State Supreme Courts Stand Up for Economic Liberty While SCOTUS Falls Down on the Job – Reason

The U.S. Supreme Court has an unfortunate habit of shortchanging certain constitutional rights.

When the justices hear a case involving a possible infringement on the right to free speech, they generally presume that the regulation at issue is unconstitutional and force the government to justify its actions. That is as it should be.

But when the Court considers a possible infringement on the right to economic liberty, it grants the government a broad degree of deference, not only presuming the regulation to be constitutional but also forcing the regulated party "to negative every conceivable basis which might support it." In other words, the Supreme Court tips the scales heavily in favor of the government in economic liberty cases.

Fortunately, several state supreme courts have stood up where SCOTUS has fallen down on the job. In Patel v. Texas Department of Licensing and Regulation (2015), the Texas Supreme Court voided an occupational licensing scheme for eyebrow threaders, on the grounds that the regulation served no legitimate health or safety purpose and violated the economic liberty secured by the Texas Constitution. As Justice Don Willett observed in concurrence, "this case is fundamentally about the American Dream and the unalienable human right to pursue happiness without curtsying to government on bended knee." (Disclosure: Willett favorably cited my book Overruled in his Patel opinion.)

The Georgia Supreme Court gave economic liberty its due in a case decided today. Jackson v. Raffensperger arose from a 2018 law that required lactation consultants to obtain an occupational license from Georgia's secretary of state before they are permitted to offer professional advice about breastfeeding. Mary Jackson, a veteran lactation consultant with decades of experience, challenged the requirement in state court, arguing that it lacked a genuine public health or safety purpose and violated her right to earn a living under the state constitution. The Fulton County Superior Court dismissed her case, arguing that the Georgia Constitution protects no such rights.

The Georgia Supreme Court disagreed. "The trial court erred," the state high court said today. "We have long interpreted the Georgia Constitution as protecting a right to work in one's chosen profession free from unreasonable government interference." Thanks to that ruling, Jackson's case against the occupational licensing law has been revived and will now move forward.

It's a shame that SCOTUS doesn't show the same fidelity to the economic liberty that's secured by the federal Constitution.

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State Supreme Courts Stand Up for Economic Liberty While SCOTUS Falls Down on the Job - Reason

Department of Labor Strengthens Religious Liberty Protections for Faith-Based Organizations Partnering with Government – GlobeNewswire

WASHINGTON, May 18, 2020 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- First Liberty Institute today commended United States Department of Labor (DOL) Secretary Eugene Scalia for issuing a directive and newguidance thatprotects religious liberty for faith-based organizations that partner with the federal government. The Secretarys actions reflect principles implemented by President TrumpsExecutive Order 13798, Promoting Free Speech and Religious Liberty.

Without these protections, religious organizations risk facing discrimination for making employment decisions that are consistent with their beliefs, said Kelly Shackelford, President, CEO, and Chief Counsel for First Liberty Institute. Religious organizations should never be forced to abandon their religious character and mission in order to be eligible to contract with the federal government. We applaud Secretary Scalia for working to ensure that religious organizations are treated on equal terms as other organizations.

In September of 2019, First Liberty submitted a public comment supporting a DOL proposed rule that also protected religious liberty. First Libertys comment was signed by a number of national religious leaders such as Paula White, Senior Pastor of New Destiny Christian Center; Jack Graham, Senior Pastor of Prestonwood Baptist Church; Tim Clinton, President of the American Association of Christian Counselors; and Jentezen Franklin, Senior Pastor of Free Chapel.

The comment states in part: Many religious ministries, charities, and other organizations stand ready to partner with the government to help individuals in need. This proposed rule not only protects their right to be free from anti-religious discrimination in the contracting process, but it also ensures that the government is free to contract with the entities that are best able to provide services to the public regardless of religious affiliation.

Religious organizations, like their secular counterparts, provide essential services desirable to federal agencies through government contracts. Among several religious liberty protections, the new guidance ensures that religious organizations seeking to contract with the federal government are free to do so on equal terms as other organizations.

About First Liberty Institute First Liberty Institute is the largest legal organization in the nation dedicated exclusively to defending religious freedom for all Americans.

To arrange an interview, contact Lacey McNiel at media@firstliberty.org or by calling 972-941-4453.

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Department of Labor Strengthens Religious Liberty Protections for Faith-Based Organizations Partnering with Government - GlobeNewswire

Remember When: Liberty and Palace theaters compete with Tarzan films – Lancaster Eagle Gazette

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This week's installment of Remember When looks at some items from the paper in 1934.

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Mark Kinsler, Correspondent Published 7:41 a.m. ET May 18, 2020

It's not often that one sees a solemn consumer-protection notice in a movie theater ad, but Tarzan was immensely popular when the Palace Theater included this one in the May 11, 1934 Lancaster Daily Eagle. The competing ape-man, advertised on the same page by the Liberty, was Tarzan the Fearless, starring Buster Crabbe, The Mightiest Tarzan in the History of Showmanship, and cobbled together from an old serial. The learned critics at imdb.com report that both films were enjoyable and lots more

You've read about the dust storms that tore up Nebraska and Oklahoma during the Depression.But they couldn't have reached green, moist, peaceful, self-satisfied Lancaster, Ohio, could they? Yup, they could indeed, reported the May 11, 1934 Lancaster Daily Eagle.The storms blew the topsoil from poorly-managed, dried-out farms 2,000 miles to the west right through Fairfield County and ultimately out over the Atlantic to confuse ships approaching New York. https://www.history.com/topics/great-depression/dust-bowl (and its short video) are worth a look. President Roosevelt's administration responded quickly and effectively, and Federal agencies look after our soil and water to this day.

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Sabrina Ionescu should have been dazzling loyal Liberty fans at Barclays this weekend – Yahoo Sports

Sabrina Ionescu would have made her New York Liberty debut Saturday in primetime against the 2019 runner-up and dangerously reloaded Connecticut Sun. Then late on Sunday afternoon, the superstar would open a new era for the Liberty at Barclays Center in Brooklyn.

Theres little doubt fans would have filled the lower bowl, glistening in fresh seafoam-green jerseys as part of the brand refresh. Most of those would have No. 20 on the back for Ionescu, who would surely make the back page for a second time in as many months a rare feat.

Those milestones are now on hold as the 2020 season is postponed indefinitely due to the COVID-19 crisis. Commissioner Cathy Engelbert avoided any premature decision and waited as long as she could to delay training camps, which should have started the last week of April. There is no word on a potential start date, just as there have not been concrete plans for the NBAs return or MLBs postponed opening day.

The entire league and all of womens sports were projected to have a big year trending off of increased viewership and attention with the Liberty, one of the eight original WNBA franchises, particularly well positioned for a renaissance of sorts. It starts with Ionescu, one of the most popular and celebrated draft picks in the past two decades. And theres no doubt it starts with a bang.

I dont know that Ive seen a player recently that recognizes and meets moments like Sabrina, Liberty general manager Jonathan Kolb told YES Networks Chris Shearn.

Now, were left to anticipate when the league will back and what we can expect from the triple-double queen.

There was one month between the draft and the scheduled season opener. Every day past that is extra time Ionescu has to study first-year head coach Walt Hopkins system and the tendencies of her new teammates. The first thing she did after getting drafted, Hopkins told YES Network, is ask for the password to the online interactive playbook.

She was already familiar with it.

She was like, Coach, is there some kind of a mistake? This is a lot of stuff we ran in college, said Hopkins, who served as a Minnesota Lynx assistant coach under Cheryl Reeve from 2017-19. And Im like, no Sabrina, thats not a mistake. Thats intentional.

The Liberty loaded up on guards in the draft and plan to spread out the offense, making everyone a potential shooter and developing a pick-and-roll system for Ionescu. Its what she starred in at Oregon with Ruthy Hebard, who now has Chicago Sky assist magician Courtney Vandersloot.

You cant take anything away from Sabrina without giving her something, Hopkins said. Because shes capable of capitalizing on whatever you give her.

Thats apparent in her Oregon career. She had collegiate career highs in rebounds (8.6) and assists (9.1) per game her senior year while her scoring output declined (17.5 versus 19.9 as a junior).

In that sense, we can expect Ionescu to dazzle as if she were still in Duck green. And the early schedule, which featured seven of 10 games at home, would provide a measuring stick. Two against the Sun would establish how far there is to go and two against the Atlanta Dream would not only provide a fun Ionescu versus Chennedy Carter comparison, but also an analysis of where each bottom-of-the-standings franchise stood. Plus Ionescu and Hebard would meet for the first time on May 26 when the Sky came to Brooklyn.

This weekend would have marked Sabrina Ionescu's WNBA debut. Whenever that day comes, she's sure to transform the league. (Amber Matsumoto/Yahoo Sports)

But it isnt going to be easy. Fans shouldnt expect the same out of the Liberty version of Ionescu at first. Its a leap from the collegiate ranks to the 140 best players in the world. There will be adjustments.

