• Marjory Collins, April 1943, in Baltimore:

    image from www.shorpy.com
    "Baltimore, Maryland. Repairing the motor of a PCC (Presidents' Conference Committee) trolley — the most recent streetcar model, designed in 1936 by a group of manufacturers and transit companies in an effort to standardize, simplify, and bring down the price; at the damage shop, maintenance terminal of the Baltimore Transit Company."

    image from www.shorpy.com
    "Baltimore, Maryland. One-armed painter, hired since the war, repainting the interior of a trolley at the maintenance terminal of the Baltimore Transit Company."
    [Photos: Shorpy/Marjory Collins for the Office of War Information]

  • From the JC:

    The restaurant critic Jay Rayner left the Observer because “there are antisemites on the [Guardian] staff” and the editor, Kath Viner, “likes to deny it,” he wrote on a private Facebook post seen by the JC.

    In the post, Rayner wrote: “I'm not sorry to be leaving Guardian newspapers. For years now being Jewish, however non-observant, and working for the company has been uncomfortable, at times excruciating.

    "Viner likes to deny it but there are antisemites on the daily's staff and she has not had the courage to face them down. For years now I have made a point of sending her a back channel email each time the Guardian has published another outrage. It will be a joy to know that I'm not a part of that anymore.”

    Surely not.

  • Yuan Yi Zhu, assistant professor of international relations and international law at Leiden University, in the Spectator – The ICC has destroyed its own credibility:

    The International Criminal Court (ICC) has issued arrest warrants against Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu and his former defence minister Yoav Gallant for alleged war crimes and crimes against humanity (a third warrant was issued against a Hamas commander, believed to be dead). In so doing, the ICC has undermined – perhaps fatally – its own credibility, as well as prospects for a peace settlement in Gaza.

    The process which led to the warrants was compromised from the very beginning, when the ICC’s Prosecutor, Karim Ahmad Khan KC, who is currently being investigated for alleged sexual misconduct (he denies the allegations), convened a ‘Panel of Experts in International Law’ to provide support for his decision to seek the warrants.

    The panel’s entire membership was selected by Khan, which raised concerns about its impartiality. As Lord Macdonald, the former Director of Public Prosecutions, pointed out in a September 2024 panel discussion at Policy Exchange, at least two of the Panel’s members had publicly accused Israel of international crimes beforehand, while at least two others had personal links to the Prosecutor.

    The charges themselves are legally problematic. To take but one example, Netanyahu and Gallant are accused of using starvation as a method of warfare, which would be a war crime. Yet as Dr Emanuela-Chiara Gillard, a leading expert in the law concerning civilian protection, pointed out at the Policy Exchange event, the mere existence of food insecurity in a warzone does not mean that a crime has been committed.

    Many of the issues with aid delivery in Gaza are caused by self-imposed limitations by aid agencies and the United Nations, the activities of Hamas, and others. Are they liable to be prosecuted on the same charge? As Gillard points out, the war crime of starvation has never been prosecuted before, and for good reason….

    Already, Israeli public opinion has understandably rallied around Netanyahu and against the Court, making a settlement of any sort less likely. What’s more, once issued, an ICC warrant cannot be withdrawn. This is in contrast with English procedure, where prosecutors have the right to discontinue proceedings if it is in the interests of justice to do so. By seemingly cornering Mr Netanyahu, the ICC gives him no other choice than to double down.

    Meanwhile, the next American administration may well impose sanctions against the ICC as a result of the warrants, which would cripple its operations, so that the warrants’ supporters may only achieve a Pyrrhic victory. As Professor Richard Ekins KC of the University of Oxford writes, the lawfare against Israel only damages the credibility of the institutions that engage in it.

    From that Richard Ekins October article:

    In late December 2023, South Africa began proceedings in the International Court of Justice (ICJ), alleging that Israel had committed and was committing genocide against the Palestinians. 

    This was an extraordinary allegation to make in the immediate aftermath of the 7 October atrocities, when Israel was using force in self-defence to attempt to rescue hostages and to degrade Hamas’s capacity to commit further acts of mass murder, rape, and hostage-taking….

    The political deployment of legal processes stepped up in May, when the prosecutor of the International Criminal Court (ICC) applied for arrest warrants against the Prime Minister and Defence Minister of Israel, as well as against Hamas commanders.

