Amerexit: Oligarchy Comes to the United States

It was a stunning election victory.  Despite a track record of lies and lawlessness, he romped home in a landslide, seeming to attract a new coalition of voters, from the conservative rural vote, to rust-belt post-industrial workers, and unexpectedly diverse sections of the cities and their suburbs. 

As the chaotic but iconic blonde with a chequered personal past took up the highest office in the land, it seemed like nothing could stop him. 

What could stand in the way of his big economic policy goal of national exceptionalism? He would erect trade barriers against capitalists from competing nations. He would stop freedom of movement and protect his labour force. And, though appealing to the public about their pocketbook issues, the new leader’s administration would open the way to a raft of crony appointments and favours to his super-rich backers. 

Many said his coalition would dominate the nation for the next two or three election cycles.

Three years later, in 2022, Boris Johnson was gone from Downing Street.  Two years after that, the Conservative Party suffered its worst election result since it was created nearly 200 years ago. 

Compared to Johnson’s ‘Get Brexit Done’ General Election of 2019, the success of Donald Trump this November is much more momentous and earth-shattering. But the question of how this authoritarian populism will play out in power – and the extent of its collision with reality – is still an open one.

Trump – who once referred to himself as Mr ‘Brexit Plus Plus Plus’ and described Johnson as ‘Britain Trump’ – also vaunts an exceptionalist ‘Amerexit’: a project that assumes the US can somehow sail out of the modern world of interdependency and internationalism and go it alone. 

But here in Britain, Brexit is deeply unpopular four years on – especially with those who voted for it and have been impacted by its economic shortcomings, as Byline Times revealed in a major investigation last year.

Trump has already sold to his voters the idea that tariffs on foreign goods will somehow solve the plight of inflation, though they will only aggravate it. Johnson’s Vote Leave campaign also promised lower energy and food prices, though delivered the reverse. 

Trump’s plans for the expulsion of millions of undocumented migrants, mainly from Mexico and South America, are as evocative and impractical as the various hostile environments and ‘stop the boats’ schemes the Conservatives have tried here, most notably the unlawful Rwanda policy. 

The US is even more reliant than the UK on migration for cheap labour, and the economic costs (let alone the moral and practical implications) of these mass deportations are likely to be much higher than the rhetorical advantage of attacking ‘outsiders’.

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The contradictions are untenable. 

Just as Johnson claimed to have a policy of ‘levelling up’ but was really in hock to a millionaire concierge class for donations, then rewarded with honours or government contracts, Trump’s appeal to the blue-collar vote, or black men or Hispanics, or disaffected Gen Z voters, sits ill at ease with his real alliance with billionaires and the tech ‘broligarchs’.

His coalition in 2024 remains as vulnerable as Johnson’s in 2019. 

How will Trump satisfy both the hedge fund owners and the union vote? The angry Muslims who voted for him over Gaza, along with right-wing American Jews who thought he would be more pro-Netanyahu? Where’s the commonality between soccer moms fearing transgender people and the cryptocurrency porn barons? The right-wing evangelicals and the Silicon Valley transhumanists? 

In this edition, Byline Times details how the Democrats lost this election, and the perils ahead for the world and the UK of another Trump presidency.

On a note of optimism, it’s worth remembering that we survived the populism of Johnson, and ‘strongmen’ remain strangely vulnerable. But on a note of pessimism, it’s also important to recognise that we experienced the onslaught of online propaganda – around Brexit and in the years that followed – while it was still in its infancy.  

Back in 2016, Steve Bannon, Trump campaign manager and close ally of Nigel Farage, called the combination of his two companies – his data harvesting and microtargeting campaigning firm Cambridge Analytica and his Breitbart publications – his ‘weapons’. Both were deployed in favour of Trump and Brexit in 2016, with the assistance of Russian troll farms. 

