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NYT’s New ‘Reader Center’ Already Proving a Step Backward in Accountability

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Without a public editor, the New York Times‘ executive editor gets the last word on the word “torture.”

The New York Times’ public editor role was killed off a mere three weeks ago (FAIR.org, 6/1/17), but its absence is already being felt. Yesterday, the Times published the first installment of the paper’s new “Reader Center,” the ostensible replacement to the public editor, and, not surprisingly, it thoroughly underwhelmed.

Reading much like an online version of a letters to the editor page, the inaugural Reader Center was comprised of five short items, only two of which were of serious import to the paper’s coverage. The other three included a breezy social-media back and forth between a staff photographer and a reader about an archival photo, one item of self-promotion about a Times investigative piece, and a update on the subscriber who won a contest to visit the newsroom. Quite a mixed signal to readers who have serious questions or issues with the paper’s coverage. (The Reader Center added an additional administrative item this morning noting that, contrary to right-wing media reports, former FBI Director James Comey did not visit the Times offices yesterday.)

Even among the two items that did raise coverage concerns, the degree to which this new Reader Center pales in comparison to a dedicated public editor was clear. Both of these issues—one on the Times’ use of the word “torture” in a recent exposé, and one critiquing the ethics of how the paper visualized obesity through photography—elicited cursory responses from the paper’s editorial staff.

On the former, Times executive editor Dean Baquet brushed off reader complaints about the exposé’s use of the phrase “widely viewed as torture” as tantamount to simply writing “torture.” He then indulged in a little more self-praise about the paper’s commitment to covering the issue.

With no public editor to mediate or push back, or add context, Baquet’s word became the final one. Readers are left with no advocate to push Baquet on the Times’ long, ignominious history of bowing to White House pressure by not using the word “torture” (FAIR.org, 8/8/14) or, contrary to Baquet’s boasting, sidestepping coverage of the issue (FAIR.org, 8/18/14).

Likewise, a real public editor might have pointed that the “widely viewed as…” caveat also appeared in the exposé’s subhed, giving it more narrative power than Baquet suggested. Or even questioned the logic of using this caveat at all, since it, by own Baquet’s account, was aimed at “describing the perspective” of the architects of a torture program–hardly the point of view you’d want investigations of torture to adopt.

This step backward in accountability and transparency is to be expected, however. By removing the interrogatory power of a staff ombud, the Times not only insures it will have the last word on any issue of its coverage, it effectively tilts the conditions for all critical debate fully in favor of its staff and masthead. It’s a media criticism version of “the house always wins.”

Back in 2013, the Washington Post tried to pass off a similar “Reader’s Representative” replacement when it killed off its ombud. The paper quietly ended that experiment too, after nine months of similarly useless, ephemeral and unresponsive columns.

Now more than ever, the Times’ coverage is in the spotlight, but the veneer of faux-accountability it’s offering is not only bad for readers, it’s a long-term gamble for the paper. It’s a given that the next big missed story or ethical lapse the Times makes won’t be prevented by this Reader Center. And if future installments of it are like the first, the paper likely won’t learn any journalistic lessons from those mistakes after the fact, either.


You can send a message to the New York Times at letters@nytimes.com (Twitter:@NYTimes). Please remember that respectful communication is the most effective.


Too Hot for Heller: First So-Called “Moderate” Republican Cracks on Senate Trumpcare Plan

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Sen. Dean Heller (R-Nev.) appears to be the first Republican to acknowledge publicly what more than two-thirds of Americans voters (according to polls) already understand—that the Trumpcare proposals put forth by the GOP are simply too aggressive in their attack on the sick and vulnerable.

“In this form, I will not support it,” Heller told reporters in Las Vegas on Friday as he held up a printed copy of the 142-page piece of legislation. “This bill… is simply not the answer.” And, he added, “It’s going to be very difficult to get me to a yes.”

Already, a mixed gang of far-right and libertarian Republicans—Sens. Rand Paul of Kentucky, Ron Johnson of Wisconsin, Ted Cruz of Texas, and Mike Lee of Utah—said they would not support the bill because it was too generous to low-income and working people, but Heller is the first from the other side of the GOP spectrum saying that the punishment it would inflict on his constituents is too brazen.

As citizens nationwide mobilize nationwide to kill the bill amid a push by Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) to bring it for a vote next week, Heller’s defection on Friday was seen as an important first step in creating the necessary fractions within the party to stall progress. On the other hand, groups like Indivisible were also quick to recognize that Heller was not immovable in his opposition.

Others noted that his position likely has less to do with taking a firm moral stance and more with his increasingly fragile prospects for retaining his seat in 2018.

With eyes on other vulnerable Republicans in swing states—including Sens. Rob Portman of Ohio, Susan Collins of Maine, and Lisa Murkowski in Alaksa—other groups opposing Trumpcare vowed to keep up the pressure.

Jettisoning 'Best Available Science,' Trump Admin. Tosses Out Federal Protections for Yellowstone's Grizzlies

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The Trump administration announced Thursday that the Yellowstone grizzly bear population is losing its endangered species protections—a decision conservation groups say is “flawed and premature” and could make the iconic species the target of trophy hunters.

CNN reports: “The bears received endangered species protection in 1975, when their population was about 136. Today, there are estimated to be 700, more than enough to meet the criteria to be removed from the endangered list, the government said.”

