisement

Prices increase to £75 if you buy the coin with a silver proof, and £99.50 if you buy a gold proof version of the coin.

All the Gruffalo and Gruffalo’s Child coins are purely collectible items, so they won’t enter general circulation – meaning you can pay for items with them – and you’re not going to find them in your change.

Ms McSweeney said: “The 2024 gold-proof coin can be purchased for £99.50. It may be worth hedging your bets and going for the gold-proof coin if you hope for a future profit. In five years, you may be looking to hit the £1000 mark with a gold-proof Gruffalo coin.

“Commemorative proof coins like these can often be bought on the secondary market for less than they were originally purchased for, so the real value in these coins is the personal enjoyment of these often beautifully designed special coins.

Advertisement

“They make particularly lovely gifts to commemorate a newborn’s year of birth!”

Rebecca Morgan, director of commemorative coins at The Royal Mint added: “The heart-warming tale of The Gruffalo’s Child has captivated readers since its release twenty years ago, and this year, the curious little monster finds a permanent home on a 50 pence piece.

“Brought to life by Royal Mint expert craftspeople, this coin captures the true essence of Julia Donaldson and Axel Scheffler’s much-loved story in beautiful detail. We hope fans of the book admire the design as much as we do.”

How to spot rare coins and banknotes

Rare coins and notes hiding down the back of your sofa could sell for hundreds of pounds.

Advertisement

If you are lucky enough to find a rare £10 note you might be able to sell it for multiple times its face value.

You can spot rare notes by keeping an eye out for the serial numbers.

These numbers can be found on the side with the Monarch’s face, just under the value £10 in the corner of the note.

Also if you have a serial number on your note that is quite quirky you could cash in thousands.

Advertisement

For example, one seller bagged £3,600 after spotting a specific serial number relating to the year Jane Austen was born on one of their notes.

You can check if your notes are worth anything on eBay, just tick “completed and sold items” and filter by the highest value.

It will give you an idea of what people are willing to pay for some notes.

But do bear in mind that yours is only worth what someone else is willing to pay for it.

Advertisement

This is also the case for coins, you can determine how rare your coin is by looking a the latest scarcity index.

The next step is to take a look at what has been recently sold on eBay.

Experts from Change Checker recommend looking at “sold listings” to be sure that the coin has sold for the specified amount rather than just been listed.

People can list things for any price they like, but it doesn’t mean it will sell for that amount.

Advertisement

We explain further how you can find out if you have a rare coin worth thousands sitting around the house.

What to do if you find a rare coin

If you think you might have a rare coin, it’s important to look after it and seek advice from an expert before attempting to do anything yourself.

Mr Miller said: “Do not clean it and do not damage it. If you clean it, it’s worth nothing and if you damage it the price shoots down.

“Then buzz over an email to a coin auction house. You really want to deal with people who deal with coins not your general auctioneers.

Advertisement

“They’ll guide you to know if you have a rare one or not.”

What are the most rare and valuable coins?

Do you have a money problem that needs sorting? Get in touch by emailing money-sm@news.co.uk.

Plus, you can join our Sun Money Chats and Tips Facebook group to share your tips and stories

Advertisement

Source link

Continue Reading

News

Officer who killed Daunte Wright is taking her story on the road with help from a former prosecutor

Published

on

Officer who killed Daunte Wright is taking her story on the road with help from a former prosecutor

MINNEAPOLIS (AP) — A former Minnesota police officer who was convicted of killing a Black motorist when she used her handgun instead of her taser during a traffic stop is out of prison and delivering presentations at law enforcement conferences, stirring up a heated debate over how officers punished for misconduct should atone for their misdeeds.

After Kim Potter served her sentence for killing Daunte Wright, she met with the prosecutor who charged her case. That former prosecutor, Imran Ali, said Potter wanted to do something to help other officers avoid taking a life. Ali saw the presentation as a path toward redemption for police officers who have erred and an opportunity to promote healing in communities already shaken by police misconduct.