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What has happened eight years on is on an unimaginably larger scale. The role of Elon Musk’s X (formerly Twitter) in promulgating pro-Trump disinformation is too stark for anyone to ignore. The now US Government’s ‘efficiency’ advisor’s statement to his platform’s users – “you are the media now” – is true in terms of both ubiquity and political impact.

In 2016, Cambridge Analytica was successful with its psychometric targeting because it hacked the data of more than 70 million users. Facebook may have closed that loophole, but Mark Zuckerberg’s Meta platforms, such as Instagram and WhatsApp, are still a major vector for unregulated and unproven conspiracy theories. 

The groups that swung towards Trump, particularly young people and Hispanic voters, are disproportionately likely to get their news from Instagram or TikTok. The latter, threatened by Trump during the campaign, reportedly changed its algorithms to boost him. 

So we are well beyond the point when an endorsement by the LA Times or The Washington Post will shift the dial in an election. Instead, we are, as the Observer journalist Carole Cadwalladr has been pointing out for eight years, in the full throes of an online information war over the meaning of truth, the importance of pluralism over populism, and the rule of law over unfettered oligarchy.

We have only a few short years to batten down the hatches against the storm coming over the Atlantic. The pages ahead suggest both the violence – real and psychic – of what could come, visit these shores and some of the ways we can defend British democracy against it. 

It’s the fight of our lives. 

ICMR-NIN scientists conduct first gene profiles in poultry

For the first time, Indian scientists have reported antimicrobial resistance (AMR) gene profiles in poultry from Kerala and Telangana, and have cautioned that the emerging resistance can get aggravated by the depleting antibiotics repertoire.Poultry is a major source for AMR because its industrial farming by modern practices widely use antibiotics. India and China are major producers of meat and have hotspots of AMR.This has been stated in a recently published paper titled ‘The antimicrobial resistance profile in poultry of Central and Southern India is evolving with distinct features’, which was recently published in Comparative Immunology, Microbiology and Infectious Diseases, by the Drug Safety Division, ICMR-National Institute of Nutrition, Hyderabad.Speaking about the study, Shobi Veleri, one of the authors of the paper, said that while central and southern India were predicted as emerging hotspots for AMR in poultry there was no data available to substantiate it.“To this end, we collected chicken faeces from poultry farms in these regions and isolated genomic DNA. The samples exhibited a higher prevalence of gram-negative and anaerobic species. These deadly species have an extra layer of cell membrane protection against drugs that could kill them. AMR acquired by them poses an additional challenge for medical treatment of serious infectious diseases like pneumonia, cholera, food poisoning etc.,’’ Dr. Veleri said.The high priority pathogens, like E.coli, Clostridium perfringens, Klebsiella pneumonia Staphylococcus aureus, Enterococcous faecalis, Pseudomonas aeruginosa, Bacteriodes fragiles, which pose challenge for antibiotic treatment in India were also detected in poultry and were carrying AMR genes. It is a red flag for urgent intervention to stop AMR spread in the ecosystem, the paper noted.Respiratory Infections (Pneumonia, bronchitis), Urinary Tract Infections, Gastrointestinal Infections, Intra-Abdominal Infections, and several Clostridial Infections commonly seen in India are caused by gram-negative and anaerobic species. The infections of AMR pathogens increase the public health risk and likelihood for mortality arising from limited drug options and consequent health complications.The study further found that southern India had the highest abundance of AMR genes than Central India. E.coli was significantly more prevalent in the southernmost zone of India than in other sites. Also the ICMR data had many common AMR profile features of the European Union (EU) poultry farms but lacked mcr-1, the gene renders resistance to colistin, the last resort antibiotic in essential drugs list of WHO. This is a recently emerged AMR gene in E.coli. Similarly, a newly emerged resistance gene, optrA, detected in EU was undetected in Indian poultry samples, whereas qnr highly present in EU is emerging in south Indian samples in low levels.“Our data revealed the extent of AMR gene evolved in central and southern India and we can say that it is comparable to the EU data but severity is lesser than in the EU,’’ the report said. Thus, now India has a window of opportunity to control AMR spread in the food chain, scientists note while seeking urgent government intervention to ensure the safety of the public. Published – November 16, 2024 05:00 pm IST
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ICMR-NIN scientists conduct first gene profiles in poultry

