'This ends today': Retired US lawyer stuck behind environmentalist blockade guns down two Panamanian protesters
Western environmentalists and climate alarmists have gone to great lengths to protest job-creating mineral extraction and the use of affordable energy in recent years, gluing themselves to airport runways, vandalizing priceless works of art, and ruining their own celebrations. One of their go-to tactics has been illegal road blockades.
Blockaders usually face little consequence for holding up traffic, even when emergency vehicles need to get by. On occasion, they have been met with criticism, buckets of water, and fisticuffs. On Tuesday, a pair of Panamanian eco-alarmists were met with bullets.
A 77-year-old Panamanian-born U.S. citizen got stuck behind a blockade roughly 55 miles west of Panama City. After a failed attempt to clear the barricade, he gunned down a pair of ostensibly unarmed protesters. As a TV news crew was just a stone's throw away, the whole incident was caught on tape.
Minera Panamá S.A., a subsidiary of Canadian mining company First Quantum Minerals, recently secured a contract from the Panamanian government to operate a copper mine in a jungle west of Panama City at a time when copper, needed for the manufacture of electric vehicles, is in high demand, reported the Times.
A powerful construction union and various teachers' unions have worked in recent weeks to paralyze the country with roadblocks in hopes of pressuring the government into reversing Law 406 and breaking the contract, even though the mining company is poised to create thousands of jobs and inject $375 million annually into the local economy. Their illegal roadblocks have reportedly caused more than $80 million in daily losses to local businesses; prevented farmers from bringing food to market; shut down schools nationwide; and all but locked down the country.
A group of educators shut down a stretch of the Pan-American Highway in the Chame district on Tuesday as part of the third week of the pressure campaign. Kenneth Darlington, a retired lawyer and university professor, was among those who got stuck behind the blockade.
According to prosecutors, Darlington told his passengers, "This ends today," before getting out of his car and ambling toward the protesters, reported TVN Noticias.
Darlington allegedly asked the teacher-protesters who was in charge and was told there were no leaders.
"I don't want to talk to women," Darlington is alleged to have said. "I want to talk to men."
Three men eventually confronted Darlington, but it appears he was running short on things to say.
— (@)
Darlington can be seen in footage of the incident drawing a handgun, waving it around, and ordering the blockaders to clear out. He then begins pulling tires and other elements of the makeshift barricade off the road.
One demonstrator can be heard in footage of the incident saying, "Why don't you shoot?" reported the Daily Mail.
Another protester yelled, "Are you going to kill someone?" to which Darlington reportedly replied, "Do you want to be the first?"
After some more fruitless arguing, Darlington can be seen opening fire. His first victim crumpled to the ground immediately. The second victim, hit in the upper chest, staggered off to the side of the road.
Abdiel Díaz Chavez died at the scene. The second victim, identified as 62-year-old Iván Rodríguez Mendoza, was taken to a nearby clinic, where he later died.
TVN Noticias reported that witnesses heard Darlington say, "This is the end of the problem," after the shootings.
Undeterred by the anguished cries and bloodshed, Darlington continued clearing the road until police arrested him without incident.
The Panamanian Attorney General's Office indicated that the retired lawyer has been charged with aggravated homicide and illicit possession of a firearm. In a statement Wednesday, the AGO stressed the importance of respect and tolerance when it comes to encounters with those exercising their right to protest.
Panama President Laurentino Cortizo wrote on X, "I express my condolences to the families of the two citizens who lost their lives in an incident that occurred this Tuesday in a sector of Panama Oeste. This is a fact that has no place in a society called to be supportive like ours."
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CNN contributor blasts teachers' union boss Randi Weingarten over COVID school closures: 'I hear no remorse'
CNN has long been a refuge for Democrats and their allies; however, this week, it afforded no shelter to the president of the American Federation of Teachers.
AFT president Randi Weingarten, deemed the "most dangerous person in the world" by former Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, appeared on a "CNN Tonight" panel discussion Thursday evening after testifying the previous day before House Select Subcommittee on the Coronavirus Pandemic.
While Weingarten has previously made headlines for opposing parental rights, spreading falsehoods about Republicans, and flouting the same rules she expected others to follow, the union boss is presently battling accusations that she colluded with the Biden administration to shutter schools, thereby adversely impacting children nationwide.
