Etiquette



DP Etiquette

First rule: Don't be a jackass.

Other rules: Do not attack or insult people you disagree with. Engage with facts, logic and beliefs. Out of respect for others, please provide some sources for the facts and truths you rely on if you are asked for that. If emotion is getting out of hand, get it back in hand. To limit dehumanizing people, don't call people or whole groups of people disrespectful names, e.g., stupid, dumb or liar. Insulting people is counterproductive to rational discussion. Insult makes people angry and defensive. All points of view are welcome, right, center, left and elsewhere. Just disagree, but don't be belligerent or reject inconvenient facts, truths or defensible reasoning.

Wednesday, December 21, 2022

The rise of corporate power and wealth in the US

This raises some interesting points about how corporations in the US came to escape restrictions on them and empowered to inflict social and environmental damage with impunity. I do not recall this being taught in public schools, but it probably should be.

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Reclaim Democracy! writes:

When American colonists declared independence from England in 1776, they also freed themselves from control by English corporations that extracted their wealth and dominated trade. After fighting a revolution to end this exploitation, our country’s founders retained a healthy fear of corporate power and wisely limited corporations exclusively to a business role. Corporations were forbidden from attempting to influence elections, public policy, and other realms of civic society.

Initially, the privilege of incorporation was granted selectively to enable activities that benefited the public, such as construction of roads or canals. Enabling shareholders to profit was seen as a means to that end. The states also imposed conditions (some of which remain on the books, though unused) like these:
  • Corporate charters (licenses to exist) were granted for a limited time and could be revoked promptly for violating laws.
  • Corporations could engage only in activities necessary to fulfill their chartered purpose.
  • Corporations could not own stock in other corporations nor own any property that was not essential to fulfilling their chartered purpose.
  • Corporations were often terminated if they exceeded their authority or caused public harm.
  • Owners and managers were responsible for criminal acts committed on the job.
  • Corporations could not make any political or charitable contributions nor spend money to influence law-making.
For 100 years after the American Revolution, legislators maintained tight control of the corporate chartering process. Because of widespread public opposition, early legislators granted very few corporate charters, and only after debate. Citizens governed corporations by detailing operating conditions not just in charters but also in state constitutions and state laws. Incorporated businesses were prohibited from taking any action that legislators did not specifically allow.

States also limited corporate charters to a set number of years. Unless a legislature renewed an expiring charter, the corporation was dissolved and its assets were divided among shareholders. Citizen authority clauses limited capitalization, debts, land holdings, and sometimes, even profits. They required a company’s accounting books to be turned over to a legislature upon request. The power of large shareholders was limited by scaled voting, so that large and small investors had equal voting rights. Interlocking directorates were outlawed. Shareholders had the right to remove directors at will.

But the men running corporations pressed on. Contests over charter were battles to control labor, resources, community rights, and political sovereignty. More and more frequently, corporations were abusing their charters to become conglomerates and trusts. They converted the nation’s resources and treasures into private fortunes, creating factory systems and company towns. Political power began flowing to absentee owners, rather than community-rooted enterprises.

The industrial age forced a nation of farmers to become wage earners, and they became fearful of unemployment–a new fear that corporations quickly learned to exploit. Company towns arose. and blacklists of labor organizers and workers who spoke up for their rights became common. When workers began to organize, industrialists and bankers hired private armies to keep them in line — sometimes by killing key leaders. They bought newspapers to paint businessmen as heroes and shape public opinion. Corporations bought state legislators, then announced legislators were corrupt and said scrutinizing every corporate operation wasted public resources

Government spending during the Civil War brought these corporations fantastic wealth. Corporate executives paid “borers” to infest Congress and state capitals, bribing elected and appointed officials alike. They pried loose an avalanche of government financial largesse. During this time, legislators were persuaded to give corporations limited liability, decreased citizen authority over them, and extended durations of charters.

