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Hahn Wants Law Enforcement Agencies Contracting with Metro to Have and Enforce Employee Vaccination Mandate

LOS ANGELES—The Los Angeles Metro Board of Directors Operations, Safety, and Customer Experience Committee Nov. 18, unanimously approved a motion by Supervisor Janice Hahn which requires law enforcement agencies that contract with Metro to enforce a COVID-19 vaccination mandate for their employees.

The motion was adopted as an amendment to an item which would extend Metro’s contracts with the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department, the Los Angeles Police Department, and the Long Beach Police Department and will be voted on by the full Metro Board on Dec. 2.

If the full Metro Board of Directors approves the item Dec. 2, law enforcement agencies will need to enforce a vaccination mandate for their employees by July 2022 or lose their contract with Metro. This would include the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department

Container Dwell Fee’ on Hold Until Nov. 29

POLA, POLB Following meetings Nov. 22, with U.S. Port Envoy John D. Porcari and industry stakeholders, the Port of Long Beach and the Port of Los Angeles announced further postponement of the “Container Dwell Fee.”

With continued progress moving containers off marine terminals, the fee will not be considered before Nov. 29.

Since the fee was announced on Oct. 25, the two ports have seen a decline of 33% combined in aging cargo on the docks. The executive directors of both ports are satisfied with the progress thus far and will reassess fee implementation after another week of monitoring data.

Under the temporary policy approved Oct. 29 by the Harbor Commissions of both ports, ocean carriers can be charged for each import container that falls into one of two categories: In the case of containers scheduled to move by truck, ocean carriers could be charged for every container dwelling nine days or more. For containers moving by rail, ocean carriers could be charged if a container has dwelled for six days or more.

The ports plan to charge ocean carriers in these two categories $100 per container, increasing in $100 increments per container per day until the container leaves the terminal.

Project Censored -The Ray of Hope in Dark Times

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“Project Censored,” has been a tough sell since its inception in 1976. Identifying the most important stories of each year on the basis of the exposure that was denied to them by forces beyond the first amendment is a pretty reliable recipe for disillusionment. Nonetheless, the doomy gloom that seeps into my mood when Project Censored is released every autumn is partly my fault. Inevitably, my focus is on the top 25 censored stories and the chapter on Junk Food News, where the same storylines tend to reemerge. The same backstories, too, often feature journalists who wind up dead as a result of their work.

The work is never-ending. There’s always another foe attempting to stand in the way of trustworthy news reporting. But over the past few years, Project Censored is doing more to report on what work is being done to support quality journalism and the fight against fake news, false narratives, and willful manipulation of the public. The result is a budding optimism in dark and depressing times in the wake of the Donald Trump administration.

Project Censored’s executive directors, Mickey Huff and Andy Lee Roth have long argued that “critical media education — rather than censorship, blacklists, privatized fact-checkers, or legislative bans — is the best weapon for fighting the ongoing fake news invasion.”

Project Censored’s annual list of 25 censored stories makes up the book’s lengthy first chapter, and the chapters looking at what happened to previously listed censored stories and examples of news abuse and junk food news, are still one of the best resources one can have for critical media education. However, the chapters reporting on the work of training up new generations of news consumers and journalists equipped with critical media literacy and efforts to transform the news media financing model from one dependent on capitalism to a publicly financed utility is the bright spot in the latest edition of State of the Free Press.

Giving Credit Where Credit is Due
It’s been five months since Project Censored went to press with the 2022 edition of State of the Free Press. So I asked Project Censored’s Mickey Huff and Andy Lee Roth what has happened that is particularly noteworthy since the book went to press.

Their immediate answer was the continued fallout from the attempted Jan. 6 insurrection. Huff and Roth give credit where credit was due to the Washington Post for reporting on what many have called an attempted insurrection and its aftermath over the past several months in the forward of the new book.

“The Washington Post is doing some quite impressive and important investigative work on detailing what happened in the lead up to Jan. 6, which goes all the way back to planning by high-level officials all the way back to the day after the 2020 elections,” Huff said.

He continued that while they know more about what happened in greater depth, nothing has happened that requires a rewriting or rethinking of the book that was published.

Roth dovetailed Huff’s comment by explaining that not everything that corporate media does is wrong or bogus.

“It’s that it needs to be scrutinized carefully given its prevalence, its size, its reach, and influence,” Roth said. “Big papers like the Post have major resources and sometimes they dedicate them to really reporting things in the public interest like in this recent report over the weekend.” (Roth was referencing the Washington Post’s release of “The Attack: Before, During and After,” an investigation of the Jan. 6 Capitol insurrection and its aftermath, a three-part immersive series examining Jan. 6 and its fallout through audio, video, photography, and news reporting).

As much as Roth is willing to give the Washington Post kudos for its reporting, he also quickly reminded me that Amazon founder and multi-billionaire Jeff Bezos still owns the Washington Post.

“This whole year at least the Washington Post has been very biased about not sticking it to billionaires, not taxing billionaires,” Roth said. “So again, these kinds of major news publications often speak out of both sides of a corporate mouth, but I do want to make sure we say they also do report sometimes on the public interest and when they do, they illustrate how significant a free press really is for a society like ours.”

The Pinpoint of Light in the Darkness
Huff said the thing that gives him hope is the involvement of students getting hands-on training in critical media literacy and doing the work with the understanding that when they do good work, it will have a public audience and someone beyond the teacher in their class will read and be affected by what they’ve done. Huff was speaking specifically about the students who are a part of Project Censored’s campus affiliates program, who do the initial identification and vetting research on the stories that make up each year’s top 25 list. He also noted the student involvement as researchers and co-authors in several of the chapters of the book. Roth said that for him, the hope that shines through State of the Free Press comes from those students in the affiliates program and seeing the increased awareness of the kinds of concerns that Project Censored has been raising for the past 45 years.

