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Wed, 18 Sep 2024 11:45:00 +0000 ???????Taiwanese Firm Gold Apollo Says It Didn't Make Exploding Beepers From Hell Used By Hezbollah Fighters
???????Taiwanese Firm Gold Apollo Says It Didn't Make Exploding Beepers From Hell Used By Hezbollah Fighters
Taiwanese pager manufacturer Gold Apollo Co., at the center of the exploding pagers incident used by Hezbollah fighters in
Read more.....
???????Taiwanese Firm Gold Apollo Says It Didn't Make Exploding Beepers From Hell Used By Hezbollah Fighters
Taiwanese pager manufacturer Gold Apollo Co., at the center of the exploding pagers incident used by Hezbollah fighters in Lebanon—resulting in nine deaths and nearly 3,000 injuries—shifted the blame onto Budapest-based BAC Consulting Kft.
The Washington Post cites Hsu Kuang, the founder of Gold Apollo, who told reporters that BAC Consulting "entirely handled" the AR-924 pager manufacturing process.
On Wednesday, Kuang told reporters at the company's headquarters in New Taipei City that BAC has been selling Gold Apollo's pager brand for less than two years. He was completely stumped by how a pager could be weaponized into an explosive device.
"I'm just doing my business, why am I getting involved in a terrorist attack?" he told reporters, adding, "The product was not ours. It was only that it had our brand on it."
A statement from Gold Apollo noted that it authorized "BAC to use our brand trademark for product sales in specific regions, but the design and manufacturing of the products are entirely handled by BAC."
On Tuesday, at around 330 local time across Lebanon , the pagers from hell exploded. Sources told Reuters that Hezbollah fighters began recently using pagers to evade Israeli tracking of their locations.
Here's more about the exploding pagers from Bloomberg :
One of the outstanding questions is how the blasts were planned and then triggered with such coordination. Small amounts of explosive were planted in beepers that Hezbollah had ordered, the New York Times reported, citing US and other officials briefed on the operation. Just one or two ounces of the material was added next to the battery of each pager, and a switch was embeded to trigger the detonation, the newspaper reported. Devices exploded simultaneously around the country at about 3:30 p.m.
Meanwhile, the Lebanese government has identified "Israeli aggression" as being behind the attack, while Hezbollah also says it holds Israel "fully responsible." Israel has yet to issue an official comment, but there are several reports from the region that war preparations are underway .
According to a report prepared by the American Center for Levant Studies (ACLS), early estimates suggest 4,000 Hezbollah fighters were injured in yesterday's attack, affecting about a quarter of leadership.
Around 4,000 Hezbollah operatives in Lebanon were injured after their communication pagers exploded. Eleven members of Hezbollah, including leaders, were confirmed dead in today's attack with 400 in critical condition and 500 losing their sight. This significant blow left 10% to 25% of the party's leadership out of service, marking a major disruption in Hezbollah's command structure. Experts in the region are calling the incident a "checkmate" for Hezbollah. Explosions spread into Syria as devices detonated in a car in Damascus, injuring 18 fighters.
ACLS noted that pentaerythritol tetranitrate explosives were embedded into each of the pagers:
The pagers, acquired as part of a technological upgrade, were brought to Lebanon five months ago from the Taiwanese company Gold Apollo. The explosive material was inserted before the devices arrived in Lebanon. Initial reports indicate they contained PETN, a powerful explosive material. Each device had no more than 20 grams of PETN, known for its strength and sensitivity. While PETN doesn't explode on impact or ignition, it can be triggered by continuous vibrations. For reference, 1 kilogram of PETN equals 1.25 kilograms of TNT. Repeated, continuous messages sent to the pagers caused prolonged vibrations, leading to the explosion.
Now, everyone is checking their electronic devices for explosives.
Tyler Durden
Wed, 09/18/2024 - 07:45 Close
Wed, 18 Sep 2024 11:20:00 +0000 France's Electricity Prices Turn Negative Amid Poor Demand
France's Electricity Prices Turn Negative Amid Poor Demand
France's Electricity Prices Turn Negative Amid Poor Demand
By Charles Kennedy of OilPrice.com
Power prices in France turned negative for hours on Tuesday morning amid tepid demand in a struggling economy and increased renewables generation.
French intraday power prices traded at as low as -$22.25 (-20 euros) per megawatt-hour (MWh) on the Epex Spot exchange, according to data compiled by Bloomberg .
So far this year, France’s power demand has been undershooting projections by grid operator RTE as the French and European economies are seeing little – if any – growth.
France, which derives about 70% of its electricity from nuclear energy, returned last year to the top spot of Europe’s net power exporters, as its nuclear fleet returned from maintenance and domestic demand was lower. Even with high levels of electricity exports, power supply in France is set to exceed demand for several hours on Tuesday.
European wholesale electricity markets have seen zero or negative power prices for the most hours on record this year amid soaring renewable energy generation and a mismatch between supply and demand hours for solar power.