Attempts were made to keep strong charter laws in place, but with the courts applying legal doctrines that made protection of corporations and corporate property the center of constitutional law, citizen sovereignty was undermined. As corporations grew stronger, government and the courts became easier prey. They freely reinterpreted the U.S. Constitution and transformed common law doctrines.

One of the most severe blows to citizen authority arose out of the 1886 Supreme Court case of Santa Clara County v. Southern Pacific Railroad. Though the court did not make a ruling on the question of “corporate personhood,” thanks to misleading notes of a clerk, the decision subsequently was used as precedent to hold that a corporation was a “natural person.” (This story was detailed in “The Theft of Human Rights,” a chapter in Thom Hartmann’s Unequal Protection.)

From that point on, the 14th Amendment, enacted to protect rights of freed slaves, was used routinely to grant corporations constitutional “personhood.” Justices have since struck down hundreds of local, state and federal laws enacted to protect people from corporate harm based on this illegitimate premise. Armed with these “rights,” corporations increased control over resources, jobs, commerce, politicians, judges, and the law.

A United States Congressional committee concluded in 1941, “The principal instrument of the concentration of economic power and wealth has been the corporate charter with unlimited power….”

Some observations & commentary
Notice how power and wealth are persistent. They never stop looking for ways to get more, even if it takes centuries. Power and wealth accumulated by corporations have corrupted government and gained great power over citizens. That power often or usually is not used for the benefit of citizens. Instead, it is used to gain more power and wealth for corporations.

I keep harping here on the importance of keeping eyes on the flow of power when radical right American politicians howl about the tyrannical socialist horrors of business regulations. When those politicians deregulate, power usually flows from government and/or citizens to special interests. Power in the form of consumer protections, civil liberties and freedom from corporate deceit does not tend to flow to citizens. It usually flows away from citizens and/or government. 

Right now, our radical right, brass knuckles capitalist Republican Supreme Court is in the process of arrogating power to itself so it can block government efforts to deal with climate change and give state legislatures the power to turn elections into a non-democratic farce. Power flows away from citizens and to political elites and allied corporations who buy those elites.

Republicans in congress want to completely get rid of federal Consumer Finance Protection Bureau because it protects citizens, not corporations. Recent Supreme Court decisions shield corporate political activities behind an impenetrable wall of opacity. That allows for plausible deniability about corporations corrupting government (via campaign contributions, etc.), opposing efforts to deal with climate change, profiting from polluting, and spreading lies in vast propaganda campaigns to deceive the public and politicians. 

And there is this parody of an oil company ad pretending to care about climate change, in the initial ~1:40 of the video:



Acknowledgement: Thanks to Freeze Peach for bringing this article to my attention.

Tuesday, December 20, 2022

Thoughts on juries, plausible deniability and the reasonable doubt concept

NPR broadcast a sad story yesterday about a parent (or sibling) of a 20-something woman who died from an overdose of fentanyl that was in some other drug (heroine?). The young woman was in daily phone contact with the parent but one day she didn’t call. The parent got worried and started searching. The next day, the found the body of the woman. She was killed by fentanyl in the drug. The police caught the drug dealer. He confessed to selling the bad drug to the dead woman. 

One member of a 12-person jury acquitted the drug dealer because they had a reasonable doubt about whether the drug dealer was one who actually sold the tainted drug to the dead woman. That one juror said they “reasonably” believed the dead woman could have bought the bad drug from someone else during the ~24 hour delay before her body was found. The drug dealer was released and faced no criminal liability in the incident.

That is how fragile and unpredictable it can be to find criminal guilt in court. All it takes is to create a “reasonable” doubt in the mind of just one person. All it took was for the drug dealer’s defense attorney to point out that it was possible that the dead woman bought some tainted drug from someone else, even though there was no evidence of another drug dealer. The belief in guilt of the other eleven jurors was irrelevant. Just that one person and their doubt let the drug dealer go free.

In the eyes of the law, justice was swerved. But was justice really served? Why did eleven people see guilt where just one did not? Exactly what does “reasonable doubt” mean?

