Anonymous ID: c4ad7e Dec. 1, 2020, 9:11 p.m. No.11867005   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>7011 >>7036 >>7063 >>7236 >>7260 >>7359 >>7467 >>7584 >>7687

https://twitter.com/Cernovich/status/1333995948842749952

 

Cerno

@Cernovich

 

Child slavery is defended in court by a high level Democrat.

Kevin Daley - DECEMBER 1, 2020 5:15 PM

 

Neal Katyal, the progressive lawyer who led the legal fight against the president's travel ban and urged the public to take an unforgiving stance toward those involved with child separation at the U.S. border, appeared in the Supreme Court on Tuesday to defend two corporations accused of abetting child slavery.

 

In legal papers filed to the Supreme Court, the plaintiffs say Nestlé USA and Cargill knew their West African suppliers used child slaves but bought cocoa from them anyway. Katyal, arguing on behalf of the food giants, said the case should be tossed because U.S. courts have no authority to hear the dispute.

 

The six unnamed plaintiffs were once child slaves on cocoa plantations in Ivory Coast, having been kidnapped and trafficked from Mali. The plaintiffs say they were held under armed guard in deplorable conditions, beaten, and tortured if they tried to escape.

 

"From the United States, [Nestlé] had complete control over the farms' labor practices, knew that the farmers they were assisting were using and continued to use forced child labor, and purposefully relied on the enslavement of children to increase profits by ensuring the flow of cheap cocoa," the plaintiffs' filings read.

 

They also claim that Nestlé cultivated close ties with plantation owners to maintain influence in the region. To do so, they allegedly financed the purchase of farming supplies, made advance payments, and provided plantation owners with personal spending money to secure their loyalty as exclusive suppliers.

 

The case asks whether the plaintiffs can sue Nestlé and Cargill in an American court under an obscure federal law from 1789 called the Alien Tort Statute. Katyal said U.S. corporations can't be sued under that law. Many on the Court wondered if that went too far.

 

"Many of your arguments lead to results that are pretty hard to take," Justice Samuel Alito told Katyal. "Suppose a U.S. corporation makes a big show of supporting every cause de jure but then surreptitiously hires agents in Africa to kidnap children and keep them in bondage on a plantation…. You would say that the victims … should be thrown out of court in the United States, where this corporation is headquartered and does business?"

 

A second issue is whether the child slavery allegations have a strong enough connection to the United States to move forward in court. Again, Katyal argued no.

 

"The claim plaintiffs bring alleges something horrific, that locators in Mali sold them as children to an Ivorian farm where overseers forced them to work," Katyal told the justices. "[But] the defendants are not the locators, not the overseers, and not the farm."

 

The Alien Tort Statute mostly sat dormant until the 1980s, when it became a vehicle for getting human-rights cases into American courts from across the globe. The Supreme Court has gradually closed the door on those cases. In 2013 the Court said the law usually doesn't cover wrongdoing outside the United States, and in 2018 it said the Alien Tort Statute doesn't cover foreign companies.

 

Among other high-profile impact cases, Katyal led challenges to the Bush administration's military tribunals for Guantanamo Bay detainees and obtained an appointment to the prosecution team in the George Floyd case. Beyond the staid world of appellate advocacy, he contributes regularly to MSNBC, appeared on stage at a Vanity Fair summit with John Legend, and played himself on House of Cards.

 

https://twitter.com/Lin_Manuel/status/989215542216200192

 

Lin-Manuel Miranda

@Lin_Manuel

·

Apr 25, 2018

I was

@VAMNit

’s +1. Honored to be in the room where it happened today.

Proud of our friend

@neal_katyal

.

Quote Tweet

Lydia Wheeler

@WheelerLydia

· Apr 25, 2018

Spotted at #SCOTUS this morning for arguments in the case against President Trump's travel ban: @Lin_Manuel, @senorrinhatch, @maziehirono and the late Justice Thurgood Marshall's widow Cecilia, who happened to be sitting next to WH Counsel Don McGahn.

 

thread: https://twitter.com/WheelerLydia/status/989214587131228161

https://twitter.com/Lin_Manuel/status/989215542216200192

 

In Tuesday's brief, Katyal claimed his clients deplore child labor.

