Trump says he will award Rush Limbaugh with Medal of Freedom – msnNOW

Jim Watson/AFP/Getty Images

President Donald Trump awarded the Medal of Freedom to conservative radio personality Rush Limbaugh on Tuesday in an unprecedented move during the State of the Union address.

First lady Melania Trump placed the medal on the visibly surprised Limbaugh, one day after the talk show host revealed he has advanced lung cancer.

"Here tonight is a special man, someone beloved by millions of Americans who just received a Stage 4 advanced cancer diagnosis. This is not good news, but what is good news is that he is the greatest fighter and winner that you will ever meet," the President said during his speech, thanking the radio host for his "decades of tireless devotion to our country."

Trump, in announcing the award, highlighted Limbaugh's charity work.

"I am proud to announce tonight that you will be receiving our country's highest civilian honor, the Presidential Medal of Freedom," Trump said, instructing the first lady to bestow the medal on Limbaugh.

Limbaugh had not been publicly announced as a White House guest for the State of the Union until Tuesday evening, just prior to the address' start.

Trump told network anchors during a private lunch earlier Tuesday that he planned to award Limbaugh with the Medal of Freedom.

Limbaugh has been a staunch ally of the President's for years, and dined with him at his Palm Beach golf club over the holidays. Once, during an event in the Rose Garden, Trump praised Limbaugh as someone who "can speak for three hours without a phone call."

Trump wished the conservative radio talk show host a speedy recovery Monday after Limbaugh told his audience he is beginning treatment, which will require him to miss the show some days.

"I wish I didn't have to tell you this, and I thought about not trying to tell anybody, I thought about trying to do this without anybody knowing, because I don't like making things about me," Limbaugh said Monday during a live broadcast. But "there are going to be days that I'm not going to be able to be here, because I will be undergoing treatment, or I'm reacting to treatment."

Limbaugh has been hosting "The Rush Limbaugh Show" for 31 years.

The Medal of Freedom is bestowed to "individuals who have made especially meritorious contributions to the security or national interests of the United States, to world peace, or to cultural or other significant public or private endeavors," according to the White House.

People close to Trump say he personally enjoys granting his friends the nation's highest civilian honor. He bestowed the award upon seven recipients in 2019, and several more the year prior.

Like presidents before him, Trump invites anchors from all the major networks to dine with him at the White House in advance of his State of the Union address. The conversation is considered off the record, but CNN was excluded this year, and therefore did not agree to the mandate. Other anchors did attend the lunch.

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Trump says he will award Rush Limbaugh with Medal of Freedom - msnNOW

Case of Freedom Trail guides headed to the NLRB – The Boston Globe

LABORCase of Freedom Trail guides headed to the NLRB

Freedom Trail tour guides fighting for their first union contract are set to face their employer in a National Labor Relations Board hearing next month, following charges by the union that the Freedom Trail Foundation withheld tour guides scheduled pay raises. Lizzie Short said she was was one of several guides denied the extra $3.50 per tour they were entitled to, following a review process, after two years of service. The reason, Shorts boss told her each time she brought it up, was the ongoing contract negotiations. The union filed a complaint with the labor relations board late last summer, and in December, the board found that the Freedom Trail Foundation had failed to bargain in good faith and set a hearing date for March 3 in Boston. The board also ordered the foundation to provide back pay to guides who had been denied scheduled pay increases. In its response to the labor relations board, the foundation denied any wrongdoing. The 30-plus guides, who take visitors to local historic sites dressed in Colonial-era garb, voted to join Unite Here Local 26 a year ago. Their main demands: the ability to use microphones, to cancel tours during bad weather, to wear more weather-appropriate garb, and to call in sick without feeling obligated to find their own replacements. They also want more money. Guides base pay $45 for a 90-minute tour, plus time beforehand getting into costume and promoting their tours hasnt increased in 12 years, the guides said. KATIE JOHNSTON

The Baker administration has named Patrick Woodcock as its new Department of Energy Resources commissioner, following Judith Judsons departure to the private sector. Woodcock had been appointed interim energy resources commissioner in December because Judson took a job with Ameresco, the Framingham-based renewable energy company. Before joining the administration, Woodcock was director of Maines state energy office from 2013 through 2016. Woodcocks current boss, state energy and environmental affairs secretary Katie Theoharides, announced his new job at a meeting of the Massachusetts Clean Energy Center board on Wednesday. Also on Wednesday, the administration announced that Jim Montgomery has been appointed commissioner of the Department of Conservation and Recreation, and Shaun Santos was named colonel of the Massachusetts Environmental Police. Both roles are also overseen by Theoharides. JON CHESTO

L.L. Bean is eliminating 200 jobs across the company and closing its call center in Maines second-largest city as part of a reorganization. The outdoor retailers job cuts will occur at all levels, company spokeswoman Carolyn Beem said Wednesday. All 130 call center agents in Lewiston will be offered the opportunity to move to a call center in Portland or work from home, she said. The company has dealt with flat sales and a difficult era of belt-tightening that included a previous reduction in workforce, a tightening of its generous return policy, and a paring of product lines to refocus on the companys outdoors roots. But the company last year reported a small increase in sales. ASSOCIATED PRESS

Online mattress pioneer Casper Sleep Inc. is slashing the price of its initial public offering. The New York-based company said in a filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission on Wednesday that it now anticipates offering approximately 8.4 million shares at $12 to $13 per share. Last month Casper said it expected to price the IPO between $17 and $19 per share. Investors may be cautious after some recent IPO flops. The ride-hailing companies Uber and Lyft debuted on the market last year, but have continued to lose money and both have traded well below their IPO prices. Office-sharing company WeWork scuttled its IPO in September. ASSOCIATED PRESS

US companies added 291,000 jobs in January, a big increase from December, but much of that strength likely reflected unusually warm weather during the month. Payroll processor ADP said Wednesday that the January job gain, which was larger than had been expected, compared to a revised December figure of 193,000. Mark Zandi, chief economist at Moodys Analytics, said that warmer-than-normal weather for January played a big role in the increase. He said without that impact, the job gain would probably have been around 150,000. The ADP report is coming out ahead of the Labor Departments release of the January jobs report on Friday. ASSOCIATED PRESS

Spotify announced Tuesday that it had entered into an agreement to acquire The Ringer, a podcast-focused pop culture and sports company founded by former ESPN writer Bill Simmons. Terms of the deal which had been rumored for weeks were not announced, though Recodes Peter Kafka reports that Spotify intends to hire The Ringers 90 employees and keep its website up and running. But the audio companys main desire was to acquire The Ringers successful podcast network, which includes offerings such as Simmons eponymous podcast and shows covering the NBA, NFL, the media, and pop culture. WASHINGTON POST

Drug maker Merck beat Wall Streets fourth-quarter profit expectations, but investors werent as happy with the biggest move Mercks made in years: deciding to spin off its womens health division and other operations with $6.5 billion in annual revenues. The maker of cancer blockbuster Keytruda announced the plan along with its quarterly results, saying the two resulting companies each would be able to grow faster and develop more new medicines, benefiting patients. But investors sold off shares in heavy trading early Wednesday, pushing their price down more than 4 percent initially before closing 2.9 percent down. The maneuver culminates a steady shift of Mercks business the past several years from a primary care drug maker with more than 160 products, to a company which will have half as many, focused on its surging but young oncology business, and growing sales of its vaccine, hospital products, and veterinary medicines. ASSOCIATED PRESS

Walt Disney Co.s crusade to become a streaming giant is off to a swift start. Subscribers to the new Disney+ online service soared to 28.6 million by early February, suggesting the company founded nearly a century ago can challenge Netflix Inc. in the crowded market for online TV. Analysts were forecasting a year-end total of 20.8 million, according to Bloomberg Consensus. BLOOMBERG NEWS

Johns Hopkins University dislodged Harvard University as the top fund-raiser among US colleges, fueled by a $1.8 billion donation from Michael Bloomberg. Schools raised almost $50 billion in the 12 months ended June 2019, a record year and the 10th consecutive period of increased donations, according to a study released Wednesday by the Council for Advancement and Support of Education. Hopkins brought in $2.7 billion after Bloomberg in November 2018 announced the gift for his alma mater to help low- and moderate-income students attend. Harvard, the richest US college, had topped the list every year since fiscal 2016. It raised $1.4 billion, followed by Stanford University at $1.1 billion, according to the data. BLOOMBERG NEWS

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Case of Freedom Trail guides headed to the NLRB - The Boston Globe

Freedom Project: Play highlights civil rights perspective of black women – Meridian Star

Fiveyoung peoplewith theSunflower CountyFreedom Project put on a play Saturday afternoon at the Meridian Arts+Entertainment Experience to highlight theperspectives of black, female activists.

