Ted Hearne – Daily Beast

TED HEARNE (b.1982, Chicago) is a composer, singer, bandleader and recording artist. He creates multi-dimensional works that are challenging, personal and reflective of the questions we face in the world today.

Pitchfork called Hearne's work "some of the most expressive socially engaged music in recent memory -- from any genre," and Alex Ross wrote in The New Yorker that Hearne's music "holds up as a complex mirror image of an information-saturated, mass-surveillance world, and remains staggering in its impact." Hearne's Sound From the Bench, a work for choir, electric guitars and drums about corporate personhood setting texts from U.S. Supreme Court oral arguments, was a finalist for the 2018 Pulitzer Prize.

Teds ongoing collaboration with legendary musician Erykah Badu pairs new music with arrangements of Badus works for orchestra, most recently presented with the Dallas Symphony Orchestra. His album The Source sets the words of former U.S. Army Private Chelsea Manning alongside classified documents from U.S. Dept of Defense cables that she was responsible for leaking to Julian Assange and WikiLeaks. The New York Times called The Source "a 21st Century masterpiece.

Upcoming collaborations include a new work with poet Dorothea Lasky and director Daniel Fish to be presented at Carnegie Hall, and a new orchestral project with performance artist and singer-songwriter Taylor Mac. Place, written with poet Saul Williams and director Patricia McGregor, is Hearnes latest album, released in 2020 on New Amsterdam Records. For more visit: http://www.tedhearne.com

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Ted Hearne - Daily Beast

War crimes in Afghanistan covered up by UK Ministry of Defence – WSWS

By Jean Shaoul 6 August 2020

The government has been caught out lying about evidence on the killing of civilians in Afghanistan by the elite Special Air Service (SAS).

Three years into a civil case in the High Court brought by Saiffulah Yar into the deaths of four family members at the hand of the SAS, the Ministry of Defence (MoD) has finally handed over a tranche of e-mails and documents revealing official concerns about the killing of Afghan civilians. The MoD previously indicated it had no such documents.

The documents, written by SAS officers and military personnel, provide evidence of war crimes. They show that while the government claimed that there was no credible evidence about these events, the evidence had been sitting in Whitehall.

It is a damning confirmation of the criminality of the 2001 US-led invasion and occupation of Afghanistan that has led to more than 175,000 deaths, hundreds of thousands of wounded, and millions forced from their homes.

The intervention in Afghanistan, planned well in advance of the bombing of the twin towers in New York in 2001, was not launched to prosecute a war on terrorism but rather to project US military power into Central and South Asia. The US was intent on seizing control of a country bordering on the oil-rich former Soviet republics of the Caspian Basin, as well as China. The UK joined as a willing partner on behalf of its own oil corporations in this criminal venture.

The High Court has now ordered Ben Wallace, the Secretary of State for Defence, to explain why the ministry withheld evidence suggesting SAS soldiers executed 33 civilians in Afghanistan in early 2011. He has until November to reply. The MoD claimed it was not new evidence, as it had been reviewed by the official inquiryOperation Northmoorinto allegations of civilian killings.

Saifullah brought the case against the MoD to discover what happened to his family and whether the case had been thoroughly investigated by the British authorities. His father, two brothers, and a cousin were killed during a raid on his familys home in Qala-e-Bost, east of Lashkar Gah in Helmand province in southern Afghanistan, under British occupation in 2011.

After the raid, Saifullah, who was 16 at the time, found his father, Haji Abdul Kaliq, 55, two brothers, Sadam, 23, and Atullah, 25, and a cousin shot dead. One of his brothers and his father had been handcuffed and hooded before being shot as they lay face down on the ground. Royal Military Police (RMP) officers had arrived at his familys compound by helicopter and handcuffed and fingerprinted him, along with the other male members of his family, before he was taken to a barn with the women and children, where they were guarded by soldiers during the raid. He denies that his family had any weapons or were connected to the Taliban, the ostensible cause of the raid.

According to the 1977 Geneva Conventions, shooting civilians is only lawful if they are participating directly in hostilities. With no precise definition of direct participation, civilians are expected to be given the benefit of the doubt. Under UK domestic law, which is applicable to the armed forces, a soldier can use force to defend him/herself and others, including lethal force, only provided it is reasonable in the circumstances.

The MoD had previously maintained that it was unaware of any complaint about the raid until the family launched a legal case in 2013. But six years later, it transpired that the Royal Military Police (RMP) had interviewed 54 soldiers involved in the operation leading up to the raid on Saifullahs family home, with the governments lawyers claiming that none of those involved could remember very much about the operation.

The documents, first revealed by BBC TVs Panorama and the Sunday Times, tell a different story. They confirm claims that the government covered up dozens of allegationsincluding by UK soldiersof the killing of innocent civilians in Afghanistan and Iraq.

Philip Alston, the former UN Special Rapporteur on executions, told Panorama, I have no doubt that overall many of the allegations [of innocent people being killed] are justified, and that we can conclude that a large number of civilians were killed in night raids, totally unjustifiably.