But Katie Wright, Daunte’s mother, said the plan amounts to an enraging scheme where her son’s killer would turn a profit from his death and dredge up painful memories in the process.

“I think that Kim Potter had her second chance. She got to go home with her children. That was her second chance,” Wright said. “I think that when we’re looking at police officers, when they’re making quote-unquote mistakes, they still get to live in our community. They still get to continue their lives. That’s their second chance. We don’t have a second chance to be able to bring our loved ones back.”

Advertisement

Potter, who did not respond to phone and email messages, had been set to deliver her presentation to a law enforcement agency in Washington state when it was abruptly canceled in September after news reports generated criticism. But other law enforcement groups, including one of the largest in Minnesota, have hosted the presentation and are continuing to invite Potter to speak.

Some see canceling her presentation as short-sighted, saying she could share a cautionary tale with others who have to make life-or-death decisions in the field.

“This is the definition of why I decided to walk away. You have somebody that recognizes the need for reform, recognizes the need for redemption, recognizes the need to engage. And still,” Ali said. “If you’re in law enforcement in this country, there is no redemption.”

Ali initially was co-counsel in the case against Potter. But he resigned, saying “vitriol” and “partisan politics” made it hard to pursue justice. Ali is now a law enforcement consultant and said he is working to help departments implement changes that could prevent more officers from making Potter’s mistake.

Advertisement

Minnesota Attorney General Keith Ellison, whose office took over the prosecution of Potter after Ali resigned, has said the former officer’s public expression of remorse could help the community heal.

Wright was killed on April 11, 2021, in Brooklyn Center, about 10 miles (16 kilometers) from where the officer who killed George Floyd was on trial. Wright’s killing ignited protests as communities in Minneapolis and beyond were still reeling from Floyd’s murder. A jury later found Potter guilty of manslaughter. A judge said Potter never intended to hurt Wright and sentenced her to two years in prison. She was released after 16 months and later connected with Ali.

“I was like, wow. Even after being convicted, even after being driven out of your home, even after having so many death threats against you and having been incarcerated, you just don’t want to go away,” Ali said.

The pair have become a fixture at Minnesota Sheriff’s Association events. They delivered training sessions at conferences in June and September, with a future training scheduled in October. They also took their presentation out of state in May when Potter presented at a law enforcement conference in Indiana, event agendas show.

Advertisement

Jeff Storms, Wright’s attorney, said the description of the Washington training session in the contract prepared by Ali’s law firm reads more like an advertisement tailored for police officers who feel embattled, rather than a heartfelt story of Potter’s regrets.

“The officer, and the prosecutor who quit in protest, will deliver a dynamic presentation on the truth of what occurred, the increased violence and non-compliance directed towards law enforcement, the importance of training, and steps we can take in the future,” says the contract for the training session, which was obtained by The Associated Press.

That passage suggests Ali is engineering support for Potter and his law firm, Storms said.

“They profit from law enforcement training. And so to say this is simply about sort of a redemption arc for Ms. Potter in doing this training, it sounds really hard to believe that that’s the case,” Storms said.

Advertisement

Ali’s firm proposed a $8,000 charge for the training session, which includes speaking fees and travel costs, the contract says.

“To say my firm is trying to benefit off an $8,000 contract is ridiculous,” Ali said.

He did not say how much money Potter would earn, but said the amount was far less than what she might earn telling her story through a book deal or another project. Ali declined to show the AP the full presentation he and Potter had been set to deliver in Washington. But he described Potter’s opening line, which would read: “I killed Daunte Wright. I’m not proud of it. And neither should you be.”

Ali said he is committed to helping law enforcement agencies implement changes that would prevent more officers from making Potter’s mistake. The backlash to Potter telling her story at the training session speaks to a view among some that redemption for those convicted of crimes does not extend to police officers, Ali said.

