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Daily Archives: June 3, 2017
How the Evergreen protesters echo Donald Trump – New York Daily News
Posted: June 3, 2017 at 1:02 pm
New York Daily News | How the Evergreen protesters echo Donald Trump New York Daily News Last fall, on the day after Donald Trump was elected President, scores of students at Evergreen State College walked out of class. They burned an American flag, and wrote chalk messages to protest Trump's victory. "We need a revolution," read one. "Not ... |
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Donald Trump Poisons the World – New York Times
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New York Times | Donald Trump Poisons the World New York Times This week, two of Donald Trump's top advisers, H. R. McMaster and Gary Cohn, wrote the following passage in The Wall Street Journal: The president embarked on his first foreign trip with a cleareyed outlook that the world is not a 'global community ... America First Doesn't Mean America Alone |
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Donald Trump Tilting at Windmills: A Long Fight, Explained – Newsweek
Posted: at 1:02 pm
He isan unseriousmanone who exists in a universe constructed in his mind, the choices he makes dictated by a reality invisible to the world around him. Everything that he believes is outdated, tied to a past that the culture-at-large gladly buried long ago.
I'm talking, of course, aboutMiguel de Cervantes's classicprotagonist, Don Quixote.
There's a famous passage in the novelDon Quixote, published in two parts in the early 17th century,in which the herojousts withor tilts atwindmills. You see, Don Quixote believes he is a knight, the last of a dying breed preserving the chivalrous code. In reality, he has lost his mind and the knights died off long ago.Regardless, whileout on an adventure, Don Quixote spotsthese "monstrous giants" and tells his oft-befuddled compatriot Sancho Panza thatit is his duty to battle themand, of course, to take their riches.
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His pal Sancho replies: "What you see over there aren't giantsthey're windmills; and what seems to be arms are the sails that rotate the millstone when they're turned by the wind." But Don Quixote is unmoved by reality, and, in turn, fights the windmills.
The phrase "tilting at windmills" has since entered the lexicon as an expression usedto describeone who battles imagined enemies, a person vigorously chasing down something despite reality's best efforts to dissuade him or her from the task.
Like many things, this brings us to President Donald Trump, who hasnot quite literally, but almostliterallytiltled at windmills.
Trump, who Thursday announcedthe U.S.would back out of the landmark Paris accord that unified the world in fighting climate change, has long had a bone to pick with wind turbines. You've probably seen them somewhere: They're the hulking, stark-white, tri-bladedwindmillsthat convert wind into electricalpower.
While the wind turbines provideclean power, Trump has routinely battled them largely because he thought they looked unsightly next to his posh golf courses. He even took his fight against windmills all the way to the Britain's highest court.Trump lost.
But the fight didn't stopnoteven after he won the election on November8. Days later,Trump urged British alliesto oppose the sorts of wind farms that would spoil his immaculate views.
As with most of hisenemies, the president has tweetedand tweeted oftenabout the wind turbines he so loathes. He hascited bird deaths, which do happen (at a far lower rate compared tothings like cellphone towers), butsome environmentalists say the benefits wind turbines provide withgreen energy would end up saving many more birds from global warming than they kill. He has said they cause health problems and, to be fair, some people who live or work in close proximity to turbines have described annoyance and issues like headaches, sleep disturbance and anxiety (many wind farms are offshore, however). He has claimed they have a warming effect on the climate (they do not). He hascalled them ugly. He even pleaded with Rachel Maddow and tweeted a link to the Huffington Post.
The now-president and the monstrous giants have been jousting for years in a fight much of the world has forgotten. Presented belowis Trump tilting at windmills:
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Sacramento development files for bankruptcy – KCRA Sacramento
Posted: at 1:02 pm
SACRAMENTO, Calif. (KCRA)
A Sacramento development that was facing financial issues was in U.S. Bankruptcy Court Friday.
Township 9 in the River District had been touted as a mixed-use development that would serve as a gateway to downtown Sacramento.
Township 9 Owners, LLC filed the paperwork Friday saying, The Board has reviewed the Companys financial position and concluded that that Company is unable to pay its debts as they arise and that it would be in the best interest of the Company and its subsidiaries to reorganize.
