Daily Archives: August 26, 2020

Hakuho may be on path to becoming great stablemaster if latest recruit pans out – The Japan Times

Posted: August 26, 2020 at 4:38 pm

Roughly 10 years ago, I noticed that virtually all sumo-related content that had been shared over the previous few months on my social media platforms was getting liked and commented on by someone with the profile picture of a young child, and a Mongolian name that I didnt recognize.

Checking it out, I discovered that the account belonged to the mother of the child in question, and that, after having recently run into Hakuho at an airport, the family was on a something of a sumo buzz.

A decade later that same small child is now a 200-cm, 160-kg giant who has just won the jonokuchi division title.

Ariunaa Davaainj, who fights under the shikona Hokuseiho, has started his sumo career 9-0 and, at just 18 years old, could be the most promising rikishi in the sport.

It appears that chance encounter with Hakuho ended with the yokozuna suggesting the elementary schooler give sumo a go and then join his stable when he was old enough and thats exactly what Davaainj did.

Although born in Mongolia, Hokuseiho was raised in Hokkaido from the age of five and has Japanese nationality, which allowed him to join Miyagino stable despite it already having a rikishi of foreign origin (Hakuho).

Hokuseiho (left) fights in maezumo, the lowest-ranked division, on March 9 at Edion Arena Osaka in Osaka. | KYODO

While a random encounter with a rikishi may seem like an unusually serendipitous way of finding yourself in professional sumo, active wrestlers scouting new recruits isnt all that unusual and in the old days, extending invitations to suitable looking young men was one of the more common ways of finding new recruits.

Veterans who may be thinking of branching out and opening up their own stable once they retire often kick-start the process by actively seeking out recruits as well. Generally, those men spend a few years in the original heya before moving to the new establishment with the man who recruited them.

Hakuho has long played his cards close to the chest, and no one knows for sure what the yokozunas post-retirement plans are, but splitting off from Miyagino beya seems unlikely.

The current stablemaster is just two years away from mandatory retirement and with no other candidates in a position to take over, Hakuho would be the natural successor.

Of course, given all that he has achieved to date, its almost unthinkable that Hakuho wont become the fifth man in sumo history to be granted special one-generation elder status.

That rare honor would allow him to continue using his ring name post retirement and he could then either change the name of his current stable to Hakuho beya or open up a new one under the same name.

Taiho, Kitanoumi and Takanohana all ran stables under their ring name while Chiyonofuji declined the honor and instead took over the existing Kokonoe name and heya.

One-generation elder stock, as the name implies, cannot be passed on and so Hakuho beya, if it comes into existence, will cease to exist in 2050 at the very latest.

For a man who has time and again shown himself to be so cognizant of and invested in sumo history, its easy to imagine that Hakuho wants to leave a more lasting legacy.

Prior to the Mongolians ascendancy, debate over the greatest rikishi of all time generally centered on two men: the aforementioned Taiho, sumos first rock star, and Futabayama, the legendary holder of sumos record 69-bout winning streak.

Although that yokozuna pair have passed away, their names continue on in sumo.

Otake and Tokitsukaze stables are also known respectively as Taiho Dojo and Futabayama Sumo Dojo with those name signs taking prominence over the door of each building.

Itd be naive to imagine that for a man who has adapted his ring-entering ceremony over the years to honor various historical yokozuna, the idea of Hakuho Dojo persisting well into the next century hasnt occurred to the Mongolian veteran.

Raising a multitude of great rikishi isnt a prerequisite for such immortality either.

As a stablemaster, Futabayama produced a yokozuna and two ozeki, but none of Taihos apprentices made it past sekiwake.

Hakuhos own record to date is mixed.

Former Nihon University wrestler Daikiho was scouted by the yokozuna but, apart from a cup of coffee in the top division, didnt make a whole lot of noise in his seven-year career.

Crowd favorite Enho, another of Hakuhos recruits, is a diminutive firebrand who never fails to excite, but a lack of size means he is unlikely to ever make it to the sports highest ranks.

With Hokuseiho, though, the yokozuna may just have stumbled upon someone worthy of taking up his mantle.

Of course getting carried away with early success in sumos lower reaches is never a good idea, as it isnt until wrestlers reach the third-highest division (makushita) that any kind of proper evaluation can be made.

With that being said, however, in the two decades that Ive been involved in sumo, Ive never seen a young rikishi with the rare combination of size, power, fluidity and aptitude for the sport Hokuseiho displays.