One of the e-mails, sent by an SAS officer the morning after the raid, described it as the latest massacre! and added, Ive heard a couple of rumours. Another document revealed that there had been a secret review of suspicious killings and a string of related incidents in which the SAS had killed fighting-age men, often during a search of premises, allegedly because they had picked up a weapon.

According to the review that covered the first quarter of 2011, 23 people were killed and 10 guns were recovered in three operations. It was clear a senior officer examining the official reports filed about the SASs night raids was sceptical of their veracity, remarking on their similarity in that the detained men suddenly grabbed a weapon. He found at least five separate incidents where more people were killed than weapons were recovered. Taken together, this led him to conclude, In my view there is enough here to convince me that we are getting some things wrong, right now.

One SAS commander even wrote to London warning there was possibly a deliberate policy and that the SAS troops had potentially strayed into indefensible behaviour that could amount to being criminal.

His concern was that the killings were jeopardising the support of Afghan forces, which were refusing to accompany the British on night raids, and put[ting] at risk the [redacted] transition plan and more importantly the prospects of enduring UK influence in Afghanistan.

While the RMP had launched an investigation called Operation Northmoor into 657 allegations of abuse, mistreatment, and killings, including into the deaths of Saifullahs family members, at the hands of British forces, the government closed it down in 2017. Once again, a three-year-long official probe, costing at least 10 million, failed to result in a single prosecution.

The corporate media had gone into overdrive, branding the investigations as a witch-hunt. The MoD filed complaints against the lawyers bringing civil suits against it, including against Saifullahs lawyer Leigh Day. Leigh Day was cleared of wrongdoing after a six-week tribunal in September 2017.

In March, the government introduced legislation proposing a five-year limit on prosecutions for soldiers serving outside the UK. With its presumption against prosecution that gives the green light to future war crimes, including the mass murder of civilians, the military will now be above the law.

It was WikiLeaks publisher and journalist Julian Assange who, by publishing the Afghan war logs in 2010, a vast trove of leaked US military documents, first brought to the worlds attention evidence of the criminality of a war that has now lasted 19 years. The Afghan war logs exposed the myth that the occupation of Afghanistan was a good war, supposedly waged to defeat terrorism, extend democracy, and protect womens rights. They revealed the mass killings of civilians by both US and UK forces, detailing at least 21 occasions when British troops opened fire on civilians.

It is not just those soldiers who perpetrated these crimes on behalf of British imperialism that have escaped punishment. The guilty include those at the top of the political and military ladder that planned and executed this criminal war, even as they plot new crimes, including catastrophic conflicts with nuclear-armed powers such as China and Russia.

Instead, the only two people who have faced criminal repercussions are those who reported the crimes: Chelsea Manning, who has endured a decade of persecution, and Julian Assange, who is imprisoned in Britains maximum-security Belmarsh Prison awaiting court hearings for his extradition to the US where he faces 175 years of imprisonment under the Espionage Act. The exposures of the horrors of both the Afghan and Iraq wars earned Assange the undying hatred of Britains political establishment, which is why they have hounded, intimidated, tortured and imprisoned him.

The author also recommends:

UK covered up war crimes in Afghanistan and Iraq [22 November 2019]

Service Prosecuting Authority drops all but one investigation into British war crimes in Iraq [13 June 2020]

Ten years since WikiLeaks published the Afghan war logs [31 July 2020]

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War crimes in Afghanistan covered up by UK Ministry of Defence - WSWS

Best Bets in Art & Entertainment This Week – Winston-Salem Journal

Artworks Gallery to share members work

Mona Wu's "Book of Critters" is in the Artworks August Window and online Exhibition.

Artworks Gallery is mounting its second Window Exhibition to share the members work with the Winston-Salem community.

The Artworks Window Exhibition is visible from the sidewalk and can be viewed online on the Artworks Gallery website after Aug. 7. Both 2D and 3D art by member artists are on display, showcasing the variety, quality and availability of original art by local artists.

Jessica Teffts George Floyd is in the Artworks August Window and online Exhibition.

If you are interested in buying a piece or would like an appointment to view an artwork in person, please send an email to Mona Wu monawu4@gmail.com.

Student Showcase 2020 on display

Student showcases and senior thesis exhibitions across the country have been canceled because of the novel coronavirus pandemic. While some have been rescheduled, many students wont have the opportunity to see their artwork displayed in public.

To compensate for the loss of in-person exhibitions, Southeastern Center for Contemporary Art has created an online gallery of work by 44 students from 16 schools nationwide.

Student Showcase 2020 a virtual exhibition of artworks by graduating high school and college students in art and design fields is at http://www.secca showcase.org.

An overall Best in Show distinction will be awarded by a jury of artists and curators, with the winning artist receiving $500. Voting will also be open to the public, and the artist with the most votes will receive the Peoples Choice distinction and a $100 cash prize. Visit http://www.seccashowcase.org.

Virtual Mask-uerade parade launch party

The Arts Council of Winston-Salem and Forsyth County will have a Mask-uerade Parade.

The Arts Council of Winston-Salem and Forsyth County will host a virtual Mask-uerade Parade Launch Party 4-5:30 p.m. Aug. 9, its 71st birthday as the first arts council in the country. The deadline for reservations is Aug. 3 at http://www.intothearts.org/mask.

