John Logan, director of labor and employment studies at San Francisco State University, said he thinks the Amazon and Starbucks workers are “desperate” to make progress before President-elect Donald Trump gets to appoint a Republican majority to the National Labor Relations Board, which is expected to be less friendly to unions during his administration.
“The unions want to make these disputes public and bring political pressures on the companies," Logan said in a written statement. “If these disputes drag on until next year, and if they are fought largely through the labor board and the courts, the unions and workers will almost certainly lose. This might be their last, best chance to pressure the companies in public before Trump comes into office.”
If you trace the path of one electrical transmission line up the coast of Maine, through and around the state’s rocky outcroppings and over a long causeway, you’ll finally reach the island city of Eastport, 40 miles from the transmission line’s origin. Here, at the line’s terminus, sits the U.S.’s easternmost city and the East Coast’s deepest port, once a thriving hub of imports by sea.
Today, the city is home to about 1,300 residents, who are no strangers to the harsh winds and strong rains that give remote islands like this one their rugged character. When big storms rip through, as back-to-back nor’easters did this January, Eastport loses its sole tenuous connection to electricity from the mainland. In 2018, the city’s backup diesel generator shut down and was never replaced, leaving residents to buy their own gas generators or sit in the dark and wait out the hours until the utility could restore power.
“We’re yankees. We’re used to it. We got candles and lanterns stashed away, and we usually get a bucket of water when it looks like the power is going to go out,” said Jeanne Peacock, an Eastport city councilor and founding member of the city’s energy committee. “But it would be nice for everybody else if that didn’t happen.”
The quest to make Eastport energy resilient has put the city at the forefront of Maine’s renewable energy transition and made it a leader in energy independence work for remote communities in the state and beyond.
This week, we were drawn to stories about determined communities taking their renewable energy futures into their own hands.RTBC Staff (Reasons to be Cheerful)
In den nordeuropäischen Ländern wird am 21. Dezember 2024 das Julfest gefeiert, welches auch als Fest der Wintersonnnenwende bzw. als das skandinavische Weihnachtsfest Jul bekannt ...Kleiner Kalender
If you trace the path of one electrical transmission line up the coast of Maine, through and around the state’s rocky outcroppings and over a long causeway, you’ll finally reach the island city of Eastport, 40 miles from the transmission line’s origin. Here, at the line’s terminus, sits the U.S.’s easternmost city and the East Coast’s deepest port, once a thriving hub of imports by sea.
Today, the city is home to about 1,300 residents, who are no strangers to the harsh winds and strong rains that give remote islands like this one their rugged character. When big storms rip through, as back-to-back nor’easters did this January, Eastport loses its sole tenuous connection to electricity from the mainland. In 2018, the city’s backup diesel generator shut down and was never replaced, leaving residents to buy their own gas generators or sit in the dark and wait out the hours until the utility could restore power.
“We’re yankees. We’re used to it. We got candles and lanterns stashed away, and we usually get a bucket of water when it looks like the power is going to go out,” said Jeanne Peacock, an Eastport city councilor and founding member of the city’s energy committee. “But it would be nice for everybody else if that didn’t happen.”
The quest to make Eastport energy resilient has put the city at the forefront of Maine’s renewable energy transition and made it a leader in energy independence work for remote communities in the state and beyond.
Tidal power and solar would fuel a community microgrid protecting the island of Eastport, Maine, from outages.Inside Climate News
プロデューサーにBrian Enoをむかえ、1995年にリリースされたDavid Bowieの18枚目のアルバム。20曲目は初回盤+日本盤限定のボーナストラック。mmr
When South Korea’s president, Yoon Suk Yeol, attempted to institute martial law in early December, the public responded with massive protests. These protests have continued across the country. On December 14, for example, an estimated 1 million people gathered outside the National Assembly in the capital, Seoul, as lawmakers convened to vote on the motion to impeach Yoon.
The sight of young people moving to K-pop’s electrifying beat has become part of the drama of this protest movement. Protest organisers are blasting out K-pop hits, and demonstrators are waving K-pop light sticks (portable devices associated with specific artists or groups), turning the protests into multicoloured musical rallies. An article in the Guardian newspaper noted that parts of the protests resembled “a club dancefloor”.
There are many words from K-pop songs that resonate with the sentiment of the protests. For example, a verse from Girls’ Generation’s Into The New World (2007), which has been one of the most popular songs at the protests, promotes purpose and camaraderie, with lyrics like: “Don’t wait for any special miracle. The rough path in front of us might be an unknown future and challenge, but we can’t give up.”
But K-pop fan culture also connects with community spirit and politics. Observers have noted that the most visible demographic group at the impeachment protests is women in their 20s and 30s. Many are K-pop fans and also discontented with Yoon’s anti-feminist stance, as well as the gender-based violence that is widespread across South Korean society.
It is these women who first brought K-pop light sticks to the protest sites and made waving them a wider protest ritual. They also passed around information on social media such as the location of the protest sites and publicly available toilets, as well as lists of useful rally supplies. And they collaborated with the older official organisers to rework K-pop soundbites, signs and artefacts into the protest grounds.
We spend inordinate amounts of time and effort on curating our outputs, but give remarkably little thought to curating our inputs. That's the real secret sauce… | 24 comments on LinkedInPavel Samsonov (www.linkedin.com)
Diese Mastodon-Instanz ist für alle* die LGBT+ oder Allies sind. Ein Safe Space für Dich! Betrieben von Christin Löhner, selbst trans Frau und Aktivistin für LSBT+ Rechte. #lsbt #lgbt #lgbtq #lgbtiqMastodon, gehostet auf lsbt.me
This rum pound cake recipe is absolutely incredible! Orange, vanilla & dark rum create a moist, tender cake, enhanced by a simple rum syrup. No mixer needed!Inspired Taste - Easy Recipes for Home Cooks
Matcha s'mores pie with a homemade graham cracker crust, decadent chocolate cream filling, and fluffy toasted matcha meringue.Sarah Menanix (Snixy Kitchen)