A Song for Coretta, by Pearl Cleave, takes the audience to the outside of Atlantas Ebenezer Baptist Church, where people of different generations are waiting in line to pay their respects to Coretta Scott King.

The conversations that ensue, make up the play, with moments of serious discussion about past experiences, historical moments and generational differences, mixed with moments of light-hearted fun.

Each character was played by a young member of the Sunflower County Freedom Project.

The cast was comprised of Kennedye Rash, 13; Amyah Nash, 13; Phillystity Gray, 16; Braelyn Ingram, 14; and Jamiyah McCloud, 14.

After the play, the cast answered questions from the audience.

One person asked, Why this play?

InBlack History Month, people dont always talk about what the females did, and thats why I liked this play, because its about what she (Coretta) did, not what her husband (Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.) did, McCloud said.

The rest of the cast echoed that sentiment, as they believe that sometimes the classroom lessons dont always give credit where its due.

They also said the play was an effort to educate people.

The play is to inform people about black history and how much it changed from then to today, Rash said.

The group was led by Kandace Stevenson, director of programming for the Sunflower County Freedom Project.

I first wanted to find a play to reflect our history, and I noticed this was a group of young ladies auditioning, Stevenson said. This is my second year with this drama troupe. I noticed the growth and maturity, the raw emotion, dedication and trying to do better than last year.

Im super excited, I think it was fantastic. These five young ladies came to Meridian, out of their shell, totally unaware of what they would run into and they showed out, said Adrian Cross, executive director of the Meridian Freedom Project.

They were very open, especially during the question and answer segment, I think that was one of my favorite parts because they got a lot of feedback and they took their constructive criticism, but they were also able to express themselves even more.

The play was received with a standing ovation at its close.

Audience members took some thoughts back with them after viewing the performance.

I feel that we dont get the chance to hear from the female perspective on the civil rights movement, and I liked how they talked about the trauma during the Katrina hurricane, the young lady in the military, and it was all done from womens perspectives, Deborah Todd, of Meridian, said.

More information on the group can be foundwww.sunflowerfreedom.org. More information about The Meridian Freedom Project can be foundat TheMeridianFreedomProject.org.

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Freedom Project: Play highlights civil rights perspective of black women - Meridian Star

Arts Wave partners with the National Underground Railroad Freedom Center to celebrate Black History Month. – WLWT Cincinnati

Visitors to the National Underground Railroad Freedom Center were greeted today, by the sounds of jazz and treated to a day of art culture and history.Andre DuBois of Arts Wave said the Freedom Center was the perfect location to recognize the art of the Queen City.What better place than the Freedom Center during Black History Month to celebrate all the diverse arts that we have in our city. Dubois said.Docents guided tours, sharing lessons of the past and perhaps inspiring visions of a more perfect future.The National Underground Railroad Freedom Center, Arts Wave's community partner, offered free admission to the public, including its brand-new exhibition, "Motel X," a multimedia interactive experienced designed by Cincinnati artist Christine Shrum.Katie Branell of The National Underground Freedom Center describes Arts Wave's kickoff as a perfect compliment to the Freedom Centers mission.We are able to talk about Black History Month and tell people why we are here, the underground railroad, and feature our special exhibit Motel X which is an interactive multimedia exhibit on human trafficking.Arts Waves partnered with the museum as part of Lifting as We Climb in commemoration of Black History Month. Watching the reaction of patrons, DuBois said he is encouraged by the agencys mission. In this particularly event, I just love the interaction we have with different African-American artists. I think it is so important, because art is always a reflection of life.For many in the tri-state and even around the world, this Freedom Center has served throughout its 15 years as a beacon to talk about the social crises of humanity. Organizers say with Arts Wave, the internationally renowned research center serves as a bridgeWe want to be the premier institution that talks about what we call inclusive freedom. So we want to teach people about this history and then encourage them to become active on fighting against injustices today.Branell said. Arts Wave raises more than $12 million annually to support the fine arts in the Cincinnati region.

Visitors to the National Underground Railroad Freedom Center were greeted today, by the sounds of jazz and treated to a day of art culture and history.

Andre DuBois of Arts Wave said the Freedom Center was the perfect location to recognize the art of the Queen City.

What better place than the Freedom Center during Black History Month to celebrate all the diverse arts that we have in our city. Dubois said.

Docents guided tours, sharing lessons of the past and perhaps inspiring visions of a more perfect future.

The National Underground Railroad Freedom Center, Arts Wave's community partner, offered free admission to the public, including its brand-new exhibition, "Motel X," a multimedia interactive experienced designed by Cincinnati artist Christine Shrum.

Katie Branell of The National Underground Freedom Center describes Arts Wave's kickoff as a perfect compliment to the Freedom Centers mission.

We are able to talk about Black History Month and tell people why we are here, the underground railroad, and feature our special exhibit Motel X which is an interactive multimedia exhibit on human trafficking.

Arts Waves partnered with the museum as part of Lifting as We Climb in commemoration of Black History Month. Watching the reaction of patrons, DuBois said he is encouraged by the agencys mission.

In this particularly event, I just love the interaction we have with different African-American artists. I think it is so important, because art is always a reflection of life.

For many in the tri-state and even around the world, this Freedom Center has served throughout its 15 years as a beacon to talk about the social crises of humanity. Organizers say with Arts Wave, the internationally renowned research center serves as a bridge

We want to be the premier institution that talks about what we call inclusive freedom. So we want to teach people about this history and then encourage them to become active on fighting against injustices today.Branell said.

Arts Wave raises more than $12 million annually to support the fine arts in the Cincinnati region.

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Arts Wave partners with the National Underground Railroad Freedom Center to celebrate Black History Month. - WLWT Cincinnati

The freedom Bobby Hurley gives to players is often criticized, but it might end up saving ASU’s season – The Athletic

Associate head coach Rashon Burno sent the text at 5:49 p.m. Wednesday, about 27 hours before Arizona States home contest against UCLA.

Hey, are you getting shots up tonight?

Yeah I am, Kimani Lawrence answered.

Work on getting shots behind ball screens. Also, get some off the bounce one-dribble pull-up.

Aight, got you.

Lawrence was coming off perhaps his worst game of the season. In last Saturdays win at Washington, the junior forward attempted two shots. Both from 3-point range. Neither hit the rim. A capable shooter, Lawrence boarded the team bus 6 of 38 from the arc on the season.

A nightmare.

Once the Sun Devils returned to Tempe, Lawrence did the only thing he knew: He studied film from last season, watching himself drill 3-pointers. Then he went to the gym, turned on music and went to work, getting up nearly 1,000 shots a day. Before practice.

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The freedom Bobby Hurley gives to players is often criticized, but it might end up saving ASU's season - The Athletic

Taking the Freedom Out of Freelancing – Foundation for Economic Education – Foundation for Economic Education

As I headed to LAX after a recent trip to Los Angeles, my Lyft driver insisted that we stop at In-N-Out Burger so that I could enjoy one last California experience. We ate the burgers outside, as planes flew above us. My driver, a professional photographer, works for Lyft to supplement his irregular income. His story is common. Most drivers that Ive encountered in California and elsewhere drive as a side job, while also, say, working in restaurants or selling real estate.

But if Californias state government has its way, driving for Lyft or Uber wont be easy in the future. The passage of Assembly Bill 5 (AB5) aims to make contract workers, like my Lyft driver, regular employees.AB5 is well-intentioned but doesnt account for how the labor market has changed. This will bring higher pay and benefits to retained workers, but it will also increase costs, which means higher prices for customers. And if employers ultimately incur the costs of adding more regular staff, odds are that they will start to mandate when and where employees work, reducing gig-work opportunities.

Under the new law, to be permitted to hire someone as a contractorand not as an employeebusinesses must pass whats known as the ABC test, which involves proving, in court, that the contractor is free from control and direction of the hiring entity, that the contractor supplies similar services to other vendors, and that the work performed falls outside the usual course of the hiring entitys business. My Lyft driver, and many others, would be unable to satisfy those conditions.

AB5 is well-intentioned. Contract work, with its unconventional hours and pay, is risky and unpredictable, with no benefits, and the prospect of instant termination. The law originated in a 2018 lawsuit, Dynamex Superior West v. Superior Court, involving delivery employees at Dynamex. Though the company considered them contractors, they were expected to wear uniforms and supply their own cars. They sued to be recognized as employees and won, and the suit created the ABC test. Within a year, AB5 became law.