For the first time, Indian scientists have reported antimicrobial resistance (AMR) gene profiles in poultry from Kerala and Telangana, and have cautioned that the emerging resistance can get aggravated by the depleting antibiotics repertoire.Poultry is a major source for AMR because its industrial farming by modern practices widely use antibiotics. India and China are major producers of meat and have hotspots of AMR.This has been stated in a recently published paper titled ‘The antimicrobial resistance profile in poultry of Central and Southern India is evolving with distinct features’, which was recently published in Comparative Immunology, Microbiology and Infectious Diseases, by the Drug Safety Division, ICMR-National Institute of Nutrition, Hyderabad.Speaking about the study, Shobi Veleri, one of the authors of the paper, said that while central and southern India were predicted as emerging hotspots for AMR in poultry there was no data available to substantiate it.“To this end, we collected chicken faeces from poultry farms in these regions and isolated genomic DNA. The samples exhibited a higher prevalence of gram-negative and anaerobic species. These deadly species have an extra layer of cell membrane protection against drugs that could kill them. AMR acquired by them poses an additional challenge for medical treatment of serious infectious diseases like pneumonia, cholera, food poisoning etc.,’’ Dr. Veleri said.The high priority pathogens, like E.coli, Clostridium perfringens, Klebsiella pneumonia Staphylococcus aureus, Enterococcous faecalis, Pseudomonas aeruginosa, Bacteriodes fragiles, which pose challenge for antibiotic treatment in India were also detected in poultry and were carrying AMR genes. It is a red flag for urgent intervention to stop AMR spread in the ecosystem, the paper noted.Respiratory Infections (Pneumonia, bronchitis), Urinary Tract Infections, Gastrointestinal Infections, Intra-Abdominal Infections, and several Clostridial Infections commonly seen in India are caused by gram-negative and anaerobic species. The infections of AMR pathogens increase the public health risk and likelihood for mortality arising from limited drug options and consequent health complications.The study further found that southern India had the highest abundance of AMR genes than Central India. E.coli was significantly more prevalent in the southernmost zone of India than in other sites. Also the ICMR data had many common AMR profile features of the European Union (EU) poultry farms but lacked mcr-1, the gene renders resistance to colistin, the last resort antibiotic in essential drugs list of WHO. This is a recently emerged AMR gene in E.coli. Similarly, a newly emerged resistance gene, optrA, detected in EU was undetected in Indian poultry samples, whereas qnr highly present in EU is emerging in south Indian samples in low levels.“Our data revealed the extent of AMR gene evolved in central and southern India and we can say that it is comparable to the EU data but severity is lesser than in the EU,’’ the report said. Thus, now India has a window of opportunity to control AMR spread in the food chain, scientists note while seeking urgent government intervention to ensure the safety of the public. Published – November 16, 2024 05:00 pm IST
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Parachute OTT Release Date: When and Where to Watch Tamil Drama Movie Online?