The virtual party will include music by SoulJam, Dance by IDA (Institute of Divine Arts), artwork by Jazmine Moore and Affee Vickers, and music by Winston-Salem Symphony performers.

The Facebook live event will be hosted by WXII-TV12 news anchor Talitha Vickers who was named as an Outstanding Women Leader of Winston-Salem by the Winston-Salem City Council earlier this year.

Arts advocates throughout Winston-Salem and Forsyth County will host small watch parties in their homes that observe COVID-19 recommendations.

The Aug. 9 virtual event will also be the Launch Party for The Arts Councils upcoming community-wide mask- designing competition, which will culminate in a Mask-uerade Parade on Sept. 19. The competition will include winners in King, Queen and Youth categories.

The arts council is in the final months of its 2020 fundraising campaign and, like most nonprofits, has had to adjust significantly its campaign tactics because of disruptions caused by the COVID-19 crisis. The 2020 fundraiser ends on Sept. 30.

Live talk show planned on Facebook

Dan Beckmann and Erinn Dearth, aka "riley," are doing "riley live!" on Facebook.

Dan Beckmann and Erinn Dearth, the creative team behind Spring Theatre, Letters From Home and the socially distanced feature film, Lock-In, will premiere a live talk show, riley live! at 7 p.m. Aug. 4 on Facebook.

Event planned at Sir Winston Wine Loft

Sir Winston Wine Loft & Restaurant will present Paint Your Pet 7-9 p.m. Aug. 4 at 104 W. Fourth St., Winston-Salem.

All skill levels are welcome. Tables are six feet apart, with four people at a table.

Students featured in Joedance Film Festival

Six students with ties to Winston-Salem have films in the 11th annual Joedance Film Festival online Aug. 6-8. The festival is normally held in Charlotte to benefit rare pediatric cancer research.

The following short films by UNC School of the Arts School of Filmmaking alumni will be online Aug. 8: 1:10 p.m. Do You Remember (2:21) directed by Christi Neptune; 1:16 p.m. Painted Love (15:14) directed by Michelle DeGrace; 1:46 p.m. Logged On (11:31) directed by Cameron McCormack; 2 p.m. Folding Fur (3:34) directed by Keaton Sapp; 2:06 p.m. Shelter (7:00) directed by Jo Hatcher; 2:16 p.m. Blue & Hue (6:02) directed by Jordan McLaughlin.

A total of 24 films by filmmakers who live in or are from North Carolina, South Carolina, Georgia and Tennessee were selected for the festival, which will be online 7:30-10:30 p.m. Aug. 6-8 with the student screenings 1-2:30 p.m. Aug. 8.

A complete schedule and tickets, which start at $10 (students screenings Saturday afternoon) and $20 (individual evening screenings) and $70 (all-access passes), are at http://www.joedance.org.

Triad Stage in Greensboro plans events

Triad Stage in Greensboro will complete its 19th season with Pride & Prejudice and Lady Day at Emersons Bar & Grill whenever COVID-19 restrictions are lifted.

In the meantime, they are presenting Season 19, a continuation of their nationally recognized, local programming with a virtual spin.

The company is presenting play readings, concerts and podcasts, and original theater works created to be experienced online.

The Artwork of Evan Miller featured at Studio 7

Studio 7 and the McNeely Gallery will host The Artwork of Evan Miller during the month of August. An opening reception will be 7-9 p.m. Aug. 7 at 204 W. Sixth St.

Studio 7 will change its opening hours due to the continued COVID-19 restrictions. It will be open by appointment and by chance, as well as Saturdays and Sundays 11 a.m.-4 p.m.

RiverRun to present film about arts, activism

RiverRun is streaming Ai Weiwei: Yours Truly online.

The RiverRun International Film Festival has made Ai Weiwei: Yours Truly, one of the films from its RiverRun Arts program, available for streaming online.

Human rights become profoundly personal when Ai Weiwei, Chinas most famous artist, transforms Alcatraz Island prison into an astonishing expression of socially engaged art focused on the plight of the unjustly incarcerated. At the core of the installation, called @Large, were portraits of prisoners of conscience coupled with the opportunity to write letters of solidarity to the imprisoned.

Director Cheryl Haines captures this monumental exhibition from conception to fruition, and visits current and former prisoners, including American whistleblower Chelsea Manning, to learn how these letters were vital to their survival.

Lynn Felder

To have your event included in Sunday Arts, send information in the body of an email to relisheditor@wsjournal.com 10 days before publication. Tell us who is doing what when (time and date) and where (street address), and cost. Give a brief description of your event and a phone number and website, if pertinent.

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Best Bets in Art & Entertainment This Week - Winston-Salem Journal

After Chelsea Manning Released From Jail, Supporters …

Thousands of people have contributed to a GoFundMe campaign launched by a friend of U.S. Army whistleblower Chelsea Manning, who was released from jail Thursday and faces over a quarter million dollars in legal fines for her refusal to testify to a grand jury about WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange.