Negative pricing occurs when there is more electricity supply than demand, a scenario becoming more frequent as Europe continues its aggressive push toward renewable energy.
The number of tradable hours in which power prices were zero or negative have jumped so far this year in major wholesale power markets, including Germany, France, the Netherlands, Spain, Finland, and southern Sweden, per LSEG data cited by Reuters .
Zero or negative wholesale power prices have started to slow investment in capacity additions and make the case for the need for higher investment in energy storage , through which power producers would avoid curtailing electricity output or having to pay to offload electricity.
The rapid expansion of wind and solar capacity is reshaping the continent’s energy landscape. On days when both sources are generating at high levels, the market can become saturated with inexpensive power, driving prices down to the point where they even turn negative. While this benefits consumers in the short term, it also highlights the challenges of managing an energy grid increasingly reliant on intermittent renewable sources.
Tyler Durden
Wed, 09/18/2024 - 07:20 Close
Wed, 18 Sep 2024 10:55:00 +0000 Lazard CEO Says Junior Bankers Are Fine With 80-90 Hour Weeks As Long As The Work Is "Interesting" And "Important"
Lazard CEO Says Junior Bankers Are Fine With 80-90 Hour Weeks As Long As The Work Is "Interesting" And "Important"
Lazard Chief Executive Officer Peter Orszag doesn't seem to be bothered by recent complaints of junior bankers being
Read more.....
Lazard CEO Says Junior Bankers Are Fine With 80-90 Hour Weeks As Long As The Work Is "Interesting" And "Important"
Lazard Chief Executive Officer Peter Orszag doesn't seem to be bothered by recent complaints of junior bankers being overworked on Wall Street. As a matter of fact, he took to Bloomberg yesterday to proclaim his young bankers are actually asking for longer hours, providing the work is interesting.
Whether its just PR spin aside, Orszag's comments come days after we reported that JPMorgan is now capping junior bankers' hours at 80 per week, while Bank of America is rolling out a tool requiring detailed time tracking.
Those moves come years after the infamous Goldman Sachs slide deck , wherein junior bankers complained about working long hours on...of all places, Wall Street. Despite this, we wrote back in July that junior bankers were working 100 hour weeks again
Orszag said in an interview this week: “There are many, many people who would rather work whatever number of hours per week on interesting, important things rather than fewer hours on things that are not that interesting. And that’s what we’re looking for. That’s the trade-off.”
The Bloomberg report says Orszag attributes his ability to ask for 80-90 hour weeks to giving remote work two days a week and offering "flexibility to ensure staff still have the agency to focus on other important things in their lives".
Employers must offer junior bankers more meaningful work, not just "make-work," said Orszag, though professions do require effort at the end of the day.
As we noted last week, the debate over junior bankers' hours resurfaced after Bank of America associate Leo Lukenas died in May, with complaints that hours were exceeding 100 a week despite prior commitments to protect worker health.
Orszag concluded by hailing the company's diversity as its strength: “The evidence is clear that more diverse teams produce better outcomes when the problems are not routine. We’re going to be better on behalf of our clients as a result.”
VIDEO
Tyler Durden
Wed, 09/18/2024 - 06:55 Close
Wed, 18 Sep 2024 10:30:00 +0000 Biden's Department Of Energy Short On Cash To Refill SPR At Low Prices
Biden's Department Of Energy Short On Cash To Refill SPR At Low Prices
Biden's Department Of Energy Short On Cash To Refill SPR At Low Prices
By Charles Kennedy of OilPrice.com
The price of the U.S. WTI crude oil has finally stayed in the low $70s per barrel for a sustainable period of time, allowing the Biden Administration to ramp up the refill of the Strategic Petroleum Reserve (SPR), which it had said would do at prices of $79 a barrel or below.
WTI Crude is now at $70 per barrel as of Tuesday morning, after spending days below that threshold.
But the Energy Department has just $841 million left to buy crude for the SPR, Bloomberg reported on Tuesday, citing an estimate by ClearView Energy Partners, a consulting firm. That money would be enough to buy only around 12 million barrels of crude at today’s prices, per Bloomberg’s calculations.
This would be a drop in the ocean, considering that the SPR is only just over half full compared to its capacity of 700 million barrels.
DOE's Office of Petroleum Reserves has recently announced a call for bids to supply up to 1.5 million barrels of oil to the Bayou Choctaw site in January 2025. An additional solicitation will follow on August 12, 2024, for another 2 million barrels destined for the Bryan Mound site, also for delivery in January 2025.
The replenishment strategy comes in the wake of the SPR's critical role in stabilizing the market during global supply disruptions, notably the release of more than 180 million barrels of oil from the SPR starting in 2021, as gasoline prices remained high. The Department of Treasury claims that these releases, along with coordinated international efforts, helped reduce gasoline prices by up to 40 cents per gallon in 2022.
