From The Progressive <[email protected]>
Subject Warnings and impacts
Date February 3, 2024 4:59 PM
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Dear Progressive Reader,

Today marks the one-year anniversary of the devastating train wreck in East Palestine, Ohio. Residents in the town are still dealing ([link removed]) with the aftermath—including toxic residue and concerns over longterm health effects. President Joe Biden is scheduled ([link removed]) to visit the town this month, and the White House says ([link removed]) it will continue to hold the railway company Norfolk Southern accountable. But problems continue at Norfolk Southern, where a worker was killed
([link removed]) on Wednesday in an unrelated incident that highlights the company’s ongoing worker safety issues. The problems are industry-wide. “Railroad owners are worried about reaching high levels of profit, which means cutting labor and cutting investment . . . . There’s no [brake] electrification, no investment in [equipment] upgrades, compromised safety, and no upgrades in tracking,” said ([link removed]) Ron Kaminkow, an organizer on the national steering committee of Railway Workers United (RWU), in March 2023. RWU has been pushing for the public ownership of railroads, noting that “private railroad corporations are putting profit over safety and service.” In a statement following the East Palestine crash, RWU wrote
([link removed]) , “The root causes of this wreck, are the same ones that have been singled out repeatedly, associated with the hedge fund-initiated operating model.”

The story of the accident itself was eerily similar to the script of the film White Noise ([link removed]) that premiered on Netflix just about five months before the actual crash. In the film, local residents are confronted with a huge train wreck, toxic fumes, and silence and obfuscation from local government officials. It is not the first case of a film anticipating real life. In 1979, the movie China Syndrome ([link removed]) , depicting a near-nuclear meltdown in California was actually pulled from some theaters ([link removed]) when, just twelve days after its release, an actual nuclear meltdown occurred at Three Mile Island ([link removed]) in Pennsylvania. Similarly, when the COVID-19 pandemic was declared, many film buffs went to their libraries to watch how the story played out in the 2011 film Contagion
([link removed]) . “It is surreal to me that people from all over the world write to me asking how I knew it would involve a bat or how I knew the term ‘social distancing.’ I didn't have a crystal ball—I had access to great expertise,” screenwriter Scott Z. Burns told ([link removed]) The Washington Post in 2020. Unfortunately, the U.S. government under Donald Trump apparently chose to disregard that expertise when it ignored ([link removed]) the pandemic-planning playbook left behind by the outgoing Obama Administration in 2017.

This week on our website, Ed Rampell interviews ([link removed]) filmmaker Wim Wenders about two of his recent movies; Hank Kennedy looks into ([link removed]) the history of Christian nationalist Gerald L.K. Smith; Mark Fiore illustrates ([link removed]) the new “civil war” brewing in Texas; and Jeff Abbott reports on ([link removed]) the status of the Kenyan-led police force headed to Haiti. Plus, as South Carolina Democratic voters go to the polls, Elijah de Castro brings the story ([link removed]) of dissatisfaction among a large group of the state’s Black voters. “I’m tired of people deciding what they
think we need without even speaking to us,” community activist Lottie Lewis tells him.

In our continuing coverage of the war in Gaza, Nyka Duda looks at ([link removed]) the “intelligence failure” that led to Israel being surprised on October 7 by the deadly Hamas attack; Guleer Shahab and Jill Inderstrodt pen an oped ([link removed]) on the impact of the war on mothers in Gaza; and Glenn Sacks writes about ([link removed]) the need for educators to be able teach about these issues with true academic freedom.

Please keep reading, and we will keep bringing you important articles on these and other issues of our time.

Sincerely,
Norman Stockwell
Publisher

P.S. – Don’t miss a minute of the “hidden history” of 2024 – you can still order The Progressive’s new Hidden History of the United States calendar for the coming year. Just go to indiepublishers.shop ([link removed]) , and while you are there, check out some of our other great offerings as well.

P.P.S. – If you like this newsletter, please consider forwarding it to a friend. If you know someone who would like to subscribe to this free weekly email, please share this link: [link removed].

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