A press statement from Interior Secretary Ryan Zinke says that the “population was determined to be recovered because multiple factors indicate it is healthy and will be sustained into the future.”

Andrea Santarsiere, a senior attorney with the Center for Biological Diversity, doesn’t see it that way. “This outrageously irresponsible decision ignores the best available science,” she said. “Grizzly conservation has made significant strides, but the work to restore these beautiful bears has a long way to go.”

Zack Strong, and advocate for NRDC’s land and wildlife program, echoes that point. Though the numbers have  increased, he writes that the estimated population number represents “far too few individuals to ensure long-term genetic health. Until natural connectivity with the northern grizzly population occurs, scientific studies make clear that a minimum population of closer to 2,000 bears would be needed to maintain long-term genetic diversity.”

Another problem with the rule from the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, says Strong, is that it “dismisses the potential threat of climate change [… ] such as loss of food sources (like whitebark pine seeds) and shifts in denning time leading to increased conflicts with humans.”

And then there’s the threat bears that wander out of the park’s confines will face.

The New York Times explains:

Under current law, eliminating threatened species protection for the big bear paves the way for Montana, Idaho and Wyoming to take over responsibility from federal managers outside Yellowstone. That means fewer restrictions; states alone will make the call on dealing with nuisance bears—and will probably include a hunting season for grizzlies. Bears within the boundaries of the national park will remain a federal responsibility and will not be hunted, unless they leave Yellowstone.

According to Santarsiere, that means the “ongoing threats the bears face will now be compounded by trophy hunting and lethal removal by trigger-happy state agencies.”

The rule will be published in the Federal Register and will take effect 30 days after that publication. 

It’s likely to face legal challenges.

“The government’s campaign to remove protections provided by the Endangered Species Act overlooked important conservation issues and denied public comment on key points,” said Tim Preso, and attorney with Earthjustice. “We will closely examine this decision, and are prepared to defend the grizzly if necessary,” he said.

Why Does the U.S. Hate Iran? Think Oil and Strategic Power.

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Posted on Jun 23, 2017

Report: CIA Told Obama in August 2016 That Putin Ordered Election Interference

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The Washington Post is reporting that the CIA informed U.S. President Barack Obama in August 2016 that Russian President Vladimir Putin was directly involved in a cybercampaign to interfere in the U.S. presidential election campaign.

The report on June 23 said the intelligence agency had evidence of “specific instructions” by Putin ordering an operation to damage or defeat Democratic candidate Hillary Clinton and to help elect her Republican rival, Donald Trump.

At the time, it was widely known by U.S. intelligence officials that hackers linked to Russian intelligence agencies had broken into Democratic Party computer systems for more than a year.

But the August 2016 top-secret briefing by CIA Director John Brennan was the “first moment of true foreboding about Russia’s intentions” reached the president, the Post reported.

The newspaper reported that after the briefing, the Obama administration debated options for deterring or punishing Russia, including possible cyberattacks on Russian infrastructure, the release of CIA-gathered material that might embarrass Putin, and sanctions that could hurt Russia’s economy.

It said Obama settled on a modest set of measures that, in effect, were “largely symbolic.”

Based on reporting by The Washington Post

LONG Putin Officially Launches Deep-Water Phase Of TurkStream Gas Pipeline

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Russian President Vladimir Putin has inaugurated the deep-water phase of the TurkStream pipeline project that will deliver Russian gas to Turkey and eventually to the European Union.

Putin on June 23 called Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan from a ship off the Black Sea coast near Anapa in southern Russia to launch the project.

TurkStream is one of several major undersea pipeline projects the Kremlin has pushed in recent years in an effort to bypass older pipeline networks that transit through bitter rival Ukraine.

NordStream sends gas directly from Russia, under the Baltic Sea, to Germany, while the proposed South Stream was supposed to send Russian gas under the Black Sea to Bulgaria. That project was shelved in 2014 after EU opposition and the crisis over Russia’s as annexation of the Ukraine’s Crimea Peninsula.

The 910-kilometer TurkStream natural gas pipeline was initially proposed in 2014 but was delayed as Russian-Turkish relations soured over the conflict in Syria before being revitalized by Putin and Erdogan.

Putin on June 23 gave the “Go!” command as he hit a button to launch the latest phase aboard the Pioneering Spirit, a ship that is laying pipe for the project.

Putin credited the Turkish president with helping to get the project moving.

“The work has already started. I want to thank you once more and congratulate you on this,” Putin told Erdogan in comments covered live by Russian state-controlled Rossiya 24 television channel.

“Undoubtedly this happens directly with your personal support,” Putin said.

The project features construction of two lines, each with a capacity of 15.75 billion cubic meters of gas a year. The first is scheduled to be completed in 2018, with the second due to come on line the following year.

Based on reporting by AFP, dw.com, and TASS

Former National Security Adviser Michael Flynn Worked With Israeli Spyware Firm

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Posted on Jun 23, 2017

When You Reject Class-Based Politics, ‘Thoughtful’ Appeals to Racism Are All You’ve Got Left

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Thomas Edsall (New York Times, 6/22/17) declares “the end of left and right as we knew them.” But how well did he know them?

In “The End of the Left and the Right as We Knew Them,” New York Times columnist Thomas Edsall (6/22/17) is back on his hobby horse—which is fine; what would a columnist do without a hobby horse or two? What’s troubling about it is how dishonest he is about it.