Though Ionescu nearly put up a 50/40/90 senior campaign (51.8% FG, 39.2% 3PG, 92.1% FT), dont expect her to join Elena Delle Donne in the esteemed club anytime soon. Her record 26 triple-doubles are nearly three times the nine through all of WNBA history.

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Not one No. 1 draft pick in the past decade has averaged more in their rookie year than their senior campaign. All but three experienced a scoring decline of at least 38 percent and that drop off can be sharper for point guards.

When youre the No. 1 pick, theres pressure to go out there and score, Seattle Storm point guard Sue Bird said on the NBC Sports Runnin Plays podcast with Kerith Burke and Logan Murdock. No matter what position you are [if] youre the No. 1 pick, you should be out there dropping 20 every night ... But whats unique from a point guard standpoint is thats probably not going to be your career.

Bird, drafted in 2002 out of Connecticut, averaged 14.4 points as a senior and as a rookie. That was a third of a point off her WNBA career high over the next 18 years, yet she still won three championships.

Las Vegas Aces point guard Kelsey Plum experienced a 73.2 percent decline in production in 2017 albeit, her 31.7 points per game at Washington is off the charts.

YEAR

PLAYER

SENIOR PPG

ROOKIE PPG

% CHANGE

2019

Jackie Young

14.7 (Notre Dame)

6.6 (Aces)

-55.1%

2018

Aja Wilson

22.6 (South Carolina)

20.7 (Aces)

-8.4%

2017

Kelsey Plum

31.7 (Washington)

8.5 (Aces)

-73.2%

2016

Breanna Stewart

19.4 (Connecticut)

18.3 (Storm)

-5.7%

2015

Jewell Lloyd

18.6 (Notre Dame)

10.7 (Storm)

-42.5%

2004

Diana Taurasi

16.2 (Connecticut)

17.0 (Mercury)

+4.9%

2002

Sue Bird

14.4 (Connecticut)

14.4 (Storm)

0

As for dropping 20 a game, its difficult even as an established veteran. Retired Houston Comets star Cynthia Cooper averaged 20.98 in her career. Delle Donne is the only active player to average at least 20 (20.28) with Breanna Stewart (19.99) and Diana Taurasi (19.62) close. And last season, only Phoenix Mercurys Brittney Griner eclipsed the mark (20.7).

The point is, its not easy to average 20 points in this league. But thats the expectation of the No. 1 pick, Bird said. So its hard and shell be judged early on something like that. Which isnt fair to a point guard. Shes going to impact the game in all these other ways that people wont even understand. So I think early on there will be some judgment.

Griners experience is a good expectation model for Liberty fans. She experienced a 47 percent drop in production from Baylor to Phoenix but has now had three consecutive seasons averaging 20 points. Whats exciting about Ionescu is shes not about to fold and a particularly bad game will fuel a stellar one next time out.

Shes going to go through some lumps, as every rookie does, Kolb said. But theres zero doubt in my mind that shell do everything possible to overcome.

Ionescu is already compared to Taurasi who it should be noted actually scored 4.9 percent more her rookie year in Phoenix than her senior year with Connecticut and the late Kobe Bryant. Now with The Last Dance in everyones heads, Hopkins called her edge Michael [Jordan]-like.

Shes got a real focus on the things that she needs to do and on the things her teammates need to do and she doesnt really care how it happens, it just needs to happen, Hopkins told YES Network. And to see that drive behind somebody, you can see it in her eyes, you can see it in her actions, you can see it in the way that she approaches every game. ... She really is thinking and adjusting on the fly as well as anybody Ive seen and everything is informed by her desire to win. And she just does whatevers necessary to win.

Hence why this weekend was going to be so exciting. Theres a renewed vigor in New York as if its on the precipice of an historic era with the games premier talent ready to build a legacy.

Ionescus debut will happen eventually. Just as well get to see Delle Donne and the Washington Mystics celebrate their title with a parade and go for another one. The Mercury trio will take the league by storm, Stewart will be back in Seattle after an Achilles injury and the Sun will push for an elusive title. Thats not to mention the dozens of other rookies who could make rosters when training camps do come around.

As with every other party, its simply on pause.

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Sabrina Ionescu should have been dazzling loyal Liberty fans at Barclays this weekend - Yahoo Sports

Still standing at 70: Here’s the story behind Tulsa’s Statue of Liberty – Tulsa World

A symbolic figure stands above the landscape near the fairgrounds.

Sure. But hes got company thats quite a bit shorter and no less proud.

Less than a mile away, at Lanier Elementary School, stands a replica of the Statue of Liberty.

Its in the corner of a parking lot at the school, 1727 S. Harvard Ave.

I think it really is sort of a hidden gem, Jerry Kirkpatrick said. I dont think very many people even know about it. Nearly everybody has gone past 17th and Harvard if they have lived here very long, either going to the fair or something. But there are not a lot of them that notice that Statue of Liberty.

Maybe its time to stop for a photo op because the statue is celebrating a milestone.

The replica was unveiled in May 1950, which means Tulsas Lady Liberty is 70.

Kirkpatrick knows of eight or nine guys who are still around from the group effort that led to a replica statue springing up at the school. Its just kind of fun to give them a call and say, Guess what we did 70 years ago? and remind them of that, he said.

Kirkpatrick isnt seeking attention for himself or those responsible. He just wants to raise awareness about, as he said before, one of Tulsas hidden gems. Maybe if more people knew about the statues existence, Route 66 travelers might be tempted to travel a flew blocks from the Mother Road and pay the statue and the Golden Driller a visit.

And if they wanted to see every one of Lady Libertys twin sister statues around the country, that would be an ambitious connect-the-dots mission. There are about a hundred dots.

A landing place for Lady Liberty

You can thank the Boy Scouts for Tulsas Statue of Liberty replica.

In 1950, the Boy Scouts of America launched a Strengthen the Arm of Liberty campaign in conjunction with the organizations 40th anniversary. The campaign began with a torch-lighting ceremony beneath the Statue of Liberty, and it included the placing of 200 small-scale replica statues in towns all across the country and in U.S. territories.

The period was post-World War II America, early in the Cold War.

Whether the future is to be one of freedom or despotism depends chiefly on how our young people develop, Boy Scouts of America President Amory Houghton said in Scouting magazine when the Strengthen the Arm of Liberty program was announced.

The Boy Scouts forged ahead with program initiatives and local Cub Scout and Boy Scout troops raised funds to ensure that Tulsa would be a landing place for one of the replica statues. Kirkpatrick was a Cub Scout at the time. According to a 2001 Tulsa World story, scouts raised money by doing odd jobs or scouting projects. Lanier students, the schools PTA and other community organizations chipped in to collect $300 for the statue, which stands 8 feet tall and weighs 290 pounds. A stone base was added for a total cost of $612.

About 1,000 people were present for an unveiling ceremony May 7, 1950.

It was an excitement you couldnt bottle up, Bill Harris recalled in a 2001 Tulsa World interview.

A Boy Scout who helped with fundraising, Harris was 13 when the replica made its debut. He wore his Scout uniform for the unveiling, and he told the Tulsa World the event changed his life. When he entered the armed forces, he did so with memories of that day in mind.

Whenever I drive by, I still get that warm, patriotic feeling, he said in 2001.

According to published reports, other Oklahoma towns that became home to replicas included Blackwell, Chickasha, Cushing, Edmond, Enid, Lindsay, Miami, Muskogee, Oklahoma City, Tahlequah and Wewoka.

A source of pride

How many of the 200 replica statues are still around in 2020? About half.

Marti Attoun wrote in Scouting magazine that weather and vandalism exacted a toll. Some cities restored their statues and others junked them. In 1998, a troop in Cheyenne, Wyoming, embarked on a project to locate remaining statues and asked people to send photos and information about statues they found.

You might be hard-pressed to find a statue (manicured hedges are on both sides of the base) as well-kept as Tulsas. The citys Lady Liberty got a facelift in 1995, when Bama Pie Ltd., an Adopt-a-School partner of Lanier Elementary, backed a $5,000 refurbishment a hefty price tag even though architect Bill Knowles donated labor.

Pre-makeover, the statue showed visible signs of deterioration. The shine was gone. Spikes from the crown were missing, an arm was close to breaking and copper seams were splitting.

After the repairs? She is beautiful, Estalene Spears of Bama Pie said in 1995. She looks really nice again.

Then-principal Sharlene Johnson told the Tulsa World the statue was a source of pride for the school.

Its still a source of pride for Kirkpatrick, who was born a block from Cains Ballroom (Theres a chance Bob Wills was probably hammering over there a block away) and has spent virtually all his life in Tulsa.

Kirkpatrick, who lived in housing on the fairgrounds as a kid, now resides a few miles away in south Tulsa. He goes by to see the statue from time to time.

I think it is impressive, he said. I try to curtail my thoughts as much as I can because I am prejudiced.

Kirkpatrick said he is proud for Tulsa.