Now, think about all the defenses that Trump will raise if he ever is indicted for anything related to his 1/6 coup attempt and the Republican Party’s culpability. It is hard and unpredictable to get criminal convictions for blue collar crimes and criminals. It is about ten times worse for white collar criminals like Trump or Republican elites. It is almost a miracle that Trump’s charity and university were found to be fraudulent criminal operations. But even there, Trump suffered no serious personal repercussions. He paid a pipsqueak fine and paid some stolen money back. Big deal. /s

The Imperial Supreme Court rises to power over all

This legal analysis is very important to know at least a little about. It directly speaks to how Republican Party fascism will most likely rise to power. It hints at the terrifying influence that (i) brass knuckles capitalism, (ii) rabid Christian nationalism, and (iii) the court’s often contradictory and/or irrational ‘all ends justify any means mindset.’ 

The argument laid out here strongly suggests that American fascism will most likely rise mostly via the least democratic federal institution, the now Imperial US Supreme Court. I posted this yesterday but it got lost in the focus on Trump’s criminal referrals to the DoJ. Due to its importance, I deleted this from yesterday’s original post, and repost and expand it here as a stand alone item. This really does deserve some attention.

The conventional critique of the Supreme Court these days is that it has lurched to the right and is out of step with the public on many issues. That is true so far as it goes.

But a burst of recent legal scholarship makes a deeper point, saying the current court is distinctive in a different way: It has rapidly been accumulating power at the expense of every other part of the government.

The phenomenon was documented last month by Mark A. Lemley, a law professor at Stanford, in an article called “The Imperial Supreme Court” in The Harvard Law Review.[1]

“The court has not been favoring one branch of government over another, or favoring states over the federal government, or the rights of people over governments,” Professor Lemley wrote. “Rather, it is withdrawing power from all of them at once.” 
He added, “It is a court that is consolidating its power, systematically undercutting any branch of government, federal or state, that might threaten that power, while at the same time undercutting individual rights.” 
In a similar vein, Justice Elena Kagan noted the majority’s imperial impulses in a dissent from a decision in June that limited the Environmental Protection Agency’s ability to address climate change.

“The court appoints itself — instead of Congress or the expert agency — the decision maker on climate policy,” she wrote. “I cannot think of many things more frightening.”

A second study, to be published in Presidential Studies Quarterly, concentrated on cases involving the executive branch and backed up Professor Lemley’s observations with data. Taking account of 3,660 decisions since 1937, the study found that the court led since 2005 by Chief Justice John G. Roberts Jr. has been “uniquely willing to check executive authority.”  
The study’s authors, Rebecca L. Brown and Lee Epstein, both of the University of Southern California, wrote that “there is little indication that the Roberts court’s willingness to rule against the president bears any reliable relation to preserving the balance among the branches or the workings and accountability of the democratic process.”

“Instead,” they wrote, “there are increasingly frequent indications that the court is establishing a position of judicial supremacy over the president and Congress.”
Why is the Supreme Court accumulating power? To advance the raging Christian nationalist and brass knuckles capitalist agendas that they were knowingly put on the bench to advance. All the evidence so far is that the radical right Christian nationalist-laissez-faire capitalist Supreme Court is going to try to completely rework the federal government and Christianize American society under Christian Sharia law. The court intends to kill secularism, secular law, secular public education, democracy, civil liberties and regulation of business, consumer protections, guns and pollution. That is the court’s agenda. It is the same as the fascist Republican Party’s agenda. 

If the Republican Christofascist Supreme Court gets its way, government, social and commercial power will be wielded by cruel, corrupt, arrogant plutocrats and an enraged White male Christian Taliban. Secular public schools will be replaced by radicalized Christian Madrasas schools that brainwash innocent children to accept and practice hate, intolerance and White Christian bigotry.

Rulers and teachers in the Christian Madrasas


Q: How likely is it that the Supreme Court, staunchly backed by a radical right Republican Party, will be able to radically Christianize America and convert it to some form of a non-democratic, radical capitalist Christofascist theocracy-kleptocracy in the next ~5 years? 0%? ~5%? ~20%? Something else?