Josie Miller and Claudine Walls said they love living in Township 9s only apartment building, the Cannery. They moved in thinking the surrounding empty lots would quickly turn into stores, restaurants and more homes.
"We don't have any yet, Miller said. They said we were going to have some condominiums, but I don't see any yet.
"I thought there was going to be some stores, Walls said. But it's not. But I love it. It's quiet.
In fact, it may stay quiet a little bit longer now that the companies developing the site have filed for bankruptcy.
The developers of the empty lots and investors will be forced to re-examine the financing of the deal.
The developers said it won't have any effect on people living at the Cannery but it could delay construction around the site.
WEBVTT READ THE PROJECTIS BY NO MEANS DEAD.THE BANKRUPTCY FILING COULD,HOWEVER, SLOW FUTURECONSTRUCTION HERE.JOSIE MILLER AND CLAUDINE WALLSSAY THEY LOVE LIVING IN TOWNSHIPNINE'S ONLY APARTMENT BUILDING.THEY MOVED IN THINKINGSURROUNDING EMPTY LOTS WOULDQUICKLY TURN INTO STORES,RESTAUARANTS AND MORE HOMES.>> WE DON'T HAVE ANY YET.THEY SAID WE WERE GOING TO HAVESOME CONDOMINIUMS, BUT I DON'TSEE ANY YET.>> YES, I THOUGHT THERE WASGOING TO BE SOME STORES.BUT IT'S NOT.BUT I LOVE IT.IT'S QUIET.KEVIN: IN FACT, IT MAY STAYQUIET A LITTLE BIT LONGER NOWTHE COMPANIES DEVELOPING THESITES HAVE FILED CHAPTER 11BANKRUPTCY.THAT MEANS THE DEVELOPERS OF THEEMPTY LOTS AND THE LENDERS WILLBE FORCED TO REEXAMINE THEFINANCING.THE DEVELOPERS SAY IT WON'T HAVETHE CANNERY, BUT IT COULD DELAYCONSTRUCTION AROUND HERE.EARLIER THIS WEEK, COUNCILMEMBER JEFF HARRIS HINTED THEPROJECT HIT A SNAG.>> IT'S A COMPLEX FINANCIALSTRUCTURE, SO THEY ARE WORKINGTHROUGH THOSE ISSUES RIGHT NOW.PROGRESS ON THE TOWNHOMES HASSTALLED.KEVIN: HARRIS SAID HE STILLTHINKS THE PROJECT WILL COME TOFRUITION AND HE HOPESDEVELOPMENT REMAINS UNDER LOCALCONTROL.THE DEVELOPERS SAY FILINGCHAPTER 11 WILL GIVE THEM A WAYTO CONTINUE ON WITH THE PROJECTAND NOT DROP IT ALTOGETHER.JOSIE MILLER SAYS SHE CAN WAIT.>> WELL, IT IS WHAT IT IS.
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Sacramento development files for bankruptcy - KCRA Sacramento
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EXCLUSIVE: Township Nine owners file for bankruptcy – Sacramento Business Journal
Posted: at 1:02 pm
Sacramento Business Journal | EXCLUSIVE: Township Nine owners file for bankruptcy Sacramento Business Journal The project, once expected to cost $2 billion and include 2,500 housing units, had been heralded as transformational for Sacramento's River District. Subscribe to get the full story. Already a subscriber? Sign in. Subscribe to get the full story ... Bankruptcy cases in Buffalo rise 15 percent in May |
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Surf contest pulled from auction: Cartel postpones Mavericks sale, remains in bankruptcy – San Mateo Daily Journal
Posted: at 1:02 pm
The future of the famed Mavericks surf competition is continuing to roll over rocky waters after Cartel Management canceled plans to auction off its assets this week.
Cartel and Titans of Mavericks are in the midst of federal bankruptcy proceedings, which have thrown the local big wave event into turmoil. The companies were slated to hold an auction June 1 in a proposal that sparked dispute from local Mavericks organizers and the San Mateo County Harbor District.