To see it ... still s1tanding proudly, its kind of neat, to me, that its 70 years old.

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Still standing at 70: Here's the story behind Tulsa's Statue of Liberty - Tulsa World

Benjamin Constant’s Writing Reaffirms the Value of Ancient Liberty – City Journal

Last year marked the 200th anniversary of the French-Swiss political writer Benjamin Constants essay, The Liberty of the Ancients Compared with that of the Moderns. Though nineteenth- and twentieth-century liberals, from John Stuart Mill and Alexis de Tocqueville to Isaiah Berlin, held Constant in high esteem, his work has lost prominence today. It deserves to better known. A witness to the best aspirations of the French Revolution and its worst crimes, Constant (1767-1830) emerged from the revolutionary era with a disgust for despotism. During the Hundred Days and the Bourbon Restoration, he became an advocate for liberal, constitutional monarchy. Delivered as a lecture to Frances Royal Athenaeum, The Liberty of the Ancients synthesized his reflections on the nature of libertyreflections that would exert an historic influence on liberalism and that remain relevant for the United States today.

To attain liberty and minimize its misuse, Constant argued, leaders and citizens must first see what makes us moderns different from the ancients. The ancient Greeks and Romans developed their understanding of liberty in socially unified communities small in territory and population. The fear of potentially hostile neighbors was ubiquitous, obliging even peaceful communities to transform themselves to be ready for unprovoked warfare. This social situation produced a fundamentally different idea of liberty than the modern conception.

For the ancients, liberty referred to the deliberations and actions of the politically enfranchised class, whose members were expected to maintain active and constant participation in politics, as a soldier on the battlefield, citizen in the assembly, or magistrate ruling over others. But this constant service to the community in war and peace entailed a dramatic subjection of the individual to the community. As Constant writes of the ancient city, there was hardly anything that the laws did not regulate. In Sparta, for example, the law determined when a newly married man could visit his wife because the city regarded him as a soldier first.

The modern state organizes itself differently. With larger populations and territories, states became less anxious about survival, and the resulting stability made possible mutually beneficial commercial ties among states. Commercial activity, in turn, allows people to satisfy needs and desires through trade, not conquest. Finding fulfillment through commerce drew many moderns away from politics and promoted a spirit of independence. State interventions became frustrating, Constant wrote, because every time governments attempt to do our own business, they do it more incompetently and expensively than we would.

For Constant, the expansion of commerce leads to a wholly different society. It promotes a conception of individual liberty that expects government to refrain from intervention in the private affairs of citizens. The overarching aim of modern liberty is the enjoyment of security in private pleasures. The goal is to sustain independence, overseen by the rule of law. And yet, the individual rarely exercises political power himself. Others govern on his behalf, through another modern discoverya system of representative government.

Constant praised the French Revolution for introducing representative government to France. On behalf of the people, the legislative body passed laws that protected the individual from the arbitrary rules of the Old Regime. Yet the Jacobins savaged this success by trying to force the concept of ancient liberty onto modern society. The Jacobins made the legislative assembly into an instrument of tyranny, passing laws not just against actions but against fleeting thoughts and impressions, while regulating all manner of virtue and vice. The law pursued relentlessly those who mis-stepped or misspoke. The Terror showed that applying ancient liberty wholesale in modern times results in tyranny.

Constant did not renounce or repudiate the ancients notion of liberty, however, and his lecture should not be read as a categorical argument for modern liberty and against ancient liberty. He warned moderns about their own defects. By focusing unduly on private pleasures, moderns become complacent about the quality of their political representatives, which, in turn, makes them vulnerable to despotism. Resisting such indifference, Constant challenges us to keep a close watch on our representatives, recasting the participatory aspirations of ancient liberty to modern circumstances.

Liberals such as Tocqueville and Mill accepted Constants challenge to combine the two notions of liberty. Tocqueville promoted participatory associations in civil society that encouraged self-development and discouraged reliance on the state. Mill connected individual rights, such as freedom of speech, to the pursuit of individual self-development and excellence. Both favored a vibrant, participatory political community that would serve as an antidote to social mediocrity and conformity.

Roughly a century later, during the Cold War, Isaiah Berlin updated Constants argument in Two Concepts of Liberty. He contrasted modern liberty, or what he called negative freedom, with Communism, which failed to acknowledge limits on government. Berlin also affirmed the value of representative institutions and political participation, recognizing them as essential to the preservation of modern liberty.

Contemporary American liberalism, however, has largely ignored the good counsel of Constant and his followers. It has elevated the liberty of moderns while forcefully denouncing the liberty of the ancients. For decades, American liberalism has regarded local communities and state governments not as places to train an active citizenry but as sites of oppression. American liberals sound the alarm about how local-citizen participation could threaten various rightsthus the modern liberals preference for transferring power from legislatures to administrative bureaucracies or the judiciary.

This view implies a different approach to politics, one that enfeebles the citizenry and privileges a legal elite. If you want to change the law, dont try to elect new representatives, because they have little real power. Instead, litigate, and hope that an appellate court strikes down laws that you dislike. This approach favors the amicus brief over the canvassing candidate and leaves most citizens out of the political process. Consider the massive role that judges and administrative agencies have played since 1965 in setting policy on birth control, abortion, affirmative action, capital and noncapital punishment, higher-education admissions, same-sex marriage, and transgender rightsoften with weak constitutional justification.

Defenders of this system argue that we cant trust an active citizenry to elect the right legislators. Yet after World War II, Commonwealth and European democracies saw unprecedented levels of political engagement, with a resulting expansion of individual rights. These successes were driven by legislatures, not courts.

It is this kind of liberalism, one that broadly trusts the people and encourages an active citizenry, to which Constant aspired. In 2020, the question for American liberalism is whether it still broadly trusts the people and still believes in the liberty of the ancients.

Constant saw that political participation is a school for moral and civic development. Americans have needed little prodding to get involved in politics, but today, many citizens see their political participation threatened by unelected officials. As a result, some Americans have become indifferent to political institutions, while others flirt with radicalism. Were Constant with us today, he would lament this developmentand encourage Americans and their leaders to reaffirm the value of ancient liberty.

David L. Tubbs teaches politics at The Kings College in New York City. Nathan Pinkoski is a postdoctoral fellow at the University of Toronto.

Photo:VanderWolf-Images/iStock

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Benjamin Constant's Writing Reaffirms the Value of Ancient Liberty - City Journal

NJ police do the right thing for liberty at gym that opened up (Opinion) – New Jersey 101.5 FM Radio

A big shout out to the Bellmawr police chief and his department for their handling of the gym owners who opened today despite Gov. Phil Murphy's order to stay shut.

This morning, the situation looked like it could get ugly as more than 100 supporters showed up along with a throng of media, local and national. The police handled it with great professionalism and compassion.

Even though the owners were handed a summons, the place was not shut down and none of the patrons were given tickets.

Let's see if the owner can quietly go about running his business in a "safe" manner, now that the initial excitement of his reopening has died down. I'm sure if he incurs major fines or legal bills there would be enough people from around the country that would be happy to contribute to any crowdfunding source set up for him. I know I would.

The post above reflects the thoughts and observations of New Jersey 101.5 talk show host Dennis Malloy. Any opinions expressed are Dennis' own.

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NJ police do the right thing for liberty at gym that opened up (Opinion) - New Jersey 101.5 FM Radio

Liberty athletics notebook: Maine pitcher DeLaite transferring to LU; Byron to honor duo at Coca-Cola 600 – Lynchburg News and Advance

Liberty baseball coach Scott Jackson was ecstatic when two senior infielders shortstop Cam Locklear and utility player Trey McDyre announced they were returning for the 2021 campaign. They were able to return for a fifth season of eligibility because of the NCAAs ruling to grant seniors another season because of the coronavirus pandemic canceling the spring sports season.

However, one of the four seniors who elected not to return was right-handed pitcher Garret Price, a reliable and valuable arm in the bullpen who was used either in long relief or in the late innings.

Jackson found a left-handed pitcher in the transfer portal who could fill Prices role.

Maine senior Trevor DeLaite told the Bangor Daily News he is transferring to Liberty as a graduate student and will be immediately eligible to play his last season in 2021.

DeLaite told the Daily News he will be in the hunt for a spot in the starting rotation, but also could be used in the bullpen.

The 6-foot-1, 180-pound DeLaite pitched against the Flames in Lynchburg in the 2019 season. He allowed one run on one hit in 3 1/3 innings of relief in a 3-2 loss. He allowed four walks and struck out four.

Seeing their facility, seeing their talent level, hearing about the reputation of their coach, and their pursuit of God, too, their values lined up really well with mine, DeLaite told the newspaper. That made it a real easy decision.

Byron honoring two military veterans at race in Charlotte

NASCAR Cup Series driver and Liberty junior William Byron will display the names of two U.S. military service members with ties to the university during the May 24 running of the Coca-Cola 600 at Charlotte Motor Speedway.