CNN political commentator Scott Jennings, who previously worked in the Bush administration, was also on the panel and seized upon the opportunity to unload on Weingarten.
"Speaking on behalf of millions of American parents — I have four at home, I had to teach them at home, my wife had to teach them at home — I am stunned at what you have said this week about your claiming to have wanted to reopen schools," said Jennings.
"I think you’ll find that most parents believe you were the tip of the spear of school closures," continued the CNN commentator. "There are numerous statements you made over the summer of ’20 scaring people to death about the possibility of opening schools."
The New York Times reported that Weingarten exploited the pandemic to "push for broader policy changes that [the AFT] had long favored."
For instance, the AFT held schools for ransom lest they receive "personal protective equipment, new cleaning and sanitization regimens in school buildings, a temporary suspension of formal teacher performance evaluations, a limit on student testing, a cancellation of student-loan debt and a $750 billion federal aid package to help schools prepare to reopen safely and facilitate 'a real recovery for all our communities.'"
Jennings added, "And I hear no remorse whatsoever about the generational damage that’s been done to these ki — I have two kids with learning differences. Do you know how hard it is for them to learn at home, and not in a classroom that was designed for them? And for you to sit in front of Congress and the American people and say, 'What? I wanted to open them the whole time.' I am shocked, I am stunned. I am stunned. And there are millions of parents who feel the exact same way."
Weingarten responded, "I knew and understood the importance of reopening the schools and the importance of making sure that people were safe. And poll after poll that we did of parents, and I spent a lot of time with parents, said that they basically understood and supported that we needed to do both."
When the union boss invoked Jennings' kids, he immediately cut her off.
"You think parents wanted to keep the kids? You think parents supported you in keeping kids? Why did we fail? How did Europe and the rest of the civilized world get this right and we failed?" Jennings asked.
\u201cWatch Scott Jennings calling Randi Weingarten on her lies.\u201d— I Meme Therefore I Am \ud83c\uddfa\ud83c\uddf8 (@I Meme Therefore I Am \ud83c\uddfa\ud83c\uddf8) 1682690890
Republicans on the Select Subcommittee on the Coronavirus Pandemic similarly shredded Weingarten over her culpability in possibly stunting a generation of American kids, reported National Review.
"The effect on children has been vast and to have no remorse on closing schools and keeping them closed for the length of time is unconscionable," said Rep. Mariannette Miller-Meeks (R-Iowa), herself a medical doctor and former director of the Iowa Department of Public Health.
Miller-Meeks grilled Weingarten over the scientific data, underscoring how at the time decisions were being made about whether to keep schools open or close them, zero children in the relevant age groups at died from COVID.
"The fact is schools were relatively safe places for both students and educators. These are scientific questions that a scientific organization should be able to study and answer. The AFT is not a scientific organization," said Miller-Meeks. "The AFT was out of its league in this regard."
TheBlaze previously reported that the AFT leaned on the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention to get its way in terms of parameterizing the national school reopening scheme and dictated select language in the reopening guidance.
During the pandemic, the AFT and other teachers' unions exerted their influence to shut down schools. The primary reason cited for this unprecedented move was the need to protect teachers' and students' health — to stop the spread of the virus.
These shutdowns have been reported to have led to significant spikes in mental illness, suicide, and obesity and the diminution of students' immune systems.
In addition to psychological and physiological impacts, school closures have also been linked to a drastic drop in academic ability of American children nationwide.
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Report: Teachers' union under Randi Weingarten 'colluded' with Biden administration to keep schools shuttered and on CDC messaging
Newly revealed emails detailed by the New York Post highlight how the American Federation of Teachers and its boss Randi Weingarten exerted significant influence over the Biden administration and shaped the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's school reopening guidance, which halted the full reopening of in-person classes.
The damning revelations come just ahead of Weingarten's Wednesday testimony before the Congressional Select Subcommittee on the Coronavirus Pandemic.
The CDC has characterized the apparent collusion between the teachers' union and the Biden administration as a matter of the latter merely seeking input from the former, but critics suggest the the records obtained by the conservative watchdog Americans for Public Trust expose something insidious about the influence dark money can buy and the ostensible willingness of the CDC to conform scientific guidance to political pressure.
Prioritizing Democratic allies over science
Americans for Public Trust obtained additional records concerning the communications between Weingarten and CDC Director Rochelle Walensky in the week leading up to the Feb. 12, 2021, announcement of its "Operational Strategy for K-12 Schools Through Phased Mitigation" guidance, which dashed any hopes that American children might return to in-person classes en masse, reported the New York Post.