Advertisement

“We can give the benefit of the doubt to people that are former Ku Klux Klan members or former skinheads that come in and educate, sometimes even our youth,” Ali said. “But we cannot give law enforcement that chance.”

Rachel Moran, a professor specializing in police accountability at the University of St. Thomas School of Law, said the perspectives of victims and their families should be considered by law enforcement agencies when they decide who to include at training sessions. But Potter’s voice might be able to penetrate a law enforcement culture that is skeptical of outside criticism, she said

“Police officers culturally do have a pattern of not wanting to hear outside perspectives and not believing other people can understand the situation,” she added. “So to hear from someone who is very much in their shoes, who’s actually willing to admit an error, I think that has potential to be heard more by officers than an outsider.”

In an interview, James Stuart, executive director of the Minnesota Sheriff’s Association, said Potter’s upcoming presentation would go on, despite the blowback. His organization has a responsibility to learn from the “national moment of upheaval” sparked by Potter’s killing of Wright.

Advertisement

“She’ll be the first to say she’s not a hero and it was a horrific tragic accident,” Stuart said. “I understand the concerns and the criticisms, but I would also hope they could understand the value of learning from mistakes and making sure that no other families find themselves in that same situation.”

Source link

Continue Reading

Business

Lobbyists access parliamentary emails using IT loophole

Published

on

Unlock the Editor’s Digest for free

Lobbyists who previously worked as aides in the House of Commons have accessed confidential information from parliamentary email systems because Westminster authorities failed to close their accounts after they left.

Two ex-aides to MPs told the Financial Times they logged in to access the private contact details of MPs and their staff after they had taken up jobs at lobbying firms.

Advertisement

One said they had been asked by their new boss at a lobbying firm to use their continued access to Commons IT systems to get private email addresses that are not available to the public.

“They would ask me to go in and get email addresses from the internal systems for the six weeks I still had access after leaving,” the ex-aide said.

Others said they were able to see emails sent to their former MP’s inbox, which would have enabled them to see confidential constituent information as well as the parliamentarian’s private messages.

The ex-aides also said the access would have enabled them to see security information circulated to MPs and staff in parliament.

Advertisement

The revelations suggest the parliamentary authorities are failing to properly secure private or confidential information, even after a high-profile China spying scandal.

In April, a UK parliamentary researcher and another man were charged with spying for China after allegedly providing information that could be “useful to an enemy”.

The two were accused of giving “articles, notes, documents or information” to a foreign state, according to the Metropolitan Police. Both pleaded not guilty on Friday.

Parliament has different bodies responsible for various parts of its operations. The Independent Parliamentary Standards Authority (IPSA) handles payroll for MPs staff, but the aides are legally directly employed by their MPs. IPSA is separate from Parliamentary Digital Services, which handles email systems.

Advertisement

Two ex-aides said parliamentary authorities did not automatically close email accounts when a staffer’s employment ended.

“To close an account, the MP or office manager has to inform Parliamentary Digital Services directly the person has left,” one of the aides said. 

“If the MP is disorganised, or just a new MP with limited training on running their office, then it’s very possible that an account may remain for months until security clearance expires,” they added.

A third former staffer added: “You go through such a rigorous security process to get your pass, it’s mad they don’t restrict access to parliamentary accounts as soon as you leave.

Advertisement

The Labour party, which swept to power at the July UK general election after 14 years in opposition, last month privately warned its parliamentary staff about the risk of access by ex-employees.

It said in an email to all Labour parliamentary staff that it was “vital” that staffing records were kept updated so that anyone who had left Westminster was immediately prevented from receiving information.

The party added that only one member of each MPs office should be on internal mailing lists at any given time to prevent confidential information being leaked.

Many former MPs’ staff move into lobbying roles upon exiting parliament. These jobs frequently involve contacting parliamentarians — often the ones who formerly employed them — on behalf of commercial clients.