But AB5 doesnt account for how the labor market has changed. In an industrial economy, dependence on a single employer made sense, and attaining skills relevant to a single firm proved valuable. Finding other work, after all, could be difficult. But in a knowledge-oriented economy, where technology makes work easier to find and on-the-job skills are more commonly transferable across companies than in the past, independence can suit both employers and employees. Gig works flexibility also makes it valuable as a fallback, offering extra money when people might need it most.Nontraditional work relationships include a host of different arrangements.

In fact, most gig workers in the U.S. dont work full-time in this capacity. Over the past 15 years, the number of full-time contractors has been stable. According to a Federal Reserve Board survey, only 18 percent of Americans perform gig work as their primary source of income. The plurality, or 38 percent, use it to supplement income from their primary job.

Overall, 30 percent of Americans do some form of gig work, and its common across education levels. Though contract work makes up less than ten percent of household income for three-quarters of survey respondents, 45 percent consider it an important part of their income.

The Fed concludes:

The greater subjective value placed on this income may be related to its ability to smooth out unexpected changes in earnings from main jobs even if the actual amount of money earned is relatively small.

Gig works flexibility also makes it valuable as a fallback, offering extra money when people might need it most. Workers of all income levels find it valuable. Its also a helpful option for stay-at-home parents who want to keep a toe in the labor market. Turning gig work into a regular job undermines this value because it removes its most important characteristic: flexibility.

No wonder, then, that workers and employers are pushing back. Freelance journalists are mounting a challenge to AB5 after many lost jobs. Developing technology calls for better regulation of gig work, not effectively eliminating it.Uber and Lyft say that theyll continue to hire drivers as contractors, but they could face legal challenges, as some trucking companies did. The truckers prevailed in court because their business takes them across state lines.

Its true that technology is transforming the labor market, and employee protections have been reduced. But this development calls for better regulation of gig work, not effectively eliminating it. The leading Democratic presidential candidatesJoe Biden, Elizabeth Warren, Pete Buttigieg, and Bernie Sandershave all endorsed a national version of AB5. They should remember that most workers use gig work as a form of insurance. By eliminating contractors, laws like AB5 will increase risk rather than reduce it.

This article is republished from City Journal.

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Taking the Freedom Out of Freelancing - Foundation for Economic Education - Foundation for Economic Education

The basis of freedom – SC Times

Gary Hukriede, White Bear Lake Published 5:00 p.m. CT Feb. 5, 2020

The left does not understand President Trump because they do not understand the basis of freedom that he so well addresses. Let me explain.

Evidence shows that from the DNA, the greater number of people are destined to be either liberal or conservative. There is where it all begins.

A researcher, Jonathan Haidt,has synthesized five moral foundations from which all humans process their environment and existence through. Therefore, our polarized ideologies are given to us as a tendency to be one or the otherfrom the DNA.

Of these five moral foundationelements, liberals tend to process the most through predominantly two, while conservatives utilize all five. Functioning predominantly through only two moral foundations is more limiting to the true understanding of the functioning of community, economyand personal freedom.

Haidt states that morality suppresses selfishness [a survival instinct] and thus enables social groups to function.

Haidt has concluded from his research that all successful civilization has functioned through all five moral foundations for balance and success. He writes, Looking at the entire range of human societies, the statistically normal human society is built upon all five foundations. It is modern liberalismwhich requires a special explanation.

Its interesting to note that Haidt was a liberal, who, after his research, now refers to himself as a centrist.

Read or Share this story: https://www.sctimes.com/story/opinion/2020/02/05/basis-freedom/4659157002/

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The basis of freedom - SC Times

The freedom in not knowing – The Boston Globe

QUITO, Ecuador

During those ancient, golden days of mainstream media dominance (say, 15 years ago), one of the undeniable thrills of being a reporter was knowing. We reporters (and editors, and compositors, and printers) would put a story to bed in the evening and then savor the delicious inside knowledge of murder convictions or campaign poll results or medical breakthroughs hours before our readers. Savvy Boston fans could call the Globe switchboard and learn the Red Sox scores right after the game because we were the people who knew.

Now, of course, there is no exclusive knowledge. News is shared the minute it happens, then further shilled or shamed minutes after that. In fact, the obsessive need to know has become a societal addiction, fed by an endless load of Internet clickbait. We are a nation fairly twitching with the compulsion to check the livestream, and it isnt healthy. So this month I have been experimenting with an even more rare and precious bliss state than knowing: not knowing.

Thirty days ago I made a deliberate choice not to expose myself to the news: not TV, not Twitter, not the Times. I didnt tell most of my friends because I knew the idea would be met with incredulity and scorn: How irresponsible to unplug when the Constitution is being shred to confetti! But I would be living for the month in Quito, Ecuador, 2,700 miles from Washington, and I knew that if ever I could extricate myself from the tangle of talking heads, this would be the time. Some people diet in January or stop drinking; I would try a different kind of cleanse.

The experience has been one of liberation and humility: freedom from the grasping, low-grade anxiety that signifies even mild addiction; sobering to learn how little the yammering madness in El Norte matters to the everyday lives of people here.

I find I most miss the news when I sit down with my morning coffee, the way some of my friends say they still miss having a cigarette when theyre at a bar. But as with most cravings, if I take a deep breath and wait it out, it will pass. Meanwhile the sparrows are trilling, the street vendors are selling mango slices and quail eggs, and the clouds are slipping down over Mt. Pichincha. I am reminded of the Paul Simon lyric: I get all the news I need on the weather report.

Occasionally a fragment of a current event will invade my attention, like the blast from a passing car radio. I thought I had shut off all my alerts, but Lessons from the Trump-Iran news cycle came through in an email from the Columbia Journalism Review (my finger hovers over the keys for a split second before I hit delete). Once I saw the unmistakable visage of Alan Dershowitz on my screen, and I knew the president was assembling his defense team. But did I know, or care, that (Breaking!) Hillary had dissed Bernie somehow, somewhere?

Unknowing is in many ways the natural order of things. We can never know about the truly big questions: When we will die; is there a God; what really happened at the end of The Sopranos?" We cant even know what will happen the moment after this one. Not knowing helps free us, if only a little, from our many assumptions and biases, leaving the door open to possibility. Not to mention the relief from endless speculation and catastrophizing about the future.

Obviously I believe in an informed citizenry, especially in these perilous times. I dont advocate unplugging from the news indefinitely, and Ill be back on the sauce myself by Sunday. But an occasional break say, a weekly screen Sabbath, or a Trumpless Tuesday could be a way to find the balance between ostrich oblivion and the roller-coaster of elation and dread we ride over Every. Tiny. Development. The information we consume is a diet no less than the Atkins plan or Whole 30. And if we are what we eat, many of us have been on a bloating binge of junk for at least the last three years. Happily, we have the power to decide for ourselves when the news is nourishing, and when its just a glut of empty calories.

Rene Loths column appears regularly in the Globe.

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The freedom in not knowing - The Boston Globe

3 things you need to know about Birmingham’s proposed Freedom Walk – Bham Now

Heres a vision that links a number of sites that played key roles in the Civil Rights Movement with different parts of Birmingham into a cohesive whole. Graphic via urbanimpactbirmingham.org

Have you heard about Freedom Walkthe vision to join three parts of Birmingham that were pivotal in the Civil Rights Movement together for a brighter future? Read on for all the details.

According to Urban Impact Birmingham, one of Freedom Walks main organizers, the vision of the project is to create one cohesive growth community where people can live, work, play, learn, shop and experience history.

Here are three main historically significant areas this vision proposes linking economically and culturally:

In case youre not sure what all is included in these three areas, well get to that in a sec.

But one important point is that North Birminghams Smithfield neighborhood and both Northside and Southside communities stand to benefit from the new economic opportunities that are part of this vision.

Did you know Birmingham has its own National Monument ? Similar to a National Park, it was created in 2017 and joins well-known landmarks such as the Statue of Liberty and Devils Tower National Monument in Wyoming.

The plan is for the National Park Service to set up shop in the west wing of the A.G. Gaston Motel once its $10m renovation is complete in the Winter of 2021. They plan also includes the development of an interpretive space in the building.

Here are a few stories to fill you in on this important part of town:

Not only did the Civil Rights District serve as the setting for many of the events of 1963 that changed the USand ultimately the worldbut it also figures prominently in plans for the citys future.

These include:

Were looking forward to seeing how Freedom Walk develops over time. If you want to follow along, visit http://www.urbanimpactbirmingham.org for updates.

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3 things you need to know about Birmingham's proposed Freedom Walk - Bham Now

Support school choice and empower families with educational freedom – Washington Examiner

We the people have lost authority over our schools and desperately need educational freedom. The school system our founders created, designed to be free from government interference, has been hijacked by government intrusion, corrupt, union-controlled politicians, and entrenched special interests. These united forces are enriching themselves and radically transforming our culture through government-run public schools.

