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Palestinian farmers resist Israeli expansion in the West Bank

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Palestinian farmers resist Israeli expansion in the West Bank

For Palestinian farmers in the West Bank, land and livelihood are deeply intertwined concerns—and the only way to defend them is through organization. Faced with a hostile legal apparatus, a military occupation, and attacks from violent settlers, Palestinian farmers have banded together under the umbrella of the Palestinian Farmers’ Union. The union’s executive director, Abbas Milhem, joins The Marc Steiner Show for an explanation of the work of his organization and the land struggle in the West Bank.

Studio Production: Cameron Granadino
Post-Production: Alina Nehlich


Transcript

The following is a rushed transcript and may contain errors. A proofread version will be made available as soon as possible.

Marc Steiner:

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Welcome to the Marc Steiner Show here in The Real News. I’m Marc Steiner. It’s great to have you all with us. And we continue looking at what came out of the movie Where Olive Trees Weep. Today, we’re going to talk with Abbas Milhem, who is the Palestinian Farmers Union Executive Director. He’s been so since 2014. We’ll talk a bit about what that means, and more about that, and what’s going on in the West Bank and Gaza with him today. Abbas, welcome. Good to have you with us.

Abbas Milhem:

Thank you Marc for having me. Good afternoon for everybody.

Marc Steiner:

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I’ve been looking forward to this.

Abbas Milhem:

Or good morning maybe. It’s almost good afternoon in our language.

Marc Steiner:

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Well, for you it’s good evening, right?

Abbas Milhem:

Yeah. In our side, good evening. But after evening, even.

Marc Steiner:

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It’s almost hard to figure out where to begin. But let me take a step back before we jump into what’s happening at this moment, and what has happened over the last 40 years to the West Bank, to Palestinian land. But talk a bit about the Palestinian Farmers Union. For 17 years, you’ve been doing this work, and you’re a farmer.

Abbas Milhem:

Yes.

Marc Steiner:

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Talk about that history a little bit so our listeners can understand who you are and where you come from.

Abbas Milhem:

Yes. Thank you, Marc. Palestinian Farmers Union is the umbrella of Palestinian farmers, and that union was established since 1993. Actually, few months before the Oslo Peace Agreement was signed between Israelis and the Palestinians, at that time in 1994.

And from the time of establishment, this union was dedicated first to act as the voice of farmers. And we call them the vulnerable farmers, the small-scale farmers in Palestine, acting as the umbrella of them, defending their rights, representing their voices, and trying to provide all the resources needed in order to enhance their agriculture and support the food security of all farmers across West Bank and Gaza Strip.

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To do so, in terms of structure, Palestinian Farmers Union started by organizing farmers on district level first. Where in each district — for example, Jenin District, Tulkarm District, Nablus District, Ramallah District, Jericho, Gaza District, and so on — in each district, the Palestinian Farmers Union established Palestinian Farmers Association of each district.

For example, in Jenin, we have Palestinian Farmers Association of Jenin Governorate or Jenin District. And that association act on the district level as the umbrella of the smaller union of farmers in that district, where the special needs and rights of farmers in that district can be addressed and tackled by the Farmers Association.

This was repeated across all West Bank areas, from the north to the south, and then expanded to Gaza. We ended up now as a structure of the union, having 16 farmers associations in 16 different districts. We are a grass-rooted union, with almost 20 members of farmers joining the union through its Farmers Association.

The focus of our work is advocacy and lobby for the rights of farmers. We lobby the government to ensure that the policies, legislations and laws that regulate the agricultural sector are better responsive for farmers’ rights, and help our farmers encounter and face the challenges they are living through and going through because of the Israeli army invasions and the Israeli settlers increased violence against farmers. And these attacks are aiming at emptifying the Palestinian farmlands from farmers.

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So, these lands can become easy hunt for settlement expansion, annexation and confiscation. To do so, we try to provide the minimum resilient interventions that enable farmers to stay in their farms.

Marc Steiner:

So, given the present situation, I mean, what I’ve read that you’ve written, and what I understand, is that the amount of land the Palestinians own on the West Bank, and in Gaza itself, but the West Bank, has diminished extensively. I mean, it exists, but barely.

So, talk about that. I mean, and how that has diminished, what happened to the land, and what’s happened to the people on the land.

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Abbas Milhem:

Now, the current situation, Marc, is unprecedented. It’s speechless. It has never happened in the history of the Palestinian… what you call Israeli [inaudible 00:04:57]. From 1967 until 1993, there was a stage. And after 1994, when the Oslo Agreement was signed is a different stage. And October 7 until now is a totally completely terrifying and tragic stage.

Israel occupying power has shifted from the level of land grabbing, which means confiscating a small piece of land here and there to establish small settlements or settlement outpost, between 1967 until 1993.

After Palestinians signed the peace agreement with Israel, Israel felt relaxed because the international pressure weakened and almost disappeared. This gave the time for the Israeli government to expand settlement. Number of settlements that was established from the time when Palestinians and Israelis signed the peace agreement in 1994, until October 6th, one day before this aggression war against Gaza, has jumped from almost 150,000 settlers to 750,000 settlers.

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And this expansion in settlers in West Bank was on the account of Palestinian farmers, by confiscating their land, imposing control on their access to their land, in order to allow more settlers to be deployed, and the expansions of the already-existing settlements, and the establishment of the new settlements from the south of West Bank in Hebron until the north part in Jenin.

And this, as I said, was on the account of the farmland area that is owned by Palestinian farmers, but now controlled and under the control of the Israeli army for the sake and for the benefit of serving Israeli settlers who were brought up from different parts of the world to this area.

Marc Steiner:

So, just so people listening to this understand, and we all understand, what was the process? How did Israel… We know after the ’67 war, Israel occupied the West Bank, it occupied Gaza, and went north as well. But what was the process? What was the process that happened? How did Palestinian farmers lose the land? What was the number of the percentage of farms, and where they are today?

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Abbas Milhem:

Look, Israeli occupation is a very smart occupation, to be honest. They try to apply all the laws that were in Palestine from different mandates all over history, from the Ottoman Empire date, through British mandate time, through Jordanian era, until the military occupation of West Bank.

For example, if they want to confiscate a piece of land, they try to look into the Ottoman Empire era laws. If there is a law that would justify the military, the Israeli army control of that land, they apply that plan, that law, on Palestinians.

For example, during the Ottoman Empire period, there was a very great policy by Ottoman Empire stating that, to encourage people to cultivate their land, they did a special policy saying, if you as a farmer do not cultivate your land for continuously three years, your land will be taken and given to another farmer, maybe your neighbor, who will cultivate that land, and you will take a rent, a price for that rent.

