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Making the case for optimism about black progress in America

black America
When was the last time you heard good news about the state of black America? Given the way the topic is reported in the media, you could be forgiven for not remembering. Most will be familiar with the standard portrayal: black people are disproportionately poor, incarcerated, born into single-parent homes, and harassed by cops. There's the test score gap, which places black kids at a disadvantage when applying to college; the school-to-prison pipeline, which prepares black boys for prison by punishing them disproportionately in school; and the racial wealth gap, which won't close for several centuries if current trends continue.

In an era when bipartisan agreement is scarce, the Left and the Right seem to be united in their somber assessment of black America, though they locate the blame in different places. Democrats tend to blame systemic racism and the legacy of white supremacy. Republicans, on the other hand, tend to blame Democrats. Recall President Trump's infamous appeal for the black vote: "You're living in poverty. Your schools are no good. You have no jobs," he maintained, blaming the Clintons for these circumstances. "What the hell do you have to lose?"

The narrative of doom and gloom, however, is misleading. Though it has gone largely unnoticed, black Americans have been making rapid progress along most important dimensions of well-being since the turn of the millennium.

Biohazard

Farmers banned from selling produce after French authorities admit Rouen inferno burned 5,200 tons of chemicals

Rouen
© AFP / Philippe Lopez
FILE PHOTO. Smoke emits from the Lumizol plant near Rouen on September 26.
A whopping 5,253 tons of assorted chemicals, mainly oil and fuel additives, have been destroyed in a major blaze at a chemical plant in Rouen that prompted fears of potential health harm and environmental damage last week.

The detailed report on what exactly burned in the September 26 incident at the plant, operated by US multinational chemical firm Lubrizol, was released by local administration on Tuesday.

Most the destroyed chemicals turned out to be multi-purpose fuel additives (3,308 tons) and viscosity booster (711 tons), according to the report that includes detailed graphs on what components exactly hide behind these names. Other compounds included various solvents, lubricants, anti-freeze and other fluids.

Comment: The truth will likely come out long after the damage has been done.

See also:


Family

French people believe Chirac is matched only by De Gaulle - poll

Chirac
© REUTERS/Eric Gaillard
People gather to pay tribute to late former French President Jacques Chirac in Nice, France, September 27, 2019.
Jacques Chirac, who died Thursday at the age of 86, is considered by the French as the best president of the Fifth Republic, and tied only with Charles de Gaulle.

According to an Ifop poll published in the Journal du Dimanche, Sunday, he received a preferential vote of 30 percent of respondents, up 20 points compared to a similar Ifop survey in November 2013. François Mitterrand tumbled from 28 percent to 17 percent.

Surprisingly, supporters of the left wing party, France Unbowed, gave him the highest approval rating with 39 percent followed by the far right National Rally (32 percent) and well ahead of the conservative party, Les Republicans (25 percent), who prefer Charles de Gaulle (48 percent).

Comment: See also:


Better Earth

Alcohol consumption drops 43% in Russia - WHO

russia alcohol
Alcohol consumption in Russia declined by 43 percent from 2003 to 2016, leading to a dramatic increase of life expectancy, the World Health Organization (WHO) says.

In a study published on October 1, the UN health agency attributed the decline of consumption to a series of alcohol-control measures implemented by the state and a push toward healthy lifestyles.

As a result, Russian life expectancy reached a "historic peak" in 2018, standing at nearly 68 years for men and 78 years for women, the report said.

Although consumption remains one of the highest in the world, Russia can now serve as a role model for other states with its policy of combating high mortality from alcohol consumption, WHO expert Carina Ferreira-Borges said.

Comment: It's likely that one of the primary factors will be all round improvements in the quality of life for the majority of Russians: Russian economy under Putin: Quality of life tripled, foreign debt fell 75%

Meanwhile in the US: 'Deaths of despair' reach record levels: Suicides, alcohol and drug overdoses


Handcuffs

Former cop Amber Guyger found guilty of murder in fatal shooting of neighbor Botham Jean

Amber Guyger
© Kaufman County Sheriff's Office/Handout via Reuters
Amber Guyger in a booking photo provided by the Kaufman County Sheriff’s Office, September 10, 2018.
Former Dallas police Officer Amber Guyger was found guilty of murder Tuesday for fatally shooting her neighbor, Botham Jean, after thinking he was an intruder when she mistakenly entered his apartment.

Guyger, who has been out on a $300,000 bond, faces a maximum of life in prison. She was not immediately taken into custody and the sentencing phase in her trial began Tuesday afternoon with opening statements from Jean's mother.

A gasp could be heard in the packed courtroom when state District Judge Tammy Kemp read the jury's decision. Jean's family later walked out crying and embracing, many wearing red — the victim's favorite color.

Biohazard

Nicaraguan plantation workers taking pesticide lawsuit: 'No right to spray poison on us'

nicaragua protest farm workers pesticides nemagon
© Reuters / Oswaldo Rivas
A protest against the use of pesticide Nemagon in Managua, Nicaragua. The sign says "Death for Nemagon."
Nicaraguan plantation workers told RT that they haven't lost hope of finally getting compensated by major chemical firms whose deadly pesticide, they say, severely damaged their health and had major impacts on their lives.