Walensky, deemed the "most dangerous person in the world" by former Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, took two calls from Weingarten ahead of the announcement: once on Feb. 7, 2021, and again one day before the guidance was issued.
The CDC, the Biden White House, and the AFT — which, under Weingarten, donated over $2.3 million to Democratic candidates during the 2022 election cycle — coordinated not only on the language of the guidance, but also on how it would be presented to the press.
According to the Post, on the day of the Feb. 7 call, then-White House associate director of public engagement William McIntee got in touch with CDC chief of staff Sherri Berger, informing her that the teachers' union had "a few comms-related questions" pertaining to a meeting between union pontiffs and Walensky the following day.
McIntee wrote in the email to Berger, "They’d like to tweet ahead of the meeting to say something to the gist of 'The CDC has invited a group of AFT/NEA teachers to meet with the Director on safe school reopening this Monday. What information would you like our members to relay to the CDC Director in the meeting?'"
McIntee also indicated that the AFT and its fellow union, the National Education Association, wanted to coordinate with the CDC on a readout press release following the meeting.
"They are battling stories being written that unions and the Administration are locking heads over the safe school reopening plan, so they think it would be helpful for there to be a positive readout of the meeting from both sides afterwards," wrote McIntee.
A Feb. 11 email revealed that the CDC had followed up with Weingarten and NEA President Becky Pringle after both had spoken to Walensky in advance of the guidance's release.
Christopher Jones, an official with the CDC, wrote, "As she [Walensky] indicated, we would like to schedule time tomorrow late morning for a follow up discussion with CDC’s technical experts on our forthcoming [guidance]."
Americans for Public Trust previously released emails received from a Freedom of Information Act request, which showcased successful efforts by the teachers' unions to shape the CDC's reopening guidance, reported The Hill.
One email from the AFT to the CDC read, "We are grateful for the agency’s effort to bring some measure of organization and framework to guidance. We are likewise grateful for the inclusion of some of the mitigation efforts we have been calling for since last year."
The letter continued, saying, "It is our hope that we can be engaged early in the process moving forward, as we believe our experiences on the ground can inform and enrich thinking around what is practicable and prudent in future guidance documents."
The Post noted that the AFT successfully recommended that the CDC employ specific language in its 2021 guidelines.
For instance, the AFT suggested that the CDC make mention of providing remote work opportunities to teachers claiming to suffer higher risks of infection or to live with a high-risk "household member," as well as to advise the shuttering of schools in areas with allegedly high COVID transmission levels.
While the CDC was originally prepared to permit in-school instruction regardless of transmission rates, it ultimately caved to the union.
Sure enough, the guidance said, "Students, teachers, and staff who are at high risk of severe illness or who live with people at high risk should be provided virtual options" and called for "virtual only instruction" for middle and high school students in "high transmission" communities.
The extent of the Biden administration's desire to bend to the will of the teachers' unions was further illuminated in a Feb. 1, 2021, email from AFT senior director for health issues Kelly Trautner to Walensky, which said, "We are immensely grateful for your genuine desire to earn our confidence and your commitment to partnership."
Collusion
Concerning the correspondence, Americans for Public Trust executive director Caitlin Sutherland told the Post, "Randi Weingarten colluded with the Biden administration to put politics over science, threatening the well-being of children."
TheBlaze previously reported that the closures sought by the teachers' unions — representing the longest interruptions in schooling since formal education became the norm — have been demonstrated to have driven a significant spike not just in academic ability of American children, but also spikes in mental illness, suicide, and obesity.
Sutherland further stressed that Weingarten's "multiple calls, emails, and non-scientific recommendations to CDC Director Rochelle Walensky and her team illustrate the level of dark money influence that was allowed to shape school reopening policies. ... While both Walensky and Weingarten have tried to mislead the public, their emails and phone logs tell the real story."
"Congress must stand up for the American people and get answers from Weingarten at this hearing to ensure she is finally held accountable," added Sutherland.
Weingarten rejected a request to appear at a congressional hearing in December after Republican Rep. Steve Scalise of Louisiana wrote to her, saying, "The catastrophic effects of prolonged school closures and abandoning America's children may be the ultimate lesson learned from the COVID-19 pandemic. ... We know that your union was granted 'uncommon' access to draft, edit, and review official government school re-opening guidance."