The axe Edsall is grinding is that politics no longer has to do with rich or poor, but is now a question of “globalism versus nationalism.” It’s a variation on his class-no-longer-matters argument, or class-matters-backwards-from-the-way-you’d-think-it-does, as in “How Did the Democrats Become Favorites of the Rich?” (New York Times, 10/7/15)—a piece I examined at the time (10/15/17).

This is a preoccupation of neoliberal pundits—who want nothing more than to believe that the economic positions of the Democratic Party are “irrelevant to its electoral predicament” (Jonathan Chait, New York, 6/18/17; FAIR.org, 6/20/17)—or even that the Democrats’ path to success involves “pro-business, finance-friendly economics” (Michael Lind,  New York Times (4/16/16); FAIR.org, 4/25/16).

But while Chait and Lind’s pro-corporate prescriptions for liberal politicians involve leaps of logic, neither of them seem so willing to fudge the data the way Edsall does.

In arguing that voting has become dissociated from class, Edsall reviews a number of recent elections, including the United States’ Clinton/Trump matchup. Here’s his summary:

In the 2016 election, as issues of race and immigration became more salient, the percentage of Trump and Clinton support among voters making more than $50,000 was virtually the same. If anything, those at the top making $200,000 or more tilted slightly to Clinton.

OK, here’s the 2016 exit polling on income, as laid out by CNN:

Say you’re writing a column about the relationship between class and politics. You look up the exit polling, and you can’t help but notice that Clinton did much better among people who make less than $50,000 than among people who make more than $50,000—winning the former by 12 percentage points, and losing the latter by 1 point. You choose to ignore that, however, and instead cherry-pick the data so it sounds like Clinton did better the further you go up the income scale—because that’s what fits with the story you’re peddling, that politics has entered a post-class era.

I’d call that rather deceptive, wouldn’t you?

Edsall went on to refer to Bernie Sanders‘ “call…to revive the New Deal origins of the Democratic Party”—seemingly the antithesis of Edsall’s class-is-over analysis—and acknowledge that it was “powerful.” He dismissed the idea, though, with an ad hominem slight of Sanders:

A candidate making that appeal, however, and seeking to build a broad majority biracial coalition, must in fact have broad biracial appeal. As of now, Sanders is far from personifying broad majority biracial appeal.

I assume that Edsall means that Sanders appeal is limited to white people, since that’s the conventional lesson of the 2016 primaries. That lesson happens not to be true—here are the results of a Harvard-Harris survey, as summarized in a Hill graphic (4/18/17):

Sanders is viewed favorably by every ethnic group polled—from 52 percent among whites to 73 percent among African-Americans. If that’s not what “broad majority biracial appeal” looks like, I don’t know what would.

Edsall went on to scoff at the idea of the Democratic Party winning on an explicitly class-based platform:

The Sanders-Warren wing of the party…has the moral high ground within Democratic ranks the votes they want the party to seek are those of some of the least reachable constituencies—white men and women whose views on immigration, race and political correctness are in direct conflict with liberal idealism. It would be an extraordinary challenge to get these particular voters to join with minorities and progressive activists.

As I pointed out earlier this week, there are many voters in the United States who have progressive economic views and conservative social views. Is it possible to get them to vote for a Democrat based on economic appeals? Yes—that’s why Barack Obama won two terms.

If you pretend that that’s not possible, of course, you’re stuck with having to appeal to these voters’ conservative social views—which is what Edsall ends up doing, citing Peter Beinert’s exortation in The Atlantic  (7–8/17) that “liberals must take seriously Americans’ yearning for social cohesion”—by “backing tough immigration enforcement,” for instance. And ixnay on the talk about iverisityday, says Beinert:

Exposure to difference, talking about difference and applauding difference—the hallmarks of liberal democracy—are the surest ways to aggravate those who are innately intolerant, and to guarantee the increased expression of their predispositions in manifestly intolerant attitudes and behaviors.

Put away those rainbow flags, guys—you’re just riling up the neo-Nazis.

Edsall concludes with an endorsement of this sort of victim-blaming. Given our “more racialized and xenophobic politics,” he writes:

If the building of a viable left coalition is possible, it is likely to require some thoughtful and humane co-optation in the form of deference to our limits and boundaries.

If you reject from the outset the idea of uniting a majority based on shared economic interests, then pretty much all you’ve got left is the “thoughtful and humane co-optation” of racism and xenophobia.


You can send a message to the New York Times at letters@nytimes.com (Twitter:@NYTimes). Please remember that respectful communication is the most effective.


Flimsy Evidence and Fringe Sources Land People On Secretive Banking Watch List

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A corporate database used by banks and other institutions to screen clients for crimes such as money laundering and terror financing has labeled dozens of U.S. citizens as connected to terrorism on the basis of outdated or unsubstantiated allegations. An analysis of a 2014 copy of the database, which is known as World-Check, also indicates that many thousands of people, including children, were listed on the basis of tenuous links to crime or to politically prominent persons.

The database relied on allegations stemming from right-wing, Islamophobic websites to categorize under “terrorism” people and groups like the Council on American Islamic Relations (CAIR), several mosques, and national and regional Islamic organizations.