 

"Nestlé USA has tremendous sympathy for plaintiffs' suffering and unequivocally condemns child slavery. In all its forms. Everywhere," the filing reads.

 

Katyal did not reply to a request for comment.

 

The case is No. 19-416 Nestlé USA v. John Doe.

 

This entry was posted in The Courts and tagged Feature, Guantanamo, Neal Katyal, Slavery, Supreme Court, Travel Ban. Bookmark the permalink.

 

 

https://freebeacon.com/courts/resistance-hero-neal-katyal-reps-corporation-accused-of-child-slavery-in-supreme-court/

Anonymous ID: c4ad7e Dec. 1, 2020, 9:12 p.m. No.11867011   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>7036 >>7063 >>7110 >>7129 >>7247 >>7260 >>7359 >>7467 >>7584 >>7687

>>11867005

 

Child slavery is defended in court by a high level Democrat.

 

Kevin Daley - DECEMBER 1, 2020 5:15 PM

https://freebeacon.com/courts/resistance-hero-neal-katyal-reps-corporation-accused-of-child-slavery-in-supreme-court/

 

Neal Katyal, the progressive lawyer who led the legal fight against the president's travel ban and urged the public to take an unforgiving stance toward those involved with child separation at the U.S. border, appeared in the Supreme Court on Tuesday to defend two corporations accused of abetting child slavery.

Anonymous ID: c4ad7e Dec. 1, 2020, 9:14 p.m. No.11867036   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>7057 >>7063 >>7260 >>7359 >>7467 >>7584 >>7687

>>11867005

>>11867011

 

CARGILL you say

 

https://twitter.com/lhfang/status/1333826418640183297

Cerno Retweeted

Lee Fang

@lhfang

 

Former Obama admin lawyer Neal Katyal in the Supreme Court today arguing corporations like Nestle and Cargill can’t be sued for allegedly using child slave labor

 

https://twitter.com/orennimni/status/1333793386482962435

Quote Tweet

Oren Nimni

@orennimni

· 13h

 

Kagan is a very good questioner.

Asks Katyal:

Q: Could you sue a slave holder under ATS?

A: yes

Q: Could you sue 10 slave holders?

A: Yes

Q: So why does it matter if those ten form a corp.

A: Umm… norms don't allow corporate liability…

Q: What sense does that make?

Show this thread

 

Oren Nimni

@orennimni

·

13h

Replying to

@orennimni

Even Barrett asks

Q: So could you sue on torture?

A: Yes

Q: But not if it was a corporation?

A: Yes

Anonymous ID: c4ad7e Dec. 1, 2020, 9:18 p.m. No.11867063   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>7080

>>11867036

>>11867005

>>11867011

https://twitter.com/orennimni/status/1333793386482962435

 

Sewage Socialist ToiletRose

@eattharich

·

13h

Replying to

@orennimni

I'm now hiring for Murder Corp LLC if anyone is interested.

Steve but decorated Rainbow flagFlag of United States

@stockhauptmann

·

13h

Where does this leave Suicide Squad?

Show replies

Citizen Chug

@CitizenChug

·

13h

Replying to

@orennimni

and

@brianefallon

Murder, Inc.

Nene Hilarious

@NeneHilarious

·

12h

Man, I wish I was a corporation Pensive face

Show replies

Bleu Skye

@jokowazy

·

13h

Replying to

@orennimni

Is this Neal Katyal?

Oren Nimni

@orennimni

·

12h

yep

Show replies

Hola, amigx

@alt_dont

·

12h

Replying to

@orennimni

and

@ByYourLogic

This is why corporations are not people: can't throw the "corporate person" and their co-conspirators in jail

 

Make it so if a corporation commits a crime then all the execs get RICO charges, then maybe we can talk about corporate money being free speech.

Darl Bundren

@ATrumpist

·

12h

Also, they aren't people.

Show replies

 

 

Dollie Paul

@PaulDollieT

·

11h

Replying to

@orennimni

Coming from a layperson didn't the Supreme Court say corporations are "people" in citizens united?