The SPR currently houses 375 million barrels of crude—a figure that is 263 million barrels less than oil in the SPR at the beginning of President Joe Biden’s term in office . The SPR, capable of storing as many as 714 million barrels of crude oil, is kept in underground salt caverns at four sites in Texas and Louisiana and was designed to protect the economy and American livelihoods during oil shortages.
Tyler Durden
Wed, 09/18/2024 - 06:30 Close
Wed, 18 Sep 2024 09:45:00 +0000 Companies Are 'Ghosting' Job Applicants In The Middle Of The Hiring Process
Companies Are 'Ghosting' Job Applicants In The Middle Of The Hiring Process
Ghosting isn't just for dating apps anymore. It's also happening in the world of hiring...
"Ghost jobs" are defined as job listings for roles with n
Read more.....
Companies Are 'Ghosting' Job Applicants In The Middle Of The Hiring Process
Ghosting isn't just for dating apps anymore. It's also happening in the world of hiring...
"Ghost jobs" are defined as job listings for roles with no hiring activity. And a new Bloomberg report says that those types of listings have hit a two year high, citing data from Greenhouse.
In the world of consulting, these 'ghost' listings rose to 31% in Q2, up from 26% two years ago, the report says. These jobs are seen as "a bellwether for the white-collar economy", the report says.
Consultants have also reported being "ghosted," where recruiters abruptly stop communication during the hiring process without explanation, according to Bloomberg . The shift has left many jobseekers frustrated.
One job seeker told Bloomberg: “It can be so awful. I don’t care for automated rejection letters, but would prefer that, just to have closure.”
Declining demand for traditional consulting services has led to job cuts and slower hiring at firms like Accenture, Ernst & Young, and McKinsey.
Growth in the U.S. consulting market slowed to 5.2% last year, down from 14%, with many firms scaling back or canceling projects. This year's growth is projected at around 6%, according to Source Global Research.
Jon Stross, co-founder and president of Greenhouse said: “When the economy is hot, you have to treat job candidates better and make decisions faster."
He continued: “When it flips and there are way too many candidates, it slows down decision making. Recruiters can wait for that perfect person, so they treat people worse and get away with it.”
The report notes that some consultants are applying to hundreds of jobs without success, as many roles are put on hold or canceled.
According to industry expert Hung Lee, this is partly due to recruiters being overwhelmed and outdated job postings remaining online.
Meanwhile, wage growth in consulting is slowing, with salary increases projected to rise only 3.85% next year, down from nearly 5% in 2023.
Tyler Durden
Wed, 09/18/2024 - 05:45 Close
Wed, 18 Sep 2024 09:44:00 +0000 War Preparations Build After 9 Killed, 2700+ Wounded In Israel's Pager Attack On Hezbollah
War Preparations Build After 9 Killed, 2700+ Wounded In Israel's Pager Attack On Hezbollah
Update(1445ET) : Official Lebanese Health Ministry figures are that nine people were killed in the si
Read more.....
War Preparations Build After 9 Killed, 2700+ Wounded In Israel's Pager Attack On Hezbollah
Update(1445ET) : Official Lebanese Health Ministry figures are that nine people were killed in the simultaneous pager explosions, including a young girl, and some 2,750 wounded . The Lebanese government has identified "Israeli aggression" as being behind the attack, while Hezbollah also says it holds Israel "fully responsible". Israel has yet to issue official comment, but there are several reports from the region that war preparations are underway . There are reports of evening Israeli shelling of Hezbollah positions in south Lebanon.
Israel's Channel 14 is reporting that "senior Israeli military officials are preparing for a third Hezbollah war which is expected to begin almost immediately ." The US State Department has said the US "was not aware of this operation and was not involved" in the attack. The Biden administration says it is "still gathering information".
The WSJ has offered some initial details on the sophisticated attack, which Lebanese and Arabs have condemned as a major 'terror attack'. "The affected pagers were from a new shipment that the group received in recent days, people familiar with the matter said," WSJ writes. "A Hezbollah official said hundreds of fighters had such devices, speculating that malware may have caused the devices to explode. The official said some people felt the pagers heat up and disposed of them before they burst ."
And more: "Hezbollah said a number of pagers carried by its members exploded simultaneously at 3:30 p.m. It couldn’t immediately be determined what caused the blasts, which were spread out across the country in several areas where Hezbollah has a heavy presence ."
Israeli media says Mossad rigged the pager batteries of a shipment that was imported five months ago :
The Israeli spy agency placed a quantity of PETN, a highly explosive material, on the batteries of the devices, and detonated them by raising the temperature of the batteries from afar, the source says.
There are initial reports that more European airlines have began cancelling flights to Lebanon and Israel amid more headlines of war plans. Lebanese schools and colleges have announced widespread closures tomorrow . The US administration appears to be standing idly by in the meantime.
War looks imminent:
* * *
Update(1050ET) : An eyewitness tells Al Jazeera: "There’s more than 400 men here. Their pagers exploded, the ones they use for communication." There are regional Lebanese media reports of over 1,200 Hezbollah operatives injured .