“And they are not alone. And there is a community of people for whom these issues of media accountability and critical media literacy are out there for them to which to belong if they so choose,” Roth said. “Both individually and collectively, this is one of the things I’m most proud of with regard to the project. It’s how the project brings people together and how under the umbrella of the project. I think we all end up maybe feeling stronger than we would if we were just acting individually.”

Huff agreed, explaining that it’s the students who are guiding the optimism reflected in State of the Free Press.

They see them go through the transformations from people who pay only modest attention to the news, or they model the habits of their families or peers, to empowered students who think for themselves and think independently about media to the degree that they are invited to become the media.

“I think that’s the optimistic part,” Huff said.

Circling back to the latest edition of State of the Free Press, Huff explains that the other thing the book does, particularly the top-25 chapter, is it celebrates the work of the “intrepid, independent journalists and the independent news outlets that make their work publicly available.”

“In a kind of glass is half-full sort of way… If we didn’t have these Intrepid independent journalists and news outlets, a lot of these stories we would know nothing at all about or we would know only a partial version of those stories and those are situations where ignorance would not be bliss,” Huff explained.

He further explained that part of the hope for the future is that by making people increasingly aware of the kind of so-called alternative news sources that are out there, a better future is possible as we see news that is more diverse in its definitions of what and who is newsworthy.

The Dangers that Remain
But the dangers to freedom of expression, press freedom and our democracy, remain. I asked Huff and Roth to comment on the chapter authored by Robin Anderson, “False Balance in Media Coverage Undermines Democracy: News Abuse in 2020–2021.” Anderson highlights examples of news abuse in the form of a year in review starting with the Jan. 6 insurrection. From one subhead to the next, Anderson recounted the ways the mainstream press missed the story: “Media Caught by Surprise on Jan. 6;” “Media Miss the Story of the Decade,” as it did during the Iran-Contra scandal; “Corporate Media Fail the Public Before and after the 2020 Elections.”

Anderson would go on to narrate the failures of the mainstream press compared to the alternative press as described in the differences in reporting on police rioting at Black Lives Matter demonstrations across the country. Anderson called out the mainstream press’ adoption of covering violent right-wing counter-demonstrations to BLM protests using the false-balance frame. Arguably, this “both-side-ism” approach to reporting has increasingly come into vogue amongst the mainstream press since President Barack Obama’s first term in office in which there were false equivalencies in discussions of white domestic terrorism and antipolice brutality protests.

I asked Huff and Roth what we should expect if we continue down this path in which the mainstream press continues to distort reality using the false-balance framing of events.

Huff says he thinks the false-balancing of events goes back to a long-standing journalistic commitment to objectivity. He explained that one of the ways that objectivity is specified or enacted is through notions of balance.

Huff went on to explain that there are many media scholars who have argued how journalistic commitment to objectivity in the form of balance creates opportunities for people who manipulate journalism for their own interests.

“Because you can say, ‘Wait, there’s another side. Let me have my moment.’ And so, I think that the challenge is how do we deal with objectivity in journalism?”

Huff noted that most people want news that we can trust ― news that has some sense that what we’re getting is real and not partisan.

“But the way that journalism as a profession has gone about doing that, at least in the United States, has had this loophole in it … it’s like how we talk about software. There’s a back door that can be exploited. Balance has been the back door in the journalistic software,” Huff said.

Huff thinks that one way forward could be to go back to what it means to have freedom of expression.

“In the U.S., we’re a very individualistic culture,” Huff explained. “We tend to think of the right to free speech as my right to say what I think is right. But there is a growing movement of scholars, and activists, and others ― and I would include Project Censored in this ― who are saying, ‘no, we need to think of freedom of expression in terms of the right to hear, and specifically, the right to hear diverse perspectives and viewpoints.’”

Roth offers the analysis that Anderson is saying that, at least in the United States, we are emphasizing too much the right to speak versus the collective right to hear.

“That’s how you get platforms for people spouting the most hateful rhetoric and members of the press treating that rhetoric as newsworthy,” Roth said. “That’s part of how you get cancel culture.”

Roth notes that Anderson gets very specific in her discussion about how false balancing has distorted establishment news coverage of storylines such as the Black Lives Matter protest movement, the so-called stolen election, or the Jan. 6 insurrection attempt.

“She’s very specific and very concrete in the [news abuse] chapter about how establishment news’ reliance on balance has led to distorted reporting on those things,” Roth said.

Roth’s response intrigued me enough to push for further discussion about what it would look like if we lived in a paradigm in which the right of the collective of humanity to hear diverse viewpoints was emphasized instead of an individual’s right to speak. Roth asked Huff to chime in given the number of times he has spoken on the issue, particularly in relation to today’s cancel culture.

Huff said he sides with the perspective of human rights attorney, Dan Kovalik, who is an anti-imperialist author and journalist. He wrote a book called Cancel This Book: The Progressive Case Against Cancel Culture. Huff explained that it isn’t what you think it is until you read it, saying that Kovalik gets into the weeds and details to discuss cancel culture.

“I think part of this balance question that gets really tricky is what Andy was saying, that balance can be wielded as a weapon or as a back door, but we have to remember that canceling is censorship,” Huff said. “So we need to go back and take a look at the definition of censorship.”

Huff noted that the project uses the definition of censorship that goes back to 1776, which is anything that interferes with the free flow of information in a society that purports to have free press systems.

He said we need to be very careful that on the one hand the very powerful and wealthy who control the institutions, the government, the lobbyist and corporations regularly engage in varying degrees or shades of censorship and curation.