Political activists also had World-Check listings originating from old, minor infractions. For instance, 16 Greenpeace activists who were arrested for protesting the “Star Wars” missile-defense program in 2001 were listed under the general “crime” category, though they ultimately pled guilty to misdemeanor trespassing and never served time.

World-Check, which is owned by Thomson Reuters, contains over 2 million entries, most of them for people who are in government, on international sanctions lists, or have convictions for financial crimes. Thomson Reuters claims that World-Check is a risk-assessment tool, not a blacklist, and that a listing is not necessarily meant to imply wrongdoing.

Yet many of the entries, especially for activist groups, raise questions about World-Check’s criteria.

Greenpeace’s Rainbow Warrior flagship remains docked in the port of Acapulco, in Mexico, on January 17, 2014. Greenpeace was added to World Check apparently after the Rainbow Warrior damaged a coral reef in the Philippines in 2005.

Photo: Pedro Pardo/AFP/Getty Images

Greenpeace International earned a listing as an organization apparently because of a 2005 accident when one of their ships damaged a coral reef. The entry for People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals links to comments the group’s founder made in support of militant animal liberation activists. Other activist nonprofits, such as Médecins Sans Frontières and Human Rights Watch are listed without any specific allegations.

World-Check’s data “frankly is nothing more than a Google search sometimes, at best,” said Farooq Bawja, a British lawyer who has led legal action against the company.

Thomson Reuters boasts that 49 of the top 50 banks in the world and 300 global government and intelligence agencies use World-Check to screen clients or job applicants. Nonprofits also use it to check out grant recipients. In some cases a World-Check listing has led to organizations having bank accounts closed, and may have other untold ramifications.

“This kind of list reminds me of those early years after 9/11 when almost every Muslim active in the American Muslim community was on some sort of list that caused them to be stopped or searched at the border,” said Ihsan Bagby, a professor of Islamic Studies at the University of Kentucky. Bagby is named in World-Check under the “Terrorism” category, apparently because he was a former board member of CAIR. His World-Check profile links to right-wing sites that circulate a decades-old, chopped-up quote about Muslims in the United States.

When told about the World-Check listing, Mark Floegel, research director for Greenpeace, said, “There is no justification for placing peaceful protesters on a watch list meant to monitor against crimes such as money-laundering or terror-financing. Peaceful protest is not an invitation to permanent interference in the lives of citizens.”

A copy of the World-Check database from 2014, containing some 2.2 million entries, was discovered online last year by security researcher Chris Vickery; it had been left unprotected on a third party’s servers.

The Intercept worked with media organizations across the world to analyze and research the World-Check database. They were: The Times of London, NPO Radio 1 Argos/OneWorld in The Netherlands, De Tijd in Belgium, La Repubblica in Italy, and NDR/Süddeutsche Zeitung in Germany. The work was supported by Journalismfund.eu.

“I don’t know why it was exposed to the public internet or what the reasoning was, it just was,” Vickery told The Times. He shared the database with these organizations on the condition that it not be made public in its entirety, partly out of concern that the records include unsubstantiated allegations against many individuals. The Intercept is not naming individuals that are on the list that we were unable to contact before publication.

In February, Finsbury Park Mosque — the target of a deadly terror attack last week — won a judgment against Thomson Reuters after its World-Check listing led to HSBC closing the mosque’s bank account. Bawja, who led the suit, told The Intercept’s Dutch partner that he has roughly 20 other clients preparing to file claims against World-Check in the wake of the Finsbury case.

“I want them to start cleaning up their act, rapidly,” Bawja said. “And start apologizing to the victims.”

More than 400,000 American citizens are on the 2014 list. Some of them are connected to a category of criminality like terrorism, organized crime, or narcotics. The vast majority are, or are linked to, “Politically Exposed Persons”— people who might be able to abuse their public roles to corrupt ends. Thomson Reuters notes in a 2008 white paper that “PEPs are by no means necessarily money launderers or embezzlers, nor automatically involved in corrupt financial practices.”

World-Check’s PEP listings include not just members of Congress and high-level federal officials, but extend also to state-level administrators, their spouses, and other family members. These often include children. One former big-city mayor is listed, as are three of his children, the youngest of which was an infant at the time she was entered into World-Check. (We are not naming the mayor since he could not be reached for comment.) The Times of London noted that a 9-month-old baby had been listed as a relative of a PEP; her father is a distant member of the British royal family, 43rd in line for the throne.

None of the U.S.-based World-Check listees contacted by The Intercept had experienced bank account closures or other financial irregularities, but the effect of a listing is hard to judge. Most people likely never know that they are on World-Check; Thomson Reuters doesn’t inform them, and banks don’t usually reveal to people the reasons why they were denied service.

“How often are people actually being denied accounts or having accounts closed, or being denied commercial mortgages or loans?” said Bagby. “It’s not having an impact on me, to my knowledge, but this is very disturbing.”

In a statement, a senior vice president for Thomson Reuters, David Crundwell, said that he could not comment on individual listings, but pointed to the company’s privacy statement, which “sets out how any individual can contact us if they believe any of the information held is inaccurate, and we would urge them to do so.” He also said that “all profiles on World-Check are regularly reviewed” and that “it is important to point out that inclusion in World-Check does not imply guilt of any crime.”

The Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR) sponsors a town hall for members of the Dar Al-Hijrah Islamic Center mosque March 17, 2017 in Falls Church, Va. CAIR, which is one of the leading Muslim advocacy groups in the country, is described by World-Check as a “Hamas-affiliated” organization.