Reuters is confirming that Iranian Ambassador to Lebanon Mojtaba Amani is among the wounded in the series of pager explosions, based on a report in Iran’s Mehr news outlet. Follow up reports say he was only lightly injured. Some of the explosions happened in Syria as well, reports say. There are reports of civilian deaths in Beirut, including children . Some of the explosions happened inside homes, where the pagers were on shelves or bedstands.
An Al Jazeera correspondent writes, "We are talking about hundreds of members of the group in hospitals. We are seeing videos online of injuries to their arms, to their legs, even to their faces ." The Lebanese Health Ministry is urging for doctors and nurses to rush to south Beirut hospitals amid a shortage. Reuters is reporting that among the confirmed killed is a Hezbollah Member of Parliament's son , who was part of the armed wing. According to more of the latest:
Eight dead, 2,750 injured in Lebanon exploding pagers: minister
Health Ministry: 200 people in critical condition
Ambassador to Lebanon Mojtaba Amani
From an alleged Hezbollah source cited in AP and Israeli media :
The official, speaking on condition of anonymity because he is not authorized to speak to the media, says the explosions were the result of “a security operation that targeted the devices.”
“The enemy [Israel] stands behind this security incident,” the official says, without elaborating.
He adds that the new pagers that Hezbollah members were carrying have lithium batteries that apparently exploded .
Does this signal the start of a larger anti-Hezbollah campaign? It appears so. And Hezbollah is definitely expected to escalate from its side. This could be the start of a new Lebanon war, bigger in scope that than the 2006 war .
Many will ask: why pagers? A regional correspondent and past ZeroHedge contributor explains :
Military analyst Elijah Magnier has told Al Jazeera that Hezbollah relies heavily on the so-called pagers to avoid Israel intercepting its members’ communications .
He also suggested that these devices might have been pre-tampered before they were dispersed among Hezbollah members.
“This is not a new system. It has been used in the past,” he said. “So in this case there has been involvement of a third party … to allow access … to remotely activate the explosion,” he said.
* * *
An apparent covert Mossad operation has unleashed chaos in a southern Beirut neighborhood on Tuesday, resulting in large-scale casualties among Hezbollah operatives and reportedly Lebanese civilians.
Telecommunications devices used by Hezbollah members began exploding, resulting in up to hundreds wounded in the suburb of Dahiyeh. There appears to be fatalities , according to graphic social media images.
Reuters reports, "Hundreds of members of the Lebanese armed group Hezbollah, including fighters and medics, were seriously wounded on Tuesday when the pagers they use to communicate exploded ," according to security sources. Al Jazeera has cited eyewitnesses who say there are over 400 victims at just one hospital .
Stillframe of one of the pagers exploding in a crowded market full of civilians.
"A Reuters journalist saw 10 Hezbollah members bleeding from wounds in the southern suburb of Beirut known as Dahiyeh," the report continues.
It is as yet unclear how precisely Israeli intelligence was able to infiltrate Hezbollah's telecoms - whether small bombs were placed in the pagers or possibly the result of some kind of large-scale cyberhack . But what is becoming clear is that they were remotely detonated .
A Hezbollah official was cited anonymously in Reuters, calling the incident the "biggest security breach" the group has ever faced since the start of the nearly-year long conflict with Israel. Groups like Hezbollah often use low-tech devices to communicate with each other, given cell phones are easier for intelligence services to intercept.
"Residents said explosions were taking place even 30 minutes after the initial blasts," the report notes further, citing eyewitnesses. People are also urgently calling for blood donations, given this appears a mass casualty event.
Local hospitals are said to be inundated with victims as well as groups of family members rushing to entrances trying to find out what's going on.
Israel has yet to comment on the apparent covert operation.
A prominent Lebanese and regional war monitor account had this to say...
Most videos are too graphic, but the below shows some of the chaos in the aftermath of the initial explosions.
developing...
Tyler Durden
Wed, 09/18/2024 - 05:44 Close
Wed, 18 Sep 2024 08:15:00 +0000 Zelensky Pressured By Western Diplomats To Find 'Plan B' Ceasefire Track Amid Losses
Zelensky Pressured By Western Diplomats To Find 'Plan B' Ceasefire Track Amid Losses
Headlines in major US outlets last week and this week point to some behind the scenes scrambling and a degree of panic among Ukraine's Western back
Read more.....
Zelensky Pressured By Western Diplomats To Find 'Plan B' Ceasefire Track Amid Losses
Headlines in major US outlets last week and this week point to some behind the scenes scrambling and a degree of panic among Ukraine's Western backers. There is beginning to be acceptance that Kiev forces are losing the war, and that Moscow won't quit until Putin sees the goals of the 'special military operation' through. The alternatives include either nuclear-armed escalation (NATO vs. Russia) or ceasefire negotiations , and Zelensky is now being pressed to think about a "plan B" — as The Wall Street Journal recently wrote.