    This was a very ill-judged decision on the part of the prosecutor, implying an equivalence between terrorists who had openly committed mass murder and the leaders of a democratic state using force in self-defence against them.

    It remains to be seen whether the ICC will issue arrest warrants. [They have now! – MH] What is clear is that in seeking these arrest warrants the prosecutor adopted an unfair process and ignored the clear limits on the ICC’s jurisdiction, which does not extend to Israeli citizens.

    Israel is not a party to the Rome Statute, which established the ICC, and Palestine, which is not a state, cannot cede criminal jurisdiction over Israelis to the ICC, not least since in agreeing the Oslo Accords it disavowed any such jurisdiction.

    The prosecutor’s many failings were spelled out by an expert panel of lawyers meeting at Policy Exchange last month. The failings include the prosecutor’s apparent misunderstanding of the Law of Armed Conflict and his indifference to the fundamental principle of complementarity, which means that the ICC only has a role when domestic legal remedies are effectively unavailable.

    As we now know, South Africa received a massive financial lifeline from Iran and Qatar – two regimes notorious for their hostility toward Israel and support for Hamas – just after filing their case against the Jewish state.

    Meanwhile these international organisations continue in their particular targeting of Israel, while ignoring much greater injustices elsewhere….

  • A BBC report:

    Russia is estimated to have supplied North Korea with more than a million barrels of oil since March this year, according to satellite imagery analysis from the Open Source Centre, a non-profit research group based in the UK.

    The oil is payment for the weapons and troops Pyongyang has sent Moscow to fuel its war in Ukraine, leading experts and UK Foreign Secretary, David Lammy, have told the BBC.

    These transfers violate UN sanctions, which ban countries from selling oil to North Korea, except in small quantities, in an attempt to stifle its economy to prevent it from further developing nuclear weapons.

    The satellite images, shared exclusively with the BBC, show more than a dozen different North Korean oil tankers arriving at an oil terminal in Russia’s Far East a total of 43 times over the past eight months.

    Further pictures, taken of the ships at sea, appear to show the tankers arriving empty, and leaving almost full.

    This is not a huge surprise. The question is: what else apart from the oil? 10,000 troops sent to Ukraine is no small matter.

    The South Korean government has told the BBC it would “sternly respond to the violation of the UN Security Council resolutions by Russia and North Korea”.

    Its biggest worry is that Moscow will provide Pyongyang with technology to improve its spy satellites and ballistic missiles.

    Last month, Seoul’s defence minister, Kim Yong-hyun, stated there was a “high chance” North Korea was asking for such help, external.

    “If you’re sending your people to die in a foreign war, a million barrels of oil is just not sufficient reward,” Dr Go says.

    Andrei Lankov, an expert in North Korea-Russia relations at Seoul’s Kookmin University, agrees.

    “I used to think it was not in Russia’s interest to share military technology, but perhaps its calculus has changed. The Russians need these troops, and this gives the North Koreans more leverage.”

  • https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js

    "Since the regime in Iran does not submit to the ICC’s jurisdiction, the only other pathway to prosecution is through a UN Security Council (UNSC) referral. The five permanent members of the UNSC, including Russia and China, have the power to veto these referrals, and have repeatedly done so for their allies in Iran and the Assad regime.

    "In other words, this highly politicized system allows authoritarian regimes to protect authoritarian regimes from prosecution, no matter how egregious their crimes against humanity.

    "Further, the ability of one belligerent to this conflict to fund an ICJ case against another—while enjoying total immunity from prosecution for its own instigation and aggression—is a tactic known as lawfare: the use of legal systems to damage or delegitimize an opponent.

    "The question is, then, is all really fair in love and lawfare?"

  • Brad Polumbo is doing the old "culture wars" routine against Nancy Mace:

    Rep. Nancy Mace, R-S.C., is making waves after introducing a resolution explicitly targeting her transgender colleague, Rep.-elect Sarah McBride, D-Del., that would bar McBride and other transgender women who work in the Capitol from accessing women’s restrooms or other gender-based facilities.

    House Speaker Mike Johnson on Wednesday announced his support for the resolution in a statement: “All single-sex facilities in the Capitol and House Office Buildings — such as restrooms, changing rooms, and locker rooms — are reserved for individuals of that biological sex,” adding, “Women deserve women’s only spaces.”