“Cancel culture tends to be more overt,” Huff explained. “It tends to be public censorship designed in a way to be punitive. We’re punishing and ostracizing for an unpopular position.”

Huff said caution is needed still, because, who gets to decide who needs to be punished and ostracized?

“We need to be very careful from right to left and in between on that weird ideological matrix that we don’t somehow slide ourselves into a rationalized position where censorship becomes not just an option, but it becomes an approach,” he said.

Roth noted that there are numerous individuals and groups on the left end of the political spectrum that engage in varying degrees of curation and censorship, and said he knows that that is something for those on the left that is a difficult thing to swallow, and an easier thing to justify.

“My bigger point and Kovalik’s bigger point is that we need to keep sight of the forest for the trees,” Roth said. “And so I’m very cautious about having people or groups or individuals be ‘canceled’ or ‘censored.’”

Roth pointed out that there are already laws against hate speech and they should be used instead of us getting distracted in a cycle of cancellation. He held up the recent backlash against the perceived transphobic comments of Dave Chappelle in his third Netflix special, The Closer. Roth noted that the current discussion is whether Chappelle had punched up or down in his commentary.

Roth argued that it shouldn’t be about Chappelle. Instead, it should be about asking what people are doing and saying.

“How is it being perceived by various groups? Are there channels for these groups to convey back or have open dialogue and be heard in meaningful ways? If the answer to that is no, then we have a problem,” Roth said. “I think that is where we should be focusing. Not just the channels of power, but the conduits of communication.

Roth explained that that is part of what critical media literacy does. Critical media literacy opens channels of communication. It doesn’t advocate shutting them down.

“In other words, when I have students in class, and they bring views that maybe some people don’t agree with, is it advantageous for me to shut them down, to call them names and ostracize them? Or is it a better idea to hear them out, ask questions, understand where they’re getting their information and their ideas, and use it as an opportunity to turn it into something different.”

In this alternative, Huff says there’s the potential for a seed to be planted that will change the way that person thinks and sees the world.

“If we’re going to knee-jerk our cancellation of ideas with that, which we disagree, I think we’re on a slippery slope in the wrong direction if we want to have an open society,” Huff said.

But he said this with a lot of caveats because he believes there are certain types of communication and certain messages that are harmful to certain groups.

“And we simultaneously need to be very mindful of that,” Huff said. “Because those of us that may one time be in a position of privilege may be at the receiving end of that kind of targeted communication at some other time in our lives and careers. And so it’s speaking of balance in a different sense.”

It’s a real tight rope and the gale winds are blowing, Huff said. He said he thinks it’s very difficult for us to maintain a true north compass in that kind of environment, but thinks it’s worth the effort by trying to call attention to that very dynamic of what it means to live in a society with freedom of the press in the first place and not to the never-ending cycle of the Chappelles versus the Whoevers.

Andy jumped in and offered a point of clarification about the collective right to hear. He explained that the collective right to hear doesn’t mean that we as individuals or as a community has to accept as legitimate or ethical everything that’s said.

“I’m prompted to say this by what Mickey is talking about in the context of his classroom, where a popular view comes up and gets aired,” Roth said. The unpopular view is not going to get written off without consideration, but it’s also not going to be accepted as valid or legitimate just because someone in the classroom said it. These ideals are all hinged on the idea that we have people who are ready to think and engage.

Roth explained that this goes back to the education in critical media literacy which is preparing students to consider viewpoints that differ from their own, instead of dismissing them out of hand. He notes that that is difficult work in a society with an inequality that is pervasive, structurally based and historically rooted. It is like Huff’s visual of walking a tightrope amidst gale-force winds. Except the tightrope walker is not simply an individual, but rather individuals forming neighborhoods and whole communities, and ultimately society while on this tightrope amidst gale-force winds.

Civic Leaders Hail Job Training Partnership with Port of LA

On Nov.19, San Pedro civic leader Joe Gatlin announced a port related job training program in partnership with the Port of Los Angeles. Gatlin, a longtime organizer of Juneteenth celebration in San Pedro and vice president of the San Pedro/Wilmington chapter of the NAACP, fulfilled a long time desire to build a jobs training program to spread the opportunity of obtaining careers that don’t require a college degree at the Port of Los Angeles.

The timing of the announcement was fully intended to take advantage of the spotlight the port has as a result of the 80 plus ships waiting outside the breakwater to drop off their containers and the Build Back Better bill that was signed.

Port of Los Angeles executive director Gene Seroka spoke with an assortment of educators, civic leaders and CEOs, the majority of whom were from communities of color. Seroka discussed a partnership between them and the port to offer job training during a ferry around the Harbor aboard the Angelina.

Seroka laid out a vision of possibilities and an array of tools that can be deployed to achieve the desired end of opening up port related jobs to disadvantaged Angelenos outside of San Pedro and Wilmington.

“Joe [Gatlin] and I thought we could take advantage of it,” Seroka said, referring to the attention the port is getting as a result of the Build Back Better bill and the cargo ships backed up outside the ports. “Can we sell this port, this community, this Southern Los Angeles enclave, to people who might be interested in coming to work here, coming to invest here, coming to bring black owned businesses here, whatever the case may be, and more? Because that spotlight is on us, we have a unique chance right now.”

Seroka explained with the education and business folk present on the ferry ride, the best at the port have been assigned to interface with the community members on this jobs training plan, including the port’s deputy executive director of stakeholder engagement, David Libatique, Jessica Bautista, management analyst for the port’s community relations department; and Avin Sharma who is in charge of workforce training and development along with three other volunteer jobs he has at the port. Sharma has worked for the U.S. secretary of labor, Tom Perez, among others in Washington, D.C.