Bryons No. 24 Chevrolet will don a patriotic paint scheme with the name of U.S. Army Sgt. Robert J. Billings on the windshield header. George Rogers, a decorated World War II hero and former Liberty administrator, will be honored with his name emblazoned beneath the rear window.

Rogers died in August 2019 at the age of 100. He received the Purple Heart and Prisoner of War medals for his service in World War II. He was one of 75,000 American and Philippine troops captured by Japanese forces while serving in the Philippines and was among the survivors of the Bataan Death March. He spent more than 25 years as an administrator at Liberty, including as the universitys chief financial officer, before retiring in 1999.

Billings, a native of Clarksville, died at the age of 30 on Oct. 13, 2012, in Afghanistan from wounds suffered from an enemy attack using an improvised explosive device. Billings was a student in Libertys online programs.

Two teams honored for academics

Two teams from Liberty received Public Recognition Awards from the NCAA for having an Academic Progress Rate (APR) score in the top 10% of Division I programs in their respective sports.

The APR scores measured academic eligibility, retention and graduation rates from the 2015-16 academic year through the 2018-19 academic year.

The volleyball and womens cross country programs were honored at Liberty. Volleyball has been recognized for its APR scores in six straight years, while womens cross country has been honored three straight years.

Damien Sordelett covers Liberty University athletics and local golf for The News & Advance. Reach him at (434) 385-5550.

Damien Sordelett covers Liberty University athletics and local golf for The News & Advance. Reach him at (434) 385-5550.

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Opinion: Five steps to protect public health, regain trust and ensure liberty – The Detroit News

Casey Mattox Published 10:47 p.m. ET May 13, 2020

American wits from Harriet Tubman to H.L. Mencken have opined on the exercise of balancing liberty and safety. In the midst of the COVID-19 pandemic, finding that balance has high-stakes implications. And Americans ability to trust the political process already foundational to a healthy democracy becomes even more critical when public leaders are asking people to make personal sacrifices for the greater good of public health.

Real or perceived abuse will make it harder for public officials to gain the public confidence they need to act. In Maryland, police have arrested people for failing to maintain social distancing. In California, theyve chased people out of the ocean who werent near anyone. In New York, the mayor broke up a rabbis funeral and specifically threatened Jewish citizens with arrest. And in several states, officials ticketed and threatened Easter churchgoers who stayed inside their cars for a drive-in church.

Each of these cases involved a judgment call by local authorities who are doing their best to perform the unpleasant but necessary task of balancing public health and civil liberties.

For going on two months now, a majority of Americans has taken the reasonable view that supporting these kinds of restrictions are acceptable because individual actions can help save lives during the coronavirus pandemic. Most Americans gave government the benefit of the doubt, forgoing the exercise of fundamental freedoms to flatten the curve.

People protest Gov. Gretchen Whitmer's new executive orders April 15 on the Capitol steps.(Photo: Daniel Mears, The Detroit News)

But as cracks begin to appear in that solidarity, government must adjust quickly to new information and changed circumstances especially when it comes to actions that violate peoples civil liberties. Government overreach, apparent attempts by political adversaries to score political points and use coronavirus to claim more power for themselves, and seemingly arbitrary distinctions between some activities deemed essential and some deemed non-essential have helped to widen those cracks in public confidence in government.

However necessary those restrictions are, if officials want them to actually be effective, they must continue to implement and exercise their extraordinary powers in a manner that will build public confidence, not diminish it.

Heres a framework of five factors for policymakers to consider:

Invite the public into the process. Government action impacting public health and safety during a crisis calls for more transparency, not less. As it assumes more power over the livelihoods and liberties of citizens, it can maintain public trust by making public the information used to determine what restrictions are being imposed and the reasoning behind them. Public officials can also invite community leaders to advise. Community and faith leaders are continuing to serve their neighbors and help their fellow citizens through this crisis. They have unique, local knowledge on innovative ways they can begin to reopen and expand this service while protecting public health.

Reassess, reassess, reassess. Orders restricting civil liberties should be time-limited and subject to frequent periodic reviews, expiring after a week or two but renewable if they are justified by the public health crisis. Sunset provisions such as this help ensure officials are mindful of the burdens they are placing on their constituents and the extraordinary nature of the powers they wield, while providing regular opportunities to adjust as more data is gathered and public health needs evolve.

People stand a safe distance apart while waiting to pick up their orders at Bucharest Grill on Livernois Avenue in Detroit on April 23, 2020.(Photo: Robin Buckson, The Detroit News)

Keep it focused. Limits on civil liberties should be as narrow as possible. If drive-in church services or protests that respect social distancing guidelines and use masks are possible without jeopardizing public health, they should not be prohibited. Overly broad restrictions on constitutionally protected activities make it less likely the public will tolerate those limits for an extended period and heightens the risk that people will perceive officials as abusing their authority, lessening respect for strictures that are truly necessary.

Allow for modifications. Government should be seeking ways to facilitate modified versions of religious services, public protests, and other constitutionally protected activities by making safer spaces and equipment available where possible. Rather than imposing blanket bans, officials should be proactively seeking ways to facilitate the exercise of First Amendment freedoms whose normal exercise is limited by their own orders. Are there large public spaces or video equipment that can be safely and temporarily used by small religious or community groups?

Ensure equal application. When touching on free expression and religious freedom, its imperative that those imposing the restrictions be consistent. Constitutionally protected activities should not be more restricted than other activities protesters deserve the same consideration as joggers, for example and any restrictions on assembly or speech must be content-neutral, applying to all in the same way.

Protesters wait in line to enter the Capitol after a rally on the front steps and lawn in Lansing on April 30.(Photo: Daniel Mears, The Detroit News)

As officials strive to balance public health and the rights of citizens, public confidence is their strongest ally. But if they get too comfortable with the extraordinary powers they can exercise during a public health crisis like this one, they will squander the public trust. With government as with one another, the best way to be thought competent and trustworthy is to be competent and trustworthy.

Casey Mattox is a senior fellow at the Charles Koch Institute.

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Opinion: Five steps to protect public health, regain trust and ensure liberty - The Detroit News

C&I Live Tweet: The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance on INSP – Cowboys and Indians

Join us May 30 as we tune in to the classic John Ford western starring John Wayne, James Stewart and Lee Marvin.

Sure, we know: If youre aC&Ireader, youve probably already seen John FordsThe Man Who Shot Liberty Valance. But, really, wouldnt you love to see it again? And maybe ask someone whos never seen it to accompany you on social media, if not in person?

Well, pilgrims, come join the party: On Saturday, May 30, you can join us as we Live Tweet whileFords 1962classic airs on theINSP digital cable and satellite television channel at 8 pm ET/7 pm CT. Look for the hashtag #ciLibertyINSP on Twitter, and dont be shy about sharing your own thoughts and observations in real time. Maybe were still living in lockdown, but so what? For two hours or so, we aim to establish our very own online movie-watching community.

For the benefit of those who tuned in late: The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance is a fascinating and affecting attempt to tell the story behind the story of Wild West myth.

When tenderfoot Ransom Stoddard (James Stewart, an idealistic young lawyer, arrives in the frontier town of Shinbone, he discovers his legalisms are of little use against legendarily lethal outlaw Liberty Valance (Lee Marvin). Fortunately, Stoddard finds an unlikely ally in Tom Doniphon (John Wayne). For all his gruffness, Doniphon emerges as an honorable knight errant, a selfless hero who ultimately plays the key role in a fateful shootout but insists that Stoddard take credit for being the hero of the title.

There is a distinctively melancholy edge to The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance, Fords last great western. Stoddard goes on to become a successful politician, bringing the dubious values of civilization to the Wild West, while Doniphon fades into obscurity, becoming an anachronism long before his death. Even when Stoddard nobly offers to set the record straight, his truths are dismissed as inconvenient. As a newspaper editor remarks in the movies most-quoted line: This is the West, sir. When the legend becomes fact, print the legend.

As Scott Eyman notes in his definitive Print the Legend: The Life and Times of John Ford: For Ford, every triumph carries the embryo of eventual failure In The Searchers, as well as Liberty Valance, the kind of men needed to master the wilderness are the kind of men that only function in wilderness; they are men who civilization must expel. If society is to benefit from someones sacrifice, legend must take precedence over truth Liberty Valance deftly, shrewdly shows the ragged process by which stories become legends, and legends become history.

Dismissed by many critics during its initial theatrical release, The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance now is widely acknowledged as one of the filmmakers most heartfelt and fully realized works. Indeed, it was selected in 2007 for preservation in the United States National Film Registry by the Library of Congress as being Culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant.

For all those reasons, and more, were looking forward to taking another look at Fords late-career masterwork May 30 on INSP. And we invite you to join us

Just to get you in the right mood: Here is the Top 10 hit song inspired by the movie, written by Burt Bacharach and Hal David (the same paid who later wrote Raindrops Keep Falling on My Head for Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid) and sung by Gene Pitney.