Although just 18 he is like an adult among kids in training. His nonchalant overpowering of veterans and instant neutralizing of their attack at the faceoff is stunning. At 160 kg Hokuseiho is also relatively slender and could easily add another 20 kg without appearing overly heavy.

Hakuho is unquestionably the greatest rikishi of all time. If his latest recruit pans out, the yokozuna may also be on the way to becoming the greatest stablemaster ever.

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Hakuho may be on path to becoming great stablemaster if latest recruit pans out - The Japan Times

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The Unbelievable True Story Of How The Memphis Pyramid Became A Bass Pro Shops – Forbes

Posted: at 4:38 pm

Crystal skulls, NBA all-stars, Mike Tyson and a legendary fish tale make this of the most fascinating structures in America.

The Memphis Pyramid began life as a basketball arena in 1991 before becoming a Bass Pro Shops in ... [+] 2015.

The line drew tight, bending the fishing rod in half and signaling the beginning of a multimillion dollar deal. In an instant, a catfish at the bottom of the Mississippi River had changed the fate of a civic icon. The day was November 10, 2005. But before we get there, we need to rewind.

High strangeness marked the Memphis Pyramid from the start. Before the ambitious construction project for a towering, steel pyramid on the banks of the Mississippi River broke ground in 1989, renderings included a glass elevator ride to the top that never appeared; a Hard Rock Cafe; a college football hall of fame; and a short-wave radio station capable of bouncing the citys iconic blues and rock n roll sounds off the stratosphere and around the world.

The Pyramid, some Memphians believed, would be the southern citys answer to the St. Louis Arch, drawing visitors by the thousands and providing a riverside monument to rally around. But by the time the 321-foot tall building opened as a basketball arena in 1991, little remained of its original planssave, except, the sixth largest pyramid on Earth and a mysterious crystal skull welded to its apex.

That part is true, said Memphis Tourism CEO and President Kevin Kane, who has worked for the citys marketing arm since 1991. The crystal skull sort of became folklore at some point and grew from there, but it is true. Isaac Tigrett, who founded Hard Rock Cafe, put a crystal skull put in there for mystic powers or what have you. It was removed. I guess he got it back.

The "Tomb of Doom" cuts an imposing figure through a foggy, Memphis night in the early 1990s. Notice ... [+] the lack of an observation deck, added by Bass Pro Shops in 2015.

Free of its mystical burden, the Pyramid began life as a basketball arena, though perhaps not without retribution from Tigrett. On opening night, the buildings toilets simultaneously overflowed causing a flood in the basement.

For 12 seasons, the Pyramid would play host to a gallery of basketball stars like Michael Jordan, Kobe Bryant and hometown hero, Anfernee Penny Hardaway all graced the court. On the hardwood, the buildings near-vertical stands and imposing structure gave way to a nickname, The Tomb of Doom.

The first time I hit the floor there, it felt special because we had never seen anything like it, recalls Hardaway, a four-time NBA all star now serving in his third season as head mens basketball coach at his alma mater, the University of Memphis. As a basketball arena, the Pyramid was out of this world. It wasnt natural. It wasnt normal. It was loud, because of how the sound went to a point in the top of the arena. We had a humungous home court advantage.

Hardaway remembers the thunderous din of the crowd in his first game at the arena. Memphis fans, 21,142 strong, filled to the rafters as the hometown Tigers took on the 20th-ranked DePaul Blue Devils from Chicago. It was amazing, he remembers. Because we came out against a top-ranked team in the country in DePaul. ESPN set it up. Dick Vitale was there. The whole nine yards. The crowd was extremely loud that night, and the arena was state-of-the-art.

1992: Guard Anfernee Hardaway of the Memphis State Tigers dribbles the ball down the court during a ... [+] game against the DePaul Blue Demons at the Pyramid in Memphis, Tennessee. Credit: Allsport /Allsport

The superstar point guard spent two seasons at the Pyramid before being drafted third overall in the 1993 NBA Draft by the Golden State Warriors and achieving basketball immortality after a trade sent him to Shaquille ONeals Orlando Magic. Soon after, Nike launched his still-popular Air Penny shoe line.

For the duration of the 1990s the the Pyramid continued to host University of Memphis basketball games, often ranking among the top programs nationally in attendance while filling its cavernous hold with fans clad in the schools colors, blue and gray. But by the early 2000s, a new era was dawning in Memphis. The city had swung and missed on an NFL expansion team in the 90s, but finally secured a major league franchise in 2001, when the NBAs Grizzlies were lured to Tennessee from Vancouver.