“We have Mike Dibernardo, who has been a fixture here in San Pedro for generations,” Seroka said. “These are people that know what’s going on from the port’s perspective; Folks who know what’s going on from community, from business, from education, the blend of these I think it’d be very powerful.”

Seroka noted that the city, through executive order No. 27 from Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti, has equity and equality built into the city’s hiring system.
“We at the Harbor Department of Los Angeles want to look like the city of Los Angeles,” Seroka said. “We publish once a month our demographics in education, and of who we are and what we do and everything in between and our goal is to look like this great city every day.”

Except executive directive No. 27 was contingent upon the passage of Prop. 16, the ballot initiative to amend the state constitution to repeal Prop. 209, which effectively banned affirmative action in education and contracting in California.

“You want to sit down and talk? If you have ideas, if you want constructive dialogue, I’m always available,” Seroka said. “Joe talked about contracting and how we do get measured every year on how many businesses we contract with that are female-owned, that are minority-owned, that are Black owned and we cut and slice every way we can to give us [as] many an opportunity as possible.”

Seroka referenced the city’s targeted local hiring program in which it is possible to look at the specific zip codes in need in different communities as a work-around.

“The targeted local hiring program has a re-entry [component]. So folks who may have been incarcerated and want to get back into the mainstream and want to work at whatever level, whatever discipline can have that opportunity as well,” Seroka said.

Throughout his comments, Seroka painted a vision of the possibilities while at the same tempering expectations by keeping the vision in the realm of ideas instead of concrete action plans.

Seroka went on to call the partnership a framework, “but it takes folks like us to figure out how to best implement real life examples into that frame.”

“Maybe the framework has to be massaged or maybe it has to be looked at from a different lens sometimes,” Seroka said. “And that’s why I say, this is a start and this is what we want to convey. This is not a one-and-done meeting. You want to visit with me, my door’s always open. It’s not always taking advantage of it, but it’s there for you. I serve the public.”

On the civic side of the conversation was Spaulding Gatlin and Associates, founded by Gatlin and the heirs of the sporting goods titan. Spaulding Gatlin and Associates will serve to connect disadvantaged communities with the training that will allow them to find well paid jobs at the port.

Gatlin introduced first, William Mendoza, Spaulding, Gatlin and Associates director of operations, who has a background in workforce development.

“The goal is to reintroduce the ports to San Pedro and then as someone who grew up here, I really want to help reintroduce San Pedro to the rest of LA County,” Mendoza said.

Jennifer Gatlin is director of programming and development at Spaulding, Gatlin and Associates. Her background includes managerial and training development, curriculum development, and workforce instruction.

She said her role at Spaulding, Gatlin and Associates is to help facilitate and oversee the training programs in partnership with many of the business leaders who were present which included ACTi founder and president, Ruben Garcia, the president and CEO of the University of West Los Angeles law school, Robert Brown and others.

“We will ensure equity in hiring and equity in hiring means generational equity,” the younger Gatlin said.

She referenced her family’s civic involvement in San Pedro and activism on the waterfront, including the National Labor Relations lawsuit that led to the Phillips-Gatlin agreement that allowed the admission of African Americans and others who were barred from joining the ILWU due to the requirement that applicants be sponsored by existing members.

“Sixty years ago, my grandfather, John Gatlin, was fighting for equity and fighting for fairness on hiring for this port,” she said. “And I’m so proud to be a part of my family’s legacy and following in my father’s footsteps. We’re fighting for this country following in my family’s legacy for supporting this community.”

She concluded her remarks expressing her excitement and hope in collaborating with the attendee present on this job training initiative.

Dr. Cheyenne Bryant, the president of the San Pedro/Wilmington chapter of the NAACP spoke on the future collaborations of Spaulding, Gatlin and Associates and the heads of industry in attendance, including the president and CEO of the University of West Los Angeles who was in attendance. UWLA will be partnering with Spaulding, Gatlin and Associates to provide online courses and training for those port related jobs.

“When it comes to online courses and online training a lot of the positions that will be available are going to [require] training and they’re going to be online courses,” Dr. Bryant said. “A lot of folks who are [going to be applying for those] positions are underprivileged and are low income. They don’t have the transportation. They don’t have the time to be sitting in a classroom.”

Bryant discussed the importance of specifically reaching out to the Black community with these jobs training programs.

“We know there’s a lot of disparities in this community and I think what makes it really awesome is that we’re doing this … predominately for the Black community,” Dr. Bryant said. “The reason why it’s important to say that is because oftentimes we say minority communities, a lot of those jobs and those resources seep between the cracks and crevices to other minorities, which we want to help, but right now we have to be able to help the Black community, which is suffering.”

Everyone left the ferry feeling good about the announcement. The biggest unanswered question was, “When will it begin?”

Mexican Cuisine: From Cure For World Hunger to Cultural Patrimony of Humanity

By Gregorio Luke, Historian of Mexican and Latin American Art and Culture

When we talk of culture we think of literature, painting or sculpture, but a cuisine is also a form of culture and in the case of Mexican cuisine, it is the only cuisine in the world recognized by UNESCO as Cultural Patrimony of Humanity.

You may wonder what it is about this cuisine that is so unique to receive such distinction. Simply stated, Mexican cuisine changed the way people eat in the world. In México we used for the first time corn, tomatoes, cacao, vanilla and many other products that are now part of every cuisine and diet. Most remarkably, Mexican cuisine has remained consistent throughout thousands of years. The molcajete we use today to prepare salsas is the same that was used by the Aztecs.

Moctezuma, the Aztec emperor, had a vast network of couriers bringing him goods from all over the country; he had ice from the high mountains, fresh fish from the coasts and so many different kinds of birds that he established his own aviary. Chroniclers describe how every day they prepared over 80 different dishes for him.

