Saturday, June 22, 2013

Brazil protesters struggle to define next steps

A protester holds a sign that reads in Spanish "Hunger, misery and oppression and Brazil five time champions," a few miles from the soccer stadium where Nigeria and Uruguay will play in a Confederations Cup soccer tournament game in Salvador, Brazil, Thursday, June 20, 2013. Beginning as protests against bus fare hikes, demonstrations have quickly ballooned to include broad middle-class outrage over the failure of governments to provide basic services and ensure public safety. (AP Photo/Natacha Pisarenko)

A protester holds a sign that reads in Spanish "Hunger, misery and oppression and Brazil five time champions," a few miles from the soccer stadium where Nigeria and Uruguay will play in a Confederations Cup soccer tournament game in Salvador, Brazil, Thursday, June 20, 2013. Beginning as protests against bus fare hikes, demonstrations have quickly ballooned to include broad middle-class outrage over the failure of governments to provide basic services and ensure public safety. (AP Photo/Natacha Pisarenko)

Brazilian police shot tear gas at demonstrators during an anti-government protest in Rio de Janeiro's sister city, Niteroi, Brazil, Wednesday evening, June 19, 2013. Rio de Janeiro and Sao Paulo city leaders said Wednesday that they reversed an increase in bus and subway fares that ignited anti-government protests. Many people doubted the move would quiet the demonstrations which have moved well beyond outrage over the fare hikes into communal cries against poor public services in Latin America's biggest nation. (AP Photo/Silvia Izquierdo)

A protestor shouts during an anti-government protest in Rio de Janeiro's sister city, Niteroi, Brazil, Wednesday evening, June 19, 2013. Rio de Janeiro and Sao Paulo city leaders said Wednesday that they reversed an increase in bus and subway fares that ignited anti-government protests. Many people doubted the move would quiet the demonstrations which have moved well beyond outrage over the fare hikes into communal cries against poor public services. (AP Photo/Nicolas Tanner)

Brazilians march demanding free public transit and protest against the money poured into stadiums for hosting the current Confederations Cup and next year's World Cup, at the Bus Station, in Brasilia, Brazil, Wednesday, June 19, 2013. Another night of mass marches around Brazil and nearly a week of unrest has shocked the country's leaders ahead of a papal visit next month and next year's World Cup soccer tournament. (AP Photo/Eraldo Peres)

(AP) ? After a week of mass protests, Brazilians won the world's attention and a pull-back on the subway and bus fare hikes that had first ignited their rage. But now, many say, the real work is only beginning.

Middle-class protesters marching for the first time say the challenge for Brazilians is to keep alive the political spirit that was awakened in the last week, after decades of apathy. They say they hope leaders emerge at the forefront of an eclectic mass movement and present concrete demands to national and state governments.

In short, protesters say it's time to organize around their flurry of grievances, ranging from ending government corruption to improving public education, health care and public safety.

"I think leaders will emerge but in smaller groups," said secretary Juliane Furno, while standing under a banner in Sao Paulo Thursday reading "Only struggle changes life."

"We're all taking the experiences of the past week back to our universities, communities and workplaces. I think things will calm down now but we have politicized Brazil and there's no turning back from that. We won't return to the Brazil of last week."

Despite such enthusiasm, Brazil's protesters face a dilemma that has bedeviled modern social movements in Latin America and beyond. If protests focus too narrowly on single issues such as bus fares, they risk losing steam when the issue is addressed. And if they focus too broadly their movements may become catchalls for everbody's grievances.

The U.S.-based Occupy movement, for example, failed to turn outrage over Wall Street corruption last year into a focused political force. Demonstrators in Egypt did manage to oust leader Hosni Mubarak but have since struggled to stay unified.

On top of that, having emerged from dictatorship only three decades ago, Brazil has no strong national civic groups that could naturally assume leadership of the protests.

"Based on the experiences we had in Chile, it will be key to foment organization," said Gabriel Boric, a former student leader who helped lead protests that forced Chilean President Sebastian Pinera to boost spending on education and social programs.