Footnote: 
The past few years have marked the emergence of the imperial Supreme Court. Armed with a new, nearly bulletproof majority, conservative Justices on the Court have embarked on a radical restructuring of American law across a range of fields and disciplines. Unlike previous shifts in the Court, this one isn’t marked by debates over federal versus state power, or congressional versus judicial power, or judicial activism versus restraint. Nor is it marked by the triumph of one form of constitutional interpretation over another. On each of those axes, the Court’s recent opinions point in radically different directions. The Court has taken significant, simultaneous steps to restrict the power of Congress, the administrative state, the states, and the lower federal courts. And it has done so using a variety of (often contradictory) interpretative methodologies. The common denominator across multiple opinions in the last two years is that they concentrate power in one place: the Supreme Court. (emphasis added)
My quibble with Lemley is this. Those Republicans are not merely “conservative Justices on the Court.” They are radical right extremists at the least, Christofascists IMO.

Monday, December 19, 2022

Trump's criminal referrals

The 1/6 committee referred the traitor thug Trump to the DoJ for breaking four laws. As always for white collar crimes like that criminal intent is front and center. Goon tyrants in the US like Trump are expert at making sure plausible deniability is sufficient to convince at least 1 juror there is reasonable doubt or plausible deniability. People like the lying pro-tyranny lawyer John Eastman gave advice to Trump that he will point to as evidence he seriously believed he was not breaking any law.

That is one huge bulwark that defends Trump against a criminal indictment.

Another bulwark in favor of Trump is the paralyzed Merrick Garland.

Between the plausible deniability and the ineffective Garland, the criminal referrals of the 1/6 Committee may not go anywhere.

The unknown here is special prosecutor Jack Smith. I don’t know if the criminal referrals will reach Smith or not.

NBC News summarized:
  • The committee voted to make criminal referrals to the Justice Department for former President Donald Trump, lawyer John Eastman and unspecified "others." Trump was referred under four criminal statutes: obstructing an official proceeding, making false statements, defrauding the U.S. and inciting an insurrection.
  • The panel also referred four Republican members of Congress to the House Ethics Committee for ignoring its subpoenas, though it did not name the members.
The 154 page 1/6 Committee introductory material is at this link. The final full report will be released with in the next week.

Investigators on the committee said they decided on criminal referrals against Trump based on sufficient evidence showing that he violated various statutes: inciting, assisting, or aiding and comforting an insurrection; obstructing an official proceeding; conspiracy to defraud the United States; conspiracy to make a false statement; and other conspiracy statutes.

The recommendations themselves, however, are largely symbolic, as the Department of Justice is not required to look into referrals from congressional committees. They also come as the agency is conducting its own investigation into the Capitol riot that was recently put under the purview of an independent special counsel.

But the referrals nonetheless mark a significant escalation in the political fight between the committee and Trump, especially as the former president wages his third bid for the White House.

From the lying, corrupt Republican politician files, etc.

Why are so many Republican politicians 
lying criminals?

What the hell is going on with all these Republican criminals being elected to office? Where is the mainstream media before these corrupt liars get elected? The NYT writes:
George Santos, whose election to Congress on Long Island last month helped Republicans clinch a narrow majority in the House of Representatives, built his candidacy on the notion that he was the “full embodiment of the American dream” and was running to safeguard it for others.

His campaign biography amplified his storybook journey: He is the son of Brazilian immigrants, and the first openly gay Republican to win a House seat as a non-incumbent. By his account, he catapulted himself from a New York City public college to become a “seasoned Wall Street financier and investor” with a family-owned real estate portfolio of 13 properties and an animal rescue charity that saved more than 2,500 dogs and cats.