This rich culinary diversity was enjoyed also by the population at large, as can be seen in the famous markets or tianguis. Diego Rivera once painted in a mural in the National Palace of Mexico City what he imagined were the great pre-Hispanic markets that offered goods from all over the country. When the Spaniards first saw this, they were amazed because there was nothing comparable in Europe.

The Spaniards arrived in the New World in search of gold. Little did they imagine that the true riches would not be under the ground, but would grow on it. See this presentation on Luke’s website. It will take you on a culinary journey from the ancient times of the Aztecs and the Mayans, to the colonial period and from Mexico’s turbulent 19th century to the present.

The basic product upon which the entire cuisine is built is corn, or like we call it, maíz. According to ancient Mexicans, corn was a gift of the Gods. The Mayans believed that man himself was made of corn.

Corn does not grow spontaneously in nature; it requires the hand of people. It took thousands of years to develop the corn that we know today. From the corn, ancient Mexicans derived all kinds of meals. Absolutely nothing was wasted; even the husks were used as a wrapping device or the cobs as caps for gourds.

Corn was eaten as a liquid in atoles or in a solid form, like the tamales. But there is much more, for example from the hair of the corn, Mexicans prepare a tea that is an excellent diuretic. Even the fungus that grows on corn (huitlacoche) is eaten as a delicacy.

There are many ways of using corn, but perhaps the most famous is the tortilla. It has been said that tortillas are simultaneously table cloth, napkin, dish, spoon, base and condiment for other foods.

With the tortilla we prepare the delicious taco. It is perfect in its simplicity and beauty. The taco offers endless culinary possibilities.

As important as the corn is the chile. The chile is the spice of life, but it also has many nutritional values and the highest concentration of vitamins of any food. Chiles are also the best antioxidants that exist.

The chile is the basis for the salsas. And México has some of the best salsas (sauces) of any country. Each salsa adds not only flavor but also texture to the cuisine. Another staple food in México are the frijoles or beans, and there is a great variety of these.

You can appreciate the health value of all these products by realizing that when the Europeans came to the Americas, the people in this continent had none of the sicknesses that were ravaging Europe. One of the reasons that the American Indian population was so decimated is that they had no defenses, because they had never experienced illnesses, such as smallpox, that were introduced by the Europeans.

Another characteristic of Mexican cuisine is its creativity. It offers a new definition of what is edible. For example, there were few animals that were domesticated in ancient México, among them the turkey or guajolote. So Mexicans had to find other sources of protein. Some of these sources were insects. We think of insects as dirty or inedible. But, these ideas are unfounded: Why would a pig be cleaner than a cricket? Many of these insects, such as the maguey worms, are still eaten today. In the same area where you can have a couple of cows you could grow millions of insects. We could effectively end hunger in the world.

Details: www.gregorioluke.com/lectures

 

Three hours after Rittenhouse verdict, conservative pages ruled Facebook’s engagement by a factor of 9 to 1

By John Byrne For RawStory

Last Friday, Cristiano Ronaldo’s Facebook page had the most interactions in the world. “Let’s chase what we are trying to achieve this season!” he exclaimed.

The Portuguese soccer star’s post, however, was an island in a partisan sea. The next six most engaged posts came from outspoken American conservativescheering the acquittal of Kyle Rittenhousefor the killings of two men at a Wisconsin protest. Looking at shared links, conservatives’ Facebook dominance was even more stark — 18 of the top 20 most engaged page links in the world originated from conservative Facebook pages.

Facebook’s largest leak in history focused on the company’s past. Missing, however, from the coverage of a Facebook whistleblower has been a focus on Facebook’s present.

To look at Facebook’s data about user interactions — which reflects the engagement of its users with content worldwide — is to find oneself in a universe where American conservative voices dominate. While Facebook claims to host a diverse spectrum of two billion users, its daily engagement ranking exposes how right-wing actors eclipse all other media conversations atop its algorithm.

Three hours after 18-year-old Kyle Rittenhouse was acquitted of the murder of two men at a Wisconsin protest, Facebook lit up with a panoply of conservative pages cheering the teen’s exoneration. Even a cursory glance at the scoreboard — the top 20 most engaged link shares by pages in the world — suggests that Facebook has become a town square for right wing American voices. Ninety percent of Facebook’s most engaged pages linking out to other websites were conservative pages, with just two mainstream sources — NPR and NBC News — eking out a place on the list.

Three hours after the Rittenhouse verdict, the above public Facebook posts had the most user engagement in the world on posts by pages that included links.

Twenty four hours after the verdict, conservative pages gave up some ground. But while link posts from Myanmar, Great Britain and Qatar joined the list (at 17, 18 and 19), conservative American pages still held 15 of the top 20 posts, and 90 percent of the top ten — worldwide.

While Facebook banned former President Donald Trump after the Jan. 6 riot at the Capitol, a Donald Trump for President page beat out all mainstream news outlets, twice, in the three hours after the verdict. NPR and NBC came in at 14 and 17, behind Donald Trump for President at position seven and eight.

“Kyle should spend the next year suing the absolute pants off of every news outlet that defamed him,” one Trump for President postread. There is no indication former president Trump is involved with the page.

Also trumping NPR and NBC — three different times — was Dan Bongino, a three-time failed Congressional candidate, former police officer and Secret Service agent, who is now a conservative radio host. Bongino also captured five of the top ten most engaged slots the prior day.

Three hours after the Rittenhouse verdict, conservative U.S. Facebook pages dominated engagement — worldwide.

Facebook reveals daily user engagement data throughCrowdTangle, a tool publishers use to get insight into what’s trending. For the past several years,New York Timesreporter Kevin Roose has tweeted “Facebook’s Top 10,” a daily list of pages atop Facebook’s engagement algorithm. Roose’s list reveals how often conservative pages win in Facebook’s interaction metrics.