Be realistic... is the new message coming from NATO allies to Zelensky. "Now, with Russia continuing to make slow gains on the battlefield and Western support for Ukraine showing signs of fatigue , Ukraine may need to come up with a more realistic plan , at least for the next year of the war, according to European diplomats," WSJ wrote last week.
Via AFP
"The West still backs Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky’s long-term stated aim of taking back control of its territory," the report continued. "But some European diplomats say Ukraine needs to be more pragmatic in its wartime aims and strategy . That could help Western officials advocate to their respective voters the need to funnel arms and aid to the country ."
...Or to put it another way, the taxpaying Western public wants this conflict to end as fast as possible, and without sinking billions more into it, because they are sick and tired of the constant escalation and want to see peace.
Earlier this month White House National Security Council spokesman John Kirby spelled out that "Certainly a negotiated end is the most likely outcome here, but when that happens, and under what conditions and circumstances, that’s going to be up to President Zelensky."
And yet, simultaneous to this talk of a "plan B" toward peace negotiations, the US and UK are mulling allowing Kiev to attack Russian territory with long-range weapons.
Bloomberg on Tuesday has followed WSJ's reporting by confirming that Western diplomats are increasingly vocal on the prospect of a quicker negotiated end to the drawn out conflict.
"As part of their discussions of strategy for the next year, officials are more seriously gaming out how a negotiated end to the conflict and an off-ramp could take shape , according to people familiar with the matter who asked for anonymity to discuss private deliberations," the report says. But the hawks are concerned this could lead to a 'pre-mature' ceasefire .
The report continues :
The people made clear that any decision to negotiate would be for Kyiv to make and that nobody is pressuring Volodomyr Zelenskyy into talks. Ukraine’s president has been adamant, publicly and privately, that ceding territory to Russia would be unfair , the people said. With no sign that Russia has scaled back its objectives, the prospect of real negotiations still remains distant, they said.
But as the war heads toward another winter, there’s little sign of breakthrough on the battlefield. That’s prompting some allied officials to start exploring ways in which diplomacy could break the deadlock.
Indeed the question of what's fair or unfair is a moot point, as the outcome is being decided on the battlefield, hence the growing pressure for Kiev to get serious about negotiations.
Pro-Ukraine hawks are still pushing hard for US to greenlight escalation...
But Zelensky still hopes to draw NATO in deeper, which is why the big lobbying push has been in full swing for the US/UK to allow launching missiles deep into Russian territory. The Biden administration has looked hesitant in the face of Putin threats and red lines, and this is a good thing . Let's hope saner minds prevail and that negotiations begin soon.
Tyler Durden
Wed, 09/18/2024 - 04:15 Close
Wed, 18 Sep 2024 07:30:00 +0000 Meet The Hate-Crime Commissar Of New Normal Berlin
Meet The Hate-Crime Commissar Of New Normal Berlin
Meet The Hate-Crime Commissar Of New Normal Berlin
Authored by CJ Hopkins via The Consent Factory,
The column you are about to read is a “hate crime.”
Or, rather, an alleged “hate crime,” as I believe my attorney would like me to put it.
We’re still sorting that distinction out in criminal court. Or, rather, we are about to sort it out again, on September 30, in Berlin Superior Court.
We already sorted it out once, in January, in District Court, where I was summarily acquitted, following which, for a few weeks, it wasn’t a “hate crime.” But the Hate-Crime Commissar of New Normal Berlin wasn’t happy about that verdict, so she appealed to have it overturned, whereupon it became a “hate crime” again, or an alleged “hate crime,” or whatever it is, currently.
OK, I’m going to go ahead and re-perpetrate my “hate crime,” or alleged “hate crime,” or whatever its legal status actually is at the moment. I want to get that out of the way now so I don’t go off on a tangent and forget to do it later. If you don’t want be a party to that, this would be the time to click away.
Still with me? OK, here comes the “hate crime” …
There you go. That’s my “hate crime” … those two Tweets from 2022, criticizing the Covid mask mandates. I’m not going to bother translating them again and going over all the details of my prosecution. I have done that ad nauseam. There is only so much repetition my regular readers can take. If you’re unfamiliar with the background of my case, you can read about it in The Atlantic , Racket News , Berliner Zeitung , Neue Zürcher Zeitung , Multipolar , Weltwoche , Sky New Australia , Epoch Times , Discourse Magazine , and assorted other outlets , or you can watch this video by The Foundation for Individual Rights and Expression , or refer to this chronological fact-sheet I published in a recent column.
Instead (i.e., instead of reciting all the details of my prosecution again, like late Lenny Bruce reading his trial transcripts onstage, which, I promised I was really going to try not to do that), let me introduce you to Frau Ines Karl, the Hate-Crime Commissar of New Normal Berlin.
Photo: dpa/Jörg Carstensen
That isn’t her real title, of course. Her official title, in German, is “Oberstaatsanwältin als Hauptabteilungsleiterin der Zentralstelle Hasskriminalität Berlin,” which basically means “Senior Public Prosecutor and Head of the Berlin Central Hate Crime Office .”