"In these type of massive movements there is often a rejection toward any sort of representation," Boric said. "But spokesmen will be needed to mediate with authorities and obtain planned goals. The work has to be permanent ? they have to create representation and dispute the power of traditional politicians."

The protests in Brazil are fresh and still running on adrenaline. Some of the biggest actions are planned for Thursday night in dozens of cities across the country.

Only one organized group has shown any control of the mobilizations so far, the Free Fare Movement that has fought since 2006 to make public transportation free across Brazil. The group's first protest in Sao Paulo last Thursday drew such a harsh police crackdown that hundreds of thousands of Brazilians were incited to take to the streets with every lament under the sun.

The Free Fare Movement has stuck to its one issue, and won its demands by putting forth leaders who could negotiate with governments.

The rest of the protesters have coalesced only around a general dissatisfaction with the sorry state of public services versus the high taxes citizens pay, as well as the billions of dollar spent on stadiums for the coming World Cup and Olympics.

But when pressed on how to turn frustration and disparate demands into concrete results, few on the streets could describe a way forward. In Salvador on Thursday, about 5,000 protesters couldn't even agree on a single march route, instead splitting up into two groups.

Ricardo Hammem, a 37-year-old lawyer attending a Sao Paulo rally in a black suit and tie this week, said that despite the amorphous nature of the protests and the lack of central leadership nationwide, the most important step had already been taken.

"It's been a long time coming. Everyone here is unsatisfied, but no one ever complains," he said. "Everyone waits for others to start."

Leonardo Avritzer, a political science professor at the University of Belo Horizonte, said time was short to harness the protests' momentum.

"This movement is like an onion," Avritzer said. "At the heart, there are these well-organized and politicized groups around which there are many external layers. Those external layers are going to disperse very rapidly ? especially if the movement doesn't find a way to turn their demands into a concrete, actionable agenda and particularly if they keep up this rhythm of daily protests."

Clive Bloom, professor emeritus at the U.K.'s Middlesex University and the author of several books on protest movements, said he sees common challenges facing protests in Europe and Latin America.

"Theses protests are made up of alliances of numerous causes and ideas," he said. "The difficulty is getting people to follow one of the ideas and see it through. You have 50,000 people out there, and each has their own agenda."

Bloom said a hallmark of modern protests is their dependence on loosely affiliated groups such as hackers collective Anonymous. Yet those groups by definition don't believe leaders can carry out traditional negotiations with governments, and form and disappear at will.

Such groups have driven the protests in Brazil, where every demonstration has included people donning the mask of British rebel leader Guy Fawkes ? a symbol adopted by hackers and anarchists globally. Brazil's Anonymous wing, however, has taken down several government and corporate websites and issued demands for combatting corruption and implementing government reforms.

For cab driver Roberto Amorim, what Brazilians need now is patience and to not lose hope if the protests die down.

"There are so many faces and voices out here, they're crying out against the same suffering that most in Brazil know," he said. "Nobody is waiting for deep changes today, tomorrow or next week ? I have no idea how it will come about. But the Brazilian people have been so submissive for so long, for now it's good to just see that we're able to put the scare into our leaders."

___

Associated Press writers Luis Henao in Santiago, Chile, and Jenny Barchfield in Rio de Janeiro contributed to this report.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/cae69a7523db45408eeb2b3a98c0c9c5/Article_2013-06-20-Brazil-Protests-What%20Next/id-c7474075d01d4539a47feb32c762c059

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Questions of Environmental Health and Justice Growing with the Petcoke Piles in Detroit

Before you read this blog post, navigate to your favorite search engine, type in ?Detroit petroleum coke,??and peruse the results for a moment (don?t forget to come back and keep reading).

