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tardigrada@beehaw.orgOPto
World News@beehaw.org•It’s raining men: How all-male voting “carousels” helped Georgian Dream -the pro-Russia ruling party in Georgia- hold on to power
1·1 year agoToday, December 29, the Putin-sponsored government of Georgia will attempt to install the illegitimate president, which the people did not elect. Live blog
tardigrada@beehaw.orgOPto
World News@beehaw.org•Russia-linked cable-cutting tanker seized by Finland ‘was loaded with spying equipment’
9·1 year agoThere’s a brief documentary on the Shadow Fleet Fueling Russia’s War (24 min)
Invidious link Original YT link
An armada of aging oil tankers is helping to keep Russian oil flowing. Hundreds of vessels are part of a “shadow fleet” that’s allowed the Kremlin to dodge Western sanctions over its war on Ukraine. Bloomberg set out to uncover the traders, intermediaries and investors that make up this network, and how they’re getting rich in the process.
Addition:
Finnish PM calls for tougher measures against Russia’s shadow fleet
Finland’s PM Petteri Orpo (NCP) has called for firmer measures to combat the risks associated with the so-called shadow fleet of Russia, [saying he] had discussions about the issue with his counterparts from Denmark, Estonia, Norway, Poland, Sweden and the European Commission.
[Finnish] President Alexander Stubb, meanwhile, has been in contact with Nato.
tardigrada@beehaw.orgOPto
World News@beehaw.org•Azerbaijan says that passenger plane that crashed on 25 December was subjected to "external interference," investigators examine "what kind of weapon, or rather what kind of rocket was used"
6·1 year agoInternational airlines cancel flights to Russia after the passenger plane was shot down, according to media reports.
- Azerbaijan Airlines suspends flights to 7 Russian cities for security reasons
- Kazakhstan’s Qazaq Air suspends flights to Yekaterinburg
- Israeli airline El Al cancels all flights from Tel_Aviv to Moscow
Addition:
Rasim Musabayov, a member of the Azerbaijani parliament’s international relations committee, in an interview with Turan news agency:
“The plane was shot down on the territory of Russia, in the skies of Grozny. It is impossible to deny this. Those who did it must be held criminally responsible and compensation must be paid. If this does not happen, then, of course, relations will move to another level.”
tardigrada@beehaw.orgOPto
World News@beehaw.org•Russia says Christmas Day attack on Ukraine was a success
6·1 year agoMeanwhile, Putin says that relations between Russia and China have reached “an unprecedented level” as a result of the high level of mutual trust between both countries, as per Chinese state media.
tardigrada@beehaw.orgOPto
World News@beehaw.org•Greenland's Leader Claps Back After Trump Suggests U.S. Taking Control Is A 'Necessity'
7·1 year agoClimate change and the melting of the Arctic ice has intensified interest in Greenland’s natural resources. The island could become the next mini.g frontier. For example, KoBold Metals -a joint venture partly backed by Jeff Bezos, Bill Gates, and Michael Bloomberg- and operated by Bluejay Mining in the UK, has been drlling there for critical minerals since 2022.
The outgoing U.S. administration under President Joe Biden has been offering advice to Greenland officials to draft a mining investment law for some time, all aimed at prodding investment in Greenland at standards considered higher than Chinese-linked rivals.
Or that of Australia. In 2023, Greenland Minerals -which is a 100-percent subsidiary of an Australian mining company- initiated arbitration proceedings against the Governments of Greenland and Denmark for the right to mine in Greenland. The Australian company seeks to gain the right to mine in Greenland or USD 11.5bn in compensation (the sum is almost four times Greenland’s annual GDP).
Access to the Arctic (maybe a similar playbook than China’s pursuing with Russia?) may be a thing, too. Just a few weeks ago, for example, Greenland’s capital Nuuk opened an International Airport, enabling larger plane landings in the country for the first time in their history.
the “never again” only applies to European countries. At least, that’s what we are now witnessing.
I’m not so sure. That can happen again in Europe at any time imo as it happens in the Near and Middle East now, as well as in Xinjiang and Tibet, in Russia, Sudan, and many other places. Human rights and democratic values are under pressure everywhere, and this year saw a rise of autocracies and extremists globally. I hope 2025 will be different.
tardigrada@beehaw.orgOPto
World News@beehaw.org•Greenland's Leader Claps Back After Trump Suggests U.S. Taking Control Is A 'Necessity'
21·1 year agoDenmark boosts Greenland defence after Trump repeats desire for US control
The Danish government has announced a huge boost in defence spending for Greenland, hours after US President-elect Donald Trump repeated his desire to purchase the Arctic territory.