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C&I Live Tweet: The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance on INSP - Cowboys and Indians

Andy McCarthy: ‘Burden of proof’ is on government to show why ‘liberty’ must be taken – Fox News

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Fox News contributor Andy McCarthy said on Monday that while states are lifting coronavirus restrictions, states who are keeping their economiesclosed for public safety purposeswill have to explain their reasoning to residents.

We seem to get this backwards when were outside of the courthouse. When were inthe courthouse, we know that the government has the burden of proof before they can take your liberty away, McCarthy told Fox & Friends.

US OFFICIALS CONFIRM FULL-SCALE INVESTIGATION OF WHETHER CORONAVIRUS ESCAPED FROM WUHAN LAB

For the last few weeks under stringent coronavirus "stay-at-home" orders, Americans across the nation have taken to the streets to protest what they deem unreasonable measures put in place by their governors to stop the spread of the pandemic.

As the deadly virus has taken the lives of over 50,000 Americans, it has also taken the livelihoods of millions with many warning that the resulting consequences for the U.S. economy if closed further could be calamitous.

CLICK HERE FOR FULL CORONAVIRUS MAP

Another 4.4 million Americans filed for unemployment claims last week, the Labor Department reported Thursday, bringing job losses since the outbreak startedto more than 26 million. The impact has completely erased the entirety of the 22.78 million labor market gains since the Great Recession more than a decade ago.

McCarthy said that when American fundamental rights are at stake, the government has to show that it has a legitimate interest in regulating.

CLICK HERE FOR THE FOX NEWS APP

We all know that preventing the spread of infectious disease is certainly a legitimate government interest, but if theyre going to burden your fundamental rights, they have to show that they are using the least restrictive legitimate means to do that, McCarthy said.

Its not like you have to prove that your job is essential, they have to prove that there is no safe way of conducting your job before they can regulate it.

Fox News' Julia Musto contributed to this report.

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Andy McCarthy: 'Burden of proof' is on government to show why 'liberty' must be taken - Fox News

Liberty versus the virus | Diana Barshaw – The Times of Israel

When the people fear the government there is tyranny. When the government fears the people there is liberty. Thomas Jefferson

Dawn was not yet broken as she let the dog in the back of the car, backed out, and drove down to the shore. A tattered banner hung from the gate that stated, Stay home and save lives. There was some traffic on the main road which calmed her slightly, but still she was looking in all directions, her body rigid, hyper vigilant. She was undecided about what to do if she were caught, lie and say she was going food shopping, a permitted activity, or tell the truth and suffer the consequences. She was going jogging with her dog on a secluded beach, but was unclear what the punishment was for this infraction.

Sounds like the beginning of a novel about a dystopian world doesnt it? But actually it is an exact recounting of how I started my day last week. In fear of my government.

We are under lockdown to prevent the spread of the coronavirus. Suddenly governments issue one regulation after another, and there is such a degree of fear in the populations of the world that the majority follow the strictures religiously. Google and Facebook (the final arbiters of logic and rational behavior in our present reality) tell us to stay home and save lives. There are otherwise sensible people, Facebook friends, who feel they have the authority to post, Stay the F**k home.

Heres my response, if you want to stay home, do so, but dont tell me what to do. I know that the liberty to swing my fist ends where your nose begins, I mustnt endanger someone else. But in what possible universe does my jogging alone endanger anyone? Even the argument that if everyone did it then it would be dangerous doesnt apply because I go to places that are empty even when there are no restrictions.

Let Science (with a capital S) guide our decisions, we hear from many voices. However, science doesnt work like that. In order to get reliable results using scientific method you need enough data. I would hazard a guess that in a year or two well have some idea of the efficacy of the strategies of different countries, but already models predicting vastly exaggerated mortality have been shown wrong though some policies were put in place based on those predictions. Garbage in garbage out is the modelers motto. Therefore in the absence of reliable information it is essential to use common sense, and not pretend that there is magic (even if you call it science) out there which will tell you what to do.

I feel so threatened! Not by the virus, mind you, but by over simplified regulations that make little sense, and a cowed, compliant population.

During the first Gulf war in 1990, as new Olim, when the scuds were raining down on Haifa, my eldest was a toddler. We were asked to prepare a sealed room, and to put him in a specially designed gas mask every time the sirens screamed. We pretended it was a space mask and he loved putting it on. Schools were not cancelled and the children went to their classes with their gas mask kits. The city lit up with the children painting the gas mask boxes and even having competitions for the most decorative ones. Thats the Israel we lived in.

Then the second Intifada with evil men blowing up buses filled with innocents. We asked ourselves, should we let our children go to school by bus or drive them? School went on, we didnt leave, we continued to work and go to cafes, and ride the buses, and finally we stopped the evil ones. The evil ones would blow up a bus and the next day it wouldnt even be possible to know where it had happened, and we continued our lives. Some criticized the level or our resilience. Didnt we care enough?

9/11 and the second Gulf War. Again missiles rained on Haifa, the supreme court building was damaged, a missile fell almost in the middle of the street going to our apartment building, another came within meters of Rambam Hospital, but somehow didnt detonate, the Zim building down by the shore was damaged. Even under such circumstances we continued to live our lives. Cafs or restaurants that had a bomb shelter nearby could stay open, while those without a nearby shelter were required to close, sensible regulations. I was sitting in my favorite caf when a siren went off. I put the saucer on the cup to keep my coffee warm and walked to the shelter with the other patrons at the caf. When the all clear signal sounded we went back to finish our coffees and pastries.

The Second Lebanon war and my eldest, a toddler during the first Gulf war, was in the army. Yet again missiles rained down on Haifa and the north. We held our Shabbat and Tisha beAv services in the bomb shelter of the reform Synagogue because ours didnt have a shelter, but we continued having services.

So what has happened to us now? Why, suddenly, has our society lost the ability to assess risk and act logically. This natural disaster is different from the terrorism and war weve experienced, where weve excelled at never letting our enemy feel theyve succeeded. Nevertheless use our past experiences of not shutting down but instead to stand up straight, look at the situation and decide the level of risk were willing to take. The greatest risk is being unable to take appropriate risk.

Both the blind disregard of obviously sensible regulations, and the blind regard for obviously illogical regulations are equally disturbing.

I am proud that we Israelis can see the reality we live in and find ways to build an amazing quality of life despite our predicaments. Lets continue that tradition, climb out of these restrictions and return to our lives.

Diana Barshaw was a research scientist and professor in the field of behavior and ecology from 1988 to 2004. Starting in 2005 she spent two years writing a novel while working for Berlitz and the Berlitz Virtual Classroom as an English teacher and as the supervisor and trainer of English teachers. She also wrote a monthly column for the Jerusalem Post called Wild Israel. Currently Diana explores the wild parts of Israel and guides hikers. She has her own website (www.DianaBarshaw.com) where she describes the Israel National Trail, writes articles about Israeli wildlife, and where she is compiling a guide to hiking the trails of the Carmel Mountains.

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Liberty versus the virus | Diana Barshaw - The Times of Israel

Letter: Personal liberty doesnt give you the right to endanger others – Deseret News

I noticed that people were protesting last weekend using the phrase Give me liberty or give me death. This is obviously a phrase that originated during the Revolutionary War. This was during a time when another country was seeking to retain its power over us in order to keep control over territory in the world with the ultimate goal being one of financial gain. That was the motivation behind the British Empires actions.

What is the motivation of the current government efforts to keep us at home and keep social distancing? It is public safety and health. You have a right to protest and have your own opinion. You even have a right to choose death or liberty. However you do not have the freedom to choose death for others. This would include health care workers, first responders and grocery store clerks. We all know that we do need to get back to work and get back to normal. But the decision about how and when to do this needs to be based on facts and science. And most importantly, it needs to be based on the health and safety of everyone.

Pattie Evans

Bluffdale

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Letter: Personal liberty doesnt give you the right to endanger others - Deseret News

Liberty Center man to be released from Marion prison – Sentinel-Tribune

A Liberty Center man in jail for two years for a sexually-oriented offense with a teen is set to be released this week.

John Box, 48, pleaded guilty in 2018 to sexual battery, a second-degree felony. The charge was in relation to his actions with a girl under age 13 in 2006.

An audio hearing was held Friday between Wood County Common Pleas Judge Matthew Reger and Box, who is in the North Central Correctional Institution in Marion.

He was sentenced July 19, 2018, and with 42 days credit given for his time at the Wood County Justice Center, he is set to be released May 3.

In return for his guilty plea, the state dismissed charges of gross sexual imposition filed in January 2018 for incidents that allegedly started in January 2004 while he was living in Wood County. The 2006 offense also occurred in Wood County.

He resided in Henry County at the time of his sentencing and said he would be returning to that county upon release from prison.

At sentencing, Box was told he must register as a Tier III sex offender upon release.

Alyssa Blackburn, assistant prosecuting attorney for Wood County, said Box would be classified as a sexual predator.