If you?re new to this issue, you might be able to quickly piece together a story about a ??three-story pile of toxic by-product?? that has helped ??Detroit?s riverfront gain national attention? amidst ?growing outrage, and calls for action?? from ?worried residents.? You may see that even with ??study results released?, concerns linger? and ??unanswered questions?? remain as to the ecological and human health risks posed by the growing pile of oil refinery waste on the banks of the Detroit River. On the other hand, you could be left thinking the headlines are making a big deal out of something that is ??not hazardous?? or even ??not that much of a problem at all?. And maybe the bright side of the issue is that it ??helps a struggling coal plant stay in business.?

If you dig in beyond the headlines, you get the full story (or at least what journalists, activists, and politicians know at this point):

The Marathon oil refinery in southwest Detroit started refining petroleum from the Alberta oil sands last fall. That refining process creates petroleum coke as a waste product?petcoke, if you will. Residents don?t think it looks as cute as it sounds, however, especially when it?s piled three stories high on the banks of the Detroit River. While a black mountain of Canadian oil waste waves its welcome to travelers crossing into the U.S. over the bridge from Windsor, Ontario, residents on both sides of the border are waving their fingers at Koch Carbon, Detroit Bulk Storage, and Marathon for their roles in creating an eyesore and potential public health problem. Samples have been collected and tested, public meetings have been held, bills have been introduced, articles have been written, and some of the petcoke has begun meandering back to Canada to be burned in a Nova Scotia powerplant.

It?s kind of a mess. An environmental, political, economic, and social mess that is, unfortunately, all too familiar to Detroit residents.

Detroit resident Jos? Luis Barrera, like other frequent visitors to Riverside Park, wonders what effect the petcoke piles will have on him and his family. After showing off his friend's catch for the day, he talked about hearing reports on the radio and wondering whether the petcoke could be responsible for the ?death-like smell? he experienced one day and the more frequent train traffic he has heard in the middle of the night. Riverside Park sits between the two petcoke piles along the Detroit River.

Detroit resident Jos? Luis Barrera, like other frequent visitors to Riverside Park, wonders what effect the petcoke piles will have on him and his family. After showing off his friend's catch for the day, he talked about hearing reports on the radio and wondering whether the petcoke could be responsible for the ?death-like smell? he experienced one day and the more frequent train traffic he has heard in the middle of the night. Riverside Park sits between the two petcoke piles along the Detroit River.

Since the headlines first appeared this spring, I?ve been following the fate of the petcoke from my home 40 miles away in Ann Arbor. So, I know which questions have been raised and investigated publicly?where it came from, who owns it, and where it?s going?but how many of those answers were reaching local residents?

I went down to Riverside Park, nestled between the two piles of petcoke on the bank of the Detroit River, to find out.

When I asked fishermen, -women, and ?kids lined up along river what they had heard about the petroleum coke pile around the corner, answers ranged from ??petroleum what??? to ??illegal dumping? and it might hurt the water?? (to which another resident replied, ?It better not hurt my fish!?).

Longtime southwest Detroit resident and frequent Riverside Park patron, Jos??Luis Barrera, has seen and heard about the piles, and he?s still waiting for answers to two questions: (1) is it hazardous, and (2) why is it here?

Well, Jos??Luis, you couldn?t have chosen more pertinent or more perplexing questions.

Is it hazardous?

Short answer: it depends.

The long answer is past the scope of this blog post, but let?s at least try to scratch the surface here.

Stephen Boyle has been actively asking and answering questions about petcoke. He explained the intricacies of the EPA?s hazardous waste guidelines at a recent community meeting while sporting a t-shirt from HELPPA.org that calls attention to the broader issue of oil sands development.

Stephen Boyle has been actively asking and answering questions about petcoke. He explained the intricacies of the EPA?s hazardous waste guidelines at a recent community meeting while sporting a t-shirt from HELPPA.org that calls attention to the broader issue of oil sands development.

Is it technically classified as a hazardous material? Not according to the EPA (Canada hasn?t thought about it yet). Marathon?s own Material Data Safety Sheet explains that petcoke itself is not classified as a hazardous waste by the EPA, but it could be when ?discarded, spilled, or disposed of.? Stephen Boyle, an activist with Detroit Coalition Against Tar Sands (D-CATS) interprets the EPA?s language to mean that this particular pile of petcoke is indeed hazardous waste because it?s being stored on land while it waits for the next step in its lifecycle (check out Section 261.4.12(i) to try your own interpretation).

