The United States – The “Wuhan of the Americas”

US deportation flights to Guatemala are driving up the country’s Covid-19 caseload, according to the country’s health minister, who said that on one flight about 75% of the deportees tested positive for the virus.



Hugo Monroy said that the United States had become the “Wuhan of the Americas” 
“We must not stigmatize, but I have to speak clearly. The arrival of deportees who have tested positive has really increased the number of [coronavirus] cases,” he said on Tuesday. “There are really flights where the deportees arrive … with fever – and they get on the planes that way,” said Monroy on Tuesday. “We automatically evaluate them here and test them and many of them have come back positive.”
the presidential spokesman, Carlos Sandoval, told reporters that Monroy was referring to a March flight on which “between 50% and 75% of the passengers during all their time in isolation and quarantine have come back positive”.
he Guatemalan government had asked the United States to not send more than 25 deportees per flight, to give them health examinations before departure and to certify that they were not infected.
However, the flights resumed on Monday with 76 migrants onboard the first and 106 on the second. Guatemala’s foreign ministry did not immediately clarify why the US had not complied with its requirements. One of Monday’s flights also included 16 unaccompanied minors, according to the Guatemalan Immigration Institute.
Since January, the US has deported nearly 12,000 Guatemalans, including more than 1,200 children.




Saving the Street Childen

For millions of street children, coronavirus restrictions have made access to food, water and shelter even more precarious. A global total of 100 million street children is often quoted, but the true number is believed to be much higher. As the pandemic takes hold across the globe, few groups are as vulnerable as the children who rely on the streets for food and shelter, who risk being further stigmatised and criminalised when cities lock down. Another fear is that the virus could drive homeless children back to families where they are at risk of abuse. Fear is mounting.



A teenager on the streets of Mombasa, wonders how he will eat. “Rich people can stay home … because they have a store well stocked with food,” he says. “For a survivor on the street your store is your stomach. The police have told us they don’t want to see us around after 7pm. Are we going to die of hunger instead of coronavirus?”



Bokey Anchola, country director for Glad’s House, an NGO working with hard to reach young people in Kenya. “Street children are having a rough time during the curfew. Food and water are a real problem as hotels and eating places where they would normally get food have closed down. Movement is restricted.” 



The closure of eating places, drop-in centres and feeding services, as well as the limits on movement, are just some aspects of a terrifying scenario for street children during the pandemic.  As small businesses have shut up shop in the lockdown, jobs that earned street dwellers a pittance, like carrying goods in markets or selling food to drivers, have vanished. Pavement dwellers are ordered to stay in makeshift structures and can not look for food. 



Megan Lees-McCowan, head of Africa programmes at Street Child, said she feared Covid-19 would drive more children to the streets across Africa as schools shut and desperate families looked for alternative incomes.

“For us, there is also the spectre of the past,” said Lees-McCowan, recalling how during the Ebola epidemic in Sierra Leone, some children were abandoned by destitute families, and shunned by communities that suspected they carried the disease.



 Duncan Ross, CEO of UK-based StreetInvest, says: “The vulnerability of this group will go up [in the crisis], their need for services will go up and isolation won’t protect them. The danger is that many people see them even more as diseased and criminal. Anecdotally, this is already happening.”



In South Africa, private security firms hired to clear the streets were taking homeless youth to temporary shelters that lack qualified workers to look after them. Mpendulo Nyembe and his team at uMthombo in Durban,  citing one encounter between a group of 11 youth and heavily armed guards. 

“They are terrified. We are terrified. The people dealing with them have no idea who these children are, of their backgrounds.”



“People’s survival is suddenly in jeopardy. Many families that live on the streets have been there for generations. They have no stocks and could starve,” says Paul Sunder Singh, founder of NGO Karunalaya in Chennai, India.



https://www.theguardian.com/global-development/2020/apr/15/will-we-die-of-hunger-how-covid-19-lockdowns-imperil-street-children

Pills for greed or pills for need.

The COVID 19 pandemic promises to have far-reaching and long-term effects in the future. The pandemic may trigger worldwide economic disintegration. But also there are signs evident of human solidarity and of collaboration, even of reorganising society, itself. 



