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March 6, 2016

Turkey: EU Must Cancel March 7 Meeting With Turkey - and grasp the fact that Erdogan is an egomaniac dictator


Dealing with the Erdogan Government
The European Union is facing increasing pressure to speak out against the erosion of Democracy and media freedom in Turkey following the takeover of the country's largest-circulation newspaper, but few expect it to take a bold stance toward Ankara while trying to assure its help in dealing with the migration crisis.

The Istanbul court's appointment of trustees to manage Zaman and its sister outlets further reduced the number of opposition media organizations in Turkey, which is dominated by pro-government news outlets. It raised alarm bells over the deterioration of rights conditions in the NATO member nation, which also aspires for EU membership, just days before a March 7 meeting, in which EU leaders will try to convince Turkey to do more to curtail the flow of migrants traveling to Europe.

"The EU countries are preoccupied with their migration crisis, they are no longer concerned by rights violations in Turkey," said Semih Idiz, columnist for the opposition Cumhuriyet and independent Daily Hurriyet newspapers. "They'll say a few things as a matter of form, but they know they are dependent on Turkey."

As an undisclosed member of the Turkish opposition noted: ' the illegal takeover of the Zaman newspaper by the Turkish Government is a disgrace and a disregard  by the Turkish Government of all basic Democratic Rights.

The EU must put their money where their mouth is, specifically when it comes to Democracy, Freedom of the Press, and Human Rights, which have all been flagrantly violated by the Turkish government,  and postpone the upcoming March 7 meeting with Turkey.

The EU also will need to close all its Southern borders with Turkey and repatriate refugees back to Turkey which have recently entere,  or those that are still making the crossing from Turkey into the EU, until Turkey comes forward with, or agrees to a verifiable agreemen as to solving the refugee crises.  

Last but not least, if the Erdogan Government continues to resort to intimidation tactics in its discussions with the EU, by making unreasonable demands,  the EU should as a last resort, consider suspending diplomatic relations with Turkey.

The question, however, that is also foremost on everyone's mind  is "when will the EU finally come to grasp with the fact that Erdogan is really an egomaniac dictator, who is dragging not only his country but also the Middle East into further chaos ?

In dealing with the Erdogan government the EU must not only carry a carrot, but also a stick.

EU-Digest

March 5, 2016

Pollution: Meat Is Murder — On the Climate, Anyway - Americans eat 60 percent more than Europeans

One of the leading sources of methane
Beware the cows !

Sure, it looks like we've got them where we want them, penned up in farms, easily led to the meat-packing plants. But in an ongoing display of passive resistance, they may be trying to take us with them.

 Beyond the fat and cholesterol, they're also one of the leading sources of methane — a planet-warming greenhouse gas with 25 times the punch of carbon dioxide on a 100-year time scale. And those emissions are expected to go up planet-wide as developing countries urbanize and get richer, putting a Western-style diet within the reach of billions more people.

In the United States alone, what the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) euphemistically calls "enteric fermentation" — the belches and farts of livestock, mostly cattle — is the second-biggest source of US methane emissions. Those emissions added up to the equivalent of 648 million metric tons of carbon dioxide in 2014. Their manure added another 60 million, according to an EPA report released last week.

 And when you total up the effect of all the feed, fertilizer, and fuel involved in modern farming, that quarter-pound cheeseburger ends up having the same carbon footprint as a nearly seven-mile (11-kilometer) drive, said Dawn Undurraga, a nutritionist with the nonprofit Environmental Working Group.

 "Americans eat a huge amount of meat," Undurraga said. "We eat 60 percent more than Europeans and somewhere between 150 or 200 percent of our needs."

Note Almere Digest: Pollution, not only by industry, but also as a result of agriculture, livestock, meat production industry, etc.etc, will eventually kill us all, if we don't act now. 

 If you are a parent and not discussing these issues with your children, to make sure they become aware of this disaster, you are basically just as criminal as the polluters. Watch programs on TV like "Meat is murder - on the climate anyway" (see story above),  do it together as a family, and talk about it afterwards. 

Might not be as much fun as sport activities, music concerts. or reality shows, but certainly will better prepare your kids for the future and hopefully also make them realize that being an "activist" is not a stigma or a dirty word. 

Read more: Meat Is Murder — On the Climate, Anyway | VICE News

March 3, 2016

The Netherlands: Refugee Crises - Plan to fly in refugees from Turkey shows divisions in Dutch cabinet - Janene Pieters

European countries, including the Netherlands, must start taking in asylum seekers from Turkey through legal channels. And this must happen immediately, according to PvdA leader Diederik Samsom. His party wants Prime Minister Mark Rutte to advocate for an “air bridge” to bring hundreds of asylum seekers from Turkey to Europe per day, effective almost immediately at the European summit on the issue on Monday. Coalition party VVD is against this plan.