Senior Public Hate-Crime Prosecutor Ines Karl began her distinguished prosecutorial career back in the GDR, i.e., the German Democratic Republic, the judiciary of which convicted roughly 200,000 people of political crimes during its 40-year existence.
I couldn’t find any details about her distinguished prosecutions during her GDR days, but Der Tagesspiegel , a German newspaper, did a profile of her in 2021, and assured us that Karl had been “lengthily reviewed” before being allowed to prosecute people and run “Hate-Crime Offices” in the reunified Germany.
Here’s an excerpt from that piece [translation and emphasis mine] …
“In April, Ines Karl will have been a public prosecutor in Berlin Moabit for 30 years. She knew early on that this was her dream job – it almost came to an abrupt end with reunification. She grew up in Berlin-Mitte and Lichtenberg, studied Law in Jena in the 1980s, and worked as a public prosecutor in Weißensee before the wall came down. Only after a lengthy review process, including by the Judges’ Election Committee and the Office for the Protection of the Constitution, was she allowed to continue the profession she learned and practiced in the GDR in the Federal Republic. The experiences of that time are still with her today, with mixed feelings. ” — Der Tagesspiegel , 2021
Given that Ines Karl was cleared by the Office for the Protection of the Constitution (i.e., Germany’s domestic Intelligence agency), there is absolutely no reason to hold her East-German prosecutorial “experiences” against her, or go fishing around in the GDR archive to determine the exact nature of those prosecutorial “experiences.”
In fact, doing so would probably be a “hate crime.”
So, I definitely won’t be doing that. I’ve got enough “hate crime” troubles as it is.
What I did, though, after I stumbled onto Senior Public Hate-Crime Prosecutor Ines Karl’s background, was Google around a bit, you know, just to refresh my memory of other people’s “experiences” in the German Democratic Republic.
One thing I found was this article in Deutsche Welle (East Germany’s Tortured Political Prisoners ) . Here’s an excerpt [emphasis mine] …
“Thirty years after the fall of the Berlin Wall, there remain Germans who tout the legacy of the German Democratic Republic. The oft-heard claim that ‘not everything was bad about the GDR’ and that the Soviet-allied state had great day care facilities, as some still assert, strikes 68-year-old Manfred Wilhelm as utterly absurd. He was a political prisoner. In 1981, Wilhelm was sentenced to eight and a half years behind bars for the crime of inciting hatred against the state — just for telling a few political jokes to friends and in bars.”
So that made me feel a little better about being re-prosecuted by Senior Public Hate-Crime Prosecutor Karl, and being defamed, and having my reputation and income as author damaged. At least she’s not looking to lock me up for eight years! Three years is the maximum sentence for my “hate crime.” Or, I don’t know, if she feels she really needs to send a message to other alleged “hate criminals,” I guess she could count up all the times I’ve published the Tweets that I just republished again above and charge me with multiple counts of my “hate crime.” In fact, her office has already launched a second criminal investigation of me based on just that!
Another thing I found while just idly Googling around, which didn’t make me feel so much better, but maybe kind of explains a few things, was an article, in two different German outlets, in which Senior Public Hate-Crime Prosecutor Ines Karl was quoted referring to one of her colleagues’ participation at a demonstration and his criticism of Germany’s Covid measures on social-media networks as “crimes.”
Here’s the quote [translation and emphasis mine] …
“Karl emphasized that the debates about possible right-wing extremist attitudes in the security services were being ‘monitored very closely.’ The case of a Berlin public prosecutor who took part in the Corona-denier demonstrations and spread corresponding posts on social networks is being extensively discussed in the public prosecutor’s office, for example ‘whether this should be socially acceptable here. If such crimes are committed, investigations will also be carried out within our own ranks,’ emphasized Karl.” — Evangelisch Magazine , MiGAZIN , 2020
The fact that Senior Public Hate-Crime Prosecutor Karl would refer to the expression of political dissent as a “crime,” on the record, without a second thought, may explain why her office is unabashedly prosecuting me on fabricated “hate crime” charges (i.e., using a swastika in my artwork), and not Der Spiegel , Stern , Karl Lauterbach, and many others, for doing exactly the same thing.
I don’t want to impugn her competence as a Senior Public Hate-Crime Prosecutor or in any way suggest that the “lengthy review process” of her understanding of the law (including the concept of “the rule of law” in non-totalitarian societies) conducted by the Judges’ Election Committee and the Office for the Protection of the Constitution prior to turning her loose on the public following the collapse of the GDR was … well, anything less than adequate, but, if Germany is going to continue to claim that it has any respect for basic democratic principles — not to mention its own constitution — someone might want to take Ines Karl aside and explain that political dissent is not a crime.
Or, on second thought, maybe it is now. In which case, it would helpful if the German authorities would drop the “Germany is a democratic state under the rule of law” crap and just go openly totalitarian. It would certainly be less confusing.