The International Association of Health Policy analyzed the world’s response to the pandemic in a teleconference in late March. Vicente Navarro, a public-health academician based in Barcelona and Baltimore, summarized their deliberations, that, “several studies of recent years…had predicted that such a pandemic would occur and that the world was not prepared for it.” And, “states on both sides of the Atlantic have applied policies of privatization and cuts in public spending. The institutional base for providing services has deteriorated along with the quality of health and social services.”
Navarro and his group explained that “the biggest problem wasn’t a lack of resources, but the enormous inequalities in the availability of those resources. Therefore, it was a political and not an economic problem.” They pointed to “the minority interests of economic and financial groups that put profits for themselves above the common good.”
Capitalism now faces the deepest crisis in its several centuries of existence. Capitalism cannot escape from this crisis, no matter how many trillions of dollars governments borrow or central banks print. But nothing is clearer than the capitalists’ priorities – their stock portfolios come first and people’s desperate need for food, housing, water, a distant last. Under capitalism, disease is an immensely profitable industry, and pharmaceutical corporations excel at extracting enormous amounts of wealth. Of course, Big Pharma would have us believe that without their investments in scientific research, millions of people would not benefit from the medicine they sell. What system other than capitalism would encourage the  maximum profits so that Big Pharma investors can pursue high share prices and high dividends and another opportunity to swell their bank balances? Medicines that can be sold to wealthy consumers in developed countries, are fast-tracked, while drugs and treatments that might benefit the poorest billions are neglected.
 Human life is secondary to the pursuit of profits. This is why the chaos of the market must be superseded by a more scientific system of planning – a socialist system, where drugs are produced to meet the needs of humanity.

Mutual aid is alive. Everywhere people are working so that others might live and survive. The Socialist Party is striving to build a global community with a shared future for mankind. Our fellow-workers must acknowledge capitalism’s failures in dealing with the pandemic — and make the significant changes necessary for the security of our future. Could there be just the faintest glimmer of light at the end of this tunnel?



Extracted and adapted from here

https://www.counterpunch.org/2020/04/16/covid-19-how-big-pharma-and-big-philanthropy-consume-the-world/



Inflation Returns



The price of high-demand food and sanitary products has risen sharply in online shops over the past month as the coronavirus crisis mounts, according to official figures.



In an early sign of rising living costs across Britain during the pandemic, prices in a basket of high demand products compiled by the Office for National Statistics, which includes long-life food, toilet roll and cleaning products, increased by 4.4% since just before lockdown measures began a month ago.



Prices rose by 1.8% in the last week alone, driven by soaring pet food prices (8.4%) and a sharp increase in the cost of rice (5.8% ), nappies and hand-wash.



COVID-19 – Wanted, A Prescription For Socialism

You don’t need the Socialist Party to tell you that coronavirus will change the world. Nor do you need politicians bought and paid for telling you that things will be fine in the end. The failures of the capitalist system and governments have been exposed. Many understand that there can be no “back-to-normal.”



The ultimate argument for capitalism has always been that at least it works while socialism remains untried and untested. Unfortunately, it is quite untrue. Profit, the feather-nesting for which capitalism exists, is irreconcilable with social well-being or simple efficiency. Whatever capitalism does is done with atrocious inefficiency. Can socialism do better? The cause of all the chronic dilemmas and idiocies of capitalism is organic: its structure on the class ownership of the means of production. There can be no hope of solutions or efficiency until this fetter is broken. Given its replacement by common ownership, social cohesion and planning of the environment we want become possible for the first time. Socialism is a world-wide community with common interests. Where the land, and all the means of production will be owned by mankind as a whole, with democratic control. Where the sole motive for production will be the satisfaction of your needs. Simply put — bread will be baked because people want to eat it — just that. Money will play not part at all in this society because there will be no need for money. Decisions by the community will be taken on their merits. The wages system will be abolished along with all the other stupid trappings of the present system. Socialism will be a system of co-operation; where each will give according to ability and take according to need. Mankind with its knowledge, harnessed to the riches of the earth, is capable of producing abundance. Why be satisfied with a world of shortages?