Just hours before the auction was slated to take place in a Los Angeles attorneys office, Cartel called it off. Only four parties showed an interest in placing a bid, and none met Cartels qualifications that included a minimum $1 million offer, according to court filings.
Instead, one of the parties has proposed an alternative transaction involving a potential recapitalization of Titans, according to the filing. That means in lieu of auctioning off its assets which many speculate included a coveted five-year permit from the Harbor District they will work with the unnamed party to negotiate an alternative arrangement, according to the filing. Without disclosing names, Cartels CEO Griffin Guess noted in an affidavit hes contacted hundreds of parties including high net-worth individuals, media companies, sports leagues, internet companies and product corporations. Although 14 entities gained access to Cartels data room which outlined what was for sale, only a small handful offered a bid. One unnamed entity even cited the cloud of uncertainty in having to deal with local organizers, as reason to not bid, according to the filing.
Cartel, which rebranded the contest at Titans of Mavericks, hosted just one event before filing bankruptcy citing a multi-million dollar debt to various creditors.
The contest attracts international attention as 24 of the worlds bravest big-wave surfers rush to the San Mateo County coastline to compete on Mother Natures stage. While the event hinges on volatile conditions like wind, monstrous 30-foot waves and weather aligning; the biggest hurdle could be for it to clear out of bankruptcy court in time for the winter season.
Ownership of the event first started by Jeff Clark has also been called into question, with local organizers contending the Harbor District permit should belong to them. Although hosting the contest requires a litany of regulatory approvals, for the first time two years ago the Harbor District issued multi-year permit through 2021.
The district and Cartel have been debating whether the coveted permit is transferable without the local boards approval.
In calling off the auction, Cartel used the opportunity to allege two parties had interfered and potentially reduced the value of their assets as the bankruptcy case unfolded in the media.
Cartel pointed to Mavericks Invitational Inc. which includes Clark and has run the event in years past before partnering with Cartel as well as the Harbor District and specifically Commissioner Sabrina Brennan.
I think theyre playing the blame game and this is probably embarrassing for them, that they didnt have a bunch of people lining up to fork over $1 million and theyre blaming people for it, Brennan said.
Ultimately, Brennan said she just wants to see a suitable group run Mavericks, particularly as for the first time women must be included in the contest.
Obviously Im very concerned about the future of the event, she said.
Time is ticking if surf enthusiasts, loyal fans and the big wave community at large are entertained with an event in this years 2017-18 season.
The event has been held just once since Cartel and local Mavericks organizers opted to work together in 2015. Despite favorable conditions, an event was never called last year and into the end of the season when fans found out why.
Cartel and Titans filed for Chapter 11 Bankruptcy earlier this year citing, in part, the costs and politics behind having to secure permits for the event.
There have been various battles to manage Mavericks over the years since Clark first kicked off an event in 1999. Recently, lawsuits and well as orders to keep quiet have flown back and forth between Cartel, locals and prior sponsors.
The requirements for hosting events have also changed over the years and it wasnt until recently that the California Coastal Commission also got involved. Permits from various agencies like the Coastal Commission, approval from the local Sheriffs Office and others is required for the event that typically requires closing public access to the beach and bluffs due to safety concerns. Hosting a contest requires advanced planning with the five-month window during which the contest can be held typically opening around November.
As the districts five-year permit lasts through 2021 and already one season has gone by without an event, this particular asset could be losing value over time.
In its filing, Cartel doesnt provide a timeline as to when it may present sale or acquisition options for the court to consider. Instead, it notes Titans and Cartel will continue to negotiate with the unnamed group to preserve the existing brands while also considering other offers potential buyers may present. It could also opt to try the auction route again.
The district opposed the assertion that its permit was transferable without the boards approval. However, if a new leader comes on board to recapitalize but maintain the Titans brand, Cartel suggests the districts objection would be moot.
The Harbor District Board of Commissioners is slated to meet in closed session Monday to discuss the issue, which is currently under the jurisdiction of a federal bankruptcy judge. Board Vice President Virginia Chang-Kiraly said whoever seeks to run the contest will still have to work with the district and adhere to its interests.