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This was a very good policy because the Ottoman people at that time, they want to encourage the expansion of the greens area in Palestine to ensure all lands are cultivated.

Now, Israel is benefiting. For example, one of the ways how they apply these techniques, they come to a land in Jordan Valley that is classified as Area C according to Oslo Agreement. Area C means the land is under the control of the Israeli military forces. And because they impose restrictions on farmers to access their farmland, and they control the water resources, large part of this land is not cultivated, because farmers are unable to go there, because the military would kick them out and force them to leave.

So, if a farmer does not use his land or cultivate the land for three years, they apply the Ottoman Empire period law on that land. But they take it from Abbas as a farmer, and they give it to Shlomo as a settler. They don’t give it to Abbas’ nephew or Abbas’ cousin as a Palestinian farmer. No, they take it, they give it to Shlomo as a settler.

Marc Steiner:

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But you’re saying, they started this by using laws from the early 20th century, from the Ottoman Empire?

Abbas Milhem:

This is one, yeah. This is one. This is one mechanism. A second mechanism, if they don’t find an excuse from the Ottoman Empire period law, they try to find any laws or policies that were adopted and endorsed by the British government mandate era.

If they don’t find, they try the Jordanian era. If they don’t find, they issue a military order by saying, “For security reason, this piece of land is confiscated.”

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Marc Steiner:

So, in brief, how much land did Palestinian farmers have, and how much have they lost?

Abbas Milhem:

Ah. Now, because the situation now is different, now 60%.

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According to the Oslo Agreement, the land was categorized in into three different categories: Area A, which are the housing area in the cities under the full controlled by Palestinian government; Area B are the housing areas of villages and towns; Area C are the rest part of Palestinian land, which forms 60% of the entire Palestinian land is categorized as Area C, and under the control of the Israeli military occupation.

In that land, most of settlement had been established, and has been expanded and established. Now, Palestinians in Area C almost have no access to almost 85% of this land in Area C. Almost 85% had been under the full control of the Israeli army, who transferred that control to the settler leaders, and settlement in the different location.

This is what we have lost due to this military occupation of Palestine. They are a military occupation, and most of the land was confiscated or annexed based on military issuing military orders for this land.

Marc Steiner:

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So now, your family have been farmers for generations, correct?

Abbas Milhem:

Yeah. Yes.

Marc Steiner:

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And you said you’re living around the town of Ramallah?

Abbas Milhem:

Yes.

Marc Steiner:

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All right. What has happened to your land, your olive groves, your trees, your farm? What’s happened to you?

Abbas Milhem:

Yeah. I told you I’m in Ramallah, but I’m not from Ramallah. I work in Ramallah. And because of my work, I’ve been living here, but I go in regularly to Jenin area. I’m from a small town in Jenin District called Kafr Ra’i. I am a farmer who is a son of a farmer who was a son of a farmer. And for the past 500 years, actually, we were farmers only.

And the main agriculture sector in my town are olive trees, because we have no water for irrigation, because the control over water resources are in the hands of the Israeli occupation, and we are not allowed to get access to our natural water resources. That’s why we depend on the rainfall.

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Because of that, most of the trees we are planting in our areas with the absence of water is our olive trees. I have three olive farms in my town, in my village. All of them are located in the so-called Area B. It’s supposed to be safe, not risky area, under the control of Palestinian authority.

Since this aggression war against Gaza erupted in October 7 until now, settlers benefited from this emergency situation, and expanded their attacks and their violence against Palestinian farmers by attacking most of the lands around, including my farmland, categorized as Area B.

And for a year until now, I have been unable to visit or access my farmland. Even the families who tried to go to these lands were beaten by settlers, arrested by settlers, harassed by settlers, and all their agricultural tools and equipment were stolen. So, this is the case of my farm, and I’m only one example of hundreds of thousands of examples of other farmers in the West Bank.

Marc Steiner:

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So, have the Israelis passed new rules or laws that say you cannot go to your farm, that you’re not allowed into your farm? Or is this part of settler attacks blocking you from your farm?

Abbas Milhem:

It’s the attacks that are blocking me. It’s the settler violence that is blocking me. And those settlers, when they conduct their attacks and their violence against us as farmers, they come with the full protection from the Israeli army. Where you can do nothing, and if you even shout or cry or protest, they accuse you of being violent and terrorist. They either shoot you, the Israeli army, or arrest you.

So, the Israeli army is providing full security, backing up for settlers attacks, preventing Palestinians from doing anything to resist the prisons or to defend their right of ownership of that land. And in many cases, in many occasions, the harassment was done jointly by settlers and the army against our farmers and against our land.

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Now, number of olive trees that had been cut off or burned from October 7 until now, Marc, exceeded 10,000 olive trees so far. The number of trees that were uprooted from the time of occupation in 1967 until now, 2.5 million trees. Again, I repeat, it’s 2.5 million trees that have been uprooted, destroyed, cut off or burned, by the army and the settlers, from 1967 until now.

We at the union, along with other organizations working on supporting farmers to cultivate their land, have succeeded to plant 3 million trees. But 2.5 million of which were, of course, destroyed, and we still have another half million trees. Not only olive trees. Olive trees, almond and fruit trees, different types of trees, and the battle is still there.

So, the message of Palestinian farmers is, we are resisting the occupation by cultivating our land. We are resisting your harassment by insisting to cultivate our land, because it is a land that we own, and the land we inherited from our fathers, who inherited from their fathers and their grandfathers, and so on.

Now, to respond to these challenges, farmers are using Palestinian Farmers Union, in cooperation with Freedom Farm. Lately, recently, since a year until now, we have cooperated in launching this campaign that is called Freedom Farm, led by Freedom Farm Campaign in the US, and that is calling people to donate and support to help farmers cultivate their farmland with olive trees, providing them with internal irrigation networks that would help supplementary irrigation during dry season and summertime, and protect that land by providing steel fence that will protect the farmland from wild animals and from settlers’ attacks.

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The first we call it Freedom Farm. The first Freedom Farm that was established in 2018 was Mu’taz Bisharat Farm in Jordan Valley. And he’s one of the very unique and special farmers there. He was the first one cooperated with us to establish a Freedom Farm in an area that had been never accessible in the past predicates, until now.

But because he was insisting, we supported him and established the first farm in that area. And luckily, we succeeded, and we were very proud to see that these trees we planted survived and were not cut off by settlers.

Although the farm is only 50 meters farm from a nearby settlement in that area, called Ru’ei Settlement, despite that, we succeeded to make that farm survival with the steel fence we provided to that farm, which helped minimize the settler attacks against that one.