For example, disastrous new sex ed curricula, marked by explicit depictions and uber-liberal views of sexuality that sharply contradict the sincerely held values of most parents, have been forced on millions of families in schools.

Thats why hundreds of my fellow Californians and I traveled to Sacramento to force our state to provide parents opt-in protections and transparent, online access to full curricula content. Thousands of letters in support of our bill flooded the legislature, and hundreds voiced their support in person during the bills hearing in the Senate Education Committee on Jan. 15.

But we were shot down by union-controlled Democrats who voted unanimously to ignore parents in favor of the special interests pushing the sexualized content onto our children.

Before defeating our parent-sponsored bill, the committee chairwoman, state Sen. Connie Leyva, a Democrat from San Bernardino, lectured us from her throne. Using prideful and condescending tones, she dismissed our concerns and basically told us were too stupid to make decisions for our own children and too afraid to teach them about sex.

She also stated the law already permitted opt-in rights, even though it specifically denies them, as does Leyvas committees own legislative analysis of our bill. She then threatened to have us removed for instinctively reacting with gasps of horror while personally witnessing communist state-like injustices within the halls of our supposedly free republic.

We stupid parents and teachers are well versed in the entire law and painstakingly fight daily to expose the concealed, horrific, state-imposed materials foisted on our children. We had the facts and the Constitution on our side, but we lost anyway.

This is exactly the sort of state control our founders risked their lives to escape, and its just one example of why they provided safeguards to keep government out of our schools and the will of the people in. It will take us some time to fully remove the entrenched interests degrading our schools, but we must take immediate action to protect children today.

The quickest way to empower Americans is with educational freedom.

According to a recent national school choice poll, the vast majority of the country agrees wholeheartedly. A whopping 82% of Latinos, 68% of African Americans, 71% of millennials, and 82% of Republicans surveyed agreed that people should be permitted to use tax dollars to send their child to the public or private school which best serves their needs.

Its common sense, and its constitutional, but many pundits claim were running afoul of the Constitution if we permit tax dollars to be used at private religious schools or that religious schools must incorporate state-mandated instruction if they receive tax dollars.

Clearly, those pundits dont know the history of our country, nor do they understand the spirit of our constitutional republic.

Education freedom more closely mirrors the intentions of our founders, who never intended for students to be forced into public government-run schools that stomp on the face of parental authority and American values. Our founders knew the only way to keep a free republic is to have a well-educated and moral citizenry that can self-govern.

Thats why they used the Bible as the foundation for learning, in all schools, and empowered parents, church leaders, and educators to labor together to teach the children. Americas schools offered children a well-rounded education including rigorous, fact-based studies, lessons in wisdom and beauty, and moral literature that stirs the soul. We became the envy of the world because our citizens were empowered with moral goodness and deep knowledge.

The Trump administration has a bold and immediate solution that could jump-start our progress toward freedom from government intrusion. Under the leadership of Education Secretary Betsy DeVos, Trump is proposing education freedom scholarships that states can choose to employ. These scholarships provide simple tax credits for those who choose to donate money for children to receive the education of their parents choice. There are safeguards protecting religious schools from government intrusion, too.

According to that 2020 national school choice poll, 83% of African Americans, 83% of Latinos, 78% of millennials, 67% of Democrats, and 77% of Republicans support education freedom scholarships.

Americans are desperate for the self-governance that springs from moral goodness and educational excellence. Our republic is in crisis thanks to government-run, communist-like, state-controlled education factories that intentionally undermine these values. Lets get back to our roots and, like our founders, lets fight for liberty.

The state may not impose its sexualized anti-morality religion on us, and it may not have our children, either.

Rebecca Friedrichs is the founder of For Kids & Country, the author of Standing Up to Goliath, and a 28-year public school teacher who led the fight against the divisive tactics, politics, and corruption of teachers unions as lead plaintiff in Friedrichs v CTA. Her Supreme Court case paved the way for a precedent-setting ruling that freed all public sector employees from forced unionism.

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Support school choice and empower families with educational freedom - Washington Examiner

Huber, Freedom want one more shot at wrestling in their own gym – lehighvalleylive.com

The way Connor Huber sees it, if he and his Freedom wrestling teammates are going to work the District 11 3A team tournament, they might as well wrestle.

Our goal is to get to the 5:30 p.m. session (championship/consolation finals) on Saturday, said the Patriot senior 126-pounder. We have to set up the gym and roll out the mats, so it only seems fair we get a chance to wrestle, for the last time for the seniors, at home.

Freedom isnt seeded to be around by 5:30 on Saturday, but the Patriots (14-6), ranked No. 10 in the region by lehighvalleylive, certainly look to have the talent and moxie to upend the seeds.

Freedom is seeded sixth, and will open the tournament against No .11 seed Whitehall (10-5) Thursday at 6 p.m. at Libertys Memorial Gym. The winner will advance to a quarterfinal against No. 3 seed Bethlehem Catholic (9-1) Thursday at 7:30 p.m. and assure at least one consolation match on Saturday where the tournament resumes at 9 a.m. Saturday.

First-round losers do not wrestle back, as Huber and the Pates well know.

Last year was depressing, Huber said. We lost to Emmaus in the first round and we didnt even get to wrestle in our own gym on Saturday.

This time around, the Patriots should at least get to do that, even if they seem disrespected by the seeding.

I was kind of surprised we were seeded sixth, Huber said. I know Becahi is seeded higher, and I know they beat us (62-6 on Jan. 8). I know we can wrestle better and give them a different match.

Freedom is certainly capable of impressive performances, like last weeks 36-28 defeat of archrival Liberty. However, the Pates can also struggle a bit, as on Saturdays EPC championship day when they looked flat in a 45-28 loss to Stroudsburg in the fifth-place match.

When were wrestling well, were very pumped up, ready to go, and we all know what we need to do, Huber said. A lot of our motivation comes from our senior class; we make sure everyone is sure about what has to happen and keep everybody motivated.

Huber, now 22-6 on the season, has looked plenty motivated lately, posting pins of Libertys Ansar Niazi (2:28) and Stroudsburgs Brandon Wiligus (44 seconds) in key spots for the Pates. Freedom head coach Dante Terenzio praised Hubers performance against the Hurricanes, saying that kid (Niazi) just doesnt get pinned.

Huber was one of two Freedom wrestlers to win a match against Becahi in the dual, as he defeated Trey Miletics 4-2. This time, though, Huber is likely to see a tougher foe, such as Matt Mayer (ranked No. 2 at 126 by lehighvalleylive) or Evan Gleason (ranked No. 1 at 132).

I dont care who I wrestle, I feel like I am capable of giving anyone a tough match, Huber said. I just have to be ready to wrestle.

Huber, who has 86 wins on his career, is enjoying his best scholastic season.

Last year I didnt really take many shots, I was always trying to score with a drag by or something like that, Huber said. Now, I have been working on my feet a lot more, and I feel like I can score points on my feet. I have also been working on my defense and on top. We have been drilling a lot of top and it has been working for us.

Part of Hubers improvement can be credited to his practice partner, senior Luis Vargas (27-3), ranked No. 2 at 120 by lehighvalleylive.

Luis is very quick, he stays low, and makes it really hard to get on his legs, Huber said. If I can get in on Luis legs I can get to anybodys. When we wrestle, its like a 50/50, but hes really good. You cant stop moving and you always have to be changing levels.

After the team duals, Huber has eyes on Hershey, where he has never wrestled.

My goal is to place in the top three in District 11, and then in the (Northeast) Regional, and then get to states and see how well I do.

Get Lehigh Valley Wrestling Insider text messages from wrestling beat writer Brad Wilson: Cut through the clutter of social media and communicate directly with Brad. Plus, news, tidbits, analysis and maybe some fun every day. Sign up now.

Brad Wilson may be reached at bwilson@lehighvalleylive.com. Follow him on Twitter @bradwsports. Find Lehigh Valley high school sports on Facebook.

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Huber, Freedom want one more shot at wrestling in their own gym - lehighvalleylive.com

Freedom of Speech Doesn’t Mean You Have to Be a Jerk Online – catcountry1073.com

Just because you have the right to say something and just because it's a free country, doesn't mean you should be a jerk for no reason. Hi trolls, this one is for you. When the Bill of Rights was written, they did not take into account that almost 230 years later people would be jerks just for the sake of being jerks. I bet if they wrote the Bill of Rights in 2020 that might reconsider that one and add a few asterisks.

I love social media, I am the typical millennial that spends way too much time scrolling through Instagram, Twitter, Facebook, and Snapchat. I'm not too proud to admit that. What infuriates me more than anything else, is people who say stupid or mean things because they can.