On Friday, Reger spent much of the time during the hearing advising Box what he must do to adhere to that order.

Box is required, a child victim offender, to register with the sheriff in the county he resides every 90 days for the rest of his life. He must register within three days of entering any county and 20 days prior to changing residence, school or employment address.

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Liberty Center man to be released from Marion prison - Sentinel-Tribune

Group Conversion Therapy And Its Aftermath At Liberty University – rvamag.com

A former Liberty student shares his experiences with conversion therapy on campus and the profound negative effects it had on his life and the lives of many others.

Were only a month into quarantine, and already Liberty University, the worlds largest evangelical college located in Lynchburg, Virginia, and its president, Jerry Falwell Jr., are demonstrating why so few respect or take them seriously.

Most recently, Falwell not only revealed his bizarre conspiracy theories about COVID-19, but also decided, recklessly, to allow students back on campus after spring break amidst the pandemic, later filing for arrest warrants (through the LU police department) for two reporters covering the story. This is not to mention how earlier this year, Falwell announced his ardent support for Vexit, a comical plan for several Virginia counties to secede from the state because of proposed changes to gun laws. And before that, Falwell unveiled his schools new Falkirk Center, an evangelical thinktank, which says that turning the other cheek is no longer sufficient when it comes to fighting what they believe to be a culture war against the big bad liberal Left.

Needless to say, the foolishness and irresponsibility of Liberty and Falwell dont seem to be slowing down anytime soon.

I, too, contributed to upholding LUs stellar reputation when I wrote about my weekly one-on-one meetings with the man on campus who tried to help turn me straight: Dane Emerick, a so-called pastor who continues his pseudo-counseling at LU today. However, as anyone with even a basic understanding of psychology might guess, he wasnt all that successful.

Yours truly is still very gay.

My stories from Liberty, both in gay conversion therapy and beyond, are legion, and to offer them all in their more-often-than-not absurd detail could fill an entire book. I am therefore resigned to offering just a few here.

From the time a Resident Advisor casually whispered for me to come to his room for some fun after a nightly room check (yes, we were checked nightly to ensure we followed curfew [and, yes, we had a curfew]) to when a Worship Studies professor repeatedly propositioned me to meet up off-campus and, after I didnt, low-key threatened to implicate my cousin into the situation (it was a whole thing), I certainly had my fair share of strange encounters with other Liberty gays. But I was not a major player in the gay underground of LU or in Lynchburg. More often than not, I was too hell-bent on becoming straight.

I had drunk the Liberty Kool-Aid and, for the most part, actively fought against my gay desires, as evidenced by my recurrent meetings with Pastor Dane over the span of my undergrad tenure. And because I was supposedly making such progress toward becoming straight insofar as I went on a few dates with a few lady friends of mine (emphasis on friends and a few) and learned to affect a more straight-presenting brand of masculinity (with any aberrant feminine behavior being chalked up to me being Canadian [whatever that means]) Pastor Dane offered me the chance to join his gay conversion therapy group meetings.

Now imagine this: youre gay and at a school where youre not allowed to articulate or act upon your sexuality, leaving you with having to guess who might also be gay, with very few clues. Then, your conversion therapist tells you that you have an exclusive opportunity to gather in a small, sweaty room for a secret meeting with about fifteen or so other gay guys.

To put it mildly, conversion therapists arent the brightest of folks. As you might have expected, for several of the guys who attended, the conversion therapy group became gay Christian speed dating.

Though I only went to the group meeting once, it both gave me a clearer picture of who else was gay on campus and allowed me to meet one of my campus crushes, a guy Ill call Mac. My and Macs schedules seemed to align, because oftentimes when I went to the cafeteria, he was there, too.

I distinctly remember seeing Mac because I had thought he looked like Ricky Ullman from the Disney Channels Phil of the Future, who just so happened to be a major tween crush of mine. Many times, Mac and I used to sit a few tables apart from each other in the cafeteria, and I would let my eyes meet his a few seconds longer than is socially acceptable, furtively signaling to him my hush-hush interest. However, the problem was that I never knew whether or not his sustained eye contact was a returned gesture.Meeting him at the conversion therapy group meeting seemed to clear things up.

When I was in attendance, the conversion therapy group, formerly called Masquerade, was dubbed Band of Brothers (may the homosocial/homoerotic under/overtones be lost on no one). Now called Armor Bearers, the group meeting, led by Pastor Dane, was held in a location on campus that was not disclosed to anyone but the group members in order to ensure secrecy something with which evangelical gays are intimately familiar.

So, as we all piled into the room, we pressed up against one another and shared our so-called weekly victories (times we resisted our gay desires). We discussed the concomitant issues of struggling with same-sex attraction (the phrasing used in such evangelical circles). And, of course, we prayed with and for each other after we listened to scripture read aloud.

But the glue that held the group together was the way in which its members constantly performed an affected presentation of pseudo-machismo, an off-brand version of stereotypical manliness. Praying for you, dude! Right on, bro! Man, Jesus is really working through you! It was like they were trying to approximate the discourse of a gay locker-room porno they had watched beforehand. Cringe-worthy, to say the least.

But regardless of how I, even then, was repelled by such artificial and poorly executed masculine speech, I managed to secure Macs number afterwards. Within weeks of texting and Skyping, it became clear that Mac felt similarly to the way I felt about him.There was a problem, though: he had a girlfriend.

I told Mac that nothing could happen between us if his girlfriend was in the picture; I said that until he ended things with her, I was off-limits. And how did Mac respond?

He thanked me.

He said staying with his girlfriend was the right thing to do, and that if he and I had continued down the sinful path we were traveling, we would have only found unhappiness, regret, and unfulfillment.

Disappointing, to say the least. Mac and I slowly stopped texting and Skyping as much, and we eventually stopped talking altogether, though we still remain connected on social media. When I last looked Mac up on Facebook, he, like the aforementioned Resident Advisor, had gotten married. To a woman.

Thankfully, unhitched and in pursuit of a proper education, I left Liberty for graduate school in my native province of Ontario, leaving behind American evangelicalism, albeit temporarily. In doing so, I found my vocation in academia, particularly in the fields of literature, religion, and Holocaust studies.

Since beginning my doctorate, though, I have returned to the upside-down world of conversion therapy in evangelical contexts, this time as a scholarly line of inquiry. In fact, much of my work on the unrespected pseudoscience of conversion therapy centers on Libertys version thereof as a central case study.

During my last trip to Lynchburg, I saw a couple of gay friends who also went through conversion therapy. One friend in particular, who we will call Gabriel, grabbed a drink with me at a swanky Lynchburg hotel bar. Gabriel and I had first met during our freshman year because at the time, when I was trying to be straight, I was pursuing his best friend, who we will call Becky. Despite things not working out between Becky and me for obvious reasons, Gabriel and I remained pals.

It was to Gabriel that I turned after a freshman year tryst with one of my dorms Spiritual Life Directors. But I didnt tell Gabriel exactly what had happened right away or at least not directly. Since my Spiritual Life Director refused to speak with me after our romantic encounter most likely due to his heavy burden of subsequent evangelical shame and because I had, at that point, yet to gather the confidence to reach out to Pastor Dane, I was left with decidedly few people in whom I could confide.

To whom could I turn and tell that I was gay at a school that fined and/or punished students who were caught in homosexual activity?

Before I explicitly told Gabriel what had transpired between me and my Spiritual Life Director, I followed in the footsteps of so many angsty teens before me: I wrote a poem. The poem was titled You Ever Notice How Cold It Gets in the Fall? My capacity for subtlety was apparently not overly refined.

In an effort to share what happened, in (what I thought was) a stealthy way, I asked Gabriel if I could read to him my poem. He answered in the affirmative, and after I finished, he looked at me with empathetic eyes, eyes that told me he might actually know what I was covertly trying to communicate. After a few minutes of awkward, fumbling, back-and-forth conversation, we both blurted out that we struggle with same-sex attraction. I asked him if he had ever liked women, to which he said, No. Never.

Today, Gabriel is also married. And, like Mac, to a woman.

Thankfully, not all of us Liberty queers ended up married to women. A number of gays from Liberty landed in cities like New York, DC, and Atlanta far away from their evangelical pasts and at a safe distance from Liberty and its culture of fear. Some have turned their experiences into literary works of art, like Andrew Hahn, who recently documented his experience at LU in Gods Boy, an equally scathing and heartbreaking poetry collection. And some, like me in Toronto, ended up working back in their hometowns, living that big gay lifestyle about which we were emphatically warned.

But many dont. Many of these ex-gays those who have convinced themselves (and have been convinced by others) that they are not gay end up living inauthentic lives that become prison cells of unfulfilling existence.

These are the men who act according to the evangelical scripts they have been taught to follow, which they mistakenly believe will afford them meaning, purpose, and ordered lives. These are the same men who, when they hit a certain age, will realize they have wasted precious years that they will never get back. And these are the ones who will show up as faceless torsos on Grindr whilst away on business trips, only to return home to their families, eagerly counting down the days until their next lascivious get-away.