Photo: Win McNamee/Getty Images

Tenuous Terror Ties

The Intercept examined the World-Check entries for roughly 1,300 U.S. citizens labeled with the category “terrorism,” and found dozens who had never actually been convicted of terror-related offenses. In advertisements, World-Check boasts that its screeners go beyond official sanctions or law-enforcement lists to include people and groups who are “reported to be connected to sanctioned parties” or “investigated or convicted” of a variety of crimes. Thomson Reuters claims that information comes from “reputable public domain sources.” For terror-related entries, in particular, it notes that it makes use of tens of thousands of records “that reveal human terror networks.”

But World-Check’s definition of “reputable” seems flexible. Many of the entries for Muslim groups cite right-wing islamophobic websites. Vice, which also accessed Vickery’s leaked database, in July identified 15,000 entries that cited Wikipedia.

And, as the publication separately reported in February 2016, World-Check often links to the websites of Steve Emerson, Daniel Pipes, and David Horowitz, all described by the Southern Poverty Law Center as “anti-Muslim extremists.”

For instance, the Muslim Students Union at the University of California, Irvine is listed in World-Check as a “Hamas supporter” with a link to an article on Horowitz’ Frontpage Mag about a film screening the group put on in 2008. Current MSU board members contacted by The Intercept were unaware of the controversy, and said that the group’s finances are controlled by the university.

Vice noted that CAIR and its director, Nihad Awad, were listed under “Terrorism” by World-Check. The data analyzed by the Intercept includes 14 current or former CAIR staffers or board members who have no terror-related charges or convictions. CAIR, which is one of the leading Muslim advocacy groups in the country, is described by World-Check as a “Hamas-affiliated” organization, and tied to the Holy Land Foundation for Relief and Development, a Texas charity convicted of funneling millions to Hamas before it was shuttered in 2001. Awad characterized his profile to Vice as “”inaccurate, bigoted garbage.” (A spokesperson for CAIR said that they did not have information to add about the listing.)

CAIR was among 300 plus organizations and individuals listed as unindicted co-conspirators in that trial. They were not charged with any crime, and in 2007 CAIR complained to a judge that publicly naming them as unindicted co-conspirators was an unfair “demonization of all things Muslim” which would taint their reputations. And indeed, years later, CAIR and many other individuals are on the World-Check list apparently only because of that designation.

Among them is Parvez Ahmed, a professor of finance in Florida. He used to be on CAIR’s national board but cut ties with the group in 2008. The CAIR link to the Holy Land case has been used against him in local politics, when he ran, successfully, for his city’s human rights commission and later during a controversy over a local art exhibit.

“I myself was never named as an unindicted co-conspirator but it was used by the usual suspects, the anti-Muslim crowd,” Ahmed told The Intercept. “There is this whole circular logic to this attack against Muslim groups — someone cites something and it’s an echo chamber of citations but they are all single source and based on allegations that just don’t hold up.”

Crundwell, of Thomson Reuters, said that World-Check’s research domains are “led by subject matter experts with deep domain knowledge focused on topics such as sanctions, terrorism and insurgency, organized crime,” and that “blog content” is used only “as a secondary source.” He said that World-Check encourages its users to independently verify the information before taking any action.

Not all the people in the “terrorism” category are Muslim. In addition to right-wing anti-government extremists and anarchists convicted of terrorism-related charges, the list includes some figures publicly associated with the Klu Klux Klan or other white nationalist groups. It also includes animal rights activists who have made controversial statements about the use of violence against animal researchers.

The Intercept’s international partners also found instances of people listed under terrorism on the basis of outdated or debunked information. The Central Council of Muslims in Germany and the Belgian League of Muslims were wrongly labeled, as was a German sociologist who was arrested on suspicions of terrorism for writings on urban policy in a widely protested case; he was released without charges in 2007, but remained in World-Check years later. Many former Guantánamo detainees are also listed, including a man named Naquibullah who was about 14 when he was released from the U.S. detention center.

Tom Keatinge, a researcher at the Royal United Services Institute, told the Times of London that World-Check “creates a vast amount of redundant work” for banks and authorities looking out for terrorist activity in the financial system. Automated alerts based on World-Check, he said, could be contributing to an onslaught of suspicious activity reports that British banks submit to authorities.

An HSBC ATM machine in London in 2014. HSBC paid $1.9 billion in a settlement over money-laundering allegations in 2012, an issue that World-Check is advertised to prevent.

Andrew Matthews/PA Wire/AP

The Problem With PEP

Banks and other institutions do have to take steps to comply with sanctions and international and domestic laws against money laundering and terror financing, which have only grown more numerous and complex since the 9/11 attacks. Thomson Reuters advertises World-Check with warnings about recent fines and settlements against banks for violating sanctions; HSBC’s historic $1.9 billion payment to U.S. authorities to settle money-laundering allegations in 2012 is the most famous example.

“PEP risk is the very real possibility that over breakfast tomorrow morning, you will read that your bank holds the accounts of one of the world’s most corrupt leaders — and you had no idea, and you are being held responsible,” reads a 2008 company white paper aimed at potential clients. So-called “Know Your Customer” efforts, aimed at ferreting out criminal intent, require combing through massive amounts of publicly-available data, World-Check notes in a company presentation. That means dealing with “extreme volatility of information” and repeatedly facing a “struggle to ensure accurate information about a customer.”