    I, for one, am surprised to see Mace launching this culture war crusade, because when I interviewed her in 2021, shortly after she took office, she framed herself as a pro-LGBT, social moderate.

    Mace responds:

    https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js

    Some responses to that Polumbo tweet:

    "Straight men in wigs have nothing to do with gay people."

    "When did .@NancyMace “abandon” support for LGB rights? This is about a rape survivor not wanting a biological man in the ladies room. If that means not indulging a biological man LARPing as a woman, so be it. Being mentally unwell has nothing to do w/ LGB rights."

    "3 years is a long time, I expect she spent it educating herself on the issues instead of just blindly spouting mantras and hurling insults at women who want male free spaces. I like a politician who is prepared to change their mind when presented with the evidence."

    "It's notable that whenever women's rights and safeguards are undermined in the name of 'trans rights' it is asserted that "there is no conflict between trans rights and women's rights" – but as soon as someone stands up for women's rights then suddenly it's a 'culture war.'"

    "A swing and a miss Brad. Give it up."

    "Supporting gay marriage and wanting men to invade women’s spaces are two different things Brad."

    "This absolute idiocy is why people are turning against the "LGBT", Brad. I'm a married lesbian and you'd probably also frame me as anti-LGBT because I don't want men in women's spaces or kids to be sterilized. Fuck off, you're doing so much harm and zero good."

    "You’re surprised to see a sexual assault survivor not want a biological man in the women’s restroom?? THIS is the worst thing to side against right now."

    And so on…

  • https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js

    "So now, instead of punishing the attacker, they’re opening a case against her for breaking the sacred law of compulsory hijab. Because in a country they’ve ruined, showing a strand of hair is more criminal than assaulting a woman.

    "Welcome to the Islamic Republic, where protecting your dignity is a crime, but violating it isn’t. her friends and Iranians on social media are worried about her whereabouts."

  • https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js

  • Since Israel started its destruction of Hezbollah, it seems like more and more Lebanese are speaking out against the Iran-backed cuckoo in their nest. From MEMRI TV:

    In an October 23, 2024 appearance on MTV (Lebanon), Lebanese academic Imad Chamoun stated that Palestinians do not have the right to the land. He pointed out that the Quran does not mention "Palestine" or "Palestinians," but refers to the Israelites and Jews multiple times. Chamoun emphasized that Israel is mentioned 43 times in the Quran, but Palestine is not mentioned at all. He argued that if Palestine had existed, it would have been referenced in the Quran, and that Allah gave the land to the Jews, who were in Israel 2,000 years before Christ and 2,600 years before the Islamic conquests. He asked, "How can this land be anything but Jewish?"

    Chamoun also praised Sunni countries that, after failing to destroy Israel, recognized it and made peace with it. He criticized the Lebanese government for legalizing Hizbullah's illegal weapons, calling Hizbullah a terrorist organization. He said that Lebanon should not absolve Hizbullah for its actions and accused the group of collaborating with Iran. Chamoun added that Hizbullah had posted videos threatening Christians, with messages saying, "Take your cross and leave." He cited comments from Hizbullah Secretary-General Naim Qassem, who reportedly said that if Christians didn't like it in Lebanon, they should leave.

    "How come you reinvent the myth about throwing Israel into the sea? And that Israel is an occupier and this is not their land… Do you want to build the new future of your children and mine on war and hatred? Or do you want to build it on the acceptance of the other? I would like to salute the Sunnis in the world. After their reckless attempt to throw Israel into the sea, which failed even though all the Arab countries were together in this – which failed even though all the Arab countries were together in this – what did they do then? Egypt – that numbers 100 million Arab Muslims – recognized Israel and made peace with it. The Hashemites in Jordan recognized Israel and made peace with it. This Sunni Islamic maturity led to the point where the UAE, the most civilized country in the world today…"

    "So to conclude, I'd say that the Shiite immaturity has destroyed us. Let's see tomorrow, if they learned their lesson like the Sunnis have."

  • More Hampstead colour:

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    IMG_2896s

    IMG_2906s

    IMG_2908s

    IMG_2912s

    IMG_2916s

    IMG_2919s

    IMG_2921s

    IMG_2923s

    IMG_2926s

    IMG_2900s

    First two – maple – in the Kitchen Garden.