Tag Archives: republicans

Support Avaaz.org


AvaazpixThe pressure on a few of my staff at Avaaz is reaching a breaking point: they’ve received death threats, had their computers and emails hacked, been threatened on television and radio, and one even had his car tampered with! Our campaigner Wissam was detained at the Cairo airport while delivering our call to stop Egypt’s largest mass execution in recent history, taken into a windowless room and interrogated for hours — drilled with chillingly well-informed questions about his personal life, travel, and work with Avaaz!

I’ve gotten threatening messages and hacks, but nothing compared to the threats these campaigners face. Let’s stand behind these brave people who speak our community’s truth to power.

The threats will get worse as we become larger and more effective, taking on some of the most entrenched and powerful players on the planet. That’s why Avaaz needs to triple-reinforce our security systems, including legal counsel to stand ready for emergencies, media support to raise the alarm if people are threatened, better encryption, and the resources to move staff to a safe location when the pressure gets to be too much.

The campaign we’re running to Egypt right now — opposing the mass execution of hundreds of people — has been hugely powerful, reaching the highest levels of the government. Wissam had permission to enter Egypt and had a meeting scheduled with the Grand Mufti Allam, who has the moral power to stop the mass killings. This is why we came under attack — Wissam says the two generals who interrogated him knew everything about Avaaz, our campaign, and his own life and travel. The government was clearly watching us closely.

And as soon as Wissam was sent home, news outlets around the world from the Washington Post to Al-Arabiya picked up the story immediately, putting more pressure on the Egyptian government to act to protect human rights.

But we know the threats will get worse as we get more effective. Our people-powered campaigning has taken on the world’s worst actors directly, in ways that genuinely hurt them — from the Syrian and Russian regimes to Rupert Murdoch, Big Oil, and organized crime. The Syrian dictatorship even called our campaigner ‘the most dangerous man in the world’.

We’re not backing down, and our team is focused on winning the campaign in Egypt — but we also need to keep the team and the movement safe. That’s why there was broad legal, media, and diplomatic pressure lined up in case Wissam wasn’t freed in Cairo — and I want to make sure we always have what we need to respond to emergencies like these. With all of our small pledges added up now, we can:

  • Build industrial-scale security and hire top technologists, so that no attack can stop us from campaigning.
  • Increase the physical security of our most at-risk staff and action teams in places like Lebanon, Russia and Uganda.
  • Have lawyers ready to leap into action to ensure we have the legal and diplomatic support needed when our team is under threat.
  • Build a direct-response media team, which brings global attention to such incidents right away and ensures that the voices of the people aren’t silenced.
  • Take a range of other actions to improve the security of our team and our members, such as installing home security systems and arranging transport when threats are imminent.

With 35 million members, we’ve become the largest global civic movement of our kind ever, and our campaigns pose a real threat to brutal regimes and corrupt corporations. Two years ago, our website came under massive attack, threatening our ability to keep campaigning. Our community came together and donated to protect it and now our tech systems are reinforced and fully prepared for almost any kind of cyber-attack. But now they’re coming after a few of our staff. Let’s prove that no matter what tactics they use, attacking our movement only makes us stronger.

With hope and gratitude,

Ricken and the Avaaz team

MORE INFORMATION:

Egypt: Stop the Mass Execution (Avaaz)
http://www.avaaz.org/en/stop_mass_execution_loc/?fr

Egypt deports man lobbying against mass death sentences (Reuters)
http://www.reuters.com/article/2014/04/04/us-egypt-deported-idUSBREA330RY20140404

Egypt Bars Lebanese Man over Death Sentence Petition (Almanar)
http://www.almanar.com.lb/english/adetails.php?eid=144362&frid=21&seccatid=19&cid=21&fromval=1

Egypt bars Lebanese activist over death sentence petition (AlArabiya)
http://english.alarabiya.net/en/News/2014/04/04/Egypt-bars-Lebanese-activist-over-death-sentence-petition-.html

Hundreds of Egyptians Sentenced to Death in Killing of a Police Officer (NY Times)
http://www.nytimes.com/2014/03/25/world/middleeast/529-egyptians-sentenced-to-death-in-killing-of-a-police-officer.html

the Senate ~~ CONGRESS 5/28~~ the House


obamacapitol_300

The Senate will convene at 2:00pm on Monday, June 2, 2014.