Thomson Reuters claims that World-Check adds 20,000 profiles a month and updates 40,000. According to a recent brochure, 75 percent of the listings are PEPs — that is, government functionaries and their families or “close associates.” In Thomson Reuters’ 2008 definition, an associate could be an adviser, consultants, colleague, or shareholder.

Additionally, World-Check contains groups and individuals with public profiles that don’t have official PEP status. For instance, World-Check includes many international entities — the IMF, the World Bank, various U.S. government agencies — full of politically prominent people. Wikileaks and Anonymous are listed, as is Occupy Wall Street (the entry for the amorphous activist movement notes, “members reportedly arrested in Brooklyn, New York.”).

Some of the non-profits and political entities it includes, however, seem arbitrary. The Tibetan Youth Congress, a prominent diaspora organization, is listed with only a link to a 2008 China Daily article in which the Chinese government accuses them of being a terrorist group. (A request for comment went unanswered by the youth group.) Human Rights Watch is listed with no rationale given, beyond a link to 2000 article about a report the group did on the FARC in Colombia. The head of HRW’s Americas division, José Miguel Vivanco, has his own listing, which describes him as “involved in the intents to prosecute former General Pinochet in Chile,” referring to the brutal military ruler who was the subject of hundreds of criminal complaints in his home country, indicted by a Spanish judge, and whose regime was the focus of a national truth commission and a U.S. Senate money-laundering investigation.

“We are surprised and puzzled to find ourselves and Mr. Vivanco in this database and can’t imagine what standards are being applied,” said HRW’s general counsel, Dinah PoKempner.

The Rainforest Action Network, an environmental activist group, is listed in connection with the journalist Jacob Appelbaum, who once volunteered there, and who is in turn listed for his work with Wikileaks. (Appelbaum did not respond to a request for comment, but Wikileaks founder Julian Assange told La Repubblica that he had long been aware that he, Appelbaum, and other Wikileaks associates were listed in World-Check, which he called “a secret financial blacklist.”) A spokesperson for Rainforest Action Network, Chris Herrera, said that the World-Check listing was “alarming to us especially at this moment when dissent and protest are under such scrutiny.”

World-Check is also used by non-profits in order to screen grantees. Several U.S. government development organizations, such as the Millennium Challenge Corporation, have World-Check subscriptions, according to public contracting documents.

“It’s a part of the non-profit sector that came about during the [George W.] Bush era,” said a source who works at a U.S.-based charitable foundation. “It was a way of us checking to make sure we weren’t funding terrorism. They used it to blacklist people.”

As a subscriber, the source discovered that her foundation was itself listed. (She requested anonymity because her organization’s work has already suffered through association with its World-Check profile.)

According to World-Check’s privacy statement, individuals may write to Thomson Reuters to request their information and challenge its accuracy. When told about their listing by The Intercept, PETA contacted Thomson Reuters and a spokeswoman said that their information was removed within a day. She added, “we would have demanded its removal long ago had we known about it.”

The foundation staffer said that when her group tried to contact World-Check, the company would not engage.

“I said, ‘this is ridiculous, the info is so bogus’ — and they flat out said no,” to taking her organization off. “They said ‘no, this is public domain info and it’s allowed to be there.’” Years later, still required to subscribe to World-Check, she looked her group up again and it had been removed.

The source said she would still run all potential grantees through World-Check, and “if it was a hit, I usually would say no.” But knowing from experience the sometimes erroneous nature of a listing, she said, “I would verify, I would look at what the links were that they included, I’d go to the website and actually read the link.”

The post Flimsy Evidence and Fringe Sources Land People On Secretive Banking Watch List appeared first on The Intercept.

Did Trump Campaign Rhetoric Empower the White Extremist Who Killed Two Bystanders on Portland Train?

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https://democracynow.org – For the second time in a week, a military man was killed by a white extremist. On Friday, 53-year-old Ricky Best, a retired Army veteran, and 23-year-old Taliesin Myrddin Namkai Meche were fatally stabbed, with a third man critically injured, as they tried to defend two teenage girls against an attack by a man going on an anti-Muslim rant. The two young women, one of whom wore a Muslim hijab, were riding a commuter train when, according to witnesses, Jeremy Joseph Christian started shouting ethnic and religious slurs. Police arrested Christian, a convicted felon, soon after the attack. “In many ways, I think his rhetoric has more to do with the campaign and the ideas unleashed in the campaign over the last 16, 18 months by the Trump folks than it does with hardcore neo-Nazism. Or at least it’s a mix of the two sets of ideas,” says our guest Heidi Beirich, Intelligence Project director of the Southern Poverty Law Center.

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Top U.S. & World Headlines — May 30, 2017

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Part 2: Dilma Rousseff on Her Ouster, Brazil’s Political Crisis & Fighting Dictatorship

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https://democracynow.org – As Brazil is engulfed by a political crisis, we are joined in studio for an extended exclusive interview by Brazil’s former President Dilma Rousseff, who was impeached last year in what many describe as a legislative coup. Her removal ended nearly 14 years of rule by the left-leaning Workers’ Party, which had been credited with lifting millions of Brazilians out of poverty. Rousseff is a former political prisoner who took part in the underground resistance to the U.S.-backed Brazilian dictatorship in the 1960s. She was jailed from 1970 to 1972, during which time she was repeatedly tortured. Rousseff would later become a key figure in the Workers’ Party under President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva. She was elected president in 2010 and re-elected in 2014. Her successor, Brazilian President Michel Temer, is now facing mounting calls to resign or be impeached, following explosive testimony released by the Supreme Court accusing him of accepting millions of dollars in bribes since 2010. This week, he authorized the deployment of the Army to the capital Brasília as tens of thousands of protesters marched to Congress to demand his resignation.