Samsom suggests that Europe takes “at least 400 asylum seekers a day” from Turkey for a trial period of a month. “As a sign of good will”, he said to the Volkskrant. “If the EU shows Turkey that we are serious about resolving the refugee crisis, Ankara will start acting against the human traffickers. Now mistrust reigns and nothing happens, except that humanitarian dramas grow by the hour.”

The PvdA leader believes that his proposal will jump-start the agreements made between the EU and Turkey in November. Turkey promised to slow the flow of asylum seekers to Greece. And in return the EU will give 3 billion euros in subsidies for asylum camps in Turkey, lift the visa requirements for Turks wanting to come to Europe and provide legal routes for recognized refugees to enter the EU. Samsom believes that the reason nothing has come of these plans as of yet, is that both parties are waiting for the other to take the first step.

Coalition partner VVD is 100 percent opposed to the plan. In reaction VVD leader Halbe Zijlstra told the Volkskrant that Turkey must first reduce the asylum flow to “zero” before an air bridge can be arranged. “Otherwise there will be two asylum flows and we will be doubly screwed”, he said to the newspaper. “If Europe does what Samsom proposes, we reward the inaction of the Turks and they will never come into action.”



Read more: Plan to fly in refugees from Turkey shows divisions in Dutch cabinet - NL Times

March 2, 2016

US Presidential Elections: More countries are destroyed by their own politicians than by foreign armies - editorial

Montesquieu,
“The deterioration of every government begins with the decay of the principles on which it was founded.”, said  Montesquieu, (Charles Louis de Secondat)  (1689-1755), a  famous French political philosopher who lived during the European "Age of Enlightenment".

In fact, putting this in the context of the US Constitution and the intended way America is supposed to function, it follows,“Congress makes the laws, the president carries them out, judges decide controversies, and the citizens may be penalized only by a jury of their peers”,

Unfortunately, in reality, this is not how the US functions as a political entity anymore.

America is now ruled by a uniformly educated class of persons controlling the commanding heights of bureaucracy, of the judiciary, education, the media, large corporations, and that force wields political power through the political establishment.

Its control of access to prestige, power, privilege, and wealth exerts a gravitational pull that has made the political elites its major accomplices.

As to the economy : “Think of the American economy as a large apartment block. A century ago—even 30 years ago—it was the object of envy. But in the last generation its character has changed."

"The penthouses at the top keep getting larger and larger. The apartments in the middle are feeling more and more squeezed and the basement has flooded. To round it off, the elevator is no longer working. That broken elevator is what gets people down the most.” said Lawrence Katz, Harvard University economist, already back in 2010.

British Prime Minister Winston Churchill (1874-1965) once noted that “democracy is the worst form of government, except for all the others.”  Indeed, democracy is a very fragile political system that can sometimes fail the very people it is designed to serve.

American president Abraham Lincoln (1809-1865) defined it as “a government of the people, by the people, and for the people.” He would turnover in his grave if he saw how his Republican party defines the functions of Government today.

But democracy is at its worst when an oligarchy takes control of a country’s institutions and imposes its own agenda. Such is the case, unfortunately, in today’s United States. Money interests, not the sovereign people, control the political system; they control the corporate media system, they control the U.S. Supreme Court and much of the judicial system and, one can even argue that they control a large chunk of the academic system.

The U. S. economy, like most industrial economies, is an open economy. This means that goods and services can be exported and imported while facing a minimum of border taxes and other barriers to international trade. For a quarter of a century now, it has also meant that the U. S. economy is part of the economic globalization model.

The later goes much further than free trade: it means that corporations and banks can move their capital, technology and production plants around the world in search of the greatest profit and the best investment environment. Many economists believe that this globalization model has been pushed too far and has become a major cause of economic stagnation in the industrial economies.

In an open economy, keynesian-type stimulus policies of deficit government spending or of tax reduction do not work properly, essentially because stimulus policies of this type are the equivalent of heating a house in winter with the windows and doors wide open. The new deficit spending may help the world economy, since much of the new spending ends up abroad, but the domestic multiplier effect of such spending can be very low. This means that such an economic stimulus in an open economy may not be as effective in stimulating economic activity as hoped and, in some circumstances, it can do more harm than good.

Nevertheless, many politicians (and some economists cling to the old idea that lowering taxes for the rich when the government is in deficit or new non-infrastructure government deficit spending can stimulate the economy.