After all, in New Normal Germany, it is once again a crime to “delegitimize the state,” as it was in East Germany and Nazi Germany. I reported this in May 2021 in a column called The Criminalization of Dissent , as did The New York Times .
Here’s an excerpt from my column …
“Yes, that’s right, in ‘New Normal’ Germany, if you dissent from the official state ideology, you are now officially a dangerous ‘extremist.’ The German Intelligence agency (the ‘BfV’) has even invented a new category of ‘extremists’ in order to allow themselves to legally monitor anyone suspected of being ‘anti-democratic and/or delegitimizing the state in a way that endangers security’ … I’m not joking. Not even slightly. The Federal Office for Protection of the Constitution (‘Bundesamt für Verfassungsschutz’) is actively monitoring anyone questioning or challenging the official ‘New Normal’ ideology … the ‘Covid Deniers,’ the ‘conspiracy theorists,’ the ‘anti-vaxxers,’ the dreaded ‘Querdenkers,’ and anyone else they feel like monitoring who has refused to join the Covidian Cult . We’re now official enemies of the state, no different than any other ‘terrorists’ … or, OK, technically, a little different. As The New York Times reported last week (German Intelligence Puts Coronavirus Deniers Under Surveillance ), ‘the danger from coronavirus deniers and conspiracy theorists does not fit the mold posed by the usual politically driven groups, including those on the far left and right, or by Islamic extremists.’ Still, according to the German Interior Ministry, we diabolical ‘Covid deniers,’ ‘conspiracy theorists,’ and ‘anti-vaxxers’ have ‘targeted the state itself, its leaders, businesses, the press, and globalism,’ and have ‘attacked police officers’ and ‘defied civil authorities.’”
As I mentioned above, it’s a bit confusing, the “delegitimizing-the-state as opposed to political dissent” thing, and the selective-prosecution-of-“hate-crimes” thing, and the German justice system, generally.
I reached out to some of the German state media, and even to Marco Buschmann, the Minister of Justice , and requested more clarity on the German justice system, and the “Is Germany a totalitarian state again?” question. Sadly, I have received no response.
Maybe Senior Public Hate-Crime Prosecutor Ines Karl can help me out with that. In light of her “experiences” as a prosecutor in the GDR, she probably has a pretty good understanding of how things work in totalitarian systems. And, if she needs to brush up on the “democratic rights” thing, she could have a look at Article 5, and Article 2, and Article 3, and Article 8, of the German constitution .
Or, I’d be happy to go over those articles with her, personally. Perhaps she’ll show up in court this time. Last time, she sent one of her junior colleagues who appeared to be a bit … well, under the weather, or on some sort of heavy medication, or maybe he had just emerged from a strenuous “New Normal” struggle session.
In any event, if you’ve never witnessed a “hate-crime” trial in New Normal Germany, and you don’t mind being subjected to the anti-terrorism-style “Security protocols” that the Court has ordered in effect in the courtroom — not to discourage the public and the press from attending and reporting on the trial, of course, but on account of what the Superior Court describes as “the overall tense security situation” — you’re welcome to attend on September 30.
Be advised, though, I might commit a few more alleged “hate crimes,” right there in the courtroom, assuming I’m allowed to speak.
I’m not sure what the rules are these days in terms of what we’re allowed to say … which is kind of the point of this entire exercise, in case that wasn’t already clear.
Oh well, I guess I’ll take my chances. I hear the New Normal political prisons aren’t nearly as bad as the old East German ones .
Maybe they’ve even added toilet seats!
Tyler Durden
Wed, 09/18/2024 - 03:30 Close
Wed, 18 Sep 2024 06:45:00 +0000 Germany's Sick Pay Dilemma: Tesla Dangles Cash For Workers To Show Up As Absences Skyrocket
Germany's Sick Pay Dilemma: Tesla Dangles Cash For Workers To Show Up As Absences Skyrocket
Faced with a surge in staff absences, Germany's employers are reaching for a new trick to get workers to clock in: a cash bonus for
Read more.....
Germany's Sick Pay Dilemma: Tesla Dangles Cash For Workers To Show Up As Absences Skyrocket
Faced with a surge in staff absences, Germany's employers are reaching for a new trick to get workers to clock in: a cash bonus for not calling in sick . Tesla, headed by CEO Elon Musk, is leading the charge - offering workers at its Berlin plant up to €1,000 (US$1,111) just to show up.
The Tesla factory in Grünheide, Germany, pictured on July 17, 2023
Sean Gallup/Getty Images
According to Bloomberg , such measures speak to the severity of the workforce crisis engulfing Europe's largest economy.
A combination of increased respiratory infections in the wake of Covid and deteriorating mental health have propelled sickness absences to the highest in Germany’s post-reunification history, impairing economic growth and exacerbating labor shortages, while heaping extra burdens onto businesses and the roughly one-third of workers who consistently show up.