But a New York Times review of public documents and court filings from the United States and Brazil, as well as various attempts to verify claims that Mr. Santos, 34, made on the campaign trail, calls into question key parts of the résumé that he sold to voters.
The NYT article goes on to point out that it could find no information to verify this thug’s claimed university education, his career as a seasoned Wall Street financier and investor, his family business, his 13 properties or his animal rescue charity. All of it appears to be vaporware lies. The NYT did find that he had criminal charges filed against him in Brazil for check fraud. Not surprisingly, that fun little tidbit was omitted from his personal disclosure statements. What a patriot!!

As usual for Republican politicians in this situation, Santos and his public relations firm (lying propagandists) fall back on the tried, true and effective KYMS propaganda tactic. His public relations firm, Big Dog Strategies, is a Republican-oriented political consulting group that handles crisis management. They all refuse to answer any questions. By golly, that’s first rate crisis management. With the KYMS shields up, people inclined to hate Democrats and liberals can give Santos the benefit of a doubt and feel good about electing a corrupt scumbag to congress. 

KYMS = keep your mouth shut


How many, if any, of these people 
is not a criminal?


CNNs march toward Faux News Lite status
Chris Licht, who became CEO of CNN earlier this year, said he has been surprised by the “uninformed vitriol” directed at him from liberals as he attempts to shift the network’s editorial direction, in a series of interviews with The New York Times.

Licht took over the network in May, making a series of staffing and programmatic changes that have sparked buzz about Licht aiming for a more centrist slant.

“The uninformed vitriol, especially from the left, has been stunning,” Licht told the Times. “Which proves my point: so much of what passes for news is name-calling, half-truths and desperation.”  
But Licht has also faced the strains of a slowing economy and dwindling digital advertising, causing him to lay off some rank-and-file employees and make other major cuts.
Despite claiming that alleged uninformed vitriol from the left proves that much of what passes for news is name-calling, half-truths and desperation, Licht did not give one example of uninformed leftist vitriol. All he had to do to have any credibility on this was just specify three or four examples of what he is talking about. Either Licht is just making stuff up, and/or The Hill is incompetent in not asking and/or reporting some of what the alleged uninformed vitriol is. Absent that information, the public has to take his word for it. Since he is struggling with inadequate profit, one can reasonably conclude Licht is a liar.

See, that’s what happens when one loses trust. Here, the ruthless capitalist profit motive is front and center. We all know what happens to inconvenient fact, truth and sound reasoning when it gets in the way of profit. All Licht has to do is state examples of the uninformed vitriol he has experienced. Then we can decide for ourselves if he is full of crap or not.


From the thugs and scoundrels files
Trump calls Jan. 6 panel members ‘Thugs and Scoundrels’ 
ahead of Monday hearing

The panel has also expected to issue symbolic criminal referrals on Monday, with multiple members arguing there is plenty of evidence that Trump is guilty of crimes.

“Republicans and Patriots all over the land must stand strong and united against the Thugs and Scoundrels of the Unselect Committee,” Trump wrote on his Truth Social platform. “It will be a dark period in American history, but with darkness comes light!!!”
The amount of projecting that goes on with fascist Republicans continues to be breathtaking. Those folks have zero shame and zero concern about their own hypocrisy and double standards. Truth Social is Lies Antisocial! Just like the fascist GOP!



From the crackpots galore files:
Musk gets voted out of Twitter power?
More than half of 17.5 million users who responded to a Twitter poll created by billionaire Elon Musk over whether he should step down as head of the company had voted yes by the time the poll closed Monday.

There was no immediate announcement from Twitter, or Musk, about whether that would happen, though Musk said that he would abide by the results. 

The results of the unscientific online survey, which lasted 12 hours, showed that 57.5% of those who voted wanted him to leave, while the remaining 42.5% wanted him to say.
Even if Musk leaves, he probably won’t really leave. Instead, he can just hire someone else do his deranged crackpottery for him, e.g., bullshit Musk Twitter stuff like this from the AP article:
The action to block competitors was Musk’s latest attempt to crack down on certain speech after he shut down a Twitter account last week that was tracking the flights of his private jet.