For the Harbor District, its always going to be about how the community is going to benefit, Chang-Kiraly said. We have to move forward as things progress and evolve, but our stance is this is a public event and were going to have the best interests of the public at heart every time.
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Canada’s Stelco Seeks US Bankruptcy Court Protection – Wall Street Journal (subscription)
Posted: at 1:02 pm
Canada's Stelco Seeks US Bankruptcy Court Protection Wall Street Journal (subscription) U.S. Steel Canada Inc., known as Stelco, has asked a New York judge to formally recognize its Canadian restructuring efforts, a condition of the company's plan to finalize a bankruptcy takeover by Bedrock Industries L.P. by the end of June. Stelco ... |
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LUTH workers call for FG’s intervention to arrest decay in institution – NIGERIAN TRIBUNE (press release) (blog)
Posted: at 1:01 pm
WORKERS of the Lagos University Teaching Hospital (LUTH), Idi-Araba, have appealed to the Federal Government to intervene in the poor management of the tertiary health institution.
The workers made the call on Friday in Lagos at an all workers congress jointly organised by unions in the institution.
The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that the unions included the Senior Staff Association of Nigeria Universities (SSANU), National Association of Nigeria Nurses and Midwives (NANNM) and Association of Resident Doctors (ARD), amongst others.
Also at the meeting were some state and national executives of the various unions to demonstrate support for their members in LUTH.
Some leaders of the unions who spoke at the forum said that the workers were tired of the management style in the institution and urged government to urgently intervene to avert a labour crisis.
Mrs Yemisi Adelaja, Chairman, NANNM, LUTH branch, said that the congress was to reaffirm all their agitations that had been made known to the government.
Government should please answer us, we are ready to work but with the plight we are facing in LUTH, it has become difficult.
Without enough materials to work and the hostile environment, workers are saying, we are tired.
The relationship with the management is not cordial that is why we are seeking governments intervention for LUTH to regain its past glory, she said.
Also, Mr Johnson Adetokunbo, Chairman, SSANU, LUTH chapter, appealed to the Federal Government to address issues of victimisation and oppression by the management of the tertiary hospital.
Adetokunbo said that workers were tired of the uncompromising and suppressive attitude of the present management on the health workers.
We are saying no more to suppression and victimisation of workers, which has made the environment unconducive for us to work in.
We are not demanding for anything other than for this foremost institution to meet up with standards that can be comparable to any hospital around the world.
Professionals in other countries are doing excellently well because they are provided a conducive environment and their welfare is being put into consideration.
Any worker that is not happy cannot give out his or her best. This is the reason we are saying no to these suppression, oppression and victimisation of labour leaders, he said.
Speaking in the same vein, the ARD President, Dr Adebayo Sekumade, called for governments intervention in restructuring the institution, stating that it was in a state of decay.
We are crying out to the government to come and intervene in this issue that has been going on in LUTH; we are tired of the decay that is happening here.
We are saying that LUTH should not be allowed to collapse because if there is no immediate intervention, we are headed for a total collapse.
LUTH is serving thousands of Nigerians and this is why the government should take necessary actions by creating solutions that will meet the demands of LUTH workers, he said.
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Police arrest 4 suspects over illegal rogue websites
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When a beacon of liberty was cruelly snuffed out – Belfast Telegraph
Posted: at 1:01 pm
When a beacon of liberty was cruelly snuffed out
BelfastTelegraph.co.uk
The presses of the Northern Star newspaper, through which Presbyterians in Belfast spread a gospel of progressive politics, were silenced for good 220 years ago. Kenneth L Dawson, the author of a forthcoming biography of the paper's founder, Samuel Neilson, explains why the city became a cauldron of radicalism.
The presses of the Northern Star newspaper, through which Presbyterians in Belfast spread a gospel of progressive politics, were silenced for good 220 years ago. Kenneth L Dawson, the author of a forthcoming biography of the paper's founder, Samuel Neilson, explains why the city became a cauldron of radicalism.
Two hundred and twenty years ago, members of the Monaghan Militia attacked the Belfast premises of the Northern Star newspaper in Wilson's Court (one of the entries connecting High Street to Ann Street), smashed its presses and threw the type and machines into the courtyard below.