Facebook has repeatedly said engagement data does not reflect how often content appears in users’ news feeds.

In August, Facebook released a report showing that recipes and cute animals ranked among the most viewed on the platform. The report was undermined by theNew York Times, whichrevealedthe company had shelved an earlier analysis showing the most viewed link was “a news article with a headline suggesting that the coronavirus vaccine was at fault for the death of a Florida doctor.” Facebook thenreleased the earlier report.

Facebook’s third quarterreportappeared to support the company’s claims that the most viewed content isn’t partisan. The most widely viewed domains included YouTube, GoFundMe and Amazon, and the most popular posts were memes. Only the anti-China page,Epoch Times, which spreads right-wing conspiracy theories, stood out among the top 20 most seen US pages.

A former Facebook executive who spoke to Raw Story criticized the company’s transparency reports. The executive noted that Facebook had only released a tiny amount of data; the reports only show the top 20 in any category.

Better reporting, the executive said, would include not simply what was popular — but where, including different geographic areas of the U.S. Facebook should also reveal what content gets distributed to which demographics, the executive said, as well as more current data to allow analysis of “trends and pockets of trends” on Facebook.

Facebook’smost engagedlink shared by a page following Rittenhouse’s acquittal was posted by Bongino, the conservative talk show host. Bongino’s Facebook post linked to a video where a crowd outside the courthouse cheered to a chant of “Freedom wins! Freedom wins! Freedom wins!” followed by another man screaming, “Second amendment stays!”

Bongino has more monthly Facebook engagement than the New York Times, the Washington Post and CNN combined. Asked why he’s so popular on Facebook,he said, “I think people just love the message.” Bongino haspromoted conspiracy theories, including allegations that Democrats spied on former President Trump’s 2016 campaign, and falsely asserted that masks are “largely ineffective” at preventing the spread of COVID-19.

Facebook’ssecond and third most engagedpost following the Rittenhouse verdict came from Ben Shapiro, founder of the conservative news siteThe Daily Wire. “Not guilty was the correct verdict,” Shapiro’s page wrote. “Anyone with a prefrontal cortex who had watched the trial for more than 30 seconds knew this. Anyone who says differently is a lying hack.”

“Justice was served,” Shapiro’s page added in another post. “The Left accepting the verdict in a peaceable manner remains the sizable elephant in the room.”

TheDaily Wirearticle linked asserted that social media was celebrating Rittenhouse’s not guilty verdict — which was true, at least on Facebook.

“Joe Biden, CNN, MSNBC, and the Democrat establishment should apologize for lying about Rittenhouse as a ‘racist’ and ‘school shooter’ and ‘white supremacist’ for months,” the authorwrote, quoting conservative radio hostBuck Sexton. “But they won’t, because they have no honor and don’t care about the destruction they constantly incite.”

“These jurors are patriots,” Sextoncontinued. “They chose honor, truth and love of country over the whims of the vicious Leftist mob.”

Twenty four hours after the verdict, conservative Facebook pages held 75% of the top engaged link posts in the world.

The Daily Wire‘s article was the most engaged news article linked from a Facebook page in the three hours following the verdict.

The Daily Wire‘s success is linked to the fact the company controls multiple Facebook pages. At least eight have more than 500,000 followers, includingDaily Wire,The Angry Patriot,Fed Up Americans,The Real Patriots,Matt WalshandDonald Trump is My President. It also controls pages with more than 100,000 followers:Conservative News,The Conservative,Boycott,The Right News,Restless Patriot,Pro-America NewsandThe United Patriots.

Shapiro’sown page, with eight million followers, is run byThe Daily Wire, which describes itself as “one of America’s fastest-growing conservative media companies and counter-cultural outlets for news, opinion, and entertainment.” The site is owned by Shapiro, his editorial partners and self-madefracking billionaires.

Daily Wire was forced to acknowledge ownership of its other Facebook pages after anexposeby Popular Information. Facebookacknowledgedthe pages engaged in deceptive coordinated sharing that violated its rules, but allowed them to continue to operate. During the Trump Administration, Shapiro was among a number of conservatives who hadprivate dinnerswith Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg.

While Facebook correctly notes that engagement and views are different, data Crowdtangle releases about videos reveal total views. That data shows that conservatives won that race as well.

Eight of the ten most popular videos posted about the Rittenhouse trial in the first three hours were posted by conservative pages. Conservative pages’ videos received 87 percent of views. A liberal political page, Occupy Democrats, captured thirteen percent. Occupy Democrats had the eighth and ninth most popular videos about the trial.

Eighteen of the top 20 videos related to the trial by engagement — or 90 percent — were posted by conservative pages.

Twitter’s algorithmic response to the verdict was more balanced. Five hours after the verdict, Kyle Rittenhouse and Kenosha ranked as number one and two most trending topics. “NOT GUILTY” was celebrated among some of the tweets, but Twitter’s number five referenced Rep. Jerry Nadler (D-NY), chairman of the House Judiciary Committee, who said Rittenhouse’s acquittal was a “miscarriage of justice.”

On Twitter, Black Lives Matter landed in position 8. On Facebook, Black Lives Matter — or any page affiliated with black empowerment — didn’t appear anywhere in the top 100 most engaged public page posts.

Have tips about Facebook or internal information about social media platforms? Email techtips@rawstory.com.

Raw Story is paid by Facebook for content through its Instant Articles program. John Byrne holds direct investments in Meta, Facebook’s parent company; Softbank, one of TikTok’s large early investors; and Alphabet, the parent company of Google and YouTube. He is the founder of Raw Story.

