Chicago - A message from the station manager

By Brett Wilkins/Common Dreams

Attorneys for drone whistleblower Daniel Hale – who faces sentencing next week after pleading guilty earlier this year to violating the Espionage Act – on Thursday submitted a letter to Judge Liam O’Grady in which the former Air Force intelligence analyst says a crisis of conscience drove him to leak classified information about the U.S. targeted assassination program.
The 11-page handwritten letter begins with a quote from U.S. Admiral Gene La Rocque, who said in 1995 that “We now kill people without ever seeing them. Now you push a button thousands of miles away . . . Since it’s all done by remote control, there’s no remorse.”


“It is not a secret that I struggle to live with depression and post-traumatic stress disorder,” the 33-year-old Hale wrote in the letter. “Depression is a constant . . . Stress, particularly stress caused by war, can manifest itself at different times and in different ways.”
Hale recounted that “The first time that I witnessed a drone strike came within days of my arrival to Afghanistan. Early that morning, before dawn, a group of men had gathered together in the mountain ranges of Patika province around a campfire carrying weapons and brewing tea. That they carried weapons with them would not have been considered out of the ordinary in the place I grew up, much less within the virtually lawless tribal territories outside the control of the Afghan authorities.
“Except that among them was a suspected member of the Taliban, given away by the targeted cell phone device in his pocket. As for the remaining individuals, to be armed, of military age, and sitting in the presence of an alleged enemy combatant was enough evidence to place them under suspicion as well.”
In 2012 – the same year that Hale deployed to Afghanistan to support the U.S. Defense Department’s Joint Special Operations Task Force and was responsible for identifying, tracking and targeting “high-value” terror suspects – the New York Times reported then-President Barack Obama, who dramatically increased U.S. drone strikes in the so-called War on Terror, “embraced a disputed method for counting civilian casualties” that effectively “counts all military-age males in a strike zone as combatants.”

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Posted on July 26, 2021

Private Equity Comes For Janesville

By Elisa McCartin/OtherWords

This spring, 166 workers in Janesville, Wisconsin awoke to a nightmare.
OpenGate Capital, the private equity firm that owns their employer, Hufcor, announced it was moving their plant out of Janesville – taking those workers’ jobs and livelihoods with it. It’s the biggest business closure in Janesville since the Great Recession.
This isn’t just another story about corporate globalization or pandemic upheaval. It’s a story about predatory private equity run amok.

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Posted on July 21, 2021

CPD Hiring Is Racist

By The City of Chicago Office of Inspector General

The City of Chicago Office of Inspector General’s (OIG) Public Safety section evaluated the demographic impacts of the Chicago Police Department’s (CPD) multi-stage hiring process.
That process is often a lengthy one, including numerous stages designed to evaluate a candidate’s cognitive ability, physical fitness, personal background, physical and mental health, and other predictors of job performance.
CPD’s leadership has articulated the importance of a diverse Department, but the representation of minority candidates is markedly reduced over the course of that multi-stage process. OIG found that CPD has a disproportionately high attrition rate for Black candidates, especially Black female applicants, which contributes to the low number of Black officers hired, with certain stages of CPD’s process most responsible for decreasing Black representation in the candidate pool.
Additionally, for female candidates, both a low application rate and the disproportionate impact of the hiring process decreases female representation by the time of hire.

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Posted on July 14, 2021

The Myth Of The Absent Black Father

By Christopher Stewart/Minnesota Reformer

I am Black. I am a father. I love my children like nobody’s business.
I will not be invisible.
I make this simple declaration because, even though involved Black fathers are the norm in the lives of Black children, we are dogged by a defamatory narrative about our supposed absenteeism.