And once this Where Olive Trees Weep movie was launched, and there were many viewers in the world viewing that movie… And I would like to seize the moment from your program and thank all the viewers who watched that, Where Olive Trees Weep, and thanks all who worked to produce that movie. These viewers, with the money they contributed, helped us to establish four Freedom Farms, two of them for two women farmers and two for male farmers in Palestine, from the money that came from the viewers who viewed this movie.

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That’s why we’re calling upon more viewers to watch that video, and more contributions and funds to come, in order to be able to establish as many Freedom Farms as possible. Because by doing Freedom Farms, Marc, is very important here to notice that establishing a Freedom Farm has two goals, two objectives.

The first one, protect that land from being confiscated. As I said in the beginning, the cultivated land is protected, almost. And second, we help farmers generate income for their livelihoods. And those are the two main goals of doing that.

But to make it difficult for confiscation, or for settler violence, we provide the fencing and the internal irrigation network that support and help the trees to naturally growing and giving fruits faster.

Marc Steiner:

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So, a couple of quick questions about that. I mean, A, how long does it take olive tree to grow before you can harvest?

Abbas Milhem:

Yes.

Marc Steiner:

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How long?

Abbas Milhem:

Yeah. And without irrigation, it will need five years. With irrigation, in the second year of plantation, that tree will start fruiting. So, we are buying in almost two to three years of time to allow that tree to give fruits because of the irrigation system. That’s why we insisted with Freedom, together we agreed to allow natural and faster growth of the trees to fruit and generate income for farmers. We provide these Freedom Farms with internal irrigation system, and this irrigation system would be only used during dry season and a hot summer. So, we adapt what we call supplementary irrigation.

Because if the tree get thirsty because of this climate change in Palestine, water is scarcity in climate change, rain water is getting lower and lower, so we need to compensate the tree by irrigating that tree. If you irrigate a tree and perform environmentally friendly farming practices, that tree would fruit in two years from the time of plantation.

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And by doing this, we are really buying in time for farmers. Instead of waiting five years, he waits only two years. And our system, our Freedom Farm, are smart in a way that even farmers do not need to wait two years to generate income. Because of the internal irrigation system we provide in these Freedom Farms, Marc, farmers can cultivate with what we call in-between farming, like vegetable production, like field crops that generate seasonal income every year. And from this income, farmers can use that income to look after their Freedom Farms and to secure some money for their livelihood, food security needs.

Marc Steiner:

So, a couple of questions here. And I know that we’ve been talking to Cyrus Copeland, who you’re talking about, who helped create this in Palestine, but it raises some questions. The first one is, so what is to stop the Israeli government, and/or settlers, from tearing down the fences? From destroying the farms that Freedom Farms build, to put Palestinian farmers back to work? I mean, because I can see just listening to you and seeing your ebullience, your joy in what the work is, in kind of resisting, and also being a farmer creating these farms. But what’s the stop the Israelis from tearing them down?

Abbas Milhem:

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There is nothing guaranteed as long as the occupation is there. 100% there is no guarantee. But we, out of experience, for the past 30 years, from [inaudible 00:22:29] until now, we know which areas are risky than other areas.

Although, Area C, that 60% of entire Palestinian land categorized as Area C, but the level of risk is different even within that area.

There is what we call… And maybe Cyrus, I told him about this. There is a red area. Red area for us means that accessibility is almost 90% risky. If you cultivate there, most likely what you cultivate will be destroyed by a percentage of almost more than 80%.

Another area is categorized, in our experience, as yellow areas. It is risky, 50-50. But if you do something on the ground, it might stay with a percentage of 50-50. It’s risky, but doable.

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And there are areas within Area C that are far enough from settlement, and less risky, and categorized or colored as light yellow areas. We in Freedom Farm, Treedom and PFU, started with the light yellow colored and less-risky areas.

Why? Because we want to build a successful model where all these olive farms can stay. And once they stay, survive, and they are surviving until now. We have so far planted 10 Freedom Farms in Palestine, four of which were, as I told you, from Where Olive Trees Weep video and the viewers of that video.

So far, we established 10 farms from them, and we are, inshallah, eager, and looking for another set of Freedom Farms to be established from the Where Olive Trees Weep near to Mu’taz Psharat Farm in Jordan Valley, which is less-risky area.

Once these Freedom Farms survive, and they are surviving, and they will continue to survive, inshallah, because they are in less risky area, this will create a pact on the ground, and even the army and the settlers will see that there are trees surrounded and cultivated in that area. So, if you expand with another set of farms there, that will not be noticed that much.

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Marc Steiner:

So, to conclude here with this, given the political situation at the moment, with the war of Gaza, which is also the war in the West Bank, that Palestinians are being killed and jailed in the West Bank as well, in the midst of this, there’s these Freedom Farms growing, and you’re trying to push back by building a community and building agriculture and building work.

I’m curious politically, what do you think happens next, then? Because you’re building, and other farmers are trying to build a world out of the rubble that Israel created by destroying the farms in the beginning, and now there’s this war going on where close to 40,000 Palestinians have been killed in Gaza alone.

So, talk to us about where you think the next steps are for you, and everybody else in the West Bank. Where do you see how the war will affect all the work you’re doing and where it goes next?

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Abbas Milhem:

For Palestinian farmers, it’s different from the outside world vision and view.

For us, we have no option except to continue going to our farms every day, despite the harassment we are subject to.

In my farm, the one I told you before, for example, all my family members and farmers, they go there every day. They get harassed, they get beaten, they get out, they come back in the second day, and so on.

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There are farmers who lost their lives in their farm. Like what happened with Bilal Saleh, for example, from a Saudi town last year. Olive harvest season, while he was harvesting his crops, he was shot to death by settlers in front of his wife and children.

But none of the farmers of that town stopped going back to their farms. This is the way we are resisting. And maybe it looks like a Hollywood movie? It is a Hollywood movie. It is a Hollywood. Farmers are going there. And this is… For a farmer, it’s very difficult to lose your olive farm.

Marc Steiner:

Yes.

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Abbas Milhem:

Olive farm, and olives in general, and the olive tree, symbolizes identity. Symbolizes life and the source of life for the largest farming community in Palestine. It is religious. Olive tree is mentioned in the Holy Quran. For most of Palestinians who are Muslims, there is a special verse in the Holy Quran about the olive tree and the symbols, what that olive tree symbolizes. It’s religious, it’s peaceful, it is patriotic, it is identity, it is a source of life.

So, for Palestinians, an olive tree is their life. The way they sacrifice their life, would sacrifice their life to defend that olive tree. And we are succeeding. Despite all the attacks, we are still going to our land.