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Part 1: Dilma Rousseff on Her Ouster, Brazil’s Political Crisis & Fighting Dictatorship

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https://democracynow.org – As Brazil is engulfed by a political crisis, we are joined in studio for an extended exclusive interview by Brazil’s former President Dilma Rousseff, who was impeached last year in what many describe as a legislative coup. Her removal ended nearly 14 years of rule by the left-leaning Workers’ Party, which had been credited with lifting millions of Brazilians out of poverty. Rousseff is a former political prisoner who took part in the underground resistance to the U.S.-backed Brazilian dictatorship in the 1960s. She was jailed from 1970 to 1972, during which time she was repeatedly tortured. Rousseff would later become a key figure in the Workers’ Party under President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva. She was elected president in 2010 and re-elected in 2014. Her successor, Brazilian President Michel Temer, is now facing mounting calls to resign or be impeached, following explosive testimony released by the Supreme Court accusing him of accepting millions of dollars in bribes since 2010. This week, he authorized the deployment of the Army to the capital Brasília as tens of thousands of protesters marched to Congress to demand his resignation.

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Top U.S. & World Headlines — May 26, 2017

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Glenn Greenwald: Ousting Brazilian President Dilma Rousseff Empowered Criminality & Corruption

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https://democracynow.org – We spend the hour looking at the growing political crisis in Brazil and air an exclusive interview with former Brazilian President Dilma Rousseff, who was impeached last August in what many described as a legislative coup. Her impeachment came as Brazil was engulfed in a major corruption scandal, but Rousseff herself was never accused of any financial impropriety. Her removal ended nearly 14 years of rule by the left-leaning Workers’ Party, which had been credited with lifting millions of Brazilians out of poverty.

Since Rousseff’s removal from power last year, Brazil’s corruption scandal has only widened. At the center of the scandal are many of the right-wing politicians who orchestrated Rousseff’s ouster. Rousseff’s successor, Brazilian President Michel Temer, is now facing mounting calls to resign or be impeached, following explosive testimony released by the Supreme Court accusing him of accepting millions of dollars in bribes since 2010. Removing Dilma Rousseff “was just so perverse, because what you were doing was actually strengthening and empowering corruption,” says our first guest, Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist Glenn Greenwald, who lives in Brazil. He notes that a third of Temer’s Cabinet are now the targets of criminal investigations.

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Top U.S. & World Headlines — May 25, 2017

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Tariq Ali on Upcoming UK Elections & Why Raising the Threat Level is a Largely Psychological Move

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https://democracynow.org – Prime Minister Theresa May has announced the threat level in the U.K. will be raised from severe to critical, indicating another attack may be imminent following the suicide bombing that killed 22 people and injured dozens at a concert in Manchester Monday night. The bombing marked the deadliest terror attack on British soil since the 2005 London bombings. It came just weeks before Britain’s general election. In part two of our conversation, British political commenter Tariq Ali talks about Britain’s upcoming general election and what impact Monday’s suicide bombing may have on the campaign.

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Not Even Our National Monuments Are Safe in Trump’s America

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In the fall of 2002, I spent nearly two weeks backpacking in Grand Staircase-Escalante National Monument in southern Utah. Fifteen years later, that experience continues to have a lasting impact on me.

Words simply cannot describe the beauty of the red rock sculpted by creeks running through the gulches, or the smell of sage that hovers above the ground as the sun coming over the cliffs warms the morning air. My stomach still drops when I think about inching toward the edge of a cliff on my belly to look down on a valley of cottonwood trees hundreds of feet below. I could feel the air rush up the cliff wall to my face as I watched a raven ascend with its wings outstretched, floating on the breeze toward me.

Grand Staircase-Escalante was designated a national monument for its unique and beautiful landscape and its important place in human history, which started at least 13,000 years ago and includes the legacy of hunter-gatherer communities and farming Ancestral Puebloans.

After witnessing its beauty for myself and learning what it means for indigenous history in the region, I’m angered by the thought of opening it — and any of our other national monuments — up to the highest bidder for fossil fuel development.

But that’s what the Trump administration — or to be more accurate, the fossil fuel industry via the Trump administration — proposed to do in an executive order issued in late April.

In the meantime, and not surprisingly, Americans from all walks of life and political stripes have responded with a resounding “no.” Outdoor enthusiasts, tribes and Indigenous organizations, local and national environmental groups, hunting and fishing groups, the outdoor retail sector, and tourism-based businesses that surround the national monuments have all expressed their frustration and concern about the review and the threat it poses to our public lands and waters.

Additionally, the legality of a president using the Antiquities Act to alter or rescind previous monument designations is increasingly questioned by legal experts and will certainly be challenged in court.

So, where do things stand now?

Trump’s executive order ordered the Department of Interior to conduct a 120-day review of 27 national monuments designated in the last 20 years. We know that several of these monuments have significant or potential oil, gas, and coal reserves underneath them.