Is it a hazard, though? As in, could it possibly do harm? Yes. It?s a big pile of carbon-sulfur-selenium-vanadium chunks sitting next to a river. Use your imagination to consider what kind of harm could be done through an action of your choice (everything from coke-eating birds to kids playing King or Queen of the Mountain is acceptable here).

So, maybe the more relevant question is how much of a risk it poses for the citizens and creatures of Detroit and Windsor. What is the probability of harm actually being done? Answering that question means looking more closely at that pile of petcoke and tracing where the pieces and particles go, how they get there, and what effect they have along the way and at their final destination (be it a person, plant, animal, or powerplant plume miles away).

My own search through the literature didn?t reveal any studies on the environmental exposures and outcomes of a petcoke pile exactly like this, but a recent study coming out of the oil sands area of Alberta saw trace metal uptake in algae and aquatic invertebrates when petcoke was used in constructed wetlands. But that?s a story for another day.

Why is it here?

Short answer: Detroit Bulk Storage put it there.

The long answer here is worth digging into. This deeper question has been at the center of countless environmental justice debates over the years, and it still pops up despite recent strides in bringing environmental justice considerations into planning and policy.

While it has grown from being focused on the disproportionate amount of toxic waste stored or dumped near minority and low-income communities to taking a more holistic approach to environmental health and community well-being, environmental justice developed its roots while answering this question across the U.S.

Dr. Dorceta Taylor, leading environmental justice scholar and advocate at the University of Michigan, points her students towards five main arguments for why hazardous material so often shows up in the backyards of people of color:

  1. Deliberate discrimination: Minority and low income communities are deliberately targeted to host such lovely amenities as PBC dumpsites and incinerators.
  2. Just plain economic common sense: If a company has the choice between cheap land with easy access to transportation and more expensive land that may be far from transportation and workers, which do you think it will choose?
  3. Path of least resistance: A 1984 report on resistance to waste-incinerators in California identified characteristics of communities that were least likely to put up a fight. Among those characteristics were low income, low education, and lack of civic involvement. While the report did not explicitly encourage companies to seek out these neighborhoods for all their waste-dumping needs, the implications were clear for many industries.
  4. The old chicken-or-egg question: Which came first?the polluting industry or the people? Maybe residents choose to move close to hazardous facilities for jobs or cheap rent. That may happen, but studies have revealed more complexity than that, with neighborhood dynamics changing in response to the new facilities moving to town.
  5. Zoning and residential segregation: Historical housing discrimination has set up a system in some cities that puts low-income residential areas near industrial districts or has placed barriers to residency in non-industrial neighborhoods by stipulating lot sizes, excluding multi-family dwellings, or enforcing owner-occupancy rules.

So, what?s going on in southwest Detroit? Which of these patterns might? help explain this growing pile of petcoke, beyond the long line of buying, selling, and transporting that moved the coke from the refinery to the lots by the river?

Let?s consider some facts. The area around the petcoke piles is home to:

  • An oil refinery, a steel plant, a major international shipping route and bridge crossing, freight infrastructure, cheap vacant land, and Michigan?s most polluted zipcode;
  • A largely Black and Hispanic population that saw more hospitalizations from asthma between 2007-2009 than the average combined rate for the tri-county area;
  • A housing and zoning structure based on historical discriminatory practices;
  • A network of community organizers, activists, concerned citizens, and representatives at all levels of government that is actively working to understand the situation, educate each other, and create change.

So, again?.why is this pile here?

A dwindling pile of petcoke near W. Jefferson and S. Clark in Detroit awaits the next leg of its journey after making its way from the oil sands of Alberta to the oil refinery of Detroit. Where to next??