Now, with the Freedom Farms, as I said from the beginning, the mechanism we are using is way different because of the October 7 until now. We are in the level of going to the less-risky areas that are at least 300 meters in the radar far from settlements, and Palestinians can access and can protect it.

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It’s not that easy for settlers to come that far to attack these farms, unless they come in groups, and with the Israeli army all the time. But they don’t come on daily basis. It’s tiring, even for the army, because there are so many settlements, and so many Palestinian citizen villages. I mean, they need triple the number of the Israeli army to provide security for all settlers attacking these farms.

But all communities, local villages and towns are there to protect the land, and they go and they cultivate and they practice their farming.

And the slogan we have in the union, we have a list where you can read that slogan, “If you uproot one tree, we will cultivate ten.” This is the slogan across Farmers Union, and the members across West Bank and Gaza. And now in Gaza, Marc, the situation is different. The entire agriculture sector had been-

Marc Steiner:

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Destroyed.

Abbas Milhem:

… completely, entirely destroyed. All animals, livestock sector in Gaza, is 100% demolished and destroyed, while in vegetable production is 85% destroyed. There are still some number of greenhouses that are still producing vegetables there.

And we purchase this produce from farmers, our farmers in Gaza, and we make food parcels that are distributed for internally displaced people in Gaza. But of course, the amount of production, it’s only 15%. And the need there for food aid in Gaza is at its maximum.

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So, we are trying to do something, building models here and there, and inshallah, this war will be over one day hopefully, and we will build back again the agriculture sector in Gaza, and Gaza will be nicer and prettier than before.

Marc Steiner:

I want to say one thing as we close here. Abbas Milhem, this has been a pleasure to talk with you, and to see somebody who is a farmer who is fighting for the future, fighting for the freedom of Palestinian people as well, to build a future, and you do it with such joy and effervescence. It is a pleasure to see and a pleasure to experience. So, I thank you so much for taking your time with us today.

Abbas Milhem:

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Thank you, Marc. And just to end up here by saying, we have belief deep in our hearts as farmers, the future is ours. Occupiers and settlers will be part of the past. Believe me, this will happen. And we will serve together. If not us, then our children, and maybe sons, and so on in the future.

Marc Steiner:

The long view. Thank you so much.

Abbas Milhem:

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Thank you. Thank you, Marc. Thank you. Bye-bye.

Marc Steiner:

Once again, let me thank Abbas Milhem for joining us today from Ramallah in Palestine, and Cyrus Copeland, who produced the film Where Olive Trees Weep, for introducing us to Abbas Milhem.

And thanks to Cameron Grandino for running the program today, Audio Editor Alina Nehlich, Producer Rosette Sawali, and the tireless Kayla Rivara for making it all work behind the scenes, and everyone here at The Real News for making this show possible.

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Please, let me know what you thought about what you heard today, what you’d like us to cover. Just write to me at mss@therrealnews.com, and I’ll get right back to you.

Once again, thank you Abbas Milhem for joining us today and for the joy he brings to his work. And as he said, if settlers tear down an olive tree, they will grow 10. So, for the crew here at The Real News, I’m Marc Steiner. Stay involved, keep listening, and take care.

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▶ How Hezbollah Is Holding Lebanon Hostage

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▶ How Hezbollah Is Holding Lebanon Hostage

What is Hezbollah’s role in Lebanon?🇱🇧

While the media frame the story through Hezbollah’s lens, it’s crucial to recognize the terror org’s influence, destruction, and control of Lebanon. pic.twitter.com/dDLjUR7K3G

— HonestReporting (@HonestReporting) October 1, 2024

While many media outlets often view the situation through Hezbollah’s lens, it’s essential to understand the group’s significant influence in the country.

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Hezbollah was linked to the 2005 assassination of Prime Minister Rafic Hariri and the Beirut port explosion. They obstructed the Lebanese army, effectively tightened their grip on Lebanese politics, and are essentially holding the nation hostage.

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Have we seen the end of cheap money?

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We are seeing the beginning of an easing cycle in monetary policy. Many now ask how far might interest rates fall and what those falls might mean for our economies. Yet, for me, the more interesting questions are longer-term. To be precise, there are three. First, have real interest rates at last made an enduring upward jump, after their secular decline to extraordinarily low levels? Second, has the valuation of stock markets ceased to be mean-reverting, even in the US, where mean-reversion had long seemed the norm? Third, might the answer to the first question have any bearing on the answer to the second?

In answering the first, we have one invaluable piece of information — a direct estimate of real interest rates for the UK provided by 10-year index-linked gilts for just under 40 years. US Treasury inflation-protected securities provide comparable information for the US, but only since 2003. These match each other well between 2002 and 2013. Since then real rates have fallen notably lower in the UK than in the US. The explanation must be the regulation of UK defined benefit pension plans, which has forced them to fund the government at absurdly low real interest rates, at great cost to the economy.

Line chart of Share of global savings (%) showing China has emerged as the world's savings superpower

Between their peak in September 1992 and their trough in December 2021, UK real rates fell by more than eight percentage points. In the US, they fell by more than four percentage points between their peak in November 2008, at the beginning of the financial crisis, and December 2021, after the pandemic.

Two things happened: a long-term decline in real interest rates and then a sharp fall triggered by the global financial crisis and the pandemic. The longer-term decline must in large part reflect the impact of globalisation, notably China’s huge excess savings.

Yet the recent rise in real rates has not brought real interest rates back to pre-financial crisis levels: today, they are 1.5 per cent in the US. These are modest rates. Estimates by the Federal Reserve Bank of St Louis (using a different methodology) give real interest rates of above 2 per cent in the 1990s in the US.

We have some reasons to expect real rates to go even higher. After all, they are still not all that high. Fiscal positions are stretched, notably in the US. There are the investment needs of the energy transition to fund, too. We have also moved from ageing to aged societies. This will tend to lower savings and raise fiscal pressures in high-income countries and China. Global turmoil will also raise spending on defence. This suggests that further increases in real rates are plausible. At the same time, ageing societies will tend to spend less on consumer durables and housing. This would weaken demand for investment. Moreover, as the OECD interim Economic Outlook notes, global economic growth is not widely expected to pick up strongly.

On balance, it is hard to have a strong view on future real interest rates, in either direction. Yet one might still have a view that inflation is set to return, perhaps as a result of soaring fiscal deficits and debts. That would show up as higher nominal interest rates if (or when) confidence in the ability of central banks to hit inflation targets started to erode. They have contained the recent price upsurge. But inflationary pressures could very easily return.