Warren Blyth

@warrenblyth

·

11h

I think it goes way further back. 13th amendment was meant to declare slaves were people, over 100 years ago, but the main result was this new idea that corporations were “virtual persons” and had rights. (Classic american evil!)

DougDet

@DougDet

·

10h

If corporations and other business entities weren't afforded rights, the government could shut down the New York Times Company or Bloomberg Media Group.

David Wright

@iminhobengoshi

·

10h

You think that's the only reason our free enterprise system exists? That's an Ayn-Randian fantasy.

DougDet

@DougDet

·

9h

No, I am saying it is reasonable to give corporations constitutional rights, otherwise they would be subject to the whims of scumbag politicians. R's could ban corps from performing abortions, D's could ban them from making guns.

Anonymous ID: c4ad7e Dec. 1, 2020, 9:22 p.m. No.11867110   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>7129 >>7260 >>7300 >>7359 >>7467 >>7584 >>7687

>>11867011

https://twitter.com/matthewstoller/status/1333847732893732864

 

Matt Stoller

@matthewstoller

·

10h

 

First pro-slavery case argued by a person of color. Historic!

 

Quote Tweet

Mark Joseph Stern

@mjs_DC

· 13h

 

This morning at the Supreme Court, @neal_katyal defended two U.S. corporations accused of aiding and abetting child slavery overseas. The question is whether alleged victims can sue these corporations for overseas crimes in U.S. courts. I’ll post a few notable exchanges.

 

Show this thread

Cerno Retweeted

Matt Stoller

@matthewstoller

Replying to

@matthewstoller

 

Here's something from the

@neal_katyal

brief. Jaw dropping. I mean, this was the Solicitor General under Obama.

 

 

Matt Stoller

@matthewstoller

·

10h

Replying to

@matthewstoller

 

Of course Katyal's history is utterly wrong. Here's a group of Nuremberg scholars pointing out that corporations were very much held liable, dissolved, and/or broken up after WWII under international law.

 

https://supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-416/158418/20201021154022816_40250%20pdf%20Green.pdf

 

https://twitter.com/matthewstoller/status/1333847732893732864

Anonymous ID: c4ad7e Dec. 1, 2020, 9:23 p.m. No.11867129   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>7260 >>7359 >>7467 >>7584 >>7687

>>11867110

>>11867011

 

>https://supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-416/158418/20201021154022816_40250%20pdf%20Green.pdf

 

Of course Katyal's history is utterly wrong. Here's a group of Nuremberg scholars pointing out that corporations were very much held liable, dissolved, and/or broken up after WWII under international law.

 

https://supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-416/158418/20201021154022816_40250%20pdf%20Green.pdf

 

https://twitter.com/matthewstoller/status/1333847732893732864

Anonymous ID: c4ad7e Dec. 1, 2020, 9:54 p.m. No.11867448   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>7551 >>7612 >>7662 >>7702

>>11866953

>>11867326

>>11867067

 

someone runs his twitter acount

 

but the latest tweet does include a 17

 

https://twitter.com/johnpodesta

 

https://twitter.com/johnpodesta/status/1333548478711132167

 

John Podesta

@johnpodesta

 

The #SDGs are a north star to guide global action.

The #17Rooms report outlines four critical transitions—

justice, the environment, technology, & the next generation—

that are needed for Covid-19 recovery

 

https://www.rockefellerfoundation.org/report/great-transitions-doubling-down-on-the-sustainable-development-goals/?utm_source=Twitter&utm_medium=organic_social&utm_campaign=Innovation&utm_content=17RoomsReport

 

Read more from

@RockefellerFdn

&

@BrookingsGlobal

4:08 PM · Nov 30, 2020·Twitter Web App

6

Retweets

12

Quote Tweets

21

Likes

:

Anonymous ID: c4ad7e Dec. 1, 2020, 10:01 p.m. No.11867528   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>7551 >>7565 >>7612 >>7662 >>7702

REPORT

 

 

notice the 17

 

https://www.rockefellerfoundation.org/report/great-transitions-doubling-down-on-the-sustainable-development-goals/?utm_source=Twitter&utm_medium=organic_social&utm_campaign=Innovation&utm_content=17RoomsReport

 

Great Transitions: Doubling Down on the Sustainable Development Goals

The Covid-19 pandemic has exposed the world’s extraordinary fragility and highlighted trenchant societal inequalities. Managing the pandemic has been hard enough and doing so while addressing other urgent stresses – like climate change, discrimination and violence – has added to the difficulty. The challenge is further heightened in the face of what may soon become recurrent interlocking patterns of environmental, economic, and social disruption.