The much-anticipated Tamil drama Parachute, starring Krishna and Kishore, is set to stream on Disney+ Hotstar from November 29. Directed by Sridhar K, the film introduces a heartfelt narrative about childhood, familial relationships and the challenges of parenthood. Alongside the lead actors, the ensemble cast includes Kani Thiru, Kaali Venkat and child artists Shakthi Ritwik and Iyal. A multilingual release ensures that Parachute will be accessible to audiences in Telugu, Kannada, Malayalam, Hindi, Marathi and Bengali.When and Where to Watch ParachuteParachute will be available for streaming exclusively on Disney+ Hotstar starting November 29, 2024. While it is primarily a Tamil-language production, the availability of multiple dubs that the movie will reach a wider audience across India.Official Trailer and Plot of ParachuteThe official trailer for Parachute was released on social media, providing a glimpse into its emotional core. The story centres around two children, their adventurous escapades and the panic caused within their family and community when they go missing. A poignant moment in the trailer highlights a father scolding his son, after which the kids set off on a motorbike, unknowingly triggering a series of dramatic events. The trailer portrays the frantic search by the parents, police and local community, blending suspense and drama.Cast and Crew of ParachuteThe film features Krishna in a dual role as lead actor and producer, under his production banner Tribal Horse Entertainment. Kishore, Kani Thiru and Kaali Venkat take on key roles, supported by a talented cast, including child actors Shakthi Ritwik and Iyal. Sridhar K directs the project, with Om Narayan as cinematographer and Richard Kevin handling the editing.

Scientists find evidence that entirety of Earth was once covered in ice

Even the balmy tropics may have once been crushed by colossal masses of ice. A severe ice age dominated Earth, some 720 to 635 million years ago, well before dinosaurs stalked the land. But it’s uncertain if the entire world froze over during the glaciations of this long-lived, extreme episode, dubbed “Snowball Earth.” Now, new evidence from Colorado, an area that once was located in the tropics, suggests mighty glaciers sprawled over even Earth’s warmest regions.”This study presents the first physical evidence that Snowball Earth reached the heart of continents at the equator,” Liam Courtney-Davies, a geologist at CU Boulder who led the new research, said in a statement. The research was recently published in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, a leading science journal.
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The first images of Earth are chilling

A dramatic decrease in greenhouse gases that trap heat on the globe — notably carbon dioxide — may have triggered the slide into a frozen orb. Previous research has suggested that even though Earth’s average temperature dropped well below freezing, some of the ocean surface and land resisted turning to or getting blanketed in thick, hard ice.But evidence in the lofty Colorado mountains points to heavy ice in the tropics.

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The telltale rocks are called Tava sandstone, which are exposed in the Rocky Mountains. As you might have guessed, sandstone started out as sand on the surface, but is compacted together by different activities, such as grains in rivers becoming buried by layers and layers of silt. In this case, the researchers say the Tava sandstone resembles the type of features found underneath ice sheets, like those in present-day Antarctica.To see if heavy glaciers may have compacted this once-tropical sandstone (shown below), the researchers dated the mineral veins that crossed through the sandstone. They shot these ancient, rusted minerals with a laser, which discharged uranium, a common radioactive element in Earth’s crust. Crucially, uranium naturally decays at a constant rate, providing a dating technique and a good idea of when something formed.

Orangish Tava sandstone exposed atop the Rocky Mountains.
Credit: Christine Siddoway / CU Boulder

The dark reddish-brown bands are the layers of Tava sandstone researchers say were crushed under heavy glaciers during Snowball Earth.
Credit: Liam Courtney-Davies / CU Boulder

The result? The uranium dating lines up with the period of Snowball Earth, hundreds of millions of years ago.
This is a compelling find, suggesting great glaciers compressed a once tropical Colorado. But this is just one surveyed area. More surveys are needed to truly grasp the extent of this vast ice cover on Earth. “We want to get the word out so that others try and find these features and help us build a more complete picture of Snowball Earth,” Courtney-Davies said.Eventually, the extreme ice age ended, perhaps stoked by a massive asteroid strike that blew a plethora of heat trapping gasses into the atmosphere, melting the ice and forcing weighty glaciers to retreat. Earth’s crust continues to reveal our planet’s wild ride over billions of years — a ride that continues today on Earth’s ever-moving surface.