The banned platforms included mainstream websites such as Facebook and Instagram, and upstart rivals Mastodon, Tribel, Nostr, Post and former President Donald Trump’s Truth Social. Twitter gave no explanation for why the blacklist included those seven websites but not others such as Parler, TikTok or LinkedIn.

A test case was the prominent venture capitalist Paul Graham, who in the past has praised Musk but on Sunday told his 1.5 million Twitter followers that this was the “last straw” and to find him on Mastodon. His Twitter account was promptly suspended, and soon after restored as Musk promised to reverse the policy implemented just hours earlier.
Are things in America more whacky than usual, or is it just me? Hm. I’m gonna go check out Mastodon, Tribel, Nostr and Post. Wonder how whacky they are going to be.

Sunday, December 18, 2022

News: Ruthless capitalism, circular firing squad update, etc.

From the Business as Usual Files:
Brass knuckles capitalism poisons drug prices
The AP writes about a combination drug that just got FDA approval. The product is used to treat Lou Gehrig’s disease or ALS (amyotrophic lateral sclerosis). ALS is an incurable neurodegenerative disease that’s usually fatal within five years. Its price is beyond shamelessly exorbitant:
In September, Relyvrio became only the third drug approved in the U.S. for ALS, or amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, an incurable neurodegenerative disease that is usually fatal within five years. But patients and physicians who celebrated Relyvrio’s approval several months ago are now contending with the obstacles posed by the U.S. health care system.

Patients with insurance coverage say the $158,000 per year price tag set by drugmaker Amylyx Pharmaceutical is fueling insurance delays or denials, and sometimes exorbitant out-of-pocket expenses.

Even when Relyvrio is covered, some patients see themselves shouldering co-payments between $1,000 and $4,000 per month.  
Some patients who are already taking a do-it-yourself approach to the treatment see little reason to change.
A professional cost-benefit analysis indicates that Relyvrio should cost between $9,100 and $30,700 per year. The drug showed some effectiveness in slowing the progression of ALS for a few months compared to untreated control patients. The data on efficacy appear to be weak. The company is conducting a larger study to answer lingering questions about its effectiveness, including whether it really extends survival.

The approved drug is a combination of one known pharmaceutical drug and one over the counter nutritional supplement. The drug, sodium phenylbutyrate, can be bought separately for $550/month ($6,600/year) and the supplement, taurursodiol, costs about $30/month ($360/year) from online sources. Some ALS patients are considering this option instead of paying the exorbitant company price.

sodium phenylbutyrate - not a complex molecule
(it’s relatively expensive because it is an approved drug, and supplies,
prices and availability are controlled by suppliers and drug laws)


taurosodiol (tauroursodeoxycholic Acid) - a naturally-occurring bile acid
used to treat some liver and bile disorders (this molecule is low cost to buy)

Going the do-it-yourself approach (separately buying the two ingredients) costs about $7,000/year compared to the $158,000/year the company charges. As usual, the company vigorously argues that the high cost is needed to recover its R&D costs. The cost-benefit analysis indicates that is a typical, shameless drug company lie. That’s cruel, brass knuckles capitalism at work.


From the Pulling Heads out of Butts Files:
Democrats are waking up to their circular firing squads 
A really interesting NYT opinion piece by Michelle Goldberg suggests that at least some elite Democrats are starting to wake up to the party’s tendency to shoot itself. Goldberg opines:
It’s no secret that many left-wing activist groups and nonprofits, roiled by the reckonings over sexual harassment and racial justice of the past few years, have become internally dysfunctional.

In June the Intercept’s Ryan Grim wrote about the toll that staff revolts and ideologically inflected psychodramas were taking on the work: .... Privately, I’ve heard countless people on the professional left — especially those over, say, 35 — bemoan the irrational demands and manipulative dogmatism of some younger colleagues.