This violent act marked the end of a remarkable publication, which offered a criticism of government policy and served as an agent of politicisation during a decade that culminated with the paroxysm of the 1798 Rebellion and its most immediate consequence, the Union between Britain and Ireland.
The Belfast News-Letter, which had been established by the Joy family in 1737, had enjoyed a virtual monopoly in the town and across the province, save for the brief lifespan of the reformist Belfast Mercury in the 1780s.
The News-Letter was itself a moderate and progressive newspaper, but the political excitement caused by the American and French revolutions, and the increasingly audible calls for concessions to Ireland's beleaguered Catholic majority in an age of enlightenment, created the opportunity for a bold new alternative.
During 1791, plans for a second newspaper were being prepared and finalised. Chief among the organisers were men who would also form a new political association in Belfast, the Society of United Irishmen, the objectives of which would be to promote a fundamental reform of the blatantly unrepresentative Irish parliament in Dublin, the abolition of sectarian divisions and the replacement of the terms Protestant, Catholic and Dissenter with the common name of Irishman.
These men - William Magee, William Tennent, Robert Caldwell, John and Henry Haslett, Gilbert McIlveen, Thomas Milliken, William and Robert Simms, John Tisdall, William McCleery, Thomas McCabe and Samuel Neilson - most of them Presbyterian, would transform the life of the town by publishing the Northern Star, a twice-weekly newspaper which called for change, mocked the rulers of the country and endorsed the armies of revolutionary France, even after Britain went to war against the French in early-1793.
The proprietors of the new paper had written to men of influence across the province of Ulster in the autumn of 1791 to canvass support for the enterprise. While some respondents questioned the need for a second newspaper, others were enthusiastic and the plans took shape with the acquisition of the printing presses and premises.
The leading figure in the scheme was Samuel Neilson, whose textile business in Waring Street had allowed him to accumulate a large personal fortune. A leading member of the reformist First Volunteer Company in Belfast, Neilson's energies were also expended on the formation of the United Irishmen and the development of a radical political vision.
In the prospectus for the newspaper, Neilson declared the Northern Star, which would guide reformers like a political compass during these turbulent times, would appeal for support on the grounds of "spirit, impartiality and independence". Neilson became the editor and lead proprietor.
Neilson cheekily advertised the new publication in Henry Joy's News-Letter in late 1791 "with a view to the better dissemination of useful intelligence". Priced at two pence, the Northern Star would be published on Wednesdays and Saturdays (although these days would change in the light of increasing rivalry between the two newspapers) and would soon outsell its more established competitor, with as many as 4,000 readers being exposed to its political and satirical content.
Opportunities were created for public readings, so that illiterate workers and farmers could also be exposed to the radical message. The Protestant Ascendancy, which dominated Irish politics through the parliament in Dublin, was lampooned ruthlessly and the claims for equality of Presbyterians and Catholics promoted.
The aristocracy was attacked in Neilson's editorials, which criticised the ruling class for spending its time on "idle gratifications and despicable pursuits, when the hereditary Legislators of a country shew no respect for public opinion". After the sale of the News-Letter in late 1794, it adopted a more conservative position. As competition and tension increased, the two rival newspapers suffered attacks upon their distribution and delivery networks, with paperboys and agents being stopped and copies of newspapers stolen or destroyed.
With the outbreak of war between Britain and France in February 1793, the pro-French position of the Northern Star became the object of government oppression. In April, a party of soldiers attacked a number of houses and businesses associated with the radical cause, including the office of the Star. The proprietors of the newspaper would be charged on two occasions with publishing advertisements and political commentaries that were deemed to be seditious.
While these actions appeared to intimidate the owners for a time, the Star continued to print both allegations of injustice and accounts of aggressive tactics and bias against the magistrates, aristocracy and military. The emergence of the Orange Order in the middle of the 1790s provided the Northern Star with a new target.
In late 1796, for example, it published a letter from a reader in the district of Tullylish, who alleged an atrocity carried out on the family of a James McArdel by "vile wretches who call themselves Orangemen". Further examples of excess, such as the forced dispersal of a wake in Newry by the military and the drunken behaviour of militia regiments in parts of Armagh and Tyrone, were published, although little reference was made to the equally provocative attacks carried out by the Defender allies of the United Irishmen in south Down, Tyrone and Armagh.