Weingarten, no longer able to avoid Congress, indicated in her prepared testimony that she will say, "Any claim that the contact the AFT had with the CDC was unusual or inappropriate, particularly in reviewing its February 2021 Operational Strategy, is simply wrong."
She will also say, "Help us help students recover from the effects of the pandemic — learning loss, trauma, and sadness. The unrelenting attacks on teachers over pandemic-era school closings must end as well."
Committee Chairman Brad Wenstrup (R-Ohio) indicated the hearing will "delve into the role Ms. Weingarten and the AFT played in editing the CDC's school reopening guidance and keeping schools closed longer than necessary," reported The Hill.
Wenstrup suggested that Weingarten "may have jeopardized the well-being of our nation's children during the COVID-19 pandemic. If so, she should be held accountable."
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Former Secretary of State Pompeo calls teachers' union head 'the most dangerous person in the world'
Former Secretary of State Mike Pompeo called American Federation of Teachers president Randi Weingarten the "most dangerous" individual on the planet, accusing teachers' unions of pushing "filth" on children.
"I tell the story often — I get asked 'Who's the most dangerous person in the world? Is it Chairman Kim, is it Xi Jinping?' The most dangerous person in the world is Randi Weingarten," Pompeo said, according to Semafor. "It's not a close call. If you ask, 'Who’s the most likely to take this republic down?' It would be the teacher’s unions, and the filth that they’re teaching our kids, and the fact that they don't know math and reading or writing."
"If our kids don't grow up understanding America is an exceptional nation, we're done. If they think it's an oppressor class and an oppressed class, if they think the 1619 Project, and we were founded on a racist idea — if those are the things people entered the seventh grade deeply embedded in their understanding of America, it's difficult to understand how Xi Jinping's claim that America is in decline won't prove true," Pompeo said, according to the outlet.
Weingarten has retweeted a post that claimed "it's crucial to teach queer history" amid "#LGBTQIA+ History Month, AND the rest of the year, too."
\u201c\ud83d\udc94 Let's honor #ClubQ victims in #ColoradoSprings teaching about why it's important we understand one another & why it's crucial to teach queer history during \ud83c\udf08 #LGBTQIA+ History Month, AND the rest of the year, too: https://t.co/ssDMU3hf4W\n\n#TransDayofRemembrance @AFTunion\u201d— ShareMyLesson (@ShareMyLesson) 1669046526
Weingarten noted that she was unsure whether to describe Pompeo's characterization of her "as ridiculous or dangerous."
"So Mike, let me make it easy for you. We fight for freedom, democracy, and an economy that works for all. We fight for what kids & communities need. Strong public schools that are safe and welcoming, where kids learn how to think & work with others. That's the American Dream!" Weingarten asserted. "And we fight against this kind of rhetoric and hate. Maybe spend a minute in one of the classrooms with my members and their students and you will get a real lesson in the promise and potential of America," she added.
\u201cI know that Mike Pompeo is running for president, and frankly I don\u2019t know whether to characterize his characterization of me in the @daveweigel interview as ridiculous or dangerous. https://t.co/5QBx2lE0K4\u201d— Randi Weingarten \ud83c\uddfa\ud83c\udde6\ud83c\uddfa\ud83c\uddf8\ud83d\udcaa\ud83c\udfff\ud83d\udc69\u200d\ud83c\udf93 (@Randi Weingarten \ud83c\uddfa\ud83c\udde6\ud83c\uddfa\ud83c\uddf8\ud83d\udcaa\ud83c\udfff\ud83d\udc69\u200d\ud83c\udf93) 1669075807
Pompeo served as the CIA director during part of former President Donald Trump's tenure before moving on to serve as secretary of state — Pompeo had previously served as a lawmaker in the U.S. House of Representatives. Now, he's considering the possibility of running for president.
"I haven't decided whether I'm going to run, and my decision whether to run doesn't depend on what lane I'm in or who else gets in the race. I've been at this for decades. The central thesis of the conservative movement is deeply embedded in my DNA, and I care about it. I think it makes America better. I think it makes life for families better," Pompeo said, according to Semafor.
Trump announced his own 2024 presidential bid last week, which means that any Republican candidates who opt to mount their own White House bids will face the former president during the GOP presidential primary.