Now consider equity prices. What have today’s higher real interest rates meant for them? So far, the answer is: very little. If we look at the cyclically adjusted price-earnings ratios (Cape) developed by the Nobel-laureate Robert Shiller, we find that in the US both of the ratios he currently uses are close to all-time highs. The implied cyclically adjusted earnings yield on the S&P 500 is a mere 2.8 per cent. That is just one percentage point above the Tips rate. It is also much lower than for any other significant stock market.

“Sell”, it seems to scream. Needless to say, that has not been happening. So, why not? Today’s earnings yield is, after all, almost 60 per cent below its historic average. One answer, lucidly propounded by Aswath Damodaran of the Stern School of Business, is that the past is not relevant. Certainly, he is right that backward-looking valuation ratios have been a poor guide to future returns, at least since the financial crisis. We cannot know whether this will remain true. Yet it is not hard to understand why he has jettisoned the past in favour of forecasts of future earnings. But the future is also highly uncertain. It is not difficult to imagine shocks able to disrupt markets that are far worse than the recent ones.

What we do know is that the margin between the real interest rate and the cyclically adjusted earnings yield is very small. It seem safe to argue that prospective returns from owning US stocks are unlikely to come to any large extent (if at all) from revaluations, given how highly valued they already are. Even the current valuations must depend on a belief in the ability of earnings to grow at extremely high rates far into the future, perhaps because existing (or prospective) monopolists will remain as profitable as today’s tech giants (now including Nvidia) have been.

This is essentially a bet on the ability of today’s US capitalism to generate supernormal profits forever. The weakness of other markets is a bet on the opposite outcome. If investors are right, recent rises in real interest rates are neither here nor there. In sum, they are betting on the proposition that “it really is different this time”. Personally, I find this hard to accept. But maybe, network effects and zero marginal costs have turned profitability into “manna from heaven”. Those able to collect it will enjoy their feast of profits forever.

Real interest rates? Who cares? Soaring inflation might be another matter.

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My neighbour piled heaps of dirt to peer OVER my 6ft fence & into my garden – but I told on them & won

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My neighbour piled heaps of dirt to peer OVER my 6ft fence & into my garden - but I told on them & won

A HOMEOWNER was ordered to flatten their garden after raising its height to peer over their neighbour’s 6ft fence.

An argument broke out after the offender piled dirt to create a terrace which caused a “significant degree of overlooking”.

The homeowner raised their garden and could easily look over the fence into their neighbour's

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The homeowner raised their garden and could easily look over the fence into their neighbour’s
The garden pictured before the raised bed was put in

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The garden pictured before the raised bed was put inCredit: Rightmove

The resident, who lives in Dinas Powys in Wales, laid artificial grass over the raised bed for a barbeque and summer house – all the same height as their patio doors.

Furious by the lack of privacy, the neighbour complained to the local council.

Council staff paid a visit and were not impressed with what they saw.

The Vale of Glamorgan’s planning committee found that the height of the garden had been increased by 600mm and would need to be lowered by 300mm.

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However, the resident refused to flatten their garden and instead submitted a planning application.

It was denied by the council, who deemed the change to the garden and the infringement on their neighbour’s privacy “unacceptable”.

A Vale of Glamorgan Council spokesperson told The Sun: “Every planning application is different with each considered on its merits.

“In this case, it was decided that the development would involve and unacceptable loss of privacy for a neighbouring property so the application was rejected.”

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Whilst the majority of councillors on the planning committee agreed that the garden’s height was inappropriate, Cllr Christine Cave said the decision was “hypocritical “.

A former primary school in the area had portable homes erected through special planning powers.

We bought the ugliest house on the street and transformed it into our dream home – it’s now more than doubled in price, and people are so impressed by the results

The temporary accommodation was passed for Ukrainian refugees, but the councillor argued that they were tall enough to see into people’s gardens – like the raised garden.

“When we made the site visit [to Eagleswell in Llantwit Major] and we actually asked why the ground had been built up and why the buildings could then be overlooking into peoples’ gardens. 

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“This seems a bit hypocritical to me here, that the council have done exactly the same on a much grander scale with huge overlooking of peoples’ gardens and now we are being told it is not permissible.”

Vale of Glamorgan Council allowed the development of the site at Llantwit Major through what is known as permitted development rights.

The planning powers are usually used in an emergency, but the scheme must eventually get planning permission within 12 months of the construction starting.

The council’s planning committee voted to allow the 90 units permission to remain for a minimum of five more years.

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One councillor called the uproar hypocritical after temporary houses were put in place for Ukrainian refugees

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One councillor called the uproar hypocritical after temporary houses were put in place for Ukrainian refugeesCredit: John Myers/Media Wales

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Balancing the Professional and the Emotional

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doctor

It was just another ordinary day in the emergency department, but I was depressed.

Bed zero usually held gravely diseased patients requiring urgent resuscitation. At that time, a young female patient occupied it. She had been out with her boyfriend when she fell into a lake. We had administered CPR when she was brought to the hospital half an hour later but hadn’t been able to revive her. A white sheet now covered her from head to toe.

The boyfriend’s legs shook as he cried. It was the first time I had seen someone literally “fall to their knees.” The father had stormed into the emergency department, took one look at his daughter, screamed and grabbed the boyfriend by his neck. Despite the father’s thin frame, it had taken four security guards to separate them.

But it wasn’t the tragic love story that had me depressed. I sighed as I twiddled with the two-milliliter syringe in my hands.

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Bed one contained a young male patient. He’d been rushed into the emergency with multiple notable abrasions on his face. I had rushed to reach him to ask his name, intending to evaluate if his airway was intact. Since he had answered without a problem, he didn’t require an intubation. I walked away, disappointed.

But not having been able to try an intubation wasn’t why I was depressed. Forget intubation; I couldn’t even do one of the most basic procedures required of a doctor. I glanced at my syringe. All I had managed to do was successfully coat its insides with heparin to prevent blood from coagulating when I took a blood sample. 

On bed two lay a twenty-year-old female patient in a bright red, traditional wedding dress. She clearly belonged to a family with a high social standing. Before her marriage ceremony to a man her family had betrothed her to, she had jumped from the top of the fancy palace at the marriage site. The jump resulted in complete fractures of both her femurs and a few vertebrae. Her oddly angled legs didn’t fit the picture of her glowing skin and mehendi patterns at all. She was currently being uncooperative with the doctors despite being in a lot of pain. It probably didn’t help that instead of being sympathetic, her father seemed to be scolding her. Her story sounded like a classic feminist tale: a strong woman who rejects the man her patriarchal family promised her to.

Her story was common in India, but that wasn’t why I was depressed. I raised the syringe in my hand. It glinted in the light above me. The speck of blood inside it taunted me, a reminder of my failure to obtain an arterial blood gas, or ABG, sample.