Advertisement

This year hundreds of aides left parliament largely because of the July general election, when 175 Conservative MPs lost their seats.

A House of Commons spokesperson said: “Network accounts sponsored by MPs are audited throughout the course of every Parliament, with accounts closed and access to the parliamentary estate removed, as soon as we are told to by either the sponsoring MP or by IPSA.”

They added: “Individual MPs, as the sponsors of their staff and owners of the data, are required to inform us of any changes or closures.

An IPSA spokesperson said: “Parliamentary accounts are administered by Parliamentary Digital Service, and IPSA sends data on a weekly basis confirming any members of staff whose leaving date has passed.”

Advertisement

Source link

Continue Reading

News

P. Diddy Faces Abuse Allegations from 120 Plaintiffs as Scandal Grows

Published

on

P. Diddy Faces Abuse Allegations from 120 Plaintiffs as Scandal Grows

Ex-Girlfriend Among Accusers

As the accusations mount, Diddy is currently in custody. His legal team is working diligently to secure his release, appealing a judge’s decision to keep him detained until the trial.

Combs has vehemently denied all allegations, calling them “disgusting claims” from individuals seeking “quick money.”

Among the accusers is Combs’ ex-girlfriend, Cassandra “Cassie” Ventura, who filed a civil lawsuit last year alleging physical abuse and human trafficking.

As the legal proceedings unfold, the implications for Diddy’s career and personal life remain significant, raising questions about accountability in the entertainment industry.

Advertisement

The situation continues to develop, and with the increasing number of allegations, it is unclear how this will affect Combs’ future and reputation in the music industry. As investigations proceed, the outcomes of these serious allegations will undoubtedly resonate beyond the courtroom.

Source link

Advertisement
Continue Reading

Business

The small Scottish loch holding an answer to how the UK could reach net zero

Published

on

Loch nam Breac Dearga, is a hidden lochan perched 475 metres above the UK’s most voluminous lake, Loch Ness, on the Great Glen in Inverness-shire.

It holds an answer to how Britain reaches net zero.

The Great Glen’s topography of deep water surrounded by vertiginous hills provides ideal conditions for pumped storage hydropower, a system that uses large bodies of water to store power, facilitating the UK’s energy transition by tackling the problem of renewables’ intermittency.

As the UK increasingly turns to wind power to decarbonise the electricity grid, long-term energy storage is vital for dependable renewable power when the wind does not blow — a gap currently bridged by fossil fuels.

Advertisement

Pumped hydro schemes elevate water from a lower to a higher reservoir when electricity is abundant and cheap, releasing it back through a turbine to meet surges in demand.

Hydro power schemes on Loch Ness

Glen Earrach Energy, formed by the owners of the Balmacaan Estate where Loch nam Breac Dearga is situated, is planning the largest such scheme on Loch Ness, with a capacity of 2 gigawatts, seeking to tap into the home of the mythical monster for a vast so-called water battery.

The firm estimates that the scheme will reduce the national grid’s post-2030 carbon footprint by 10 per cent and save £2bn in grid operating costs in the first 20 years of operation. Its size and height differential will make it the most efficient in the UK, maximising power output while minimising the impact on Loch Ness water levels, it said.

“This is how the UK becomes a green energy superpower,” said Roderick MacLeod, director of family-owned Glen Earrach. “The UK has a massive offshore wind resource, so the question is how to smooth it out so it can be usable in the UK and also countries abroad,” he said.

Roderick MacLoed stands outdoors near Loch Ness, Scotland.
Roderick MacLeod says high-head projects will minimise water-level changes © Paul Heartfield/FT

The UK is playing catch-up with other parts of the world, such as China, Japan, the US and Europe, where the technology is growing rapidly as a means of stabilising renewables generation.

The world’s 179GW of pumped storage hydro capacity, which forms 90 per cent of overall installed global energy storage, is expected to increase by almost 50 per cent to about 240GW by the end of the decade, according to the International Hydropower Association.