Federal Judge Anthony Trenga ordered Manning's immediate release less than 24 hours after she was hospitalized for attempting suicide. While welcoming that decision, some of Manning's supporters pointed out that Trenga also ordered Manning to pay the $256,000 in fines she has accrued.

Manning's friend Kelly Wright, who was the communications director for the whistleblower's 2018 U.S. Senate bid, set up the fundraiser with the aim of fully covering the court-imposed fines. As of press time, more than 2,300 donors had collectively given over $93,400 to the effort.

And just like that we are 20% of the way toward our goal of WIPING OUT the fines accrued by Chelsea Manning during her year incarcerated for grand jury resistance. Thank you all so much for donating and sharing! Onward and upward: https://t.co/lnTJEdIvD7 pic.twitter.com/lZrACn2fMu

Kelly Wright (@anarchakelly) March 13, 2020

Supporters of Manning raised awareness about the fundraiser on Twitter, decrying both the fines and Manning's yearlong detention, which United Nations Special Rapporteur on Torture Nils Melzer denounced last year as "an open-ended, progressively severe coercive measure amounting to torture."

This is the official crowd funding link for Chelsea Manning's $256,000 fines. Please donate! No one should get tortured and fined hundreds of thousands of dollars, without even getting charged with a crime, for standing up for their rights https://t.co/CrrWgiamo4

Micah Lee (@micahflee) March 13, 2020

Chelsea Manning has been released, but she was fined $1,000 for each day she refused to testify.

Those fines now total approximately $256,000, and she's been ordered to pay them.

Help her out: https://t.co/9dNvZmcXTr

The Tor Project (@torproject) March 13, 2020

IMPORTANT: Chelsea Manning (@xychelsea) is being released from jail, but she has to pay more than a quarter million dollars in fines.

THIS IS THE ONLY OFFICIAL FUNDRAISER TO HELP HER PAY THOSE FINES:

Please retweet, donate, and spread the word. https://t.co/TRy59pGWZI

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Evan Greer (@evan_greer) March 13, 2020

do good in the world, consider throwing chelsea some money https://t.co/icUt27YRmO

Alex Press (@alexnpress) March 13, 2020

The fundraiser has grown in popularity since Thursday as critics continued to sound off about the U.S. government's treatment of Manning, who was jailed at the William G. Truesdale Adult Detention Center in Alexandria, Virginia for most of the past year for not testifying against Assange, who is imprisoned in London while he fights the U.S. government's attempt to extradite him.

Manning's detention in Virginia since March 2019 came after she was released from prison in May 2017 because outgoing President Barack Obama had commuted all but four months of the 35-year sentence she was serving for leaking classified materials and government records to WikiLeaks.

The government cast Manning into a dungeon for resisting a scheme to make publishers of news subject to the Espionage Act. They offered to let her out in exchange for collaboration, but she chose her principles instead.

That is moral strength.@xychelsea https://t.co/zmlG0ksTnV

Edward Snowden (@Snowden) March 13, 2020

Chelsea Manning has done more for the world in her 32 years than can be expected of any person in a lifetime, & has sacrificed so much & paid such a huge price for her public service. She was released from prison yesterday but faces huge fines & challenges to live. Please donate: https://t.co/BNu13OsFlk

Glenn Greenwald (@ggreenwald) March 13, 2020

Along with the GoFundMe campaign launched by Wright, there is an ongoing fundraiser on the Action Network to cover Manning's "legal fees, and legal costs such as court transcripts and travel, and commissary."

The National Suicide Prevention Lifeline is 1-800-273-TALK (8255) and the Crisis Text Line is 741741. Both offer 24/7, free, and confidential support.

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After Chelsea Manning Released From Jail, Supporters ...

Go Inside The ACLU’s Fight For Civil Rights In The Trump Era This Wednesday – Broadway World

On Wednesday, July 29, at 3 p.m. ET, Intercept Editor-in-Chief Betsy Reed will host a virtual conversation on the current state of civil rights in the Trump era with three American Civil Liberties Union lawyers at the center of these fights: Brigitte Amiri, deputy director at the ACLU Reproductive Freedom Project; Lee Gelernt, deputy director of the ACLU Immigrants' Rights Project; and Chase Strangio, deputy director for Transgender Justice with the ACLU LGBT & HIV Project.Watch Live: https://theintercept.com/2020/07/24/aclu-trump-the-fight-documentary/

The conversation coincides with the upcoming release of the new documentary The Fight, an inside look at four high-profile ACLU lawsuits that attempt to block the Trump administration's efforts to target immigrants, women, and the LGBTQ community. The film, directed by Eli B. Despres, Josh Kriegman and Elyse Steinberg, is being released by Magnolia Pictures and Topic Studios and will be available in theaters and on demand on July 31.