Danish Defence Minister Troels Lund Poulsen said the package was a “double digit billion amount” in krone, or at least $1.5bn (£1.2bn).
tardigrada@beehaw.orgOPto
Technology@beehaw.org•Albania declares one-year TikTok ban over stabbing
1·1 year agoI thought you might be familiar with Australia’s threats to ban tiktok whilst ignoring the crimes other tech companies commit and making no effort to protect Australians from them.
Are you sure you read the thelucky8’s comment?
tardigrada@beehaw.orgOPto
Technology@beehaw.org•Albania declares one-year TikTok ban over stabbing
1·1 year agoRemoved by mod
tardigrada@beehaw.orgOPto
Technology@beehaw.org•Albania declares one-year TikTok ban over stabbing
2·1 year agoYour answer has nothing to do with my question.
Isn’t it somewhat strange that Tiktok, whose parent company is forced to closely surveill and censor each politically undesired content in its home country, while it is at the same time not only unable to suppress but reportedly even promotes obviously harmful content on its platforms outside China?
tardigrada@beehaw.orgOPto
Technology@beehaw.org•Albania declares one-year TikTok ban over stabbing
2·1 year agoIsn’t it somewhat strange that Tiktok, whose parent company is forced to closely surveill and censor each politically undesired content in its home country, while it is at the same time not only unable to suppress but reportedly even promotes obviously harmful content on its platforms outside China?
tardigrada@beehaw.orgOPto
Technology@beehaw.org•Albania declares one-year TikTok ban over stabbing
12·1 year agoAs AP reports on the same issue:
There has been increasing concern from Albanian parents after reports of children taking knives and other objects to school to use in quarrels or cases of bullying promoted by stories they see on TikTok.
Isn’t it somewhat strange that Tiktok, whose parent company is forced to closely surveill and censor each politically undesired content in its home country, while it is at the same time not only unable to suppress but reportedly even promotes obviously harmful content on its platforms outside China?
[Edit typo.]
tardigrada@beehaw.orgOPto
Politics@beehaw.org•U.S. Senate approves government funding extension after failing to meet shutdown deadline while Elon Musk’s business in China sparks controversy
3·1 year agoThe Prospect provides some more details:
This is the first scandal of the second Trump term, and take a long look, because it’s going to look like all the other scandals: a conflict of interest among his impossibly wealthy advisers and aides (or from Trump himself) seeps over into policy.
The measure at issue is known as the “outbound investment” provision. We have heard for years about the problem of manufacturing businesses shipping jobs overseas to China, with its low worker wages and low environmental standards. China typically forces businesses wanting to locate factories in its country to transfer their technology and intellectual property to Chinese firms, which can then use that to undercut competitors in global markets, with state support.
Congress […] finally came up with a way to deal with this issue. Sens. John Cornyn (R-TX) and Bob Casey (D-PA) have the flagship bill, which would either prohibit U.S. companies from investing in “sensitive technologies” in China, including semiconductors and artificial intelligence, or set up a broad notification regime around it.
[…] Cornyn-Casey [which added some reporting requirements and enhanced reviews] passed the Senate last year, and after about a year of legislative wrangling, a final outbound investment package made it into the year-end bill. “We’re taking a necessary step to safeguard American innovation against bad actors and ensure our lasting dominance on the world stage,” Cornyn said in a statement.
Funny story: Elon Musk’s car company has a significant amount of, well, outbound investment. A Tesla Gigafactory in Shanghai opened in 2019; maybe a quarter of the company’s revenue comes from China. Musk has endorsed building a second Tesla factory in China, where his grip on the electric-vehicle market has completely loosened amid domestic competition. He is working with the Chinese government to bring “Full Self-Driving” technology to China, in other words, importing a technology that may be seen as sensitive. Musk has battery and solar panel factories that are not yet in China, but he may want them there in the future.
You can argue about whether the U.S. should be restricting investment in China. But it’s incontrovertible that a billionaire who has a bunch of investments in China and wants to make more all of a sudden disrupted a normal congressional process that was going to restrict that investment with a bunch of lies from his media platform. And lo and behold, when the new funding bill emerged, the outbound investment feature was dropped. In fact, all traces of provisions related to China were removed from the bill.
tardigrada@beehaw.orgOPto
Politics@beehaw.org•Evidence of pre-planned genocide by Russia: Ukrainian Intelligence reveals target lists and mass grave preparations by Putin's forces ahead of invasion
4·1 year agoFrom the Ukrainian Center for Countering Disinformation::
War criminals are the new elite of Russia: Temirlan Abutalimov – (archived)
Temirlan Abutalimov is a Russian soldier from Dagestan and a participant in Russia’s armed aggression against Ukraine.
He serves in the 70th Guards Motorized Rifle Regiment of the 58th Army from Dagestan. Before the full-scale invasion, he worked as an investigator in the local police. Following Putin’s announcement of mobilization in September 2022, Abutalimov decided to go to the front.