Has social media made us that desperate for attention that we would rather people hate us online rather than not know we exist? Why do we care that Karen from New Zealand knows that you have a bold, probably exaggerated for effect, opinion? Leaning into that shock factor is getting old.

It is such a toddler-like reaction to defend your jerky statement by saying you said it because you can. Are you five? No? Okay, then start acting like an adult and choose your words wisely.

Hiding behind the veil of freedom of speech is a poor excuse. Telling someone to scroll past if they don't like your opinion usually means you made an outlandish opinion just to get someone to notice you.

Real-life is filled with enough negativity, you don't need to add to the pot by being an unkind jerk online.

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Freedom of Speech Doesn't Mean You Have to Be a Jerk Online - catcountry1073.com

No to Trump’s apartheid plan. Yes to freedom and justice for the Palestinians – Haaretz

The Trump Plan was never about freedom and equality for Palestinians.

Instead, it was always about consolidating Israel's control over Palestinian lives, prolonging the status quo, and legitimizing Israels crimes under international law including colonization and annexation. Its authors are well-known supporters of Israeli illegal colonial settlements, and so this plan has the blessing of extremist Israeli politicians and settlers, as well as other apologists of the systematic denial of the inalienable rights of the Palestinian people.

Trumps Unreal Deal: No Peace, No Plan, No Palestinians, No Point. Listen to Haaretz's podcast

The Trump administration continues to reward Israel for violating Palestine's right to exist. At the same time, it portrays the recognition of a Palestinian "state" as a hard concession for Israel to make, in spite of the historic compromise by the Palestine Liberation Organization in 1993. For the sake of peace and cognizant of international legitimacy,we recognized Israel on 78 percent of our historic homeland.

The Trump plan serves the interests of the Greater Israel project that wants all the land of historic Palestine while treating the native people as aliens on our land, ultimately eroding international law and the national and human rights of the Palestinian people.

It takes over vital land for the development of the State of Palestine to benefit Israel's illegal colonial enterprise - and revokes Palestine's rights to its natural resources, borders, air-space, and maritime borders. No nation, let alone the dignified nation of Palestine that has been struggling for 100 years, would accept this formula of submission and giving up our rights.

What came out is a reflection of that goal. Perhaps inspired by Moshe Ya'alon - then a member of the Israeli cabinet - who stated dismissively in 2014, "Let them call it the Palestinian empire. It's autonomy." But the facts on the ground in occupied Palestine go beyond that. The one-state reality imposed by Netanyahu and his supporters is not mere autonomy; its a reality of apartheid.

Why apartheid? Because we have one state, Israel, that controls all the land and governs with two different sets of rights: one for those born to a Jewish family and another one for those born to a Palestinian, Christian or Muslim, family. The Trump administration has moved the whole discussion to a different level, where international law and the global order as a whole are irrelevant.

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The international community is therefore obliged to respond with concrete measures; otherwise, it will be sending the Palestinian people a fatefully wrong message. That diplomatic efforts to create conditions for a meaningful peace process have utterly failed and no longer matter.

This is not about any blame game against the Palestinians. It is about the U.S.and Israel rejecting the basic requirements of peace - by implementating international law and the long-overdue UN resolutions. Saying no to the Trump Plan is saying no to apartheid. We can only say yes to freedom, justice, and peace - and not to the perpetuation of the immorality of Israel's control over our lives and the denial of our right to self-determination.

What has been announced by the Trump administration is a flagrant attack against international law and the international system, and the repercussions do not only affect Palestine.

This moment requires the international community tonot only condemn the U.S. and Israeli attempts to confound peace, but requiresaction to save the prospects of a just and lasting peace. The world now has an opportunity to act on its obligations and commitments: End Israels occupation of Palestine, to achieve the just and lasting peace we all deserve.

These international actions are doable, and part and parcel of the responsibility of the international community to peace and an international rules-based order: from the recognition of the State of Palestine, the release of the UN database of companies involved in the Israeli occupation, to imposing sanctions on Israel's colonization efforts.

This is not only about Palestine: it's about the future of the world as a whole.

Husam Zomlot is Palestines ambassador to the United Kingdom. He was the last Palestinian envoy to Washington. Twitter: @hzomlot

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No to Trump's apartheid plan. Yes to freedom and justice for the Palestinians - Haaretz

The True Cost Of Freedom Gas – Yahoo Finance

The reputation of natural gas as a clean fuel has been repeatedly undermined by unfavorable emissions data. But now, several new studies suggest that the problem could be even bigger than we imagined.

Do these studies paint an accurate picture of LNG, or are they just more anti-fossil fuel hype?

The short answer is: its complicated.

The University of Texas at Austin earlier this month warned that the expansion of oil, gas, and petrochemical infrastructure along the Gulf Coast could add half a billion tons of greenhouse gas emissions to Americas total every year by 2030. This, the UT said, was equivalent to 8 percent of the countrys current total in emissions and would come from new refineries, petrochemical plants and, perhaps a little unexpectedly for the layperson, liquefied natural gas plants.

Touted as freedom gas by the Donald Trump administration, LNG has quickly turned into a major export commodity for U.S. energy companies. Indeed, LNG as a fuel burns a lot more cleanlywith a lot less emissionsthan oil derivatives. But its production turns out to be a different matter.

In early January, the Environmental Integrity Project released a report that, although a little less pessimistic than the UTs, was still concerning. It said oil and gas companies and related businesses have permits or have applied for permits for facilities that would add 227 million tons of greenhouse gas emissions by 2025.

Only a minority of these additional emissions are to come from new drilling: just 36 million tons. The total additional emissions would be a 30-percent increase on the GHG emissions total of the oil and gas industry for 2018.

Related: As Gas Prices Crash, Will This Shale Giant Survive?

Of this total, the Environmental Integrity Project said, the largest growth would come from LNG plants.

In 2018, there were eight operating LNG export terminals in the United States. These released seven million tons of greenhouse gases during that year. The amount was more than a tenfold increase from 2016. Now, there are 18 new LNG export terminals planned to be built along the Gulf Coast, plus one plant inland, according to the report. These, if all are built, could add 80 million tons of greenhouse gases to total annual emissions from the fossil fuel industry. This, the EIP warns, would be an increase of 100 times over ten years.

The latest to add to the LNG gloom was Bloomberg. In an analysis published last week, the news and intelligence firm said the 11 LNG plants approved by President Trump could add 78 million tons of carbon dioxide to total U.S. emissions, plus quite a lot of sulfur dioxide, and methaneby-products of the liquefaction process that basically cools natural gas to superlow temperatures so it can liquefy.

Then, Bloomberg continues, there are emissions associated with the transportation of the natural gas from the wellhead to the liquefaction train and from there to its destination overseas. Even operating an LNG plant has a carbon footprint comparable to that of a coal plant, with the comparison not too flattering for LNG. The analysis of the data that Bloomberg used showed that the 11 new LNG plants, if built, would emit as much carbon dioxide as 24 coal plants.

Not All Emissions Doom and Gloom

Luckily for the environment, there is a bit of good news. The emissions levels of different LNG plants vary greatly. The Cameron LNG plant, for instance, could release as much 328,000 tons of carbon dioxide per 1 million tons of LNG it exports when it becomes fully operational. Yet the Annova LNG terminal in Texas would emit only 59,000 tons of CO2 for every 1 million tons of LNG it exports.

The differences may have a lot to do with how these facilities cool the gas. Oilprice spoke to an expert from Yamal LNG, Mehdy Touil, who said the main source of greenhouse gases in an LNG train comes from the combustion of gasmethanein the turbines that drive the refrigeration compressors. Methane emissions from LNG trains are negligible because every facility has gas detectors.

CO2 emissions are also generated from other gas processing equipment at the facility. But even with these emissions, Touil noted, LNG plants are a smaller polluter than coal-fired power plants. And those that opt for electric motors instead of gas turbines have an emissions footprint of next to zero.

Story continues

Related: US Oil Rig Count Inches Higher As Production Hits 13 Million Bpd

One terminal operator, Freeport LNG, for example, said it planned to cut its emissions by 90 percent compared with other LNG exporters by switching to electric motors from combustion turbines. Touil called Freeport LNG the first eLNG plant.

Two Canadian projects, LNG Canada and Woodfibre LNG, Touil added, plan to source their energy for refrigeration entirely from hydropower, which would be another way to reduce the dominant source of emissions from the production of LNG.

It seems to also depend on location, too. Cheniere Energy, the largest LNG producer in the U.S, emits less from its Corpus Christi LNG terminal, which draws electricity from the grid, than from its Sabine Pass terminal, which makes its own power.

The Clean Fossil Fuel Myth?