We should recognise that unless we get to the root causes of this pandemic, it’s going to recur, perhaps even in a worse form. Those who benefit from the capitalist system will re-create circumstances for a new pandemic.The pandemic can be a catalyst for change. In this unprecedented moment in history, many fear for the future but while we are going through a traumatic period of time, we should see this crisis as an opportunity to go forward to a new sort of society. We are living when events could engender a sense of reawakening of people-power. If we want to disrupt the inequalities that we are witnessing today that requires free access to the necessities of life as an indisputable human right for the benefit of all. That vision will become more and more a likely in the future. 



In times of of crisis and emergencies people reveal their true character and revert to their deep sense of community. Mankind is by nature a social animal. We need to be sociable; much of the disturbed behaviour one witnesses today is born of the fact that people have to compete to survive but it is in fact against our nature. Human nature is humanity’s hope, not its harbinger of doom.

Every part of our daily lives is restricted and determined by cost consideration and ultimately decided by the overall effect on the profits of the system as a whole. Whether it be houses, hospitals, health, or education, where the money is coming from is always the first question. Human need must come second in a society that lives on profits. The only possible solution is to change society. Socialism means a way of life where the whole world and its resources will be held in common by all mankind. A class-free world community with production solely for use and free access according to need. No longer will wages, markets and profits blight and restrict our lives. People will co-operate to produce an abundance — and then enjoy it.

We seek a system of society where every single person will be able to take freely from the store of social wealth whatever he or she needs. Such a system — which we call “free access” — means quite simply what it says: there will be no restrictions (such as are imposed today by the size of your wage-packet) on the amount of goods or services which any individual consumes, enjoys or uses. We maintain that an abundance of wealth, which such a system implies, could quite easily be produced if production were motived by the desire to satisfy people’s needs, not by profit as at present. Profit acts as a barrier to production, since if a thing cannot be sold at a profit, it will quite simply not be produced, no matter how many people would like it. And we have all read in the newspapers of fruit and so on, which has already been produced, actually being destroyed in order to keep prices up and to serve the interests of profit. Again, think of all the people (cashiers, ticket collectors, in short all those whose work is concerned with money) who do not produce socially useful wealth; under a system of free access their abilities, and those of countless others too, including those unemployed at present, could be put to producing goods which people really need. What we stand for, then, in this election as at all times, is a world-wide system of society where there is no money, no government, no war, and where the production of wealth for use alone, is democratically controlled by everybody.

We make no apology for introducing ideas such as these into this debate over the COVID-19 pandemic. We wish to change the system fundamentally, since this is the only way to solve the problems which both you and ourselves suffer from.




A solution for who?

Eastern European farm workers are being flown to the UK on charter flights to pick fruit and vegetable crops.British farmers recently warned that crops could be left to rot in the field because of a shortage of seasonal workers from Eastern Europe.The National Farmers’ Union said up to 70,000 fruit and vegetable pickers were needed.



 Travel restrictions due to the coronavirus lockdown have meant most workers have stayed at home. Farmers have already arranged flights for seasonal workers in other countries. It flew 1,000 farm workers to Germany from Bulgaria and Romania in recent weeks.Germany alone needs 300,000 seasonal workers to harvest its crops. 



But this begs the question about what east Europeans will expect when the workers take the virus back home with them and the burden of any treatment falls on the Romanian and Bulgarian health system, already weakened by the migration of its nurses and doctors.



A Bit of Humour

Donald Trump goes on a fact-finding visit to Israel. While he is on a tour of Jerusalem he suffers a heart attack and dies.



The undertaker tells the American diplomats accompanying him,

“You can have him shipped home for $50,000, or you can bury him here, in the Holy Land, for just $100.”


The American diplomats go into a corner to discuss for a few minutes.


They return with their answer to the undertaker and tell him they want Donald Trump shipped home.




The American diplomats reply, “Long ago a man died here, was buried here, and three days later he rose from the dead. We just can’t take the risk.”





The Rich get Richer



Jeff Bezos now has a fortune of $138bn.



The boss of Amazon has seen his wealth swell by $24bn (£19bn) after soaring demand for online shopping sent the firm’s share price to a new high.



The Waltons, owners of Walmart and Asda saw their net worth rise 5% this year to $169bn, making them the world’s richest family.



“The wealth gap, it’s only going to get wider with what’s going on now,” said Matt Maley, chief market strategist at Miller Tabak + Co. “The really wealthy people haven’t had to worry. Yes, they’re less wealthy, but you haven’t had to worry about putting food on the table or keeping a roof over your head. The unfairness of it all is who is going to benefit from it most,” Maley said. “Money makes money.”