It still boggles my mind to think that I probably would have claimed a similar ex-gay identity, had it not been for the actual education that I received post-Liberty. Crazy what a little learning and critical reflection does for a guy.

And it is in the spirit of critical reflection, in concert with the practice that evangelicalism taught me of sharing my testimony, that I continue to expose conversion therapy programs for how embarrassingly unsuccessful they are. Despite never having changed an individuals sexual orientation, this base practice at Liberty and beyond somehow still endures. As someone who underwent conversion therapy, I am doing what I can to speak up for those who have been victims to such psychological, emotional, and spiritual violence.

In fact, if I able to change even one persons mind about conversion therapys legitimacy, Ill be more successful than the ex-gay movement has been in changing the sexual orientation of any single individual in all the decades it has existed something that is remarkably pitiful given that changing individuals orientations is its express purpose.

Call me crazy, but I think the odds are in my favour.

Top Photo viaLiberty University

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Group Conversion Therapy And Its Aftermath At Liberty University - rvamag.com

The real problem with the manufactured coronavirus liberty protests – Seattle Times

Theres a dead giveaway that these coronavirus liberty protests around here are political theater, and not real outrage.

It has to do with a certain sense of dj vu.

Take, say, our newly famous state Rep. Robert Sutherland, R-Granite Falls, who is in the national spotlight now for taking to the state Capitol steps in Olympia last Sunday and seeming to foment armed rebellion in the middle of a pandemic.

The ruling state government here is hell bent on destroying the rule of law, Sutherland told the big crowd. If you try to defend your rights, they will kill you without hesitation.

Yep, fighting words. But these are unusual times, and you can sense the heightened passion in his oh wait, Im sorry. Sutherland actually said that at an Olympia gun protest a year ago, in April, 2019. My mistake. Heres what he said, pistol tucked in his pants, at last weekscoronavirus protest:

Were starting a rebellion in Washington Governor, you send men with guns after us for going fishing, well see what a revolution looks like you send your goons with guns, we will defend ourselves.

Sutherland was joined in inveighing against this new government tyranny by Rep. Jim Walsh, R-Aberdeen who had also joined Sutherland in decrying the old government tyranny back at the 2019 rally.

Or take Rep. Matt Shea, R-Spokane Valley. You know your liberty rally is part of an ongoing vaudeville act when he signs up. Oh look: May Day Mutiny, read a flyer that Shea was circulating online last week trying to whip up more protests, according to The Spokesman-Review of Spokane.

RE-OPEN THE ECONOMY GOV. INSLEE. May 1st, if you wont we will rally in our counties to get them to re-open, Shea wrote. Freedom is the cure.

I dont know, if anything feasts on freedom, its this virus. But setting that aside, how genuinely oppressed by the coronavirus restrictions can one claim to be when you were exactly as oppressed by other perceived tyrannies, like five minutes ago?

I bring all this up because it feels as if were heading once again into idiocracy territory, with the hard political debates we need to have instead getting hijacked by theater performers like those mentioned above.

Yes, the government shutdown orders are onerous, and yes, some of them dont make much sense (I can go running but I cant go fishing?) But nobody is being ticketed for violating any of them, let alone confronted by goons with guns. Thats because they were issued in an emergency fashion with an acknowledgment that they werent perfect, so it was thought everyone deserved some slack.

But the bigger problem is they are a total sideshow to the real political problem we face now one that actually is worth protesting. Namely, that government is failing to ramp up enough testing to allow a social and economic reopening.

This one I truly do not understand. America, with more than 50,000 deaths now and bearing down on a million infections, still is only testing fewer than 200,000 people a day. That doesnt rank us in the top 20 countries for per capita testing.

Epidemiologists have been shouting about this deficiency for months now. Its vital because its only way out. The virus isnt much chastened by guns or protests or bellicose threats, but it can be hunted down relentlessly and isolated, by science. Not doing so virtually guarantees more outbreaks.

I see test-trace-isolate as the only real solution to the problem were facing, says Trevor Bedford, an epidemiologist at Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center, who was one of the first to warn that a large-scale outbreak in America was happening. A mass testing operation is the Apollo program of our times, he called it six weeks ago.

Harvard scientists estimated last week that to fully re-open society and the economy, we need to be doing 20 million tests per day by this summer. Were currently doing 1 percent of that.

It remains a mystery then why months into this crisis, testing is still on the back burner. The president, who I recall is a builder, could declare himself the King of Testing and ramp up national production, then make a daily spectacle out of trumpeting his progress. Plagiarize Bedford and dub it Apollo, or No American Left Unswabbed whatever, hes the sales expert, he could come up with something gold.

Absent that and were definitely absent that maybe Washington, California, Oregon and throw in British Columbia could form a Cascadia Testing Project that could combine to do the regional production needed.

Some dramatic progress needs to happen, and soon.Because heres the thing: The protests are political theater, and theypoll terribly, but its simultaneously true that the target of their ire, social distancing, isnt a long-term solution. So without more testing, we may soon be facing another volatile contagion which is that increasingly desperate people may start feeling the protesters have a point.

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The real problem with the manufactured coronavirus liberty protests - Seattle Times

Liberty University’s Board of Trustees should remove Jerry Falwell Jr as the school’s president – LGBTQ Nation

Over the past month, Jerry Falwell Jr., the president of Liberty University, has found himself in the medias spotlight for reasons that would be surprising if he didnt already have such a blemished track record as the leader of the worlds largest evangelical university.

Despite immense pushback, Falwell had planned to keep classes running amidst the COVID-19 pandemic. His grave lack of understanding of how viruses spread (or of science more generally) was and is deeply troubling for any university president worth their salt.

Related: Shocking expose of Jerry Falwell, Jr. reveals sexual sins & shady finances at Liberty University

A simple Google search would have revealed the danger of his decision to continue running classes as all reputable news outlets had, for weeks, encouraged social distancing. He insisted it was all liberal media hype.

Falwell was strongarmed into moving classes online by Virginia Governor Ralph Northams emergency ban on public gatherings. But, despite the Governors ban, Falwell nonetheless welcomed some students back to campus who can clearly be seen disregarding social distancing protocol in footage taken by an LU student that was, ironically, intended as a defense of Falwells handling of Liberty amidst the pandemic.

Falwell disregard of so many voices of reason public health officials, students, parents, and those in the Lynchburg community in the name of politics calls into question his ethical, moral, and intellectual fitness to be a college president.

Falwells plan to keep the school open dramatically illustrates how he was willing to use his own students as political pawns in his battle against the Left. Indeed, he jeopardized the health and safety of the community in order to make a point that he believed the liberal media was overreacting to the World Health Organizations classification of COVID-19 as a global pandemic.

It seems that politics trump the health and safety of those with whom Falwell is entrusted.

Falwell explained his initial plan to reopen the campus, stating: Were hopeful that its overhyped and its not as bad as everyone wants to think it is; were praying thats the case.

About 1900 students returned to campus housing after Spring Break. By the time a week passed, half had fled and students were reporting symptoms and being quarantined. No one knows how many students who live in off-campus housing returned.

In addition to his blatant disregard for his students wellbeing in favor of the culture wars, Falwell also told Fox & Friends that he wondered if COVID-19 was a Christmas present for America from North Korea. He suggested that an elaborate biohazardous scheme to get Trump.

The virus first appeared in China, not North Korea. Thetwo countries have vastly different provenance, size, and influence.

Falwell doubled down on his conspiracy theory, albeit modified, this week in the following Tweet:

His propensity to buy into unfounded and wildly enigmatic conspiracy theories is nothing new. His belief that COVID-19 is a gift from China/North Korea is very much in line with the Liberty-sponsored propagandistic film The Trump Prophecy, a film based on a memoir of a man who believes God told him Trump would one day be president.

When asked on ABC News why he was ignoring public health guidelines by welcoming students, faculty, and staff back to campus, Falwell responded, So, we emphasize safety first, we are cleaning surfaces every hour that are touched off, and we are increased police, uh, police protection on campus.

Every chair, every other chair, has a sign that says dont sit next to the person beside, that might be next to you. Sit, leave a space between And so, weve taken all the precautionary measures, and we, uh, all the students love it.

Understandably, Falwells recent actions have garnered attention from both sides of the political spectrum, liberal and conservative alike.

One (soon-to-be-former) Liberty University professorpublicly pleaded with the Liberty Board of Trustees to take Falwells seemingly unmitigated power from him during this pandemic. It is time that Liberty University goes one (sensible) step further and remove Falwell from his university presidency permanently.

As has been made overwhelmingly clear by his recent and not-so-recent statements and actions, Falwell is a man who would arguably be better suited for the world of conservative politics, rather than university education.

It is unclear, however, if Falwell quite understands the difference between Republican politics and university-level education.