From the early days of his administration, President Donald Trump has overseen a barrage of legislative attacks on marginalized communities: ripping immigrant families apart, blocking access to abortion, and banning transgender people from military service. As grassroots movements responded to these attacks with unprecedented protests, the legal team at the ACLU launched more than 150 lawsuits aimed at protecting our civil rights and liberties from encroaching authoritarianism. What: "Inside the ACLU's Fight for Civil Rights in the Trump Era" When: Watch Live on Wednesday, July 29, 2020 Time: 3 p.m. ET Where: This event will be streamed live on The Intercept, as well as on The Intercept's official YouTube, Facebook, and Twitter pages Who: Intercept Editor-in-Chief Betsy Reed, Brigitte Amiri, deputy director at the ACLU Reproductive Freedom Project; Lee Gelernt, deputy director of the ACLU national Immigrants' Rights Project; and Chase Strangio, deputy director for Transgender Justice with the ACLU LGBT & HIV Project Bios:

Betsy Reed became Editor-in-Chief of The Intercept in 2015. Since then, The Intercept has earned many awards - and millions of readers - with its fearless reporting on a range of issues, from war, surveillance, and U.S. politics to the environment, technology, prisons, the death penalty, the media, and more.

Among the awards The Intercept has won under Reed's tenure are a George Polk Award, a National Magazine Award, a Sidney Hillman Prize, the Innocence Network Journalism Award, and an Edward R. Murrow Award. The Intercept Brasil, launched in 2016, has achieved wide recognition for its groundbreaking journalism in Brazil. Prior to joining The Intercept, Reed was executive editor of The Nation, where she led the magazine's investigative coverage while also editing and writing political commentary.

Brigitte Amiri is a deputy director at the ACLU's Reproductive Freedom Project. She is currently litigating numerous cases, including leading the Jane Doe case, challenging the Trump administration's ban on abortion for unaccompanied immigrant minors. She also represents the last abortion clinic in Kentucky, and is lead counsel in a challenge to Kentucky's six-week abortion ban and another challenge against the state's attempts to close the clinic's doors. Ms. Amiri also leads the Project's efforts to ensure that religious objections are not used to discriminate against or harm people seeking access to reproductive health care.

Lee Gelernt is the deputy director of the ACLU's national Immigrants' Rights Project and director of the project's Access to the Court's Program. He has argued many of the highest profile challenges to the Trump Administration's immigration policies, including its family separation practice. He is widely considered one of the nation's leading public interest lawyers and has been recognized as one of the top 500 lawyers in the country in any field. Lee has argued dozens of groundbreaking cases throughout the country, including in the U.S. Supreme Court, where he will again be arguing in March, on behalf of asylum seekers.

Chase Strangio is the deputy director for Transgender Justice with the ACLU's LGBT & HIV Project and a nationally recognized expert on trans rights. He is counsel in the ACLU's challenge to North Carolina's notorious anti-trans law, HB2, Carcao, et al. v. Cooper, et al, the ACLU's challenge to Trump's trans military ban, Stone v. Trump, and the case of Aimee Stephens, R.G. & G.R. Harris Funeral Homes v. EEOC, which is pending before the Supreme Court. He was counsel to whistleblower Chelsea Manning in her lawsuit against the Department of Defense for discriminatory denial of health treatment while in custody and worked with the team defending the rights of transgender student, Gavin Grimm, before the Supreme Court. He also appears regularly in the media and lobbies in state legislatures around the country on issues impacting trans and nonbinary people.

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Go Inside The ACLU's Fight For Civil Rights In The Trump Era This Wednesday - Broadway World

Letters to the editor for July 25, 2020 – Opinion – The Ledger

Vote by mail

We enter a time of some turmoil, and for reflection in many areas. Changes some accomplished, some still to develop are often met with uncertainty. We look for means to address and calm concerns and have, and should express, hope for certainty in the future.

Either to solidify a position or advocate for change, our voice is heard and recorded in the single most effective way the opportunity to cast our vote. Its easy. Call your Supervisor of Elections at 352-374-5252, email kbarton@alachuacounty.us or go to http://www.votealachua.com and have them send you your absentee ballot in the mail.

And theres no postage due to return it. Just ask then vote.

Bill Salmon, Gainesville

What took so long?

In the span of six days, the first African-American leader of a U.S. military service was confirmed (General Charles Q. Brown as Air Force chief of staff), the Navys first black female fighter pilot completed her training (LTJG Madeline Swegle), and the first woman joined the U.S. Army Green Berets (unnamed for security reasons). These are tremendous accomplishments, and should be lauded as such.

I have just one question: What took so long?

The ban on women in combat was lifted almost 30 years ago, in 1993. The U.S. military was desegregated more than 70 years ago in 1948.

While the accomplishments of General Brown, LTJG Swegle and the unnamed Green Beret deserve recognition, it is with a heavy heart that we must also acknowledge that these achievements come far too late for a nation that espouses the equality of all mankind.

Will Atkins, Gainesville

Questionable decisions

I didn't know whether to laugh or cry at a few recent letter writers claiming the Obama administration was scandal-free, because that statement is untrue.

Barack Obama also wasn't free from some questionable decisions. Remember when the Benghazi tragedy started from a video? Do the IRS scandal, Operation Fast & Furious, leaving Iraq and allowing ISIS to be born, the moving Syria "red line," waging war on Libya without Congress consent, ransoms paid for hostages with foreign currency and an unmarked plane in the middle of the night, the Bowe Bergdahl swap, the veto of the 9/11 crime bill, claiming Affordable Care Act coverage and doctors wouldn't change if you wanted to keep them, his 2008 and 2016 apology tours, the Veterans Affairs scandal, the Colorado environmental disaster and commuting the sentences of Chelsea Manning and Oscar Lopez Rivera ring any bells?