As a result of more frequent infections, sick days have soared to levels not seen since reunification - causing production lines to grind to a halt, forcing businesses to strain under the weight of these unprecedented absences. Some companies even suspect that generous sick-pay benefits and pandemic-era rules allowing employees to call in sick by phone are being exploited by workers who aren’t actually ill.
In Germany, that figure has increased to at least 15 days per employee, and some estimates put the total nearer 20. This is one of highest rates in Europe; if attendance was better, Germany could have avoided a recession last year, economists say.
Volkswagen, meanwhile, is mulling over plant closures and layoffs for the first time, with reports suggesting that around 10% of its production workers are out sick—double the expected rate . The company is losing an estimated €1 billion per year due to these absences. Meanwhile, Tesla's new pilot program, which offers €1,000 bonuses to employees who maintain a 95% attendance rate, is a clear sign of how dire things have become. And they're not alone: Kiel’s transport company KVG and even Mercedes-Benz have dabbled in similar incentives, though with mixed results.
As Bloomberg 's Chris Bryant notes, if employees feel forced to show up sick to earn a little extra cash, it could spell disaster for workplace health, while those with chronic conditions who stand no chance of getting a bonus will be left out.
Germany's sick-leave policies are incredibly generous by international standards. Workers are entitled to six weeks of full pay when they call in sick, with costs covered by the employer—a system that costs companies around €70 billion annually. After six weeks, health insurers cover up to 70% of wages for up to 72 weeks . For Americans used to minimal or zero sick leave, this setup might sound like a dream. But with nearly 60% of Germans admitting they’ve called in sick when they could have worked, it’s clear the system isn’t without flaws.
So what’s next for Germany’s sick leave conundrum? The government has promised to review the pandemic-era rules allowing doctors to excuse workers from work over the phone for up to five days. But with a culture so deeply ingrained in protecting workers’ rights, even small changes are likely to face stiff resistance.
Tyler Durden
Wed, 09/18/2024 - 02:45 Close
Wed, 18 Sep 2024 06:00:00 +0000 The Media Is Exaggerating The Impact Of Anti-Proxy War Posters In Italy
The Media Is Exaggerating The Impact Of Anti-Proxy War Posters In Italy
The Media Is Exaggerating The Impact Of Anti-Proxy War Posters In Italy
Authored by Andrew Korybko via Substack,
CNN headlined an article last week about how “Pro-Russian posters appear on billboards across Italy ” as part of their ongoing campaign fearmongering about alleged Russian influence in the West.
The posters themselves are innocuous though and simply call for an end to the NATO-Russian proxy war in Ukraine . Some municipalities like Rome ordered them taken down for using the city’s name and official symbol, but others let them stay up.
Ukraine protested these posters and predictably demanded censorship.
It turns out that all this is organized by a local activist who’s connected to groups formed during the height of the COVID-19 lockdowns, thus meaning that they represent Italians with heterodox views.
This analysis here from February shares more insight into evolving national sentiments towards this conflict, which are increasingly trending towards opposition to perpetuating it, while this one here from last weekend reminds everyone that folks can independently arrive at seemingly Russian-aligned views.
The insight from those two pieces discredits CNN’s innuendo that these posters are physical proof of a Russian influence campaign.
Rather, they’re just manifestations of citizens’ constitutionally enshrined freedom of speech, which is being practiced within legal limits in this case. Regardless of one’s views on this issue, it’s important that they don’t exaggerate the impact of these posters, which are unlikely to change Rome’s official stance towards the conflict.
Public sentiment is always important to pay attention to, but only in rare instances does it lead to a change in policy. When this does happen, it’s usually after elections and only if those who win do what they promised, which isn’t always the case. Another example is large-scale protests that inflict serious economic damage on the state, but these aren’t expected in Italy over this issue. Even if they occurred, however, forcible means could be employed for breaking them up and containing the economic fallout.
At the same time, however, public influence campaigns like the one that’s being legally waged by local activists in line with their constitutional rights could succeed in bringing more followers to their cause. In that case, some politicians might calculate that it’s better to speak out more loudly in favor of whatever it is that the people in general or a strategic constituency thereof are agitating for. Depending on the national political arrangement, this could destroy ruling coalitions and lead to early elections.
It’s therefore just as much of a mistake to dismiss the impact of this poster campaign and those like it as it is to exaggerate their impact. What CNN and Ukraine are doing is counterproductive to their proxy war cause though by hyping up what’s happening in order to push their anti-Russian fearmongering. By doing so, they’re amplifying the activists’ anti-proxy war message in ways that their posters could never achieve, plus they prove that there are people passionate enough to fund this public influence campaign.
On a closing note, these same activists might soon be accused of “receiving money from Russia” in order to discredit their campaign and fuel the Russiagate 2.0 conspiracy theory that the American elite have concocted ahead of the next elections, but observers shouldn’t take any such accusations at face value. All that’s happening is that a group of people are making their political opinions known in a peaceful way, which only bothers those who are insecure about the merits of their own contrarian views.
Tyler Durden
Wed, 09/18/2024 - 02:00 Close