All these studies are making one thing clear yet again: there is no clean fossil fuel. In fact, some would argue that natural gas is even more problematic than oil in that its production and transport is accompanied by methane leaks, and methane is a lot more harmful to the atmosphere than carbon dioxide. Will all these revelations halt the LNG boom, not just in the United States but across the globe?

Hardly.

The truth is that although it is far from emission-free, liquefied natural gas is less polluting than coal. Bloombergs comparison between an LNG plant and a coal plant is evidence of that. Whats more, the studies warning against LNG terminals emission potential only focus on the production of LNG rather than its use. The reason LNG has become so popular as an alternative to coal is that it does burn a lot more cleanly than coal. Perhaps the emissions produced during the liquefaction process could be offset by the emissions not released by coal plants because they have switched to LNG.

By Irina Slav for Oilprice.com

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The True Cost Of Freedom Gas - Yahoo Finance

The long road to freedom – a giraffe is on the lam in Thailand – News965

We have the case file. We have the suspects. We have the experts. Now we just need you. That is the tagline of the CrimeCon eventCrowdSolve, a convention-style gathering of true crime buffs slated for Feb. 21-23 in Chicago that will investigate the mysterious 1981 death of Kurt Sova, a Newburgh Heights 17-year-old whose body was found in a ravine five days after he vanished from an early Halloween party with friends. Participating in the event will be investigators from the Newburgh Heights Police Department. The NHPD will be participating in this unique event to help bring justice for Kurt Sova,the departments Facebook page reads. Check it out! The event is the latest effort by authorities to bring closure to Sovas loved ones, who have wondered for more than 39 years what took place after that Oct. 23, 1981, Halloween party. VAULT Studios true crime podcast, True Crime Chronicles, this monthdevoted two episodes to the case. In December, cold case investigators also announced they were teaming up with a group of 10 Tiffin University criminal justice students to take another look at the mystery. Crime Stoppers of Cuyahoga County has offered a reward of $5,000 for information leading to an arrest in the case. Our thought process was to incorporate the brightest and best criminal justice and social science students to look at this case with a fresh set of eyes and a clear lens, Michael Lewis, a TU criminal justice professor,told the Advertiser-Tribune in Tiffin last month. It is our hope that the case can finally be solved and the loved ones can have a sense of closure. Sovas brother is expected to be at theChicago CrimeSolve event. Kevin Sova, the only surviving member of the family, said not knowing what happened to his youngest sibling has taken a toll over the decades. When somebody dies, we should know why,he told WKYC in Cleveland earlier this month. The hardest part of this whole case is not knowing why our brother and my moms son is dead (and) gone. According to CrowdSolve, Kurt Sova accompanied a friend to a party at a duplex the night he vanished and his parents and three older brothers never saw him again. The next morning, his mother began calling his friends and his father began searching the neighborhood. His father, Kenneth Sova, told WKYC in the days after his disappearance that he knew immediately something was very wrong. I knew something was wrong with him because it wasnt like him to be away from the house that long without calling or without getting in touch with somebody,Kenneth Sova said in 1981. On Oct. 25, the Sovas reported their son missing. His mother began placing missing posters in store windows, at which point she learned of the party her son had attended. The woman who allegedly hosted the party denied seeing Kurt Sova or even having a party,the case briefing on the CrowdSolve website states. When a pizza delivery man confirmed to the Sovas that there had been a party, the woman relented and admitted the teen had been there. Guests later commented that Kurt had been drinking Everclear, the strongest alcoholic drink on the market at that time,the case summary states. One of Kurts friends later said that hed taken an intoxicated Kurt outdoors for some fresh air, leaving him for a few minutes to run back inside for Kurts jacket. However, when he returned, Kurt was gone. Sovas body was found five days after his disappearance in a ravine about 500 yards from the duplex where the party was held. Though it appeared as though he may have fallen to his death in a drunken state, his autopsy revealed a startling detail: Sova had only been dead between 24 and 36 hours. A classmate of the missing teen also reported seeing him three days after the party, walking toward a van with people he did not recognize. Sova reportedly called out to the boy by name. Unfortunately, the schoolmate did not suspect anything out of the ordinary as he was unaware of Kurts status as a missing person at the time of this occurrence,the CrowdSolve summary states. Further, Sovas father told authorities he had personally searched the ravine where his sons body was found -- two days before three young boys playing there stumbled upon him. He had found nothing out of the ordinary during the search. Sovas cause of death was never determined, though he still had alcohol in his body when he was found. Police could not find any sign of assault and his body revealed no major injuries,the summary states. Police could not locate his right shoe, although his left shoe was found wedged in a pile of rocks nearby. Do we think somebody killed him? Its possible,Newburgh Heights police Chief John Majoy told WKYC. But is it more plausible that he died and his body was later dropped there? Yeah, because that area was searched. Majoy is expected to be one of the experts at CrowdSolve, as is retired U.S. Marshal Art Roderick, who serves as chief investigator for the event.According to WKYC, Roderick suggested Sovas unsolved case to the event organizers, who thought Newburgh Heights 345-mile distance from the event was within the parameters to make the case a suitable one. Kevin Balfe, executive producer for CrowdSolve, told the news station they look at three things when choosing which case to take on: geographical relevance, solvability and support from law enforcement and the victims family. At the first CrowdSolve event,held in October in Seattle, participants took a look at the March 2009 disappearance of Nancy Moyer, who vanished from her Tenino, Washington, home, and the murder of Karen Bodine, 37, who was found strangled to death in January 2007 near a gravel quarry in Thurston County. Its a rare thing to find police departments that are open to what we do,Balfe said. Certainly, Newburgh Heights was. Majoy told WKYC the department is glad for the opportunity. We were also humbled to have this case selected because our thought process was that if we bring enough attention to the case, perhaps someone may come forward with information to help us solve it,the chief told the news station. Balfe said he anticipates between 300 and 400 attendees at next months event. Participants will work in smaller groups to pore over the case file and spitball ideas, and will then reconvene to present Newburgh Heights investigators with their findings. The police chief said he doesnt expect the case to be solved at the convention, but hopes it gets moved in the right direction. He also hopes to give Kevin Sova some peace after all he has lost. Kenneth Sova died in 2001, followed by his wife, Dorothy,in December 2014. A second of the Sova brothers, Keith Sova,died in June 2014 at age 52 and a third, Kenneth,died in 2017 at age 57. We need to let them know their loved one mattered and we want to help solve their case,Majoy told WKYC. All too often, the victims and their families are not given the diligence or attention they deserve. Refocusing this will at least send a message that we do care about them and want to help solve their case.

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The long road to freedom - a giraffe is on the lam in Thailand - News965

How An Enslaved Woman Sued And Won Her Freedom In 18th-Century Massachusetts – WBUR

Nearly 250 years ago this month, 11 men gathered in a house on the Housatonic River to draft a document on equality and independence aimed at the British crown. A woman who was enslaved in the house overheard the discussion and determined the words applied to her too.

Elizabeth Freeman later used those ideas to win her freedom.

The house in Sheffield, Massachusetts, built in 1735, was home to Colonel John Ashley, his wife Hannah and their four children. People enslaved by the Ashleys lived there too. They included Brom, Zack, John, Harry and Freeman known then as Bett, and later MumBett.

Mark Wilson, curator of collections for the Trustees of Reservations which owns the house said the organization has shifted its focus from the story of Ashley, a prominent landowner and judge.

We began working on retelling the story from the perspective of the enslaved members of the household, he said. In terms of the story of Elizabeth, it wasnt being told properly and it wasnt being given its due.

Freeman was brought to the house in 1758 as a teenager. She helped keep the fires going. She cleaned, cooked and served.

In the upstairs study in January of 1773, Ashley and 10 other white men were writing a document called the Sheffield Resolves. Wilson said Freeman, in her 30s then, probably overheard the discussion while serving the men food or drinks.

The Sheffield Resolves, also known as the Sheffield Declaration, reads:

Resolved that Mankind in a State of Nature are equal, free, and independent of each other, and have a right to the undisturbed Enjoyment of their Lives, their Liberty and Property.

Historian Emily Blanck of Rowan University said about 2% of the population in Massachusetts was enslaved in the 1770s. At that same time, she says, white residents of the colonies, like Ashley, were arguing that America was a country of freedom.

They actually complained that they were being enslaved to the British, Blanck said. And so enslaved people also were starting to demand that they should be free because slavery was inconsistent with this new rhetoric and new idea of what America was going to be, as something separate from England.

Clark University historian Ousmane Power-Greene said these words of freedom may have inspired Freeman.