When the current investigation by John Durham is completed, we may have to add the spying and criminalizing of Michael Flynn.

Cathy Anderson, Williston

Significant achievements

A recent letter writer complained about what he considers a lack of significant achievements during the Obama administration. So let me educate the author of this letter.

Despite the fact that President Obama inherited a terrible economy during the great recession, the stock market tripled and the unemployment rate decreased from over 10% at the beginning of his administration to less than 5% at its end. Significant legislative achievements include the Affordable Care Act, through which 20 million people received health insurance; the Dodd-Frank Act, which limited the ability of banks to participate in the risky financial transactions that caused the great recession; and establishment of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau. Regarding the war on terrorism, many al-Qaida leaders, including Osama bin Laden, were terminated during the Obama administration.

President Obama also tried his best to combat climate change and improve environmental conditions for future generations.

T.J. Ronson, Micanopy

Write a letter

Letters to the editor should be emailed to letters@gainesville.com. Letters should be 150 words or fewer and include the writers full name, city of residence and contact information.

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Letters to the editor for July 25, 2020 - Opinion - The Ledger

‘AI Weiwei: Yours Truly’ – Paying Respect to the Man, Artist, and Legend – Highbrow Magazine

If you are looking for the definitive portrait of one of the worlds most famous conceptual artists, you will not find it in director Cheryl Hainess Ai Weiwei: Yours Truly documentary.

In all fairness, to do justice to Ai's prolific output of protest art alone would be like trying to shoot the moon and all the stars as well in one volley. That Haines succeeded in the realizing of this one project is worthy of four stars at least.

In 2013, Ai was incarcerated for 81 days as a Chinese dissident. Three months after his release, hopeful curator Haines traveled to Beijing to visit the artist in his studio, where he was under house arrest. Her goal was to persuade him to create a work on freedom and human rights abuses. Her venue of choice? Alcatraz. (As a former top security prison in the San Francisco Bay, it was shut down in 1963.)

Ambitious? Yes. But chasing an artist known for many installations such as Seeds, where 100 million sunflower seeds were laid out to symbolize the brute conformity of his heritage or Straight, with collapsed steel rods signifying a Sichuan earthquake that left thousands of children dead because of the poor construction of their schoolhouseshe could prove to be the right subject for her.

For Ai, he was obviously tired of making installations I cant attend. Through virtual walkthroughs and a reverential persistence on Hainess part, a plan was put into action. The exhibition would be in two parts: The first, Trace, would involve a series of pixilated portraits done with Legos to be laid out across the vast floor space of Alcatraz. Such a project involved months of searching the internet to identify imprisoned subjects worldwide. In Ai's words, Many people are in prison because they want to change society. And people are still disappearing.

The second part, Yours Truly, takes up a large portion of the films finale, with adult visitors and children alike writing postcards to a prisoner of choice. Binders with bios are available to the viewers. A touching explanation is given of his fathers imprisonment when Ai was just an infant. The artist remembers the power that one postcard had on his father during that harrowing time.

Elusive as the butterflies and dragons in his creations or the cats that hover around his studio, Ai is above all, a humanitarian. And however jarring the journey as Haines and her subject zigzag back and forth in the telling, she picked the right man for this moment.

The film was released on July 8, 2020 in Virtual Cinemas. Ai was under house arrest in Beijing at the time.

When the film does slow down, it shines. Interviews with Ai and his mother reveal the psychological impact of the familys exile to a labor camp in northeast China in the late 1950s, and directly link to two main components of the exhibition: "Trace", a room with Lego portraits of 176 people imprisoned for their beliefs laid out on the floor; and Yours Truly, another room where visitors are able to write postcards to a select number of those incarcerated people, which would later be mailed.

The film also explores the positive impact of this analogue correspondence and features interviews with Chelsea Manning, the former Army intelligence analyst who in 2010 leaked archives of military and diplomatic documents, and John Kiriakou, a former C.I.A. agent who confirmed the agencys use of torture.

Author Bio:

Sandra Bertrand is Highbrow Magazines chief art critic.

For Highbrow Magazine

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'AI Weiwei: Yours Truly' - Paying Respect to the Man, Artist, and Legend - Highbrow Magazine

Letters to the editor for July 25, 2020 – Opinion – Sarasota Herald-Tribune

Vote by mail

We enter a time of some turmoil, and for reflection in many areas. Changes some accomplished, some still to develop are often met with uncertainty. We look for means to address and calm concerns and have, and should express, hope for certainty in the future.

Either to solidify a position or advocate for change, our voice is heard and recorded in the single most effective way the opportunity to cast our vote. Its easy. Call your Supervisor of Elections at 352-374-5252, email kbarton@alachuacounty.us or go to http://www.votealachua.com and have them send you your absentee ballot in the mail.

And theres no postage due to return it. Just ask then vote.

Bill Salmon, Gainesville

What took so long?