The Grizzlies were an immediate hit in the basketball-crazed town. But the summer after the first major league season in Memphis history, the Pyramid came face-to-face with its biggest night, a night bigger than basketball.

MEMPHIS, TN - NOVEMBER 15: Memphis Grizzlies' fan Evan O'Connor, 6, gets a boost from brother Ryan ... [+] O'Connor, 12, as the Grizzlies come close to beating the Timberwolves during the second half 15 November 2001 at the Pyramid in Memphis, Tennesee. The Timberwolves pulled ahead in the last minutes to defeat the Grizzlies 99-95. LANCE MURPHEY/AFP via Getty Images)

Penny Hardaway was the most famous permanent occupant of the building, tells Geoff Calkins, a Memphis-based sports columnist since 1996. But I think you can make an argument that [the fight] was the biggest sporting event ever in the history of Memphis.

The fight took place on June 8, 2002 when Mike Tyson challenged Lenox Lewis for the WBC World Title beneath the very rafters where Hardaway played college basketball a decade earlier.

The heavyweight contest had been originally scheduled to take place in Las Vegas, but after a press conference brawl between the two opponents, the State of Nevada refused to grant Tyson a boxing license. Memphis Mayor Willie Herentonan amateur boxer whod go on to fight Joe Frazier in a bizarre Beale Street boxing match years laterswung for the Tyson/Lewis battle with a $12 million bid and won it.

Herentons civic slug hit home.

In the days leading up to the fight, international media descended on the city in droves. Private jets lined the tarmac of Memphis International Airport. A tangible buzz filled the air and the Pyramid became the epicenter of the sports world.

As the bell rang, the Tyson/Lewis fight set a record for the highest grossing event in pay-per-view history, netting $106 million from viewers and a $17.5 million purse for the combatants. The undercard featured a young Filipino fighter named Manny Pacquiao. And the scene, according to Calkins, was bedlam.

It was Hollywood meets the Vegas Strip meets Beale Street all right there tucked into this crazy ass lookin pyramid on the river. It couldnt have been more electric, he describes.

MEMPHIS, TN - JUNE 8: Lennox Lewis and Mike Tyson fight for the WBC, IBO, IBF, Ring and Lineal ... [+] heavyweight titles on June 8, 2002 at The Pyramid in Memphis, Tennessee. Lewis won the fight with an 8th round KO. (Photo by Focus on Sport/Getty Images)

Tyson was an almost unparalleled box office draw. The card brought an A-list of celebrities like Samuel L. Jackson, Denzel Washington, Clint Eastwood, Leonardo DiCaprio, Tom Cruise, Britney Spears, Magic Johnson, Alec Baldwin, Ben Affleck, Dwayne The Rock Johnson and Donald Trump to Memphisa blue-collar city that hadnt seen that kind of star power since Elvis Presley lived on the edge town.

The whole damn universe came here, adds Calkins, who covered the fight for The Commercial Appeal. There were parades down Beale Street. You couldnt go anywhere without bumping into a star. The world stopped for a heavyweight championship fight, especially when it was Lennox Lewis, this gentleman champion against the fearsome Mike Tyson.

Lewis won the fight by knockout in the eighth round. For a time, efforts were made to make Memphis a fixture for high profile fights.

The heavyweight boxing bout was the pinnacle for The Pyramid. Though the arena served as the Grizzlies temporary home from 2001-2004, Hardaway says it wasnt quite up to snuff as a professional basketball venue. Indeed, part of the negotiations bringing the NBA to town included a requirement to build a new arena.

Knowing what the NBA is about now, I dont think that building was NBA-ready, reflects Hardaway, who would return to play on the floor of his old stomping grounds as a member of the Phoenix Suns from 2001-2004. It was okay for college, but NBA players probably thought it was unusual because of how far they had to walk to the locker rooms. It just wasnt built like other places. Im sure they felt that it was difficult to get into their normal routine.

FedExForum, a modern $250 million NBA arena, opened for the Grizzlies on nearby Beale Street at the beginning of the 2004-2005 season. Immediately, both the Grizzlies and the Tigers relocated. A non-compete clause meant the Pyramid could also no longer be effectively used as a year-round entertainment venue. Once home to thunderous crowds, rambunctious rock concerts and a thriving entertainment district at its doorstep, the building stood as a looming monument to obsolescence.