White men with power one of whom is a slave holder are writing these words that are saying these words, Power-Greene said. And that's what's going to give her the sort of impulse, right? Not the idea that her life is not one that was worth more than being a slave. It's the moment that these same white people are articulating that verbally, and are writing it down, and proclaiming it, that they're going to encourage her and try to see if those would manifest in her actual freedom.

About nine years after she heard these words, something happened in this house that changed everything for Freeman.

One day, bread was baked for the family. Lizzie, who was either Freemans daughter or sister historians disagree put a piece of dough in the hearth for herself. Ashleys wife, Hannah, got angry and grabbed a shovel from the fireplace. Freeman intervened.

Put her arm in the way and then was struck by this [shovel], which left a scar that she would, of course, hold out for people to sort of see, and wear it as a sort of illustration [of the] sort of violence that she endured as enslaved person in the household, Power-Greene said.

That act of violence was the last straw, according to Mark Wilson.

Elizabeth asked for an apology. She didn't receive it. So she walked away from the house, Wilson said.

The exact details vary, but the story goes that it was winter and a foot of snow blanketed her path. Freeman walked several miles to the home of one of the men she overheard writing the Sheffield Resolves.

She has the resilience to just bundle up and go to the house of the young Theodore Sedgwick, a lawyer, and ask for her suit for freedom, Wilson said.

Sedgwick agreed to represent her. And he added a man named Brom, also enslaved by the Ashleys, to the lawsuit. Brom & Bett v. Ashley was heard in the Berkshire County court.

Historian Emily Blanck said Sedgwicks argument was based on the new Massachusetts state constitution.

It declared that all men are born free and equal, and Sedgwick and others believed this was inconsistent with holding people in slavery in the state, Blanck said.

They won their freedom, and the judge ordered John Ashley to pay 30 shillings each to Brom and Freeman. After appealing and then dropping the appeal, Ashley paid the money.

Not long after, an enslaved man, Quock Walker, also sued for his freedom in Massachusetts and won.

Blanck said that in the aftermath, two facts point to a kind of quiet emancipation in the state.

One: nobody else sued for freedom. Two: when we get to the 1790 census, theres nobody else in the state of Massachusetts that will admit that they own slaves, Blanck said.

That doesnt mean slavery had disappeared, but Blanck said the states legal institutions did not support it.

After winning her lawsuit, Bett, who now called herself Elizabeth Freeman, went to work for Sedgwick, her lawyer. She ran his household for 20 years as a paid housekeeper.

When Freeman was in her 60s, she moved out onto her own property. She lived with her family on nearly 19 acres. She farmed and worked as a midwife.

Power-Greene said Freeman showed that one individual can make big change.

One can challenge authority, and end up shifting the way people think about the world, Power-Greene said. And so for me personally, I'm tremendously inspired by her. And I'm actually shocked that she's not memorialized in Massachusetts, particularly in western Massachusetts. You know, we need a MumBett statue in western Massachusetts.

But we do we have Freemans words, as written down by Catherine Maria Sedgwick, Theodore Sedgwicks daughter including this quote: "Any time, any time while I was a slave, if one minute's freedom had been offered to me & I had been told I must die at the end of that minute I would have taken it just to stand one minute on God's earth a free woman I would."

Freeman died at age 85 and was buried in the inner circle of the Sedgwick family plot in the Stockbridge cemetery.

The epithaph on Freeman's grave stone reads:

ELIZABETH FREEMAN known by the name of MUMBET Died Dec 28, 1829 Her supposed age was 85 Years. She was born a slave and remained a slave for nearly thirty years. She could neither read nor write, yet in her own sphere she had no superior nor equal. She neither wasted time nor property. She never violated a trust, nor failed to perform a duty. In every situation of domestic trial, she was the most efficient helper, and the tenderest friend. Good Mother, farewell.

This story is a production of New England News Collaborative. A version of this story was originally published by New England Public Radio.

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How An Enslaved Woman Sued And Won Her Freedom In 18th-Century Massachusetts - WBUR

Sports: A Battlefield for Freedom of Expression and Political Change – besacenter.org

Mesut zil playing for Arsenal, photo via Wikimedia Commons

BESA Center Perspectives Paper No. 1,426, January 28, 2020

EXECUTIVE SUMMARY: Athletes, executives, and fans are turning sports in anera of defiance and dissentinto a battleground for freedom of expression and political change, putting national and international sports associations that only nominally adhere to human rights on the spot.

The responses of sports associations to denunciations of repression in Chinas troubled northwestern province of Xinjiang and support for pro-democracy protesters in Hong Kong bysoccer celebrity Mesut zil,Houston Rockets basketball general manager Darryl Morey, andrugby superstar Sonny Bill Williams,alongside soccer fans in regions like Morocco and Hong Kong, highlight the willingness of those associations to sacrifice their values for commercial gain in their dealings with autocratic nations.

They also puncture the fiction of a separation of sports and politics that sports associations have long employed to justify their often-close ties to government and dealings with countries irrespective of their records in upholding basic rights.

By distancing themselves from the statements of zil and Morey (the former of whom hasties to Turkish president Recep Tayyip Erdogan), English Premier League clubArsenaland theUS National Basketball Association (NBA)have highlighted the discrepancy between their declared principles and their policies.

So has China with its penalizing of theNBAandzil.

The gap between professed principles and practice is even more yawning with the awarding of the 2021 FIFA Club World Cup to China despite Chinese president Xi Jinpings crackdown in Xinjiang and his moves to turn the Peoples Republic into a 21stcentury Orwellian surveillance state.

FIFA awarded the hosting rightsin a consultative rather than a transparent bidding process.

In a letter to Human Rights Watch,FIFA justified its decision by insisting that the Chinese football association as well as China as a nation have committed to respect human rights in their activities associated with the tournamentin accordance with internationally recognized human rights standards and FIFAs own Human Rights Policy.

It was not clear how human rights associated with the Club World Cup could be separated from the overall crackdown in China. Nor was it clear why FIFA would help Xi take a step toward fulfillinghis dream of China first qualifying for the World Cup, then winning it and ultimately hosting the tournament.

The awarding casts doubt onFIFAs campaign against racismin stadiums given that the crackdown in Xinjiang aims to force Turkic Muslims to violate principles of their faith and allow Xi Jinping to supersede Islam in their lives.

The re-emergence of sports as a battleground is not limited to the plight of Xinjiang.

Hong Kong fans recently took their struggle for greater democracy to a match in South Korea.

Chinese and Hong Kong broadcasters refrained from showing the playing of the national anthemswhen China and Hong Kong played each other in an East Asia Football Federation (EAFF) Championship match.

Hong Kong fans booed Chinas anthem, chanted Liberate Hong Kong, the revolution of our times, and displayed Hong Kongs British-era flag.

Support for national teams in autocracies like Egypt and Syria has dropped, with fans demanding the reform of regime-controlled football federations that are widely viewed as corrupt.

Egypts national team is also its national embarrassment Plenty of Egyptians are basking in the teams loss today, tweeted journalist Karim Zidan in July after host Egypt crashed out of the African Cup of Nations.

Privately, many fans assert that the team represents the repressive regime of general-turned-president Abdel Fattah Sisi rather than its historically huge fan base.

Sentiments in war-torn Syria are no different.

Anyone who knows Syria well knows that in Syria there are no independent institutions, and that includes sporting institutionsConsidering this (national) team as one that is above politics and a national team that unites people is a big lie and part of a certain propaganda, said Syrian journalist Hala Droubi.

In Morocco last year, during a match that was being broadcast live on television in the northern city of Tetouan, fans dressed in black booed the national anthem in protest against the killing by the Moroccan navy of a 20-year-old student as she tried to cross into Spain illegally.

These days, thenational anthem feels like a way to force patriotism onto us, so our reaction has been to boo, said Zakaria Kamal, a PhD student in sociology and supporter of Raja Athletic Club of Casablanca (RCA).

Fbladi Delmouni, a song chanted by RCA fans, has gone viral and become the anthem of disaffected Moroccan youth, garnering millions of hits on YouTube. Its lyrics read:

My country has wronged me

We live in a cloud in this country

They have rendered us orphans to be judged on Judgement Day

You stole the wealth of our country and shared it with strangers

Somebody understand me

This is my last word

I write it from my heart

Tears fall from my eyes

In a tweet to journalist Aida Alami, Gruppo Aquile, the composers of the song, said itexpressed a feeling among Moroccan youth that it does not matter whether they are dead or alive.

Behind the title Fbladi Delmouni hides the difficulty of living, the feeling of being a foreigner in your own country We are Moroccan citizens. We live in a dying society, and the youth is asphyxiated, the group said.

It is a sentiment shared by anti-government protesters across the globe from Latin America to Asia.