 This obviously does not work, at least not if the new deficit spending is not focused domestically. Spending deficit money in Afghanistan or in Iraq doesn’t much stimulate the U.S. economy!

What works in an open economy are policies geared toward changing relative prices in order to encourage domestic production and employment. First of all, a lowering of the real exchange rate can encourage net exports and stimulate domestic production and employment, provided the government does not sustain excessive domestic absorption through unproductive large deficits.

Another approach to move relative prices in favor of domestic production and employment is to use the tax system accordingly. Presently, many American corporations are hardly taxed at all on their profits when they operate abroad. Some appropriate taxation of these profits can encourage repatriation of capital and support additional domestic investments. It may be argued that the American political system is not flexible enough to allow for the use of tax policies to encourage domestic production and employment. If so, this would be another indication that the current state of the political system in the U. S. is inimical to economic progress.

The results of the present day US economic policies are everywhere to be seen. The United States has reached levels of inequality in wealth and income that used to be seen only in some backyard third-world countries.

Specifically, therefore, when it comes to politics, it is also in the best interest of any country to avoid giving power to idiots, ignoramuses, incompetents, devious and delusional characters or to demagogues. If not, watch out.

The records show — More countries are destroyed by their own politicians rather than by foreign armies.

Donald Trump’s claim to be an enemy of 'rule-by-inside-deal' is counter intuitive. His career and fortune have been as participant and beneficiary in the process by which government grants privileges to some and inflicts burdens on others. Crony capitalism is the air he breathes, the only sea in which he swims, his second nature. His recipe for “fixing” America, he tells us, is to appoint “the best people”—he names some of his fellow crony capitalists—to exercise even more unaccountable power and to do so with “unbelievable speed.” He assures the voter that, this time, it will be to “make America great again.” Sure, tell us another one Mr.Trump.

Hillary Clinton's approach is to "improve on the system" as she says. She's also embracing the label of "insider," declaring that she knows "what it takes to get things done". With Hillary it is probably the word "insider" which worries most Americans,specially those who believe that the US political system is rotten to the core.

Bernie Sanders's call for a political revolution is at the center of his political appeal. Progressives don't just love him because his policy proposals are more left wing than Hillary's. They love the fact that he calls America's political and economic system by what it is: corrupt.

America's choice for President in November 2016 will either be as significant as the declaration of independence on July 4, 1776, or the final chapter in the systematic destruction of the American Democracy..
.

EU-Digest

Nigeria: Environmental Concerns: Dutch Royal Shell proves test case for oil majors’ -- by William Wallis and Anjli Raval

Royal Dutch Shell’s environmental record will come under renewed fire on Wednesday in two cases that will test the ability of aggrieved communities in Nigeria to use UK courts to hold the company to account.

Shell’s Nigeria subsidiary, the Shell Petroleum Development Corporation (SPDC), is the largest onshore producer in the Niger Delta, where millions of barrels have been spilled — in accidents and as a result of criminal interference — since oil was first discovered in 1956.

In many instances — including in the two cases being brought to the high court in London by solicitors Leigh Day on behalf of the affected communities of Ogale and Bille — the spills have yet to be properly cleaned up. Shell says that in both cases sabotage and oil theft was a likely cause.

Lawyers at Leigh Day said their action would contribute to establishing whether oil spill litigation “goes international”. They would also seek to compel the company to clean up the affected areas immediately and compensate villagers for the impact on their lives in the wake of last year’s £55m payout by Shell for a similar Nigerian case brought by the Bodo community, also handled by Leigh Day.

Wednesday’s hearing is a procedural one in which Leigh Day will begin to make the case for why a UK court should have jurisdiction over Shell’s Nigeria subsidiary. Similar cases brought against SPDC and other oil companies in Nigeria have tended to languish for years, even decades.

“No one is going to mess around in the Nigerian courts if they can get remedy in the UK,” said Daniel Leader, lead solicitor in one of the cases.

In the past, the World Wildlife Fund has said that amount of oil spilled in Nigeria over the decades has been equivalent to an Exxon Valdez disaster every year for half a century. It claims the Niger Delta is one of the top five polluted places on earth. 

Read more Shell proves test case for oil majors’ environmental records - FT.com

March 1, 2016

e Top Lobbyist for Drug Makers Threads a Thicket of Outrage - by Robert Pear

Few
lobbyists have walked into the kind of political inferno that greeted
Stephen J. Ubl when he became the top pitchman for the pharmaceutical
industry.