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For most laboratory investigations, either a venous or an arterial blood sample would work. However, an arterial blood sample becomes particularly important when administering oxygen to a patient. Since arterial blood contains the oxygen absorbed in the lungs, the measurement would indicate whether or not the patient is responding to the supplied oxygen.

My success with ABGs was like playing tennis: on some days, my top spins were inside the court, and on others, my racket became a cricket bat and launched the ball into space.

Today was one of those cricket bat days. I had tried three ABGs and failed all of them. Obtaining these samples had become so normalized for me that today’s failures were equivalent to forgetting how to breathe. Perhaps someone ought to take my ABG and check my oxygen levels.

I knew that until I solved my current problem, I wouldn’t be able to function normally. But the situation was complicated. ABG success rates are linked to confidence. My first failure at the ABG had put me on a vicious cycle that ensured the rest. But why had my self-confidence been low during the first one? Was it because I was sleep-deprived, having been doing twelve-hour night duties for three days now? Or was it because I’d had a quick dinner because I woke up late? Or maybe I was annoyed at my friend during our debate yesterday about his firm beliefs in the subjectivity of emotions?

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My hands clenched involuntarily. I looked down at them in surprise, finding nail marks in my palms. Ah, so this is the reason.

My friend claims that emotions are irrational and unpredictable. He said that each person reacts to situations in different ways, and therefore emotions are subjective. On the other hand, I believe that the emotional response is not only rational but very predictable. Emotional responses stem from patterns formed from accumulated experiences. Understanding a person would make it easier to anticipate their reactions. Businesses and social media even exploit this technique when advertising their products. But my friend had been thoroughly unwilling to consider my ideas.

Four attendants rushing a stretcher into the emergency snapped me out of my musings. I instantly got up along with the other emergency medicine residents. The patient’s eyes were partially closed and his face was lacerated in various places. A large flap of his scalp hung loose, revealing red and black tissue beneath. 

By the time I realized that his altered consciousness was an indication to perform an intubation, a resident was already in position at the head of the patient with an endotracheal tube in her hand. Disappointment rose in me. But then I scoffed at my foolishness: what was the point of feeling disappointed about not having the chance to perform intubation when I couldn’t even take an – 

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“ – ABG, now!” someone called.

The world kicked into high gear. Of course. The patient was being intubated and connected to a ventilator. An ABG would be needed to check that the intubation had his oxygen saturation under control.

I glanced at the syringe in my hand. It would be poetic to say that this syringe that had failed me previously would now help me succeed. However, this needle carried the risk of HIV transmission since I had already pricked a patient with it. I threw away the syringe and took a new one, quickly flushing it with heparin. I stood beside the patient, gazing at his wrist, imagining I had ultrasound eyes that could see directly to his radial artery.

“Please, he’s already in so much pain.”

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One of the patient’s companions was looking at me. Judging by her age, I assumed she was the patient’s mother.

“I know,” I replied. “This sample will help with the treatment.”

“He’s already been pricked. Look at how hurt he is. Don’t cause him more pain,” she pleaded desperately.

I glanced at the patient. His eyes were directed at the ceiling, unseeing. He groaned intermittently, straining against the cuffs tied to his hands to prevent him from pulling out the tube reaching down his trachea. With multiple lacerations, a few skull fractures and a part of his head peeled off, I doubted he’d feel the prick of a needle, even if it was for a procedure as painful as an ABG.

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Because arteries are deep beneath the skin, the needle pierces a lot of tissue to reach the artery, causing pain. Additionally, arteries aren’t directly visible like veins are. People inexperienced in the art of taking ABGs usually end up poking around blindly until they finally pierce the artery. When I had first managed to get my first ABG, it left me ecstatic for the next week. Today, however, I was proving incompetent. I felt as if my failures to obtain an arterial blood sample had rendered five years of the effort I had put into medical school useless. What had gone wrong so suddenly? What if this happened to me later on when I became an established doctor? Forget established – was I even worthy of becoming a doctor?

I closed my eyes and tried to shut out my thoughts and the patient’s mother’s talking. With each passing second, her buzzing complaints got louder and more distracting. I knew I needed to do this fast before she changed her mind about letting me take the sample.

I opened my eyes and uncapped my syringe. The patient was lean and thin; hence, his veins were prominent. They were begging to be sampled. I had to remind myself they weren’t important here; the unseen radial artery was. I placed two fingers on the patient’s wrist, trying to locate the pulse that indicated the artery’s position. I held my syringe slightly above, poised to strike.

If my looks could burn, I would have turned the patient’s hand to ashes. The pulse teased me. At one moment, I felt I had gauged their directions perfectly, and in the next, they seemed to have shifted. Every micro-adjustment of my fingers left me feeling dissatisfied. I turned my needle a few degrees clockwise, then counterclockwise; a few degrees upwards, and finally downwards. Yes. If it were going to work, it would work like this. With a final feel for the pulse, I poked the patient’s skin in one clean stroke. He didn’t even twitch his hand. I moved my needle deeper with a bated breath. 

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Suddenly, red flashed in my plastic syringe, and my heart soared. It was perfect. With each beat of the pulse, the volume increased. 

When the blood reached the mark of one milliliter, I placed a piece of cotton at the puncture site and withdrew the needle. “Press that cotton against his wrist for at least 5 minutes,” I instructed decisively. It was verbal confirmation to the universe that I had collected the sample against all odds.

Task completed, I turned to leave when the patient’s mother spoke. “You’re just going to keep taking his blood instead of healing him.”

I opened my mouth to reply, paused, and then closed it. At my level as a medical intern, there was a limit to how much I could help patients. There was nothing more I could do than take the sample. So I didn’t respond.

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I walked towards the blood gas analyzer. As usual, it was in the calibration process, something it did whenever it wasn’t running a sample. And for some reason, it would go on and on repeatedly four or five times in a row before it decided to perform its duty. It was as if it had an Indian government job. So, as I waited for it to (metaphorically) drink its tea, I thought about the mother’s comment.

Was there really nothing else I could do for the patient?

I should have been happy. At long last, I’d gotten my hand back on collecting arterial samples. However, an uncomfortable feeling gnawed at me, like butterflies in the stomach coated with uneasiness. I had been questioning whether or not I could become a good doctor since I couldn’t take blood samples. But now, even though I had taken one, the patient’s relatives had still not been convinced of my worthiness. I looked at the syringe in my hand. Was there a point to it?

Almost poetically, the blood gas analyzer beeped, signifying its readiness to work again.

