March 17, 2020 "Information
Clearing House" - I’ve spent two decades
studying the transformations that take place under
the cover of disaster. I’ve learned that one thing
we can count on is this: During moments of
cataclysmic change, the previously unthinkable
suddenly becomes reality. In recent decades, that
change has mainly been for the worst — but this has
not always been the case. And it need not continue
to be in the future.
This video is about the ways the still-unfolding
Covid-19 crisis is already remaking our sense of the
possible. The Trump administration and other
governments around the world are busily exploiting
the crisis to push for no-strings-attached corporate
bailouts and regulatory rollbacks. Treasury
Secretary Steven Mnuchin is moving to repeal
financial regulations that were introduced after the
last major financial meltdown, as part of the 2010
Dodd-Frank Act. China, for its part, is indicating
that it will relax environmental standards to
stimulate its economy, which would wipe out the one
major benefit the crisis has produced so far: a
marked drop in that country’s lethal air pollution.
But this is not the whole story. In the United
States, we have also seen organizing at the city and
state levels win important victories to suspend
evictions during the pandemic. Ireland has announced
six weeks of emergency unemployment payments for all
workers who suddenly find themselves out of work,
including self-employed workers.
Are You Tired Of
The Lies And
Non-Stop Propaganda?
And despite U.S. presidential candidate
Joe Biden’s claims during the recent debate
that the pandemic has nothing to do with
Medicare for All, many Americans are
suddenly realizing that the absence of a
functioning safety net exacerbates
vulnerabilities to the virus on many fronts.
This crisis — like earlier ones — could well
be the catalyst to shower aid on the
wealthiest interests in society, including
those most responsible for our current
vulnerabilities, while offering next to
nothing to the most workers, wiping out
small family savings and shuttering small
businesses. But as this video shows, many
are already pushing back — and that story
hasn’t been written yet.
Naomi Klein is a senior correspondent at The
Intercept and the inaugural Gloria Steinem endowed
chair of media, culture and feminist studies at
Rutgers University. She is an award-winning
journalist and best-selling author, most recently of
"On Fire: The Burning Case for A Green New Deal."
She has also written "The Battle for Paradise," "No
Is Not Enough," "This Changes Everything," "The
Shock Doctrine," and "No Logo." - "Source"
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