As part of the government's campaign against the developing militancy of the United Irishmen, Neilson was arrested in September 1796, alongside other leading radicals such as Thomas Russell, Henry Haslett and Charles Teeling. Over the next few months, other employees of the Northern Star (such as the compositor Samuel Kennedy, Thomas Storey, William Kean and William Templeton) were arrested and confined.
The editorial duties fell upon Robert and William Simms until they, too, were incarcerated shortly after a second attack on the offices of the Star in early-February 1797. This was a result of the publication of a public address to the electors of Carrickfergus by the firebrand former MP Arthur O'Connor, wherein he declared himself a republican. O'Connor posed a question about the legitimacy of British policy in Ireland: "Could French invaders do worse than establish a system of corruption and unfairness as exists in Ireland already?" Coming so soon after an attempted French invasion in Co Cork just weeks before, O'Connor's outspokenness - and the Northern Star's willingness to publish his address - prompted the authorities to order Colonel Lucius Barber of the Royal Artillery to arrest the Simms and take steps to prevent future publication.
By the end of the month, the Northern Star was again being printed, with a new editor, Thomas Andrew Corbet, replacing Robert and William Simms. However, things were not running smoothly for the troubled newspaper. Mounting debts, the arrests of its employees and the resorting to an inferior brand of paper combined to undermine the newspaper's quality.
Corbet was forced to print that the Star would no longer be delivered to anyone who had not paid in advance. Increasingly exasperated, he informed his readers that "The plunder of the office - the consequent derangement of the Printing Materials - the imprisonment of ALL the proprietors and the inexperience of the Printer, will plead a powerful apology with a generous public, for any inaccuracies, mistakes or delays that may unavoidably occur in the management of the business".
With problems mounting, the newspaper would run into more trouble in May 1797. General Gerard Lake, the commander-in-chief of the Crown forces in the province of Ulster, was convinced that the Northern Star would have to be muzzled if the authorities wanted to maintain control of the district.
He wrote to Henry Pelham, the Chief Secretary, that the newspaper would need to be forcibly put out of business: "Surely the Northern Star should be stopp'd, the mischief that it does is beyond all imagination. May I be allowed to seize and burn the whole apparatus?" Lake's wishes would be carried out soon enough.
After four members of the Monaghan Militia were executed at the military camp at Blaris Moor, near Lisburn, in May 1797 for encouraging soldiers to take the United Irishmen's oath, other men of the same regiment attempted to place an advertisement in the Northern Star proclaiming their loyalty to the Crown. When the Star refused to print the wording of the advert, because it sullied the reputation of Belfast, members of the regiment went on the rampage in the town, forcing the newspaper to close once and for all.
The presses were destroyed and the office ransacked before the troops were recalled by the regiment's commander, Colonel Charles Leslie of Glaslough. Shortly afterwards, members of the artillery arrived to finish the job. Samuel Neilson's newspaper would never again be published.
The demise of the Northern Star deprived the United Irishmen of its most important propaganda tool in Ulster and beyond. From its editorial debut in January 1792, the newspaper had communicated the news of the developing revolution in France, the campaigns for the abolition of slavery abroad and the ideas of thinkers such as Thomas Paine. But the Star also provided an outlet for the pens of radicals closer to home. Thomas Russell, Rev James Porter (the outspoken Presbyterian minister in Greyabbey) and the lawyer William Sampson had all contributed delicious satirical pieces for publication such as The Lion of Old England, Billy Bluff and Squire Firebrand and The Trial of Hurdy Gurdy, allowing readers to make fun of the aristocracy and the legal system.
The presses of the Northern Star also provided encouragement for an Irish cultural revival, publishing the magazine Bolg an tSolair, which provided a useful resource for students of the Gaelic tradition at a time when Patrick Lynch of Loughinisland was making a living as a teacher of Irish in Belfast.