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Dr. James M. Dorsey, a non-resident Senior Associate at the BESA Center, is a senior fellow at the S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies at Singapores Nanyang Technological University and co-director of the University of Wrzburgs Institute for Fan Culture.

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Sports: A Battlefield for Freedom of Expression and Political Change - besacenter.org

Collings Foundation and FAA agree to temporary grounding of Wings of Freedom vintage planes – FOX61 Hartford

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WINDSOR Big news Friday that the Collings Foundation has grounded the vintage planes used in their Wings of Freedom tour.

The ill-fated B-17 flying fortress that crashed at Bradley Airport back in October was a part of their exhibit.

The move is temporary. It's an agreement with the FAA to suspend the living history flights while the Collings Foundation responds to the FAA's concerns about operations and procedures.

The vintage planes of the Collings Foundation traveling Wings of Freedom tour will not be taking passengers on flights.

Im a fan of history myself, said Joe Roberts, whos brother Jim was killed in the B-17 crash. I dont want to see the whole industry shut down. At the same time, I dont want to see what happened happen again.

The Collings Foundation told FOX61, We have agreed to a temporary stand down with our LHFE flights (living history flight exemption) as we work with the FAA thoroughly addressing questions regarding operations. We hope to have this resolved soon.

Nearly four months after the tragic crash that killed 13 people at Bradley Airport, a video tour of the B-17 remains on the Collings Foundation website. I can see where some people may have a tough time, especially for anyone who perished, said Roberts.

To completely take out all the information and the amazing long history of "Nine 0 Nine" would be a disservice to all the people, crew, pilots, support staff, volunteers, veterans and family members who have a personal connection to this extraordinary aircraft. We are all in deep mourning, said a spokesperson for the Collings Foundation.

Andy Munson of Higganum is a sponsor of the Collings Foundation. He says preserving history is important.

Like my family, its three generations that we have thrilled at what these airman did in World War II and we cant lose that and bringing it to the people, Munson said.

Joe Roberts has been driving his brother Jims old car now. He said the holidays were hard.

We stilldid the holidays, my brother wouldve wanted that. But its really setting in now that hes not coming back.Roberts said hes formed a bond with other victims' family members. Everybody has a big loss so in some ways it does provide support.

Right now, the Collings Foundation Wings of Freedom tour is in Venice, Florida. As of now, they have no plans to come back to Connecticut this year. The NTSB is still months away from issuing a final report into the crash.

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Collings Foundation and FAA agree to temporary grounding of Wings of Freedom vintage planes - FOX61 Hartford

Jon Moxley ‘1000 percent’ reinvigorated by creative freedom in All Elite Wrestling – WKYC.com

CLEVELAND Jon Moxley has gained a reputation in professional wrestling of being somebody that wants to handle his own business and not ask for help or support from other competitors to reach the top of the sport, and not much has changed now that he competes for All Elite Wrestling.

Moxley entered 2020 with a clear vision of doing what is best for his career, and when AEWs weekly show, Dynamite makes its Cleveland and Ohio debuts at Cleveland State Universitys Wolstein Center tonight, he will continue letting that be known in his own, unique, and often, physical way.

As much as I want to get in there with younger talent, help them make their name and build this brand -- I want to be one of the guys that helps us get to the next level -- theres a lot of self-interest right now, Moxley told WKYC.com Tuesday.

My career, at this point, for 2020 to be the year that it needs to be for me, it has to be about me. My focus has to be on me. I dont need any partners. I dont need anybody watching my back. I watch my own back. I want to be able to make decisions on the fly.

RELATED |Jon Moxley proud to bring AEW brand to home state of Ohio

Moxley made it clear during his AEW debut at the Double Or Nothing pay-per-view event back in May of 2019 that he was going to do things his way.

After the main event on the card, featuring a match between Chris Jericho and Kenny Omega, Moxley walked through the crowd and dropped Jericho, now the AEW world champion with his finishing move, The Paradigm Shift.

Moxley went on to battle Omega throughout the ring before gaining the upper hand.

Theyre in the main event, Moxley said. Theyre in the last match of the evening and competing for that top dog spot in the company, so if youre showing up on that first day, you want to come in on that prime spot in the main event. Whoever was standing there was going to get dropped on their head. It just happened to be those two.

The whole journey I went on to where Im sitting here with AEW now, Im going my own way and being my own person. I dont need to wear a white hat. I dont need to wear a black hat. I get to do what I want, when I want and to be able to have the ability to do that in AEW is definitely exciting. Everybodys got that spirit and that freedom here.

RELATED |Jon Moxley: AEW will bring energy, passion to wrestling fans in Cleveland debut tonight

Despite being on the wrong end of Moxleys debut, or maybe because of it, Jericho recently offered him a spot in his stable of talent, The Inner Circle. After initially accepting, Moxley smashed a bottle of champagne on Jericho in an act of defiance.

Instead, Moxley is focused on a path toward the AEW world title.

I aint no dummy, Moxley said. I know why he wanted tokeep your friends close and your enemies closer. Ive been in this game a long time. Ive known Chris Jericho for a long time. I knew that ploy, saw it coming from a mile away.

Nobody can tell me what I can and cant accomplish, what I can and cant do, and if I want Chris Jerichos AEW world title, Im going to get it. Thats what Im going to go for. I dont care if hes got four guys in his group, five guys in his group, 10 guys in his group, Im going to do what Ive got to do to get to the other side.

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Jon Moxley '1000 percent' reinvigorated by creative freedom in All Elite Wrestling - WKYC.com

Melissa Martin: What happens when freedom of the press is silenced? – Cleburne Times-Review

Jailed journalists around the globe. How can it be?

First Amendment aggressions in the United States. How can it be?

Devious despots misusing power and preying upon humanitywithholding information because knowledge is power. Silencing the other side of the story. Fear of losing control feeds their depravity. Dictators hiding behind castle walls and armies of destruction for those who dare criticize.

Freedom of the press is held hostage as journalists observe through prison bars. The courageous story-tellers that sacrifice personal safety for the human rights of others. But their lips will not be nailed shut like a wooden coffin. Truth finds a way to seep out of the cracks and crannies of the grave.

Duvar English, an independent newspaper in Turkey, revealed the following facts in a 2019 article. There are 250 imprisoned journalists in the world, nearly 50 of whom are in Turkey, according to a report by the New York-based Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ). Turkey follows China with the second largest number of journalists jailed with 47, marking a decrease from 68 last yearPenned by CPJ editor Elana Beiser, the report noted that over 100 news organizations have been closed under the current Turkish government and that many working journalists are being accused of terrorism and are in legal battlesSaudi Arabia and Egypt tied for third place with 26 journalists incarcerated. http://www.duvarenglish.com.

Reporters Without Borders (RSF) lends bulletproof vests and helmets at no cost to journalists travelling to dangerous areas.

Freedom of Press in USA

Before the thirteen colonies declared independence from Great Britain, the British government attempted to censor the American media by prohibiting newspapers from publishing unfavorable information and opinions. http://www.history.com.

The First Amendment, which protects freedom of the press, was adopted on December 15, 1791, as part of the Bill of Rights.

The U.S. Press Freedom Tracker, which documents First Amendment aggressions in the United States, has collected student journalism-based incidents at both the university and high school levels. Since its launch in 2017, the Tracker has documented five cases of high school newspapers being censored or placed under prior review for their coverage of controversial topics. At the university level, it has collected two arrests, two physical attacks and three border stop involving student journalists, as well as three cases of subpoenas or legal orders. http://www.freedom.press.

What Can Citizens in the US Do?

Support your local newspaper and pay for the news you consume. Read local, state, and national newspapers and write Letters to the Editors about free press issues.

Join or donate to Reporters Without Borders at http://www.rsf.org. Reporters Without Borders USA (RSF USA) is the US office of the global organization. Read about the 100 Information Heroes from countries abroad.

The Committee to Protect Journalists is an independent, nonprofit organization that promotes press freedom worldwide. CPJ is made up of about 40 experts around the world, with headquarters in New York City. When press freedom violations occur, CPJ mobilizes a network of correspondents who report and take action on behalf of those targeted. http://www.cpj.org.

Be aware of fake news outlets and fake news on social media. PolitiFact is a fact-checking website that rates the accuracy of claims by elected officials and others at http://www.politifact.com. And Snopes.com is an independent publication fact-checking site online. Fact-checking and accountability journalism from AP journalists around the globe at FactCheck@ap.org.

Freedom of the Press, if it means anything at all, means the freedom to criticize and oppose. George Orwell.

Melissa Martin, Ph.D., is an author, columnist,

educator and therapist. She lives in Ohio. Contact her at melissamcolumnist@gmail.com.

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Melissa Martin: What happens when freedom of the press is silenced? - Cleburne Times-Review