UCB Lecturers Greet The New Contract As “Game Changer” And “Only the Beginning”

UCB Lecturers Greet The New Contract As “Game Changer” And “Only the Beginning”

By Jane Hundertmark and David Bacon

CFT United, 11/18/21

https://www.cft.org/article/uc-lecturers-greet-new-contract-game-changer-and-only-beginning

More articles about the history of the lecturers’ fight for a contract:
https://www.cft.org/article/job-security-still-table-uc-lecturers-members-vote-authorize-strike
https://www.cft.org/article/back-classroom-no-contract
https://www.cft.org/article/lecturers-rally-nine-uc-campuses-statewide-action
https://www.cft.org/article/what-does-uc-aft-strike-look

UC lecturers were ready Nov. 19, to set up morning picket lines at the entrances to all nine University of California campuses. At Berkeley, the strike lines normally go up first between Bancroft Way and the famous Sather Gate. But instead of going on strike no angry lines appeared. And at noon lecturers massed in front of the MLK Student Union in what was almost a festive atmosphere.

 

Cheers broke out as members of the lecturers’ bargaining team announced that agreement had been reached with university administrators the night before. “Whose University? Our University!” – the chant familiar in every lecturers’ rally, became a victory cry. It echoed across the plaza against the windows of Sproul Hall, from which students were dragged sixty years ago at the beginning of the modern era of university activism. It would have seemed familiar to them – a sign that lecturers and their students had taken another step, a generation later, toward the same goal.

 

One lecturer, Khalil Kadir, called “beloved” by rally chair Crystal Chang-Cohen, told the crowd, “We need to continue to assert this is our university.” Kadir explained the obvious reason why administrators had agreed the night before: “They didn’t stay up until 5 am because they wanted to. They stayed up until 5 am for a reason – they were terrified that the moment we stop working the university stops working. We make the university function. It only works because we do.”

Crystal Chang-Cohen holds Khalil Kadir’s son, and gives him the chance to put in his two cents.

The biggest cheers at the rally greeted the announcement that the union had broken through on what has been one of the most important issues for the last 50 years – the precarious nature of lecturer jobs. The agreement summary posted by the union Thursday morning says it “revolutionizes the first six years of a lecturer’s career at the UC.”

 

Lecturers now will get a formal review after their first year and a preference for classes the next year before any new hire. After two more years, another review and a continuing appointment. And finally, a third three-year appointment leads to another review, and a permanent appointment. “Unlike the current system of complete precarity through the first five years of a lecturer’s career with a requirement that lecturers apply for their jobs each year, after the first year all the contracts are multi-year.”

 

The new agreement also contains wage raises that Ben Brown, a bargaining team member, told the Berkeley crowd amounted to “an average salary increase between 30 and 38 percent.”

Lecturers and their supporters greet the new contract.

Winning a livable salary was one of the key factors that motivated students on the Berkeley campus to support their teachers. A letter from the Political Economy Students Association and the Associated Students outlined “a sample of some of our most beloved lecturers’ 2020 salaries.” After listing a few salaries the letter charged that “most of them will STILL either be under or just above the low income threshold of Alameda County. This is unacceptable.” In the event of a strike, it warned, “We will be standing right beside our lecturers, and bringing senate faculty with us … The world is watching.”

 

Caroline Quigley, co-chair communications of the PESA and the letter’s author, was introduced to the rally by her proud teacher, Crystal Chang-Cohen. She described the note she wrote to the university’s lead negotiator, Associate Director of Labor Relations Nadine Fishel, expressing her shock at learning that Fishel herself was a UC Berkeley Political Economy alumna.

Caroline Quigley tells the crowd about the letter to Nadine Fishel.

Most lecturers present felt that the letter, and other support from students, faculty and other university workers played a key role in winning the new contract. Ben Brown also credited the sessions of open negotiations held over zoom, that let rank-and-file lecturers hear what was happening at the bargaining table. “The pandemic was awful in so many ways,” he said, “but it was great for bargaining – to negotiate in front of 300 colleagues.” The crowd responded by chanting, “When we fight, we win!”

 

Tiffany Page, a bargaining team member from the Berkeley campus, told the rally that the union’s persistence in the face of university stalling for over two years finally paid off. “We had 55 bargaining sessions,” she said. And in the end, “the team stayed up for the last 48 hours to get an agreement. I think there are some really great improvements in this contract.”

 

Strike teams members also spoke out. “Unions work. Collective action works,” said one member. Another called it “a game-changing contract.” Anna Lee (?) recalled that she had belonged to the graduate students’ union at Berkeley before getting a job as a lecturer. “This contract is huge,” she said. “I may not have to work at the two other campuses I work at now. People have said to me, ‘why don’t you quite being a lecturer and get a real job?’ As one of the 40% of teaching faculty here at UC Berkeley, I want to say thank you.”

 

David Walter, longtime lecturer activist, told the gathering, “”I’ve been a lecturer here several years but am still pre-six,” he said. “Lecturers have to get another job to pay the rent, but that is no longer the case here at UC Berkeley. One job is enough. We’re not alone anymore. We don’t have to slink into our offices. We are now family.”

David Walter speaks out.

The rally ended on a note of caution from Khalid Kadir, who said that despite the gains, lecturers still don’t make a salary that allows them to live in dignity in the Bay Area. Nor do the other workers on the campus. The problem, however, is not that the university doesn’t have money. “We do not have a budget problem,” he explained. “We have a distribution problem – there are people on this campus who are paid too much, while most of us are paid too little.”

 

The new contract has changed some of that for lecturers, but graduate students, researchers and other campus workers are still struggling to survive. “This means we have a 5-year contract, and now we can come to other people’s rallies,” he warned. “This is only the beginning.”

At the end of the rally everyone sings Solidarity Forever.