Advertisement

The operator of the UK grid has projected that 7GW to 15GW of long-duration electricity storage would be required by 2050 as the government targets net zero emissions.

The UK’s four existing 2.8GW pumped storage hydro facilities in Wales and Scotland were built more than four decades ago, when energy was state owned.

But opposition is forming to a hydro “gold rush” around Scotland’s most famous loch.

The 300-megawatt Foyers Power Station, operated by energy group SSE, was commissioned half a century ago via a link to the 19th-century Loch Mhor Dam, which used to power aluminium production in the Highlands. Other prospects on Loch Ness include Statera’s 600MW at Loch Kemp and Statkraft’s 450MW at Loch na Cathrach.

Advertisement

The slew of projects around the tourist hotspot threatens the loch’s fragile ecosystem, including juvenile salmon and shoreline invertebrates, because of rapid, frequent water drawdowns, said Brian Shaw of the Ness District Salmon Fishery Board.

“There are huge risks involved — it’s hard to see how they [developers] can demonstrate they can leave biodiversity in a better condition, it’s simply not possible,” he said. “There is a gold rush of companies trying to get access to these waters.”

A panoramic view of Loch nam Breac Dearga under a cloudy sky. The landscape features rolling hills covered with brown and green vegetation, surrounding the expansive, calm waters of the loch
Loch nam Breac Dearga © Paul Heartfield/FT

MacLeod, who aims to start construction in early 2026, said high-head projects such as Glen Earrach’s — with larger vertical distance between the lower and upper reservoirs — would benefit the local economy while also minimising water-level changes. The flow of water through Loch Ness would also help mitigate fluctuations, he added.

A Scottish government spokesperson said impacts on communities and nature were “important considerations” and all applications were subject to “site-specific assessments”.

As well as bringing local communities on side, other challenges to such grandiose engineering feats include expensive upfront costs, lengthy construction and uncertainty around operational revenues.

Advertisement

Glen Earrach said it had made significant progress in developing the £2bn project and was now seeking to raise equity funding.

The government, industry executives said, was set to unveil a “cap and floor” price stabilisation mechanism that would guarantee minimum revenue for operators while capping excessive returns.

Developers say such a mechanism — similar to the one used for electricity interconnectors that share power between neighbouring countries — could unlock billions of private sector investment into UK hydro projects, primarily in Scotland and Wales, where the most favourable geographical conditions are found.

“We are embracing the future of energy production and storage and will lay out further plans on this in due course,” said a UK government spokesperson.

Advertisement

Further south at Loch Lochy, energy group SSE is funding ground condition surveys at its 1.5GW Coire Glas project, drilling and blasting 1.2km tunnels into subterranean caverns near where an underground powerhouse complex could be located for the generators.

SSE has ploughed in £100mn so far ahead of an implementation of a cap and floor policy that Mike Seaton, project director for Coire Glas, hopes can be in place for developers by the first or second quarter of next year.

Seaton said SSE had garnered interest from other utilities and institutional funds for co-investment. “There are lots of interest, but they will need this cap and floor — without this there will be no projects,” he said.

Source link

Advertisement
Continue Reading

News

The seven best seaside hotels in Hastings, with rooms from £74

Published

on

Seaside resort town of Hastings in East Sussex.

Hastings in East Sussex was once much maligned, often a punchline to jokes about the “roughest” seaside towns in the country. Those in the know, though, know differently. This coastal community has a long-held artistic tradition and more recent implants – known to locals as “Down from Londons” (DFLs) – have added to this reputation.

While the town, made up of the Old Town, new town and edgy St Leonards-on-Sea, may still be a little rough around the edges, it’s full to the brim with eccentric art galleries, cosy pubs, Michelin-recommended places to eat – and some of the most quirky shops and museums you’ve ever seen (try the Fishermen’s Museum and True Crime Museum).