He has a lengthy track record of censoring student free speech on campus and muffling of student dissent, in addition to silencing faculty and university employees; university-wide fearmongering; lying; hypocrisy; questionable business deals; supporting civil disobedience as it relates to firearms; and running a school that has a gay conversion therapy program and a rampant and violent culture of homophobia.

A college president with such an extensively tarnished resum that demonstrates a barefaced disregard for the welfare, safety, and livelihoods of his students is profoundly disconcerting. As more and more people question the validity of Falwell as a leader, his recent actions point to the need for the Southern Association of Schools and Colleges ought to investigate.

Falwells monumental mishandling of Liberty University during the pandemic can and should be understood as the model for what not to do in times of crisis and, more generally, for how a proper university should not be run. Indeed, Falwells mismanagement of the situation is one in a long line of many that he is not capable of performing his job and his employment should be earnestly reconsidered.

The Liberty Board of Trustees has a choice to make. Who do they serve: the God they profess to worship or Jerry Falwell Jr.?

Lucas Wilson holds a BA in English, summa cum laude, from Liberty University and an MA in English from McMaster University. He then completed his MTS with a Certificate in Jewish Studies at Vanderbilt University, graduating first in his class. He is now a PhD candidate in Comparative Studies at Florida Atlantic University, writing his dissertation and teaching in Toronto, Ontario, and he is a Dissertation Fellow through The Honor Society of Phi Kappa Phi.

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Liberty University's Board of Trustees should remove Jerry Falwell Jr as the school's president - LGBTQ Nation

Stephen Sings officially signs with Liberty – A Sea of Red

The second highest rated commitment in school history is now official as Stephen Sings has signed with Liberty.

The 64 225 pound defensive lineman is a 3-star rated prospect who was previously committed to Virginia Tech. After he de-committed in October, Sings pledged to the Flames in January. He had offers from a litany of schools including Virginia Tech, Auburn, East Carolina, Georgia Southern, Maryland, North Carolina, Old Dominion, Oregon, Syracuse, and UCF.

Sings attends Vance High School in Charlotte, North Carolina. According to 247Sports, he is the 2nd highest rated prospect in school history, just behind rising sophomore Tayvion Land.

He was having issues getting qualified academically, but amidst the COVID-19 pandemic the NCAA announced earlier this month it is dramatically reducing the academic requirements for incoming Division I freshman athletes will need to meet in order to be eligible to practice and play during the 2020-21 school year.

These athletes will not be required to submit an SAT or ACT, and their classroom work during this academic year essentially will be disregarded if they had earned at least a 2.3 grade-point average in 10 NCAA-approved core courses before the start of their senior year of high school.

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Stephen Sings officially signs with Liberty - A Sea of Red

Beloved Liberty coach Jesse Woods remembered for life of giving – Chron

The funeral cortege carrying the body of 38-year-old coach Jesse Woods wound its way through Dayton onto East Clayton Street to Magnolia Cemetery where he was laid to rest in a brief ceremony. Woods died .

The funeral cortege carrying the body of 38-year-old coach Jesse Woods wound its way through Dayton onto East Clayton Street to Magnolia Cemetery where he was laid to rest in a brief ceremony. Woods died .

Photo: David Taylor / Staff Photo

The funeral cortege carrying the body of 38-year-old coach Jesse Woods wound its way through Dayton onto East Clayton Street to Magnolia Cemetery where he was laid to rest in a brief ceremony. Woods died .

The funeral cortege carrying the body of 38-year-old coach Jesse Woods wound its way through Dayton onto East Clayton Street to Magnolia Cemetery where he was laid to rest in a brief ceremony. Woods died .

Beloved Liberty coach Jesse Woods remembered for life of giving

The communities of Dayton and Liberty are mourning the loss of one of their beloved coaches. Jesse Woods, 38, succumbed to what is believed to have been a heart attack late Monday evening at San Jacinto Methodist Hospital in Baytown after attempts to revive him failed.

Liberty head coach Chad Taylor said he had talked to his wife Jodi earlier and she called him later Monday night to let him know that her husband had died.

It was devastating. Its hard to fathom that hes gone, Taylor said.I couldnt go back to sleep, he said.

Then the phone calls started coming at 1:30 a.m., 2:30 a.m., texts at 3 a.m. and 4 a.m. from his football squad trying desperately to confirm the awful news.

They wanted to know if it was true. I hadnt put it out there, but they found out, he said.

Liberty senior tight end Devin Fregia heard the news from one of his friends about three hours after he had passed and called Taylor to confirm.

I couldnt sleep all night crying and thinking about the four kids and his wife he left behind, he said tearfully.

Some of Woods boys spent time on the sidelines and in the locker room with the high school players.

Jace was always in the locker room with us before games teasing with us and us with him, he recalled.

Fregia said he was excited about this season knowing that he would figure into the new wrinkles in the offense that Woods had planned. Last year he threw in some rare passing plays for Liberty, and Fregia made some big catches and gains for the Panthers.

Well dedicate this season to him. Every play I will be thinking about him. I loved him and I know he loved me too, he said.

Sophomore center Seth Stearns took the news hard. He had spent his last two years working with Woods who helped him become better and make the varsity as a sophomore.

Its been very tough. We grew to a very close bond. We came to love each other. Im at a loss for words right now, he said.

Stearns credited Woods, who was also his powerlifting coach, for his weight gains and strength.

There will be a hole in our team this fall, but well go out there and play our best for Coach Woods. We will make the best of the season, he said.

Woods was a life-long resident of Dayton where he attended Dayton ISD schools graduating in 2000.

While in high school, he played football next to his twin brother Bruce and helped lead the Broncos to deep playoff runs.

I knew I could always count on the line because of Jesse and Bruce, said former coach and now DISD Athletic Director Jeff Nations.

He never complained about workouts or coming to practice, he said. Woods and his brother Bruce played on the team that finished 12-1 and got a chance to play in the Houston Astrodome.

He continued his education and graduated from Sam Houston State University in 2005. Jesse was currently a math and physics teacher for Liberty ISD and was the offensive coordinator for the Liberty Panthers football team.

His coaching didnt stop on the other side of the river. He was also very active in the Dayton Youth Sports Association and a member of the DYSA board, and the Rangers Softball Association.

He was originally hired as the assistant offensive line coach for the Panthers.

I had him for two years, one of those while Coach Stanley was still here. This last year he took over as offensive coordinator, Taylor said.

The head coach said he had more than 30 coaches reach out to him over a 24-hour period offering their condolences and support.

He was the guy who would coach anything, Taylor said.

He took the initiative to take care of anything whether it was cleaning out the equipment room or straightening up the locker room, he was always busy.

He and I had been collaborating the last few weeks on changing up our offense. We were going to meet yesterday to work on it and then set up a ZOOM meeting with our kids on Thursday to talk about what we had planned, but the meeting never happened.

Last year, he said they became close when he promoted him to offensive coordinator. They spent their conference period every day last year talking about football, and when softball came around, it was all about their daughters and how they were advancing in the sport.

Taylor said his colleague was an equal opportunity butt-chewing out kind of guy but was also loved and well-respected by his players.

He was also real quick to put his arm around you and tell you he loved you and those kids loved him back, Taylor said.

There are so many people on both sides of the river that had so much admiration for him and if this wasnt in the middle of this COVID-19 situation, it would be a huge funeral, he said.

Jesse was preceded in death by his grandparents, Elize Woods, Colleen Woods, Jack Keeton and Judy Wood, also his brother-in-law, Jordon Pierce. He leaves behind to cherish his memory his wife of 13 years Jodi Pierce Woods of Dayton; his parents, Bruce and Cathy Woods of Dayton; his children, Brendan Woods, Jordon Woods, Jess Woods, Jace Woods, and Jaxx Woods; his brother, Bruce Woods, Jr. and wife Spring; his sister, Paula Newkirk and husband Hunter; his grandparents, Pat Grayson, Jack Grayson, Merv and Linda Pierce and Silas Wood; father-in-law and mother-in-law, Bret and Kathy Pierce; brothers-in-law, Erik Pierce and wife Tamami, Jered Pierce and wife Brittany and Brody Pierce; numerous aunts, uncles, nieces, nephews, cousins, other relatives, and a host of friends.

Honoring Jesse as pallbearers will be Brendan Woods, Bruce Woods, Jr., Eric Pierce, Jared Pierce, Brody Pierce, Bubba Britt, Chris Louvier, Aaron Strickland, Hunter Newkirk and Marshall Wiley.

You never take anything for granted. None of us have a guarantee in life. Make the most of your time and the opportunities while you have it and at the end of the day you have no regrets, Taylor said.

Well move forward and honor our coach the right way with some Ws this fall.

dtaylor@hcnonline.com

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Beloved Liberty coach Jesse Woods remembered for life of giving - Chron

Letter to the editor: Destruction of life, liberty, happiness – TribLIVE

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Letter to the editor: Destruction of life, liberty, happiness - TribLIVE