Scientists find evidence that entirety of Earth was once covered in ice

Even the balmy tropics may have once been crushed by colossal masses of ice. A severe ice age dominated Earth, some 720 to 635 million years ago, well before dinosaurs stalked the land. But it’s uncertain if the entire world froze over during the glaciations of this long-lived, extreme episode, dubbed “Snowball Earth.” Now, new evidence from Colorado, an area that once was located in the tropics, suggests mighty glaciers sprawled over even Earth’s warmest regions.”This study presents the first physical evidence that Snowball Earth reached the heart of continents at the equator,” Liam Courtney-Davies, a geologist at CU Boulder who led the new research, said in a statement. The research was recently published in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, a leading science journal.
SEE ALSO:

The first images of Earth are chilling

A dramatic decrease in greenhouse gases that trap heat on the globe — notably carbon dioxide — may have triggered the slide into a frozen orb. Previous research has suggested that even though Earth’s average temperature dropped well below freezing, some of the ocean surface and land resisted turning to or getting blanketed in thick, hard ice.But evidence in the lofty Colorado mountains points to heavy ice in the tropics.

Mashable Light Speed

Want more out-of-this world tech, space and science stories?
Sign up for Mashable’s weekly Light Speed newsletter.

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The telltale rocks are called Tava sandstone, which are exposed in the Rocky Mountains. As you might have guessed, sandstone started out as sand on the surface, but is compacted together by different activities, such as grains in rivers becoming buried by layers and layers of silt. In this case, the researchers say the Tava sandstone resembles the type of features found underneath ice sheets, like those in present-day Antarctica.To see if heavy glaciers may have compacted this once-tropical sandstone (shown below), the researchers dated the mineral veins that crossed through the sandstone. They shot these ancient, rusted minerals with a laser, which discharged uranium, a common radioactive element in Earth’s crust. Crucially, uranium naturally decays at a constant rate, providing a dating technique and a good idea of when something formed.

Orangish Tava sandstone exposed atop the Rocky Mountains.
Credit: Christine Siddoway / CU Boulder

The dark reddish-brown bands are the layers of Tava sandstone researchers say were crushed under heavy glaciers during Snowball Earth.
Credit: Liam Courtney-Davies / CU Boulder

The result? The uranium dating lines up with the period of Snowball Earth, hundreds of millions of years ago.
This is a compelling find, suggesting great glaciers compressed a once tropical Colorado. But this is just one surveyed area. More surveys are needed to truly grasp the extent of this vast ice cover on Earth. “We want to get the word out so that others try and find these features and help us build a more complete picture of Snowball Earth,” Courtney-Davies said.Eventually, the extreme ice age ended, perhaps stoked by a massive asteroid strike that blew a plethora of heat trapping gasses into the atmosphere, melting the ice and forcing weighty glaciers to retreat. Earth’s crust continues to reveal our planet’s wild ride over billions of years — a ride that continues today on Earth’s ever-moving surface.

HarperCollins is asking authors to sell their books to the A.I. woodchipper

In one of those developments that feels a bit like what we get instead of actual good things happening in the world of the modern internet, it sounds like the situation surrounding artificial intelligence training is about to move from “A thing nobody likes is happening” to “A thing nobody likes is happening, and also some people are getting paid to say it’s okay.” This, per a recent social media post from author and Colbert writer Daniel Kibblesmith, who revealed that he was approached by publisher HarperCollins about including his kids book Santa’s Husband (illustrated by A.P. Quach) in a deal the publisher is making to provide portions of their library to “a large tech company” for the purposes of training an A.I. language learning model.
The post includes screenshots of communications between Kibblesmith and the agency that represented him on the book, which was passing on the publisher’s offer for the title (a well-reviewed and charming kids book that “tells the story of a Black Santa, his white husband, and their life in the North Pole”). Kibblesmith was apparently offered a non-negotiable $2,500 to allow his book to be bundled in with other works for training, covering a three-year period of use. The posted email, which invokes the specter that “these A.I. models may one day make us all obsolete,” also mentions that “several hundred authors” have already agreed to the deal, and emphasizes the stance that, hey, getting to paid to have your work fed into an A.I. woodchipper is better than having it stolen for that same purpose.