 

What should be done to move forward? How can the world find a way out of this difficult situation?

 

These were the questions tackled by participants in 17 Rooms 2020, a yearly convening of leading experts and practitioners brought together by the Brookings Institution and The Rockefeller Foundation to channel ideas and energy into actions for the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). A clear consensus from this year’s convening was that the SDGs are more relevant than ever, and should be used as a “North Star” to guide action out of the Covid-19 crisis.

 

The 17 Rooms Report sets out four Great Transitions: for justice, for the environment, for technology, and for the next generation. These transitions take us from today’s place of fragility and inequity to one of resilience and equal opportunity. The four transitions offer a fresh take on the SDGs as a guiding reference point out of the crisis, drawing from the insights of the 17 different working groups that came together in this year’s 17 Rooms process.

 

The transitions are inspired by, and anchored in, actionable ideas emerging from across the 17 Rooms community. They aim to serve as organizing concepts that can help channel widespread societal energies looking to answer questions about “What should we do next?”

 

The four transitions are:

 

Towards integrated justice for all → From tackling economic and social inequalities independently to recoupling economic and social progress for everyone

Towards blue-green replenishment → From valuing natural capital at the margin to actively stewarding nature at scale

Towards equitable technology infrastructure → From celebrating novel applications to building inclusive systems for innovation

Towards generational transition → From preparing young people for the future to partnering with next generation leadership today

In addition to the main report, each of the SDG-focused “Rooms” moderators and participants prepared short reports summarizing insights and actions that emerged from discussions on each SDG.

 

each image:

Click to download each Room’s Report

https://www.rockefellerfoundation.org/report/great-transitions-doubling-down-on-the-sustainable-development-goals/?utm_source=Twitter&utm_medium=organic_social&utm_campaign=Innovation&utm_content=17RoomsReport

 

 

https://www.rockefellerfoundation.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/11/Participant-List-11.30.pdf

List of Participants

17 Rooms – 2020 Annual Flagship

Co-chairs

• Zia Khan, Senior Vice President, Innovation, The Rockefeller Foundation

• John McArthur, Director, Center for Sustainable Development, Brookings Institution

 

Room 17 – Partnerships/universities

Moderators:

• Angel Cabrera, President, Georgia Institute of Technology & Chair, University Global Coalition

Anonymous ID: c4ad7e Dec. 1, 2020, 10:03 p.m. No.11867551   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>7612 >>7662 >>7702

>>11867528 lotso 17 tossed around here

>>11866953

>>11867448

 

https://www.rockefellerfoundation.org/report/great-transitions-doubling-down-on-the-sustainable-development-goals/?utm_source=Twitter&utm_medium=organic_social&utm_campaign=Innovation&utm_content=17RoomsReport

 

https://www.rockefellerfoundation.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/11/Participant-List-11.30.pdf

Anonymous ID: c4ad7e Dec. 1, 2020, 10:13 p.m. No.11867612   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>7642 >>7662

>>11867551

>>11867528 lotso 17 tossed around here John Podesta tweet link 4:08 PM · Nov 30, 2020

>>11866953

>>11867448

 

 

What should be done to move forward? How can the world find a way out of this difficult situation

 

These were the questions tackled by participants in 17 Rooms 2020

 

HMMMM???

 

The 17 Rooms Report sets out four Great Transitions: for justice, for the environment, for technology, and for the next generation. These transitions take us from today’s place of fragility and inequity to one of resilience and equal opportunity. The four transitions offer a fresh take on the SDGs as a guiding reference point out of the crisis, drawing from the insights of the 17 different working groups that came together in this year’s 17 Rooms process.

 

The transitions are inspired by, and anchored in, actionable ideas emerging from across the 17 Rooms community. They aim to serve as organizing concepts that can help channel widespread societal energies looking to answer questions about “What should we do next?”