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It’s not about the sample

The difference between the emergency department and the medicine wards is time. In the emergency department, patients don’t have time because…well, they need treatment as fast as possible. In the wards, however, most of the patients are stable. And because they are no longer in a dire condition, they have plenty of time to ask questions. 

So, while in the emergency room, I didn’t face issues taking blood samples from patients. The ward was a different story altogether. 

“I have been pricked three times since the morning.”

“Yeah, but those were different samples…”

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“Ouch, ouch, OUCH! AHHH!”

“I haven’t even pricked you yet!”

“Sir please please please…”

“I’m trying to heal you, not torture you.”

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“Sir, I’m sick, I’m sick!”

“You think I don’t know that? That’s why I’m doing this.”

“Do you promise this is the last time?”

“Do you promise to get better without treatment?”

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It was currently 10:30 pm in the medicine ward. The evening rounds had dragged on particularly late. Considering that I’d been here for over 13 hours, I was a little desperate to finish up and go have dinner. But of course, I’d been given one of the most time-consuming samples to collect – a bacterial blood culture.

I walked towards the assigned patient’s bed, my arms full of gloves, syringes, blood culture bottles, clean gauze pieces and a betadine bottle. The patient eyed me menacingly as I dumped my tools onto his table.

“I’m not going to be giving you my blood,” he declared, putting on his glasses as if he were a lawyer getting prepared to argue his case.

I sighed. It was going to be a long blood draw. 

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“Why is that?” I asked as I unpacked my sterile gloves, confident that I’d change the patient’s mind in the time I needed to prepare my equipment.

“I’ve had no change in my condition since I arrived here. The only thing that you doctors have been doing here is taking my blood and nothing else. Don’t bother with your sample. I won’t give it to you.”

And here I’d been hoping to get this done within ten minutes. I looked up at him. He was around 60 years old. He seemed educated, too, and well-off economically. His son, sitting beside him on a stool, gave me an apologetic look.

Realizing that my plan wasn’t going according to my predicted timeline, I put down my half-opened gloves. “Look. Medical treatment takes time. Your diagnosis…” 

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I glanced at his file. He had multiple myeloma, a cancer of the bone marrow that forms defective white blood cells. Because these white blood cells can no longer fight against infections, the patient becomes susceptible to microbes. This patient was running a fever, which meant there was a chance he had an infection. And to check for that, we needed to get his blood cultures.

“I have a friend who is a doctor,” he interrupted me. “I visited him a month ago. He gave me some medication, and my back pain resolved instantly.”

“Yes, but he didn’t treat the underlying condition, did he? You’re here in our hospital. That means you aren’t well.” I was no longer arguing.

“There is no underlying condition; there’s only destiny. What has to happen will happen. Just the other day, I had parked my car outside my house. I’ve been parking in that exact spot for over ten years now. I’ve never had any trouble. Yet, one week ago, someone crashed into the side mirror. I’ve never had an accident while driving, but my car got damaged while stationary.”

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“Uh…okay?”

“That’s destiny. What happened is completely illogical. I should know since I’m a math professor at university. How do you explain that?”

“Bad luck?”

But he wasn’t waiting for my response. Whether or not I answered, he continued within two seconds of asking a question.

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“If I’m going to die, I’m going to die. You and all your medicines can’t stop it from happening.”

“Your disease can be controlled. There is a decent chance of remission,” I insisted.

But he wasn’t listening to me. “All you can do is take my blood and test it. And with the amount you take, you’ll kill me faster than my disease is. As a matter of fact – “

“Can I take your sample while we talk?” I asked.

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He didn’t answer my question and continued talking. I slowly reached for his hand, waiting for him to resist. He didn’t. I assessed his veins, tied a tourniquet, wore gloves, cleaned the sample site and held up my syringe. He was looking at me, fully aware of what I was doing. He didn’t stop me, choosing to just keep talking instead.

All I had to do was “hmm” and “ahh” intermittently. I was vaguely aware that the patient was discrediting the medical community with his supposed logic. He was also saying something about how honest he was and didn’t accept bribes from students for a passing grade on their test papers. All the while, I took his samples. He didn’t even wince or complain about the fact that I had pricked him in two different sites as required for a blood culture.

When I finished my work, he was still speaking. “Politics is involved everywhere. Take my university, for example. Some of the students – “

“I’m done with taking your samples.” I showed him the two bottles.

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He took a few seconds to register them. “Good for you. But it won’t change anything. Remember that.” He huffed.

I checked the time on my phone. It was almost 11:00 pm.

“Well, goodbye,” I said and walked away.

A voice followed me. “Sir?”

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I turned around. It was the patient’s son. He had followed me into the hallway.

“What’s wrong?” I asked.

“You are currently a student, right, sir?” he asked.

“Yes.”

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“You’ll be a very good doctor in the future, sir.”

I tilted my head. With faculty, senior and junior residents all working here, and considering their pivotal roles in treatments, I hadn’t even considered myself a doctor. Forget a good one. “Uh…thank you.” I fiddled with my culture bottles.

“No one talks to him,” the son continued. “Everyone just comes, does their work and goes away. You were the first person to truly talk to him.”

I felt a little guilty. I hadn’t exactly spoken to the patient to make him feel good; I just wanted to make him amiable to give up his blood. “You’re welcome.” I decided that was the best response. “I’ll see you tomorrow.”

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When I arrived the next day, however, I didn’t see the patient or his son. When I asked where he was, the junior resident told me that the patient’s vitals had collapsed in the night and that he’d died. They had tried resuscitating him without success.

I sat back in my seat, silent and confused. The patient had been just fine yesterday. I had a conversation (albeit a one-sided one) with him. Now, suddenly, he was dead. I’d seen a lot of patients die before, but I hadn’t talked to any of them for that long before it happened. The discussion I had with the patient hadn’t meant much to me yesterday, but today, it felt as if it should. Had I really made the patient better? Did it even matter since, ultimately, he had died just a few hours later?

I thought back to the son’s words. Neither he nor the patient had cared about the fact that I had successfully collected his blood sample. They had just appreciated that I talked to him. It hadn’t been my medical skills that impressed them. It was as if only I appreciated my skill at taking blood cultures and ABGs. Were my medical skills not enough to make me a good doctor?

Perhaps having maximal knowledge wasn’t entirely the correct answer to being a good doctor. Sometimes, quack doctors, the kind who prescribed pointless medication and unnecessary IV fluids, were preferred by patients purely because they received more attention. I had heard multiple studies suggesting that what patients wanted from their doctors was to be adequately heard.

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Was this why the patient’s son had appreciated me yesterday?