Not only that, it singled out Bears Ears National Monument in Utah for a special 45-day review. That review included a public comment period that elicited hundreds of thousands of comments, most in favor of keeping Bears Ears as is. Importantly, the Bears Ears Inter-Tribal Coalition, the consortium of five tribes that co-manages the monument with the Bureau of Land Management and the Forest Service, condemned the recommendation.

Despite this, Interior Secretary Ryan Zinke released an interim report after the 45-day review that recommended shrinking Bears Ears National Monument. New boundary lines have not yet been proposed.

The public comment period for the entire review ends July 10. More than 1 million comments have already been submitted and hundreds of thousands more are expected. Submit yours now and ask a friend to do the same.

Fifteen years after I spent time in Grand Staircase-Escalante, I am still so grateful that I had the chance to experience such a unique place. We need to defend the values that are at the core of our national monuments. These values celebrate special places of natural beauty and cultural significance, protect them from the short-sighted interests of industry and industry-influenced politicians, and leave them for future generations to cherish as we do.

Texas Rep. Al Green Faces Threats of Lynching & Murder After Calling for Trump’s Impeachment

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https://democracynow.org – Last week, Texas Democratic Congressmember Al Green became the first congressmember to call for President Trump’s impeachment from the floor of the House of Representatives. Since then, the African-American lawmaker has received a barrage of racist threats, including voicemails in which callers threaten to lynch him. For more, we speak with Congressmember Green.

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Ire for Democrat Who Pulled Plug on California's Single-Payer Bill

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Advocates of the single-payer healthcare proposal which has been steadily advancing through the California legislature were voicing outrage and disappointment on Saturday after Assembly Speaker Anthony Rendon, a Democrat, announced he was pulling the bill from further consideration this year.

“If the great state of California has the courage to take on the greed of the insurance companies and the drug companies, the rest of the country will follow. The eyes are on California today.” —Sen. Bernie SandersKnown as the Healthy California Act, or SB 562, the measure had already passed the state Senate and was making its way through the lower chamber when Rendon said Friday it was being shelved by the Assembly Rules Committee, which he chairs, “until further notice.”

Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.), who has vocally promoted SB 562 amid a broader call for a national Medicare-for-All system, said he was”extremely disappointed” and called on Rendon to reverse his decision.

“At a time when the United States is the only major country on earth not to guarantee health care for all, and when tens of millions of Americans are uninsured or underinsured because of outrageously high costs, California has the opportunity to lead this nation in a very different health care direction,” Sanders said. “If the great state of California has the courage to take on the greed of the insurance companies and the drug companies, the rest of the country will follow. The eyes are on California today.”

It is time “go forward,” Sanders added. “Allow the Assembly to vote.”

The California Nurses Association/National Nurses United, a lead sponsor of the bill, was busy on Saturday echoing Sanders’ call, urging all California Assembly members to declare their support for SB 562 and arguing it was not too late to oppose Rendon’s decision.

Deborah Burger, co-president of the CNA/NNU, said the timing of the move—just a day after Republicans in the U.S. Senate released their disastrous Trumpcare bill—was particularly troubling.

“With daily reminders of millions of patients already priced out of access to care, and subjected to the callous practices and care denials of the insurance industry there could hardly be a more heartless response to the Senate bill than Speaker Rendon’s Friday night announcement,” Burger said.

Though she was hardly alone, Roseann DeMoro, CNA/NNU’s executive director, made it clear she was disgusted that it was a Democrat behind the decision.

And Speaker Rendon immediately became a target on Saturday, including calls for his ouster:

With support for Medicare for All surging nationwide (as shown by a Pew Research Center survey released Friday), backers of California’s single-payer proposal say it is a terrible idea for Democratic lawmakers, either at the state or nation level, to backpedal on bold and popular solutions such as these.

“Nurses and the activists who are so critical to rebuilding the Democratic Party after a decade of massive losses across the country will not be silent in demanding all corporate Democratic officials, including Rendon, become part of the movement to join the community of nations in guaranteeing healthcare for everyone,” Burger said.

Meanwhile, the bill’s co-authors, Democratic State Sens. Ricardo Lara and Toni Perkins, expressed dismay at the decision in the Assembly but said they had no intention of giving up.  “We are disappointed that the robust debate about healthcare for all that started in the California Senate will not continue in the Assembly this year,” they said in a joint statement. “This issue is not going away, and millions of Californians are counting on their elected leaders to protect the health of their families and communities.”

Though Rendon on Friday called the bill “woefully incomplete,” economists who have studied the proposal say it could potentially provide universal coverage at a much better cost than the current for-profit model.

As Robert Pollin, co-director of the Political Economy Research Institute at the University of Massachusetts, wrote this week in an op-ed for the Los Angeles Times, “Enacting a single-payer system would yield considerable savings overall by lowering administrative costs, controlling the prices of pharmaceuticals and fees for physicians and hospitals, reducing unnecessary treatments and expanding preventive care. We found that Healthy California could ultimately result in savings of about 18%, bringing healthcare spending to about $331 billion, or 8% less than the current $370 billion.”

The Healthy California Act, he concluded, “is capable of generating substantial savings for families at most income levels and businesses of most sizes. These savings are in addition to the benefits that the residents of California will gain through universal access to healthcare.”

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