 

17 Rooms

The 17 Rooms initiative was first launched by The Brookings Institution and The Rockefeller Foundation in September 2018, as an experiment in stimulating new forms of collective action for the 17 Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). Gathering on the eve of the UN General Assembly in New York City, the aim was to provide a fun […]

 

Catalyzing an Equitable Recovery at Virtual 17 Rooms | #UNGAxRF

 

Just as the impact of Covid-19 is unequal, the recovery from it threatens to be as well. The privileged will recover faster, while marginalized groups could feel the effects for generations. During 17 Rooms, a #UNGAxRF event, experts on SDG #3 for Good Health & Well-Being discussed a framework for an equitable recovery from Covid-19.

 

Dr. Jono Quick, Managing Director of Pandemic Response, Preparedness, and Prevention for The Rockefeller Foundation offers further insight on what we need to do to achieve this goal by its 2030 deadline.

Just as the impact of Covid-19 is unequal, the recovery from it threatens to be as well. The privileged will recover faster, while marginalized groups could feel the effects for generations. During 17 Rooms, a #UNGAxRF event, experts on SDG #3 for Good Health & Well-Being discussed a framework for an equitable recovery from Covid-19.

 

Dr. Jono Quick, Managing Director of Pandemic Response, Preparedness, and Prevention for The Rockefeller Foundation offers further insight on what we need to do to achieve this goal by its 2030 deadline.

 

 

https://www.rockefellerfoundation.org/search/?search=true&keyword=17%20Rooms

 

OCT

05

20200.55

#UNGAXRF

Catalyzing an Equitable Recovery at Virtual 17 Rooms | #UNGAxRF

 

SEP

25

2020

BLOG POST

Catalyzing a Just Recovery at Virtual 17 Rooms

 

SEP

18

2020

17 Rooms

The 17 Rooms initiative was first launched by The Brookings Institution and The Rockefeller Foundation …

 

DEC

10

2019

REPORT

17 Rooms Global Flagship Meeting Summary Report

Time is running fast for the bold set of 17 Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) that …

 

SEP

28

20180:52

CONVENINGS & PARTNERSHIPS

Achieving #SDG17 by promoting sincerity & humane values

Daniella Ballou-Aares from Dalberg was one of the moderators for our 17 Rooms convening on #SDG17 – Partnerships for …

Anonymous ID: c4ad7e Dec. 1, 2020, 10:19 p.m. No.11867662   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>7702

>>11867612

 

Podesto tweet link:

 

I do not think this is really about Covid, METHINKS it is PANIC meeting COMMS re: 17:

 

>17 Rooms community.

>17 Rooms process.

>help channel widespread societal energies

>answer questions about “What should we do next?”

> first launched by The Brookings Institution and The Rockefeller Foundation in September 2018

>an experiment in stimulating new forms of collective action for the 17 Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). Gathering on the eve of the UN General Assembly in New York City,

>Catalyzing an Equitable Recovery at Virtual 17 Rooms | #UNGAxRF

>During 17 Rooms, a #UNGAxRF event, experts on SDG #3 for Good Health & Well-Being discussed a framework for an equitable recovery

> Preparedness, and Prevention for The Rockefeller Foundation offers further insight on what we need to do to achieve this

>Just as the impact of Covid-19 is unequal, the recovery from it threatens to be as well. The privileged will recover faster, while marginalized groups could feel the effects for generations

>he Rockefeller Foundation offers further insight on what we need to do to achieve this goal

 

>>11867551

>>11867528

>>11866953

>>11867448

Anonymous ID: c4ad7e Dec. 1, 2020, 10:25 p.m. No.11867702   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>11867662

>>11867551

>>11867528

>>11866953

>>11867448

 

They practice magic and spells

 

The Sick People communication in virtual 17 Rooms Community in a 17 Rooms process:

 

channel widespread societal energies

 

What should we do next?

 

What should we do next?”

 

for Good Health & Well-Being discussed a framework for an equitable recovery

 

what we need to do to achieve this

 

impact of Covid-19 is unequal, the recovery from it threatens to be as well

 

privileged will recover faster, while marginalized groups could feel the effects for generations

 

Rockefeller Foundation offers further insight on what we need to do to achieve this goal