After you’ve got your 1066 history fix, antiqued up and down the streets of St Leonards, danced to live Irish music in The Albion, eaten from the imaginative menu at The Crown on All Saints St and washed it all down with a pint or two at the First In Last Out on the High Street, head to one of Hastings’ best stays – rounded up here…

Vive, Havelock Road

Hastings and Ibiza are rarely referred to in the same sentence, but Vive Hotel is where the two meet.

Advertisement

Open for just a year, this hotel in the up-and-coming new town was a collaboration between Jason Bull – who previously owned the snazzy Es Vive in Ibiza before he sold it to footballer Lionel Messi – and designer Sean Cochrane, who designed the Balearic escape.

Set in a former university building, rooms are modern and functional, with each acting as a studio, ideal for long or short stays.

Each space features white walls and clean lines and comes fully equipped with a luxury en-suite shower room, modern kitchenette, and desk area.

There are plans for a modern European restaurant, as well as a spa, creche and a playroom, slated to open in the near future.

Advertisement

Rooms from £74, vivehotel.co.uk

Hastings House, St Leonards-on-Sea

Although technically a separate town, St Leonards-on-Sea is frequently lumped in with Hastings. It offers a very different vibe, though, with artists in residence and achingly hip eateries everywhere you turn.

Hop off the train from London or Brighton one station before Hastings at St Leonards Warrior Square and take a short walk to Hastings House, set in a Regency townhouse, which is one of just a few five star residences in the area. Step inside this upscale B&B and you’ll be greeted with contemporary soft greys and exposed wood.

Most rooms have a sea view and are bright, clean and comfortable. Each comes with an en-suite bathroom, featuring wet room-style rainfall showers as well as robes and slippers – and some have luxurious freestanding bathtubs.

Advertisement

Breakfast is included as standard, and guests can choose from a traditional Full English, French toast or a perfectly seaside-y smoked salmon and scrambled eggs.

Rooms from £115, hastingshouse.co.uk

St Benedict Victorian B&B, Pevensey Road

Hastings and St Leonards are well known for their quirkiness – and St Benedict Victorian B&B encapsulates that reputation perfectly.

Walk inside and you’ll feel as if you’ve stepped into a time machine. Located, aptly, in a late Victorian family house, this spectacular B&B has taken great care to recreate the 1800s with accurate interiors, many sourced from the town’s wealth of antiques shops.

Advertisement

Each of the five rooms is named whimsically – The Old Nursery and The Colonel’s Room – and several feature William Morris wallpaper.

Owner Paul Oxborrow, who started the B&B in 2008, is clearly committed to presenting an accurate picture of the Victorian era but, luckily, there are baths, showers and plumbed-in loos as opposed to the more rudimentary methods of our forefathers.

In the colder months, the dark yet sumptuous interiors come into their own. Guests can warm up in front of a cosy open fire in the lounge and the Victorian lighting gleams off ornate gold picture frames and chandeliers, while heavily patterned rugs add extra snugness.

All stays include a full English cooked breakfast, served “country house style” in the dining room along with home made marmalade. Visitors can also take a stroll in the faithfully restored walled kitchen garden, flanked by authentic greenhouses.

Advertisement

If you’re feeling inspired by the remarkable decor, take a brisk walk to nearby Norman Road, which has a seemingly endless array of antiques shops, perfect for picking up a Victorian era trinket as a souvenir of your trip to the ‘past’.

Rooms from £118, victorianbedandbreakfast.co.uk

The Laindons, Hastings Old Town

Locals know the Old Town as the “real” Hastings. With buildings dating back the 1400s, it’s a world away from the new town with its chain shops and utilitarian architecture.

The Laindons, a small but perfectly formed guest house in the middle of Old Hastings, is the perfect base to explore the narrow streets, packed with quirky gift shops and cute coffee spots.