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Posted on June 30, 2021

When Rich Families Fundraise

By Neal Morton/The Hechinger Report

In 2013, families at a Seattle high school raked in more than $100,000 for a raffle to win a Tesla Model S.
The year before, the parent teacher association at Garfield High cleared $40,000 in raffle tickets for a Nissan Leaf. Other schools in this tech-boom city rely on lavish galas to raise as much as $422,000 in a single night, and some spend almost as much as they haul in.
During the pandemic, parents at the John Stanford International School spent $249,999 – one dollar less than the school district allows before the board steps in to review such spending – on teaching assistants for a dual language program. This year, the Green Lake Parent Teacher Association paid about half that much to cover the cost of the elementary school’s vocal teacher and a portion of a full-time counselor’s salary, among other supports for students.
Meanwhile, on the city’s South End, parents at Rising Star Elementary celebrate when they can cobble together even $300.

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Posted on June 16, 2021

Judge Certifies Class Action Lawsuit Against IDOC

By The Uptown People’s Law Center

The United States District Court for the Southern District of Illinois certified all 28,000+ state prisoners to be part of a class Monday in a class action lawsuit challenging IDOC’s excessive use of solitary confinement.
Plaintiffs, represented by the Uptown People’s Law Center and pro bono attorneys with Winston and Strawn, allege that conditions in solitary are horrific; that IDOC permits the use of solitary confinement for minor infractions; and that IDOC uses lengthy, disproportionate stays, all of which constitute “cruel and unusual punishment” in violation of the Eighth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution. Plaintiffs also allege that prisoners are given no meaningful opportunity to present a defense, and sometimes are not even told why they are being sent to solitary, thereby violating the 14th Amendment by not complying with the minimum requirements of due process.

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Posted on June 15, 2021

Little Village Car Wash Workers Win 9-Year Fight

By Arise Chicago

Workers’ rights group Arise Chicago supported workers through a nearly decade-long campaign to recover more than a quarter-million dollars from their former car wash employer, Octavio Rodriguez, involving several government agencies and a federal court.

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Posted on June 1, 2021

European Plan To Unify Corporate Tax Rules And Recoup Billions Faces Steep Hurdles

By Scilla Alecci/International Consortium of Investigative Journalists

The European Commission proposed this week to revamp the bloc’s tax system and introduce a single corporate taxation rulebook that would stop European governments from competing with each other to attract business investments by lowering tax rates.
The new proposal, the third the commission has put forward in the past 10 years, called for a unified way to tax corporations where they generate income rather than where they set up their headquarters – which is often in a low tax rate jurisdiction.
“Our tax rules should support an inclusive recovery, be transparent and close the door on tax avoidance,” trade commissioner Valdis Dombrovskis said in a statement.

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Posted on May 27, 2021

Another Tax Loophole That’s Making The Rich Even Richer

By Robert Reich

How do we prevent America from becoming an aristocracy, while also funding the programs that Americans desperately need?
One way is to get rid of a tax loophole you’ve probably never heard of. It’s known as the “stepped-up basis” rule.
Here’s how the stepped-up-basis loophole now works. Take a man named Jeff. At his death, Jeff owns $30 million worth of stocks he originally bought for a total of $10 million. Under existing law, neither Jeff nor his heirs would owe federal tax on the $20 million of gains because they’re automatically “stepped up” to their value when he dies – $30 million.
Close this stepped-up basis loophole and we help finance the programs the vast majority of Americans desperately need and deserve.

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Posted on May 25, 2021

How The Federal Reserve Is Making The Rich Richer – And Not So Much Everybody Else

By Allan Sloan and Cezary Podkul/ProPublica

Ever since the COVID-19 pandemic struck, the Federal Reserve has gotten plenty of kudos for moves that have helped stabilize the economy, kept house prices from tanking and supported the stock market. But those successes have obscured another effect: the inadvertent impact the Fed’s ultra-low interest rates and bond-buying sprees are having on economic inequality.
Longstanding inequality in the U.S. has been exacerbated by the Fed’s role in touching off a multitrillion-dollar boom in stock markets – and stock ownership is heavily skewed toward the wealthiest Americans.
In contrast, soaring stock prices don’t help people like Wina Tan. Tan, 59, is one of the millions of Americans nearing retirement age whose greatest source of wealth isn’t stocks or equity in a home. Rather, it’s the Social Security checks she expects to start getting once she retires.

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Posted on April 27, 2021

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