A dwindling pile of petcoke near W. Jefferson and S. Clark in Detroit awaits the next leg of its journey after making its way from the oil sands of Alberta to the oil refinery of Detroit. Where to next??

Maybe this question is also a bit too complex for this post. To figure out why a pile of petroleum coke is growing near W. Jefferson and 14th Street in Detroit requires first asking broader questions that breech international and academic borders?questions of policy, science, history, and human nature.

As organizers and activists acknowledge, this petcoke pile is just one very visible piece in the intricate system of global resources. It?s a system that connects people, profits, smoke plumes, and piles of waste where the physical realities of shared water, soil, and air meet the systemic realities of disproportionate burdens and benefits all along the trail of the energy source.

The good news for Detroit residents like Jos?? Luis (who is probably still waiting for satisfying answers to his original questions) is that things are moving in Detroit. The Michigan Department of Environmental Quality, urged by lawmakers and residents, is now working to ensure the petcoke storage meets state standards for air and water quality management.

While permits could change the nature of petcoke storage in Detroit, the long and short-term ripple effects from this incident could be felt by residents of Detroit, the Alberta oil sands, and everywhere in between. The obvious and not-so-obvious questions will keep coming from those residents. We just might have to follow more than the news headlines to find the answers?

To Learn More:

Petroleum Coke: The coal hiding in the tar sands

Detroit Petcoke News and Resources

Principles of Environmental Justice

Thanks to the residents who let me interrupt their fishing and to the activists and experts who shared stories and insights.

Photos: by the author

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Source: http://www.scientificamerican.com/blog/post.cfm?id=questions-of-environmental-health-and-justice-growing-with-the-petcoke-piles-in-detroit

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Samsung shows off two new Windows 8 ATIV tablets

Yes, Samsung is launching even more tablets with different screen sizes, but this time they aren?t Galaxy-branded devices. The new ATIV Q and ATIV Tab 3 are Windows 8 tablets that deliver very different capabilities and add some real diversity to Samsung?s tablet lineup. The ATIV Q is the most intriguing of the pair because it actually comes preloaded with Android 4.2 Jelly Bean that gives users the option to use?popular Android apps that aren?t yet available on Windows 8. Samsung also says that ATIV Q users will ?also be able to transfer files to share folders and files from Windows 8 to Android, truly marrying the mobile and PC experiences.? The device features a 13.3-inch display with a resolution of 3200 x 1800 pixels, an Intel Core i5 processor, 4GB of RAM, 128GB of storage and up to 9 hours of battery life.

The ATIV Tab 3, meanwhile is being billed as ?the world?s thinnest Windows 8 tablet? and measures in at 8.2 millimeters thick. The tablet is also influenced by the design of Samsung?s popular Galaxy series, which means it will look more like a Galaxy Note 8 than previous Windows-based Samsung tablets. The device features a 10.1-inch display with a resolution of 1366 x 768 pixels, an?Intel ATOM Z2760 processor, 2GB of RAM, 64GB of storage and up to 10 hours of battery life. The device also comes preloaded with Office 2013.

Samsung did not disclose a release date or pricing for the new tablets. Samsung?s full press release is posted below.

Samsung Strengthens Tablet Business and Demonstrates Commitment to Customer Choice with Innovative New ATIV Tablets

New Convertible ATIV Q and ATIV Tab 3, the World?s Thinnest Windows Tablet, Offer Ultimate Versatility and Productivity on the Go

LONDON, U.K. ? June 20, 2013 ? Samsung Electronics Co., Ltd., a global leader in digital media and convergence technologies, unveiled two new tablets today, giving consumers more ways than ever to create, consume and share content, and blurring the industry boundaries. The two new Windows 8 tablets, the ATIV Q and ATIV Tab 3, include several innovative new features that set them apart from other mobile tablets, including incredibly versatile form factors and extremely thin and light bodies. Both are powered by Windows 8 and bring several unique features to market ? including the world?s thinnest tablet and a convertible tablet with the ability to run Android apps.