In the span of six days, the first African-American leader of a U.S. military service was confirmed (General Charles Q. Brown as Air Force chief of staff), the Navys first black female fighter pilot completed her training (LTJG Madeline Swegle), and the first woman joined the U.S. Army Green Berets (unnamed for security reasons). These are tremendous accomplishments, and should be lauded as such.

I have just one question: What took so long?

The ban on women in combat was lifted almost 30 years ago, in 1993. The U.S. military was desegregated more than 70 years ago in 1948.

While the accomplishments of General Brown, LTJG Swegle and the unnamed Green Beret deserve recognition, it is with a heavy heart that we must also acknowledge that these achievements come far too late for a nation that espouses the equality of all mankind.

Will Atkins, Gainesville

Questionable decisions

I didn't know whether to laugh or cry at a few recent letter writers claiming the Obama administration was scandal-free, because that statement is untrue.

Barack Obama also wasn't free from some questionable decisions. Remember when the Benghazi tragedy started from a video? Do the IRS scandal, Operation Fast & Furious, leaving Iraq and allowing ISIS to be born, the moving Syria "red line," waging war on Libya without Congress consent, ransoms paid for hostages with foreign currency and an unmarked plane in the middle of the night, the Bowe Bergdahl swap, the veto of the 9/11 crime bill, claiming Affordable Care Act coverage and doctors wouldn't change if you wanted to keep them, his 2008 and 2016 apology tours, the Veterans Affairs scandal, the Colorado environmental disaster and commuting the sentences of Chelsea Manning and Oscar Lopez Rivera ring any bells?

When the current investigation by John Durham is completed, we may have to add the spying and criminalizing of Michael Flynn.

Cathy Anderson, Williston

Significant achievements

A recent letter writer complained about what he considers a lack of significant achievements during the Obama administration. So let me educate the author of this letter.

Despite the fact that President Obama inherited a terrible economy during the great recession, the stock market tripled and the unemployment rate decreased from over 10% at the beginning of his administration to less than 5% at its end. Significant legislative achievements include the Affordable Care Act, through which 20 million people received health insurance; the Dodd-Frank Act, which limited the ability of banks to participate in the risky financial transactions that caused the great recession; and establishment of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau. Regarding the war on terrorism, many al-Qaida leaders, including Osama bin Laden, were terminated during the Obama administration.

President Obama also tried his best to combat climate change and improve environmental conditions for future generations.

T.J. Ronson, Micanopy

Write a letter

Letters to the editor should be emailed to letters@gainesville.com. Letters should be 150 words or fewer and include the writers full name, city of residence and contact information.

Link:
Letters to the editor for July 25, 2020 - Opinion - Sarasota Herald-Tribune

Letters to the editor for July 25, 2020 – Opinion – Palm Beach Post

Vote by mail

We enter a time of some turmoil, and for reflection in many areas. Changes some accomplished, some still to develop are often met with uncertainty. We look for means to address and calm concerns and have, and should express, hope for certainty in the future.

Either to solidify a position or advocate for change, our voice is heard and recorded in the single most effective way the opportunity to cast our vote. Its easy. Call your Supervisor of Elections at 352-374-5252, email kbarton@alachuacounty.us or go to http://www.votealachua.com and have them send you your absentee ballot in the mail.

And theres no postage due to return it. Just ask then vote.

Bill Salmon, Gainesville

What took so long?

In the span of six days, the first African-American leader of a U.S. military service was confirmed (General Charles Q. Brown as Air Force chief of staff), the Navys first black female fighter pilot completed her training (LTJG Madeline Swegle), and the first woman joined the U.S. Army Green Berets (unnamed for security reasons). These are tremendous accomplishments, and should be lauded as such.

I have just one question: What took so long?

The ban on women in combat was lifted almost 30 years ago, in 1993. The U.S. military was desegregated more than 70 years ago in 1948.

While the accomplishments of General Brown, LTJG Swegle and the unnamed Green Beret deserve recognition, it is with a heavy heart that we must also acknowledge that these achievements come far too late for a nation that espouses the equality of all mankind.

Will Atkins, Gainesville

Questionable decisions

I didn't know whether to laugh or cry at a few recent letter writers claiming the Obama administration was scandal-free, because that statement is untrue.

Barack Obama also wasn't free from some questionable decisions. Remember when the Benghazi tragedy started from a video? Do the IRS scandal, Operation Fast & Furious, leaving Iraq and allowing ISIS to be born, the moving Syria "red line," waging war on Libya without Congress consent, ransoms paid for hostages with foreign currency and an unmarked plane in the middle of the night, the Bowe Bergdahl swap, the veto of the 9/11 crime bill, claiming Affordable Care Act coverage and doctors wouldn't change if you wanted to keep them, his 2008 and 2016 apology tours, the Veterans Affairs scandal, the Colorado environmental disaster and commuting the sentences of Chelsea Manning and Oscar Lopez Rivera ring any bells?

When the current investigation by John Durham is completed, we may have to add the spying and criminalizing of Michael Flynn.

Cathy Anderson, Williston

Significant achievements

A recent letter writer complained about what he considers a lack of significant achievements during the Obama administration. So let me educate the author of this letter.