Advertisement

Each of its five rooms are named after colours and offer unique designs and vibes – think tiled fireplaces and nods to the sea beyond, like shell-shaped lamps and cushions adorned with crabs.

The Blue Room takes the nautical theme a step further, with a roll top bath in the room itself. The Yellow Room has perhaps the best view of all, thanks to its bay window which reveals a panorama over the delightfully quirky Old Town buildings.

Breakfast, included in the price, is served until 10 in the conservatory which overlooks the pretty East Hill nature park.

Free-range eggs and sausages and bacon come from local farms and jams and marmalades are hand-produced in nearby Battle.

Advertisement

Rooms from £165, laindons.com

The Laindons offers comfort, views – and a little light nautical theming

The Cloudesley, Cloudesley Road

If you’re a conscious traveller, The Cloudesley could be your best bet for a visit to Hastings.

A little inland, this environmentally-conscious B&B has previously been named one of the best in the country and it’s easy to see why.

Designed by Chelsea Flower Show award winner Shahriar Mazandi, relaxation and calm is the vibe here.

Rooms have no televisions and are painted in limewash from Francesca’s Paints and the showers are heated by solar panels.

Advertisement

Carrying on this philosophy, there are no microwaves in the kitchen, Himalayan crystal salt is used in food preparation on-site, while fruit from the garden is served at breakfast when in season.

For a full-on escape, spa treatments and holistic therapies are on offer, from traditional massage to reflexology, and reiki in peaceful treatment rooms.

Rooms from £111, thecloudesley.co.uk

The Old Rectory, Harold Road

If you’re looking for a sign that Hastings truly is on the up and up, The Old Rectory is it. It has been recognised by the Michelin Guide’s new Michelin Keys, created to highlight outstanding hotels.

Advertisement

Just inland from Hastings’ iconic fishermans’ huts, this stylish haunt is owned by Lionel Copley, a designer who previously worked with Katherine Hamnett.

His fashionable nous is evident in The Old Rectory, which dates back to mediaeval times and has had Victoian and Georgian wings added on over the intervening years.

The nine rooms, elegantly decked out, are all named after streets in Hastings Old Town. Some of them feature wallpaper designed by local artist Deborah Bowness and others feature shabby-chic chandeliers and gilded mirrors, adding a rustic-meets-glamorous touch to your environment.

The walled garden is a must-see and breakfast is a gem. The Old Rectory makes their own meat and veggie sausages and smoke their own kippers and salmon at an in-house smokery.

Advertisement

Hastings is not known for its spas, but the venue here is hailed as one of the best for miles around.

On offer are a wide variety of treatments, including a Sculpted Facial, Oriental massage and reflexology and postural realignment body work. Bookings are open to non-residents, so make sure to book ahead.

Rooms from £135, theoldrectoryhastings.co.uk

Hastings - city in East Sussex, UK.
Hastings is still home to countless fishermen who catch the freshest fish to be served in local eateries (Photo Hija/Getty Images)

The Jenny Lind Inn, High Street

If you like to be in the thick of it and experience life like a local, you could do a lot worse than a stay at The Jenny Lind Inn.

Downstairs is a cosy pub with a wide selection of real ales on tap and live music – think sea shanties, folk and blues – on several days a week.

Advertisement

Upstairs, in the inn’s rooms, it’s a world away from the noisy fun in the bars below. The five bedrooms, which offer flexible accommodation for family groups and single occupancy rates, are cosy and comfortable. All have seagull’s eye views of the higgledy piggledy Old Town below, and are just two minutes walk from the beach.

The Jenny – as locals call it – also makes the perfect base to visit two of Hastings’ most interesting museums – the Flower Makers’ Museum and the Fishermen’s Museum, both offering unique insights into parts of the town’s rich history.

Rooms from £74, jennylindhastings.co.uk/stay

Source link

Advertisement
Continue Reading

Trending

Copyright © 2024 WordupNews.com