 

 

Union Kaiser Permanente Members To Vote on Tentative Agreement With Healthcare Giant

Los Angeles— Averting a nationwide strike, almost 4,000 UFCW union Kaiser Permanente workers represented by six UFCW locals in Southern California will start to vote on a contract agreement Nov. 22. The rank-and-file member vote comes after a standoff with the healthcare giant that saw multiple unions threatening a strike over a punitive contract offer. The new, tentative agreement was ratified by delegates at a conference last Nov. 17.

Using an electronic voting system, the ratification vote is set to begin at 7 p.m. Nov. 22 and continue through 5 p.m. Nov. 24 .

If ratified, the agreement will have an effective date of Oct. 1, 2021 through Oct. 1, 2024.

The tentative deal with Kaiser Permanente secures:

Significant annual across-the-board wage increases of 3% in 2021; 3% in 2022; 2 % + 2% bonus in 2023 and 2% + 2% bonus in 2024.

Wage parity for certain jobs in Kern County with a 1.25 % wage increase beginning on July 1, 2022; and an additional 1.25% wage raise on July 1, 2023.

Clinical Lab Scientists will receive an additional $.45 in longevity wage bumps.

The tentative agreement also protects existing medical and pension benefits and eliminates Kaiser’s proposed 2-tier wage system.

The proposed deal adds new staffing language to continue to protect employees and patients, and maintains benefits while providing career development and advancement opportunities for union-represented employees.

When ratified, the agreement will ensure Kaiser Permanente patients continue to receive safe, high-quality care and service; maintain Alliance union members’ industry-leading wages and benefits; and ensure Kaiser Permanente remains affordable for its members in the future.

On Nov. 13, the Alliance of Healthcare Unions – a coalition of 22 labor organizations including UFCW– and the company, both announced a tentative agreement, halting a strike that was set to start in the following 48 hours. AHU represents over 50,000 health care employees across the country.

UFCW union members were actively involved in this contract fight. Workers participated in town hall meetings, wore campaign stickers and union t-shirts, participated at the mega March for the Future of Healthcare in Pasadena, shared their stories in the press, created videos and social media posts. They also authorized a strike and signed up for picket shifts.

The tentative agreement benefits approximately 2,000 UFCW Local 770 members who work as pharmacy clerks, pharmacy technicians and interns as well as clinical lab scientists and clinical and administrative health care workers at numerous Kaiser locations in Los Angeles, Ventura, Kern, San Bernardino and Riverside counties.

Turkey Grab & Go Giveaway at El Fresco Farms in Carson

On Nov. 20, hundreds of families collected food boxes at El Fresco Farms, a grocery store in Carson. The Thanksgiving packages had frozen turkeys and other uncooked food items in their boxes. People either picked up a box in their vehicles via a drive through system or stood in line.

Sponsors for the event included IBEW Local 11, Mayor Pro tem Jim Dear, L.A. Regional Food Bank, Port of Long Beach, Watson Land Company, E.R.B. FoundationShipper Transport Express and El Fresco Farms.

The flier advertising the event list Carson’s newest councilmember, Arleen Rojas, as presenting the turkey giveaway

The Los Angeles Unified School District is conducting a Grab and Go food giveaway over multiple days. Last year, L.A. Unified gave away 80 million meals and 1.5 million meals in a single day.

The meals had sliced turkey, mashed potatoes with gravy and green beans. Meatless meals are available for students and families who request them in advance.

Dates and Hours of Operation:

  • November 22
  • December 20
  • December 27
  • January 3

From 8a.m. to 11 a.m.

Locations:
Banning Senior High School
1527 Lakme Ave., Wilmington 90744

Curtiss Middle School
1254 E. Helmick St., Carson 90746

Dana Middle School
1501 S. Cabrillo Ave., San Pedro 90731

Dymally High School
8800 S. San Pedro St., Los Angeles 90003

Edison Middle School
6500 Hooper Ave. Los Angeles 90001

Fremont Senior High School
7676 S. San Pedro St., Los Angeles 90003

Gompers Middle School
234 E. 112th St., Los Angeles 90061

Markham Middle School
1650 E. 104th St., Los Angeles 90002

Narbonne Senior High School
24300 S. Western Ave., Harbor City 90710

Peary Middle School
1415 W. Gardena Blvd., Gardena 90247

Rancho Dominguez Preparatory School
4110 Santa Fe Ave., Los Angeles 90810

White Middle School
22102 S. Figueroa St., Carson 90745

MOLAA Honored Dodger Announcer Jaime Jarrín, and Renowned Artist and Activist, Dr. Judith Baca

Long Beach– On Nov. 13, the Museum of Latin American Art kicked off a year-long celebration of its 25th Anniversary at a gala attended by more than 500 guests. The Los Angeles Dodgers and its’ longtime Spanish-language announcer, Jaime Jarrin, and prominent Chicana Artist and Activist Dr. Judith Baca were honored at the fundraising dinner.

MOLAA’s CEO Dr. Lourdes Ramos-Rivas called the event a spectacular night of the coming together of prominent community leaders, elected officials to celebrate MOLAA’s achievements over the past 25 years.

Popular Latino, rock, and hip-hop band from Los Angeles, Ozomatli, performed a special live concert. Artist Sami Hayek was in charge of designing the official commemorative wine bottle in partnership with Bodegas de Santo Tomás.

For 25 years, MOLAA has showcased some of the world’s brightest artists and has brought arts education directly to the community.

More than 180 exhibitions of Latinx and Latin American Masters and up-and-coming artists. The mission expanded to represent Latinx art in addition to Latin American art and approximately 1,600 artworks are in the collection. Over the past 25 years, more than 1 million visitors have crossed MOLAA’s threshold and enjoyed its curation of Latinx art and programming.