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Kibblesmith did not agree, including in his post a screenshot of his rejection of the deal, which he called “Abominable.” In a statement to The A.V. Club, Kibblesmith wrote that, “It seems like they think they’re cooked, and they’re chasing short money while they can. I disagree. The fear of robots replacing authors is a false binary. I see it as the beginning of two diverging markets, readers who want to connect with other humans across time and space, or readers who are satisfied with a customized on-demand content pellet fed to them by the big computer so they never have to be challenged again.”
HarperCollins has not responded to requests for comment.

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Coralie Fargeat pulls The Substance from film festival over “highly misogynistic” comments

Citing a “highly misogynistic” essay that exemplifies the “behaviors” her film is designed to condemn, director Coralie Fargeat has pulled her horror satire The Substance from Poland’s Camerimage Film Festival. Fargeat, who also mentioned that the film’s director of photography, Benjamin Kračun, would similarly be ditching the cinematography-focused fest, is just the latest creator to back away from the event after its founder, Marek Żydowicz, published an essay last week titled “Time For Solidarity” in Cinematography World.
Per THR, Żydowicz’s piece was responding to a recent petition from organization Women In Cinematography, which was calling on Camerimage to do more to support the work of women cinematographers. The festival founder seemed to balk at the suggestion, writing in response that such calls to focus on women in cinematography “Raises a question: Can the pursuit of change exclude what is good? Can we sacrifice works and artists with outstanding artistic achievements solely to make room for mediocre film production?”

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The implicit assumption there—that a shifting of focus to include more work from women in the field would lead to “mediocre” films being elevated over “outstanding” ones—provoked a pretty immediate outcry, leading organizations like The British Society of Cinematographers to issue letters calling Żydowicz’s comments “profoundly misogynistic.” Żydowicz, for his part, says he’s been misinterpreted, and that he’s working with Women In Cinematography to craft new Diversity and Inclusion policy for the festival, which he later posted online—although WIC, in turn, says it wrote the policy, and Żydowicz only responded to it after everybody started yelling at him. In any case, the damage has been done: Steve McQueen announced this week that he wouldn’t be attending the fest’s screening of his new movie Blitz, which is set to kick off the festival, and now Fargeat has pulled her buzzy Substance from being shown entirely. (Talk about not respecting the balance.)

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Disney replaces Christmas 2026 Star Wars movie with… Ice Age 6

Disney’s nigh-total inability to get a Star Wars movie off the ground over the past five years has followed a pretty predictable expression of the old “rake gag” bell curve: At first, it was surprising, and then it was hilarious, and now, it’s just getting kind of sad. To wit: The company announced today that its plans to get a new Star Wars film in theaters for Christmas 2026 have now been blown up with a big ol’ space laser, with the slot now being filled by the recently announced Ice Age 6, a substitution we are sure will make someone, somewhere happy, although we personally don’t know who.
That leaves just two Star Wars films still standing on the company’s schedule: A very far-off and untitled movie currently aimed at December 17, 2027, as well as the only one of these movies we expect might actually have a chance in hell of coming out: Jon Favreau’s The Mandalorian And Grogu, which is currently in post-production, and which is scheduled for May 22, 2026. That one, obviously, has the backing of Disney’s Star Wars TV efforts over the last few years, which have run rings around the film side of the franchise ever since Rise Of Skywalker came out in 2019, made a pretty hefty chunk of money, and then apparently sucked all remaining interest in these movies into a black hole faster than you can ask “They fly now?!”

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None of which has stopped Disney from announcing new Star Wars movies, of course: Over the past five years, the company has floated potential films from Dave Filoni, Sharmeen Obaid-Chinoy, James Mangold, Patty Jenkins, Taika Waititi, Donald Glover, Shawn Levy, and, of course, Rian Johnson, any one of which we’re sure will be racing into production any minute now. Indeed, Disney has become one of the world’s premiere studios when it comes to saying it’s going to make a Star Wars movie; it’ll be fun to see if they actually end up filming one any time soon.
[via Variety]

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