Before the age of a genuinely free Press, Samuel Neilson's Northern Star was a beacon of liberty, which encouraged discussion and promoted knowledge at a time of exciting political change in Europe. Its remarkable story presents us with an interesting sidelight on a truly momentous decade, during which Belfast was a hub of political debate and intellectual diversity.
Two hundred and twenty years ago, the presses through which Belfast Presbyterians set out a template for political change and encouraged widespread political discourse were silenced.
It is a part of our past that deserves to be acknowledged.
Belfast Telegraph
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When a beacon of liberty was cruelly snuffed out - Belfast Telegraph
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Rekindling war on drugs will victimize more families – Las Vegas Sun
Posted: at 1:00 pm
By Domenica Ghanem
Friday, June 2, 2017 | 2 a.m.
Angela Pryor, a 41-year-old woman from Ross County, Ohio, is not living the life she thought she would.
She used to stay at home and take care of her kids while her husband, Jesse, went to work as a carpenter. But as Jesse fell into opioid addiction, Angela had to pick up the slack. It became even harder when he ended up in jail for selling drugs, and harder still when Jesse overdosed and died in 2015.
Now Angelas struggling to care for her five children alone. Shes even lost her house, The Atlantic reported recently.
A few hundred miles to the east, in Washington, another familiar scene played out in the pages of the New York Times.
When Charlene Hamiltons husband, Carl Harris, was jailed for selling drugs, she was left behind to take care of the kids, pay the rent and feed the family. Like Angela, Charlene found herself homeless more than once. She slept in a car for a month while her kids stayed with other relatives. Meanwhile in prison, Carl started using the drugs he once sold.
The similarities in their stories dont stop there. Both families lived in communities plagued by joblessness. In Ohio, the decline of good-paying manufacturing jobs combined with health problems have led to a drug epidemic, largely among white men, that was responsible for more than 3,000 deaths statewide just last year.
Meanwhile, majority-black communities have been suffering from unemployment for decades. In the District of Columbia the unemployment rate for black residents now at 13.4 percent has actually gotten worse since the recession, even while every other racial and ethnic group in the city has seen an improvement.
These are the conditions that can lead a husband and father like Carl Harris or Jesse Pryor to turn to drug use, abuse and trade. It is economic despair, and its happening all over the country. As extreme inequality gets worse and the middle class disintegrates, many formerly middle-income white Americans are now experiencing the sorts of pain long suffered by poorer communities of color.
All thats bad enough. But theres one man who seems determined to make it all worse: Attorney General Jeff Sessions. Reversing an Obama-era guideline, Sessions recently told federal prosecutors to go after low-level drug offenders and to seek the toughest possible penalties against them.
Its an unmistakable return to widely discredited mandatory minimum sentencing laws that treat drug use and abuse as a crime, rather than a mental or physical health issue. (Interestingly, Sessions shows little interest in prosecuting the white-collar criminals who are the cause of much of the income inequality that can lead to drug use in the first place.)
The effects of a return to harsher drug law enforcement go beyond the loss of our white and black fathers, husbands and friends. These policies will stifle children for generations to come, as new data show.
Sociology professor Kristin Turney found that children with incarcerated parents were three times more likely to suffer from depression or behavioral problems, and twice as likely to suffer from learning disabilities and anxiety, The Nation reported.
That same story quotes a former New Orleans city councilman and former teacher who is an ex-offender himself. He said that when he spoke to schoolchildren and asked if any of them had a family member in prison, just about everybody raises their hand.
These students are more statistically likely to drop out, too, which of course makes it more difficult to get a job, continuing the cycle of economic despair.
Poor white families who are now suffering can learn a lot from the suffering that poor black families have endured from this system for decades. These communities can come together to fight reactionary drug war policies like Sessions, which exacerbate everyones suffering.
The Essie Justice Group is one such effort that brings together those often forgotten victims the women and the families left behind of the war on drugs, mass incarceration, and the economic inequality wrapped up in all of it.
Gina Clayton, who founded the group, has this message for those women like Angela and Charlene: This loss that Ive experienced is not OK, and we all need to do something about it.
Domenica Ghanem is the media manager at the Institute for Policy Studies and an alumni member of Students for Sensible Drug Policy. She wrote this forInsideSources.com.
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