Maybe if doctors were receptive as well as knowledgeable, that might put them above the rest. Still, it seemed much more logical to hone my medical knowledge and procedural skills than to invest time and energy in my communication ones.

I didn’t have an answer then. Until I figured out what was suitable for me, the sight of blood in my syringe during a successful sample draw would continue to fuel me.

The views expressed in this article are the author’s own and do not necessarily reflect Fair Observer’s editorial policy.

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Greggs blames riots and poor weather for slowing Q3 sales growth

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Greggs shrugged off slowing sales in the past quarter, which the UK bakery chain blamed on violent riots and poor weather, and said its appeal to cost-conscious shoppers would endure even as inflation eased.

However, shares in the food-to-go retailer — which continues to expand rapidly as its popularity has soared in recent years — still fell 6 per cent on Tuesday as sales growth slowed in the three months to September 28.

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“We had the riots, and we know that in some key shopping locations the public decided to stay away from those locations for a period of time just because of the unrest that was taking place,” chief executive Roisin Currie told the Financial Times. The UK experienced about a week of anti-immigrant and far-right violence from late July, as masked men attacked hotels housing asylum seekers and mosques while clashing with police.

She added that the “wet and damp weather of the British summer” as well as uncertainty over the general election had weighed on trading in July and August, but that it had recovered in September.

Like-for-like sales for company-managed shops were up 5 per cent in the 13-week period, a slowdown from a 7.4 per cent rise in the first half.

Currie said she was confident that 2025 would be “better than the preceding two years” for Greggs, which grew significantly amid the cost of living crisis, as consumers will stick with its products such as the popular sausage rolls even when they have more disposable income.

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“Customers, through the cost of living crisis, have now just become more savvy,” she said. “Even when you might have a bit more cash in your pocket, you want to choose where you spend that.”

“We’ve probably got more customers who maybe came to us occasionally previously, but are [now] more frequent consumers, and I believe that behaviour will stay,” Currie said, adding that new products and opening into the evening were broadening the chain’s appeal.

She added that the easing of inflation including food commodities would also relieve cost pressure on the business, even as wage costs continued to grow.

Data published by the British Retail Consortium said UK shop prices fell for the second consecutive month in September, with the 0.6 per cent contraction the lowest rate in more than three years.

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Currie’s bullish comments come as Greggs gears up its expansion. The Newcastle-based group is set to open between 140 and 160 new stores this year, after adding 145 in 2023.

In 2021, Greggs set out a plan to double its sales by 2026 and to have “significantly” more than 3,000 shops in the UK. It currently has 2,559.

Shares have surged over the past year, rising 28 per cent before Tuesday’s fall. Clive Black, head of research at Shore Capital, said the third quarter was “weaker and also more volatile than the management would have expected”.

“Greggs is undoubtedly very well placed when times get tough”, which has been the case over the past few years, Black said. “As inflation falls and living standards rise, is Greggs as well positioned as some others? Probably not.”

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How to play the income resurgence

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How to play the income resurgence

For income investors, there are typically three legs to the stool – the yield, total return and a stable, or growing, dividend stream.

Key to a successful strategy above all else is generating a real yield, ensuring income is not eroded by inflation over time.

Prior to the global financial crisis of 2008, when interest rates sat comfortably higher than inflation, this real yield was relatively easy to achieve.

Over the decade that followed, however, the economic environment reversed, with interest rates languishing below inflation, meaning cash held in the bank, and accordingly asset prices, lost value in real terms.

As long as rates remain above inflation, income investing once again looks more appealing

Subsequent rounds of quantitative easing suppressed yields on fixed-income assets and investors were forced to look to more growth-oriented assets.

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Today, however, the picture looks very different. Inflation and interest rates have crossed over once again, with the former sitting below the latter. This creates an environment more favourable for both yields on bonds and equities.

While it is hard to say with certainty how long this will last, as long as rates remain above inflation, income investing once again looks more appealing.

In the case of fixed-income yields within the UK market, those available from both gilts and corporate bonds fell drastically in the aftermath of the financial crisis.

Income investors no longer need to look to riskier areas of the market to secure the same yield

However, with the base rate as it stands today, the economic backdrop is much more supportive of fixed-income yields. This is because fixed-income securities adjust to cash rates given the additional risk involved in investing in them.

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The implication for income-seeking investors is that they no longer need to look to riskier areas of the market to secure the same yield. Instead, it is possible to remain in the relatively safe areas along the capital-risk spectrum.

In contrast, yields from equities have been relatively static over the last decade, as fixed-income yields dropped off and then subsequently rose strongly.

Yields from the UK equity market today stand at around 4% and at around 2% for global equities due to the dominance of the US, which has typically paid lower levels of income.

The outlook for dividends has been steadily improving, with strong gains posted year-on-year

But that is only part of the story.

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Another major element to the overall picture is dividend stability. Dividends took a significant hit during the pandemic – in the UK to the tune of 40%, in part due to UK banks being forced to suspend payments and the impact of travel restrictions on oil companies’ profitability, both fertile sectors for income investors.

Since then, however, the outlook for dividends has been steadily improving, with strong gains posted year-on-year.

Indeed, in the first quarter of 2024, some 93% of dividend paying companies globally either increased their payouts or held them steady, demonstrating the robustness of these businesses as a source of income. Even firms considered high growth stocks – the likes of Meta and Alibaba – started to pay a dividend, albeit from a low base.

The combination of these elements means it is now possible to secure much higher levels of yield without incurring additional risk.

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Investors might consider adding some spicier funds to the mix offering exposure to high yield debt, or equity strategies that employ an options overlay

Nonetheless, it is important to blend income styles with strategies that reinvest dividends to secure the compounding effect, thereby producing an attractive total return complemented by more defensive approaches focused on more stable or growing dividend streams – stocks that are sometimes referred to as bond-proxies.

These may lag in more exuberant market conditions but their return profile tends to be steadier, with the added attraction of offering some downside protection.

Finally, investors might consider adding some spicier funds to the mix offering exposure to high-yield debt, or, on the equities side, strategies that employ an options overlay to enhance income, albeit by sacrificing some capital appreciation.

The implications for income investors, typically those in or approaching retirement and therefore needing to replace a salary with an alternative source of income, are important.

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Earlier this year, the Financial Conduct Authority’s review of the pensions freedoms introduced some 10 years ago found income portfolios had been largely neglected for such individuals.

While annuities are once again looking attractive as a means of delivering a baseline level of retirement income, a much broader range of natural income generating solutions are now coming into play that sit above that, helping to ensure that, in retirement, the financial liabilities linked to funding a comfortable lifestyle can continue to be met.

Daniel Pereira is investment manager at Square Mile Investment Consulting and Research

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