The volume of transactions in beaten-down industries, from travel to health care to gaming, suggests executives and directors are more bullish than they’ve been at most other points in the past decade, according to Sundial Capital Research.
Carnival Corp. board member Randall Weisenburger bought $10 million of stock in the beleaguered cruise-line operator last week.

UBS Group AG is seeing ultra-wealthy clients ramp up borrowing to place more wagers in what they see as a cheap market. 



Mortgage brokers to the rich have said more clients are seeking loans backed by real estate to help them invest in businesses and snap up other assets.

The Rich get Richer



Jeff Bezos now has a fortune of $138bn.



The boss of Amazon has seen his wealth swell by $24bn (£19bn) after soaring demand for online shopping sent the firm’s share price to a new high.



The Waltons, owners of Walmart and Asda saw their net worth rise 5% this year to $169bn, making them the world’s richest family.



“The wealth gap, it’s only going to get wider with what’s going on now,” said Matt Maley, chief market strategist at Miller Tabak + Co. “The really wealthy people haven’t had to worry. Yes, they’re less wealthy, but you haven’t had to worry about putting food on the table or keeping a roof over your head. The unfairness of it all is who is going to benefit from it most,” Maley said. “Money makes money.”



The volume of transactions in beaten-down industries, from travel to health care to gaming, suggests executives and directors are more bullish than they’ve been at most other points in the past decade, according to Sundial Capital Research.
Carnival Corp. board member Randall Weisenburger bought $10 million of stock in the beleaguered cruise-line operator last week.

UBS Group AG is seeing ultra-wealthy clients ramp up borrowing to place more wagers in what they see as a cheap market. 



Mortgage brokers to the rich have said more clients are seeking loans backed by real estate to help them invest in businesses and snap up other assets.

The Cracks in Capitalism are Showing

The social fallout of the virus is receiving less attention. The women locked in with abusive partners. The vulnerable children, invisible to social workers now that schools are closed. We might call them the hidden casualties of coronavirus: the ones who are unable to find safety within the four walls of home.



Recent days have seen blatant attempts to depoliticise coronavirus, as if the pandemic exists in a vacuum devoid of economic or social factors. Boris Johnson falling ill seemed to confirm the idea that coronavirus is a great leveller – after all, not even an Eton-educated prime minister was immune from the effects of the disease. In reality, Britain is experiencing a public health crisis defined by inequality. There were already cracks in our society, and we should have known that given the slightest pressure they would cause it to shatter.



Research conducted by the Food Foundation has revealed that 3 million people in Britain are living in households where someone has been forced to skip some meals, and 1.5 million people have gone without food for a whole day because they had no money or access to food. Almost 2 million people were already undernourished before coronavirus hit, with one in five under-15s living with an adult experiencing food insecurity after a decade of austerity. Hunger, much like insecure housing or domestic abuse, is not a new phenomenon.



The causation is clear enough: a cocktail of rising food bills, unemployment and reduced wages from the pandemic, the paucity of the social security system, and isolation of those for whom even a trip to Tesco is now a luxury.
Doing “one big shop” to avoid going out only works if you happen to have £150 in your bank account. When panic buying reduces stock, low-income families who are usually able to shop around for cheaper products are forced to buy whatever’s left. Couple this with a fall or drop in income, and meagre universal credit provision, and it’s clear why some food banks are seeing as much as a 300% increase in footfall compared with this time last year, according to the Independent Food Aid Network. All this while donations of basic supplies plummet.
New research shows that a fifth of private renters had to choose between paying for food and bills and paying their landlords this month. The government has introduced a temporary ban on evictions but a quarter surveyed have already lost their home. Unable to pay the rent, they had to voluntarily move in with friends or parents.

The lockdown has forced some, such as the self-employed, into contact with the UK’s decimated welfare system for the first time.



There are millions who will be preoccupied tending to more pressing material concerns: is there food in the cupboard? How will they pay rent? Are their children safe? This is a national crisis – just not the one we’re hearing about.



https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2020/apr/15/britain-coronavirus-crisis-inequality-hungry-domestic-violence