That’s why the decision by Maurice Mitchell, the national director of the progressive Working Families Party, to speak out about the left’s self-sabotaging impulse is so significant. .... he has a sharp critique of the way some on the left deploy identity as a trump card. “Identity and position are misused to create a doom loop that can lead to unnecessary ruptures of our political vehicles and the shuttering of vital movement spaces,” he wrote last month in a 6,000-word examination of the fallacies and rhetorical traps plaguing activist culture.

Among many progressive leaders it’s been received eagerly and gratefully. It “helped to put language to tensions and trends facing our movement organizations,” Christopher Torres, an executive director of the Leadership for Democracy and Social Justice institute, said at a Tuesday webinar devoted to the article. 

All the problems Mitchell elucidates have been endemic to the left for a long time. Destructive left-wing purity spirals are at least as old as the French Revolution. .... It’s not surprising that such counterproductive tendencies became particularly acute during the pandemic, when people were terrified, isolated and, crucially, very online. There’s a reason Grim’s article was titled “Elephant in the Zoom.”

“On balance, I think social media has been bad for democracy,” Mitchell told me. .... These platforms can give power to the powerless, but they also bestow it on the most disruptive and self-interested people in any group, those likely to take their complaints to Twitter rather than to their supervisors or colleagues. The gamification of discourse through likes and retweets, he said, “flies in the face of building solidarity, of being serious about difference, of engaging in meaningful debate and struggle around complex ideas.”
Maybe some elite Democrats are waking up. If so, one of the very first things they ought to see is their own catastrophic failure to deal with immigration. The fascist Republican Party relies on heavily demagoguing immigration. The issue, especially when turbocharged by relentless demagoguery, resonates with lots of Americans. That includes more than a few independents and legal immigrants.

For context: From what I can tell, heavy demagoguery behind every major authoritarian movement in modern democracies plays heavily on illegal immigration and national ethnic identity. In majority White democracies, a White Replacement Theory (myth)[1] is typically emphasized.


From the Immigration Policy is Messed Up Files:
Chaos in El Paso
The mayor of El Paso, Texas, declared a state of emergency on Saturday, as migrants continued to pour into the southern border town in anticipation of the end of Title 42.

Migrants have converged on El Paso in recent days, overwhelming shelters and forcing some to sleep on the streets amid dropping temperatures. With more asylum seekers expected, El Paso Mayor Oscar Leeser said the city felt it was time to make the emergency declaration.

“I really believe that today our asylum seekers are not safe as we have hundreds and hundreds on the streets,” Leeser said at a press conference on Saturday. “That’s not the way we want to treat people.”

“We want to make sure that people are treated with dignity and being out in 20, 25-degree weather is not want we want to see,” he added.
We all know what the fascist Republican Party propaganda Leviathan will make of news like this. Right? Right. 

CBS 8 in San Diego reports
The number of migrants trying to cross into the United States is climbing daily, with Title 42 set to expire in less than a week. Title 42 allows the government to turn away migrants at the border with the goal of protecting the public from the pandemic. In Texas, more than 2,000 migrants are arriving daily. Closer to San Diego, local activists tell CBS 8 they too are seeing more migrants. Shelters in both Tijuana and the El Paso region are full. “There isn't a lot of infrastructure. They're sleeping in cold freezing weather,” said Pedro Rios, director of American Friends Service Committee.
Title 42 expires next Wednesday.


Immigrants rushing the US-Mexico 
border to cross into the US


Footnote:
1. White Replacement Theory (Wikipedia): The Great Replacement, also known as replacement theory or great replacement theory, is a white nationalist far-right conspiracy theory disseminated by French author Renaud Camus. The original theory states that, with the complicity or cooperation of "replacist" elites, the ethnic French and white European populations at large are being demographically and culturally replaced with non-white peoples—especially from Muslim-majority countries—through mass migration, demographic growth and a drop in the birth rate of white Europeans. Since then, similar claims have been advanced in other national contexts, notably in the United States. Mainstream scholars have dismissed these claims as rooted in a misunderstanding of demographic statistics and premised upon an unscientific, racist worldview.