Following any Leader remarks, the Senate will be in a period of morning business until 5:30pm with Senators permitted to speak therein for up to 10 minutes each.

At 5:30pm, the Senate will proceed to Executive Session to consider Executive Calendar #633, the nomination of Keith M. Harper, of Maryland, for the rank of Ambassador during his tenure of service as United States Representative to the UN Human Rights Council.  There will be 2 minutes of debate prior a roll call vote on the motion to invoke cloture on the Harper nomination.

During Thursday’s session of the Senate, cloture was filed on the following items in the order listed:

–        Executive Calendar #633, Keith Harper, of Maryland, for the rank of Ambassador during his tenure of service as United States Representative to the UN Human Rights Council (up to 8 hours of post-cloture debate equally divided);

–        Executive Calendar #755, Sharon Bowen, of New York, to be a Commissioner of the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (up to 8 hours of post-cloture debate equally divided);

–        Executive Calendar #691, Mark G. Mastroianni, of Massachusetts, to be United States District Judge for the District of Massachusetts (up to 2 hours of post-cloture debate equally divided);

–        Executive Calendar #692,Bruce Howe Hendricks, of South Carolina, to be United States Circuit Judge for the District of South Carolina (up to 2 hours of post-cloture debate equally divided);

–        Executive Calendar #733, Tanya S. Chutkan, of the District of Columbia, to be United States District Judge for the District of Columbia (up to 2 hours of post-cloture debate equally divided); and

–        Executive Calendar #798, Sylvia Mathews Burwell, of West Virginia, to be Secretary of Health and Human Services (up to 30 hours of post-cloture debate).

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Last Floor Action:5/27
12:19:41 P.M. – The Speaker announced that the House do now recess.

The next meeting is scheduled for 2:00 P.M. today.

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White House and Climate Change


We have a moral obligation to lead the fight against carbon pollution.

Demand a more climate resilient electricit​y system


This “war on science” has thousands of casualties. Here’s what you need to know.

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Buzz from the UCS Blog: The Equation

  Steve Clemmer: Power Outages, Extreme Weather, and Climate Change: How Smart Energy Choices Will Help Keep the Lights On

  John Rogers: How to Celebrate Earth Day: Go Treasure Hunting with the Kids

  David Wright: Accidents Happen—They Shouldn’t Lead to Nuclear Disaster

  Dave Cooke: EPA Emission Standards: The First Inning is Over, and Automakers are Ahead…For Now

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The most comprehens​ive look yet at climate change


The White House, Washington

Hi, everyone

We released the third National Climate Assessment report, by far the most comprehensive look ever at climate change impacts in the United States.

Based on four years of work by hundreds of experts from government, academia, corporations, and public-interest organizations, the Assessment confirms abundant data and examples that climate change isn’t some distant threat — it’s affecting us now.

Not only are the planet and the nation warming on average, but a number of types of extreme weather events linked to climate change have become more frequent or intense in many regions, including heat waves, droughts, heavy downpours, floods, and some kinds of destructive storms.

The good news is that there are sensible steps that we can take to protect this country and the planet.

Those steps include, importantly, the three sets of actions making up the Climate Action Plan that President Obama announced last June: cutting carbon pollution in America; increasing preparedness for and resilience to the changes in climate that already are ongoing; and leading the international response to the climate change challenge.

We’ve made great progress in the year since his announcement — but there’s much more work to be done.

Watch this short video to learn more about the new report and see how climate change is affecting people across the United States today:

Learn more about the new National Climate Assessment report.

Explore the full report, and find out how you can help — because every one of us has to do his or her part to meet the challenge of climate change.

Thank you,

John

 

Dr. John P. Holdren
Director, Office of Science and Technology Policy
The White House