?Busy lives demand convenience, and the convertible nature of these tablets delivers the versatility, mobility and adaptability consumers should expect from personal computing today,? said DJ Lee, President and Head of Sales and Marketing Office, IT & Mobile Communications Division, Samsung Electronics. ?These tablets are the result of people-centric innovation, and they were designed to provide consumers the flexibility to manage their digital lives on their terms whether they are in the office, at home or on the go.?

ATIV Q

Samsung launches the ATIV Q ? a truly convertible device with the ability to change modes and the power to enjoy both Windows and Android. Born of the tablet family, the ATIV Q allows users more flexibility than ever to adapt the device to fit any situation, posture or environment. Built with today?s evolving consumer lifestyles in mind and usable as a notebook or tablet, it delivers on the ATIV promise to make work more seamless and life more convenient.

  • Enjoy Android Apps on Windows: Addressing consumers? desire to access Android apps on a Windows-based PC, the ATIV Q allows users to experience both Windows 8 and Android (Jellybean 4.2.2) on the same device. Users will not only get access to Android apps via Google Play but will also be able to transfer files to share folders and files from Windows 8 to Android, truly marrying the mobile and PC experiences.
  • Versatility to Suit Any Environment or Needs: The ATIV Q sports an innovative hinge design that allows the user to transform the tablet into four functional modes. Lay the display flat over the keyboard for tablet mode. Raise the display upright to type just like a laptop. Float and adjust the display to a comfortable viewing angle. Or flip the display to place in the stand mode to watch movies with ease. The four-in-one design of the ATIV Q easily adjusts to give users all the options they need in one device. ATIV Q is also extremely thin and lightweight for optimum portability. At 1.29kg and only 13.9mm, it?s easy to take everywhere you go.
  • The Ultimate Viewing Experience: The ATIV Q introduces the world?s highest resolution, QHD+ (3200?1800) display. The tablet?s 13.3-inch touch screen offers 2.8 times higher pixel density (275ppi) than full HD displays for viewing the finest of details. ATIV Q is also designed to provide an optimized viewing experience regardless of location and high brightness in outdoor environments.

ATIV Tab 3

A tablet with the power of a PC, the ATIV Tab 3 makes personal computing more mobile than ever. The tablet is the world?s thinnest Windows 8 tablet ? as thin as popular smartphones ? and shares the premium design of the GALAXY series. It is also ideal for both creativity and productivity with improved S Pen functionality, including high level pen display and S Pen compatibility with MS Office.

  • Ultimate Mobility: The ATIV Tab 3 is the perfect device for on-the-go users. The frame is incredibly thin and light at only 8.2 millimeters thick and 550g in weight, making it a perfect companion device for travel as well as transporting between work and home. The ATIV Tab 3 also features up to 10 hours of battery life, eliminating the need to carry a charger for most long-distance flights.

Full Windows Experience for Work and Play: The ATIV Tab 3 runs Windows 8 with the ability to run Windows apps and programs, as well as coming preloaded with Office? Home & Student for the best experience whether at home, at work or on go.

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Both the ATIV Q and ATIV Tab 3 also enable superior productivity with S Pen functionality, enabling users to easily make written updates to creative and work.

SideSync is available on the ATIV Q and ATIV Tab 3, enabling users to switch from working on their PC to an Android-based Samsung smartphone with simplicity and ease. With SideSync, the user?s PC and mobile device become one. Simply use the PC keyboard to respond to a text on a mobile phone; view maps on a larger screen, display photos and videos on both devices to make editing files even easier; or use an ATIV PC to back up and charge mobile devices. With SideSync, users enjoy more productivity with fewer interruptions to work and everyday life.

Convenience is all about saving time and finding easier ways to get things accomplished, and Samsung ATIV tablets enable users to do just that. By making the personal computing experience more versatile, Samsung continues to make work more seamless and life more convenient.

For more information on the full ATIV PC Family, please visit http://www.samsung.com or http://www.samsungmobileuspress.com.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/samsung-shows-off-two-windows-8-ativ-tablets-190047354.html

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