The pesticide makes men sterile and "also increases cancer rates among women and men," the victims' lawyer Stuart Smith told RT.

The people that were affected by the highly-toxic chemical were not compensated, despite being "significantly hurt," he said.

The US banned the use of the roundworm-killing DBCP, marketed as Nemagon, in 1977. But chemical giants Dow, Shell and Occidental (now OxyChem) continued to sell it overseas, including to Nicaragua, where the substance was sprayed over banana and sugarcane plantations. It was reported that up to 22,000 workers were affected as a result.

Comment:


Pistol

Finland school shooting: One dead, at least 10 injured in attack on vocational college located Kuopi

finland police force
© Reuters/Leonhard Foeger/File
Finnish police force
At least one person has been killed and ten others injured in an attack at a shopping mall hosting a college in Kuopio, Finland. One of those injured is the suspected perpetrator, who was arrested by responding officers.

According to the local police, violence happened at the premises of a vocational college located at the Herman mall.

Officers had to use firearms to apprehend the sole suspect.

Arrow Up

Russian court overturns prison term for actor Pavel Ustinov after reviewing footage of arrest

Ustinov
© Sputnik / Maxim Blinov
A Russian court has reduced a jail term for young actor Pavel Ustinov to a one-year suspended sentence, after he was earlier convicted of violence against police during an unsanctioned rally in Moscow.

The case garnered a lot of media attention in Russia and abroad after many celebrities and activists came out to support Ustinov and vouch for his innocence. He was due to spend three years and six months in jail, but a Moscow court ruled otherwise on Monday. The actor had earlier been released on bail while waiting for his appeal hearing.

Comment: See also:

Actor jailed for resisting arrest during Moscow protest released on parole as sentence appealed
Top Russian public figures call for release of actor jailed for assaulting cop during protest


Stop

UFC boss Dana White slams feminist calls for banning Octagon girls: 'Ridiculous - they're essential to UFC brand'

fight girls
© News Corp Australia
The ring girls weren't happy about losing their jobs before the Horn-Zerafa fight.
UFC boss Dana White has slammed the "ridiculous" calls from a politician to ban Octagon girls for UFC 243 in Melbourne on Sunday.

Similar to boxing, mixed martial arts deploys scantily-clad females to parade around the cage prior to each round at their events.

That has led to the likes of the beautiful Chrissy Blair, Brittney Palmer, Arianny Celeste and Jhenny Andrade all becoming huge favourites with fight fans across the globe.

But the much-loved girls could be banned from a UFC event in Australia next week after Melbourne's Lord Mayor Sally Capp claimed the "sexist and backward" tradition was "outdated".

"It's 2019, do we really still need scantily clad women to wander around the middle of a fighting ring between rounds?," she said. "Grid girls are no longer part of Formula One, walk-on girls are no longer part of professional darts — surely it's time to move on."

However, UFC president White has hit back at those comments and insists the girls are just as much of the show as the fighters.

"Our Octagon girls, they're as much a part of the UFC brand as anyone, they're ambassadors for our sport," the 50-year-old told The Daily Telegraph.

Comment: The Puritan busybodies strike again! It's simple, if you're offended by seeing somewhat scantily clad women at an even in which mostly naked men (and women) engage in bloody hand-to-hand combat - simply don't attend.


Vader

How to Be a Dictator: The Cult of Personality in the Twentieth Century — A Review

hitler  Mussolini

Benito Mussolini and Adolf Hitler
A review of How to Be a Dictator: The Cult of Personality in the Twentieth Century by Frank Dikötter, Bloomsbury Press (December 2019) 304 pages

One of the first things to emerge from Professor Frank Dikötter's eagerly awaited new book How to Be a Dictator is that it is a stressful vocation: there are rivals to assassinate, dissidents to silence, kickbacks to collect, and revolutions to suppress. Quite hard work. Even the most preeminent ones usually meet ignominious ends. Mussolini: summarily shot and strung upside down over a cheering crowd. Hitler: suicide and incineration. Ceausescu: executed outside a toilet block. Or consider the fate of Ethiopia's Haile Selassie: rumoured to have been murdered on orders of his successor Mengistu Haile Mariam, he was buried underneath the latter's office desk. Not the most alluring career trajectory, one might say.

Dikötter's monograph is a study of twentieth century personality cults. He examines eight such cults: those created by Mussolini, Hitler, Stalin, Mao, Kim Il-sung, Duvalier, Ceausescu, and Mengistu. For them, cultism was not mere narcissism, it was what sustained their regimes; foregoing cultism, Dikötter argues, caused swift collapse. Consider Pol Pot and the Khmer Rouge. Cambodians were unsure of Pol Pot's exact identity for years, even after he had assumed leadership of the country. The Khmer Rouge, meanwhile, was in its initial stages merely called "Angkar" — "The Organisation." There was no inspiring iconography. There was no ritualised leader worship. There was only dark terror. Dikötter quotes historian Henri Locard: "Failing to induce adulation and submissiveness, the Angkar could only generate hatred." The Khmer Rouge soon lost its grip on the country. Dikötter makes an obligatory reference: "Even Big Brother, in George Orwell's 1984, had a face that stared out at people from every street corner."