Despite the fact that President Obama inherited a terrible economy during the great recession, the stock market tripled and the unemployment rate decreased from over 10% at the beginning of his administration to less than 5% at its end. Significant legislative achievements include the Affordable Care Act, through which 20 million people received health insurance; the Dodd-Frank Act, which limited the ability of banks to participate in the risky financial transactions that caused the great recession; and establishment of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau. Regarding the war on terrorism, many al-Qaida leaders, including Osama bin Laden, were terminated during the Obama administration.

President Obama also tried his best to combat climate change and improve environmental conditions for future generations.

T.J. Ronson, Micanopy

Write a letter

Letters to the editor should be emailed to letters@gainesville.com. Letters should be 150 words or fewer and include the writers full name, city of residence and contact information.

Read the original:
Letters to the editor for July 25, 2020 - Opinion - Palm Beach Post

Tories want new law that could punish journalists and whistleblowers with 14 years in jail – The Canary

Parliaments Intelligence and Security Committee (ISC) is recommending Boris Johnsons government brings forward its proposed Espionage Act. The new laws will likely end up not much different from the sort of legislation thats currently being applied by the US against WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange.

The legislation would make it much harder for whistleblowers to reveal wrongdoings and would also criminalise journalists who publish leaks. Those who break the law could face up to 14 years imprisonment if proposals from the Law Commission are adopted.

The ISC report states:

In 2017, the Law Commission ran a consultation which considered options for updating the Official Secrets Acts and replacing them with a new Espionage Act.

It goes on to add:

it is very clear that the Official Secrets Act regime is not fit for purpose and the longer this goes unrectified, the longer the Intelligence Communitys hands are tied. It is essential that there is a clear commitment to bring forward new legislation to replace it

Clues as to what any new legislation might look like were provided in the 2017 Law Commission document, entitled Protection of Official Data.

The commission notedthat its recommended offence of espionage would be capable of being committed by someone who not only communicates information, but also by someone who obtains or gathers it.

Indeed, journalist Duncan Campbell, who in 1976 with US journalist Mark Hosenball famously exposed the existence of GCHQ and other eavesdropping sites, wrote in the Register that the legislation, which could jail journalists as spies,is

an attempt to ban reporting of future big data leaks [and] would put leaking and whistleblowing in the same category as spying for foreign powers.

Importantly he also noted that Sentences would apply even if like Edward Snowden or Chelsea Manning the leaker was not British, or in Britain, or was intent on acting in the public interest.

In addition, the Open Rights Group (ORG) observed how the 2017 document recommended that harm (to the state) resulting from disclosure by whistleblowers would no longer have to be proven. Nor would a defence of prior disclosure or publication be applicable in other words, republishing leaked information thats already in the public domain would constitute an offence. ORG further observed that the proposed act could even apply to someone outside the UK leaking information from the EU concerning negotiations over Brexit, or UK media publishing that information.

Campbell points out, too, that the legislation, which would replace the Official Secrets Acts, would end the public interest defence. And where prosecution is pursued, juries would be subject to vetting.

ORG commented:

We believe that the concealed purpose in [the Cabinet Office] requesting the Law Commission report, and the obvious driver for the governments request in 2015 has been the publication on the Internet and in the press of large compendia of leaked documents, including by the Wikileaks website and the documents provided by Edward Snowden.

ORG believes that the commission was asked to produce a report in the wake of the publication by the Guardian of documents leaked by Snowden.

In 2017, UK bureau director of Reporters Without Borders Rebecca Vincent commented on the proposed legislation:

The prospect of journalists being labelled as spies and facing the threat of serious jail time for simply doing their jobs in the public interest is outrageous. This proposal must be revised with respect for press freedom at its core.

Furthermore, News Media Association, a body representing national and regional UK news publishers, said that the law would:

extend and then entrench official secrecy. It would be conducive to official cover up. It would deter, prevent and punish investigation and disclosure of wrongdoing and matters of legitimate public interest [and have a] chilling effect on investigative journalism [It would also] make it easier for the Government to prosecute anyone involved in obtaining, gathering and disclosing information, even if no damage were caused, and irrespective of the public interest The regime could lead to increased use of state surveillance powers against the media under the guise of suspected media involvement in offences, posing a threat to confidential sources and whistle-blowers.

Work began on an espionage bill in 2019. Meanwhile, in response to an urgent question following the publication of the ISC report on Russia, security minister James Brokenshire told parliament:

We have committed to bring forward legislation to counter hostile state activity and espionage. This will modernise existing offences to deal more effectively with the espionage threat, and consider what new offences and powers are needed. This includes reviewing the Official Secrets Acts

Should all or even most of the recommendations made by the Law Commission form part of the proposed legislation, then its the end of press freedom in the UK. The government can hide whatever it likes, transparency will be meaningless and whistleblowing likely to become a thing of the past. And anyone who flouts the law and gets caught could face years in prison, just as the WikiLeaks founder is currently facing the prospect of decades imprisonment in the US for publishing leaks, such as war crimes.

You might be next.

Watch your backs.

Featured image via Pixabay

More:
Tories want new law that could punish journalists and whistleblowers with 14 years in jail - The Canary