In 2023, during the battles for Robotyne, he rose to the position of assault company commander. Ukrainian intelligence has identified him as one of the perpetrators who ordered the execution of four captured Ukrainian soldiers. It is also suspected that Abutalimov was involved in other similar crimes. For his actions in the Robotyne area, Abutalimov was awarded the Order of Courage and later received the Hero of Russia Star.
Now, this war criminal is being positioned as part of so-called “Russian new elite”. He became a finalist in the Kremlin’s “Time of Heroes” program, completed an internship, and is preparing for a career as an official.
tardigrada@beehaw.orgOPto
Politics@beehaw.org•Protect free speech from harassing lawsuits: Tell your members of U.S. Congress to support the Free Speech Protection Act -- (EFF Action Center)
1·1 year agoAnother one:
Tell your Senators to oppose Trump’s dangerous pick of Kash Patel for FBI Director
Trump has announced he’s selected Kash Patel to lead the FBI.
A reminder - directors of the FBI serve for 10 years and the mission of the bureau is to protect and defend the United States against terrorist and foreign intelligence threats and to uphold and enforce the criminal laws of the United States.
But instead Patel is one of Trump’s most loyal enforcers and a conspiracy theorist — a 2020 election denier whose main focus is to purge the so-called “Deep State.” He recently publicly pledged to investigate and prosecute Trump’s enemies in the media and government.
Patel is a hyper-MAGA, vengeance-minded Trump loyalist to the point that even some Trump advisers recognize as an extreme liability — even if those aides and confidants aren’t willing to do much to get in Patel’s way, mostly due to Trump’s protection of the man.
tardigrada@beehaw.orgOPto
Politics@beehaw.org•Stop and think: An undervalued approach in a world that short-circuits thoughtful political judgment
3·1 year agoThere’s a lot to learn from Herman and Chomsky, even though the book has been written long time ago. One point I don’t agree with, though, is the notion of ‘manufactured consent’ as the book frames it, as just because individuals in a democracy can’t meaningfully influence ‘corporate mass media’ and their published content doesn’t mean that there is consensus. There is influence at various levels, but not necessarily consensus.
One lesson we can derive from the book is the importance of decentralization not just in media, but in the entire state, its economy, and society. Decentralization is key imo.
(The ironic bit is that the book is sometimes used by Chinese propagandists as a case of Western propaganda (there is a Chinese translation afaik). What they don’t mention is that the Chinese government follows a much harder propaganda playbook than what Herman and Chomsky analyse for the US, and -contrary to China’s media landscape- contrary opinions are allowed, citizen journalists exist, alternative independent media work. In China, all this is impossible.)
tardigrada@beehaw.orgOPto
World News@beehaw.org•Russian Inflation Ticks Up Amid Ruble Woes
6·1 year agoHigher prices were recorded for services (+11.4% vs. +11.3% in October) and food (+9.9% vs. +9%), notably butter (+34.1% vs +29.7%) and fruit and vegetables (+18.7% vs +13.5%). Meanwhile, non-food product price growth remained steady at 5.7%.
tardigrada@beehaw.orgOPto
Environment@beehaw.org•Over 100 countries want an ambitious plastics treaty. Saudi Arabia, Russia, other oil-producing states are getting in the way.
1·1 year agoNo. As @megopie@beehaw.org already said, plastic production plays a major role in the fossil fuel game. We needed such an agreement as the first step, but Russia, SA, and others are blocking unfortunately.
tardigrada@beehaw.orgOPto
Environment@beehaw.org•Over 100 countries want an ambitious plastics treaty. Saudi Arabia, Russia, other oil-producing states are getting in the way.
1·1 year agoThe US was also opposed to this and only changed position until after the November 2024 election. Now they’re for it when they know that the Trump administration will likely never agree to this.
No, the US didn’t change position “until after the November 2024 election”. You have misinterpreted the article.
The article you link to has been written before the election results were known. As it reads:
Mongabay inquiries to the campaigns of U.S. presidential candidates Donald Trump and Kamala Harris went unanswered. But Forbes with Greenpeace USA said that Harris, the current vice president, has been supportive. “She’ll have to step up and show leadership on the process.” Though INC-5 will take place before a change in administration, an empowered Trump administration could “blow up the whole process,” one unnamed negotiator fears. Oil interests have given more than $75 million to Trump PACs, according toThe New York Times.
At the time when the article was published, it was unclear what the US would do, as a Harris administration might have backed an agreement including production limits, but a Trump administration could “blow up the whole process”.




















It’s a good week, although I just obviously got banned by @OneRedFox@beehaw.org, the mod in the Socialism community. Seems that different views are not welcome. I don’t complain (it’s your server, your rules), just wanted to let you know that. I was on Beehaw quite a while and didn’t expect something like that.
Happy new year to everyone.