Mr.
Ubl, the 47-year-old president and chief executive of the
Pharmaceutical Research and Manufacturers of America, took charge in
November, as the Obama administration, presidential candidates, members
of Congress, consumer groups, health insurance companies and doctors were criticizing the prescription drug industry for charging prices they saw as exorbitant and excessive.

The anger has only grown worse.

“Enough is enough,” Senator Bernie Sanders of Vermont, the firebrand Democratic presidential candidate, wrote on Twitter on Thursday. “Pfizer and other pharmaceutical companies can no longer be allowed to rip off American patients.”

That anger is just one of the challenges facing Mr. Ubl.

The
pharmaceutical and health products industry spent more on federal
lobbying than any other industry in  015, according to the Center for
Responsive Politics, an independent group that tracks money in politics. 

Within that sector, the Pharmaceutical Research and Manufacturers of
America led the list, with $18.4 million in spending on a wide range of
health, trade and patent issues. Mr. Ubl’s lobbying powerhouse has
members that include giants like Amgen, Eli Lilly, Johnson &
Johnson, Merck and Pfizer.

The
group reported total expenses of nearly $208 million in 2014, the most
recent available filing with the Internal Revenue Service. Its 170
employees work at its headquarters here, as well as in nine offices in
the United States and others in Tokyo and Dubai.

Some
of that money is used to cultivate strategic relationships through
grants to doctor organizations and nonprofit advocacy groups
representing patients with specific diseases like cancer, Alzheimer’s, diabetes and arthritis. And the organization multiplies its influence through more than 30 lobbying, consulting, communications and law firms.

But
public outrage over drug prices is boiling. John C. Rother, who leads
the Campaign for Sustainable RPricing, backed by consumer, labor and
physician groups, said Mr. Ubl was in an impossible position.

“The
issue is prices,” Mr. Rother said, and the lobby for drug makers, like
other trade associations, “can’t do much on prices without getting into
trouble under the antitrust laws.” Any efforts to control or suggest
prices raise antitrust concerns, federal officials say.

Mr.
Ubl (pronounced YOU-bul) said the drug lobby had been effective at
beating back proposals like allowing the government to negotiate drug
prices or import medicines from Canada. But, he said, it has not been as
good at formulating and advancing a positive agenda. He hopes to change
that.
Brand-name
drug companies and manufacturers of lower-cost generic drugs have
historically been rivals. But Mr. Ubl said he wanted the government to
speed the approval of generic drugs and approve more of them, reducing a
backlog of generic drug applications. Increased competition, he said,
would help hold down prices — and could perhaps avoid another outcry
like the one over Daraprim, a drug to treat a life-threatening parasitic
infection.

Turing
Pharmaceuticals, a start-up founded by a former hedge fund manager,
Martin Shkreli, acquired Daraprim last year and immediately increased the price to $750 a tablet, from $13.50.

Note EU-Digest: Many Americans who have family members or friends living abroad and need prescription drugs are often having them buy the exact similar prescription drugs as those being sold in America in Europe at often less than 10% of the US listed price. 

In one particular case, a person who required eye drops to keep his Glaucoma pressure under control had a family friend buy the eye drops, which in America would have cost him $200.00   (same brand name and quality) for approximately $10.00 in Europe . This is not only scandalous, but also complete highway robbery.  


Read more: Pharmaceutical Industry Ripoff: Top Lobbyist for Drug Makers Threads a Thicket of Outrage - The New York Times

Greece: Migrant crisis: Greece needs EU help to avoid chaos, says Merkel

Austria and several Balkan countries have introduced restrictions stranding migrants in Greece.

Mrs Merkel said EU nations had not battled to keep Greece in the euro just to leave it "in the lurch".

She also defended her decision to open German borders to migrants, despite a resulting slump in her popularity.

More than one million people arrived to claim asylum last year, sparking opposition within her governing coalition  and a rise in far-right extremism.

But speaking on Germany's ARD television, Mrs Merkel said she had no "Plan B" and would not change course, rejecting a proposed limit on migration.

In the coming weeks she faces a major test when voters go to the polls in three German states.

On Greece she said: "Do you seriously believe that all the euro states that last year fought all the way to keep Greece in the eurozone, and we were the strictest, can one year later allow Greece to, in a way, plunge into chaos?"

Greece is the main entry point for migrants arriving in Europe, and was infuriated after a group of countries led by Austria installed controls.

It recalled its ambassador to Austria after the group held talks but did not invite Greece.

A key meeting is scheduled on 7 March between EU members and Turkey and a further summit due later that month.

Read more: Migrant crisis: Greece needs EU help to avoid chaos, says Merkel - BBC News