Bob Seger plays at Madison Square Garden on January 25, 2007, eight days before closing down the ... [+] Pyramid. (Photo by Patti Ouderkirk/WireImage)

When Bob Seger and the Silver Bullet Band rolled into town on February 3, 2007, the mothballs were briefly shaken from the cavernous venue. In a long line of acts that included Aerosmith, Prince, Elton John, Eric Clapton, Guns N Roses, Celine Dion and Metallica, Segers stage lights would be the last to rise over the Pyramid stage.

I insisted that my music manager book us at the Pyramid on that tour, tells Seger now 75. I loved to play the Pyramid. The acoustics were a challenge, but it was such a beautiful, eye-opening venue.

Seger would kick off the buildings last show with a rendition of Roll Me Away along the banks of Old Man River. More than two hours later, hed cap an encore with Rock and Roll Never Forgets.

Its special, he adds. Its an honor to close an arena. We closed the Palace in Detroit a few years ago as well, and it is truly an honor. Musically, Memphis is an enormously signifiant, great American city. Its the home of Elvis, Sun Records, Graceland, Beale Street, the blues. It was always fun playing there. There was nothing quite like itvery southern, very gracious, very beautiful.

Several months later, Bass Pro Shops founder and Forbes billionaire Johnny Morris found himself hiking to the top of the silent, steel sentinel where Segers voice echoed that night. As he looked down from the rafters, visions of a cypress swamp began to fill his mind.

These stairs were the only way to reach the top of the Pyramid for nearly 25 years.

On June 21, 2012, Morris hosted a construction kickoff celebration inside of the empty arena. Dance was at his side as a slew of local media descended on the Pyramid for the first time in nearly a decade. A deal had been finalized on a $215 million financing package for renovations to the former arena. But had it not been for a chance encounter, the event might have never happened at all.

That tale begins at the top of our story, six and a half years before the kickoff celebration.

On November 10, 2005, three men bobbed in a boat on the Mississippi River. One was Morris. Another was Bass Pro Shops very first fishing department manager, Jack Emmitt. The final member was a prominent Memphian with a signature, orange T on his baseball cap.

I know Bill Dance!, chimes Hardaway, from his office at The University of Memphis. He was on t.v. every weekend when I was growing up.

Such is the legend of the worlds most famous fisherman, Bill Dance. The third member of the fishing crew that day is now as inseparable from the legacy of the Pyramid as the citys most iconic basketball playing son.

Instantly recognizable behind signature sunglasses and a white University of Tennessee baseball cap, the 79-year-old Dance is still going strong behind a nationally syndicated television show thats been on the air for five decadesthe same show that once beamed into a young Penny Hardaways house in the citys Binghampton neighborhood. Dances online fanbase reaches more than a million, and he shares a slot in Memphis Sports Hall of Fame beside Hardaway.

It was Bill Dance that brought the sleeping pyramid back to life.

An empty Pyramid as configured for University of Memphis basketball circa 1992.

After FedExForum opened, the City of Memphis struggled to find an occupant for its monolithic, vacant arena. Ideas were tossed out: an aquarium, a casino, a megachurch, but according to Kane, none of them stuck. The most feasible, he said, was a megachurch; however, none of the potential suitors could afford the buildings more than $700,000 yearly utility bill. On one occasion, the city was close to signing an agreement with The Recording Academy for a Grammy Hall of Fame, but negotiations fell apart when Memphis learned it would be just one of multiple sites for the museum.

Years went by, and residents grew accustomed to the tombs dark, empty presence slicing through the citys night sky. Save a blinking, red safety beacon at the top, few could remember the last time theyd seen the Pyramids lights turned on.

It was up to Dance to flip the switch.

Dance is no billionaire, but he does have the ear of one or two. In the course of his star-studded career, Dance became good friends with Morris, the most powerful man in outdoor sporting goods. Through Dance, Morris learned of the vacant 535,000 square foot structure positioned squarely in the heart of the American south. And it was Dance who Morris leaned on to gain insight into the the viability of an idea that seemed absurd on the surface: ripping out the Pyramids seats and replacing them with an indoor swamp.

Early concept sketches for a redesigned interior replaced the Pyramid's seats with a swamp.

As Dance tells it, he and Morris were on a whirlwind tour of store openings when the company founder, along with Bass Pro Shops President Jim Hagle, began pressing Dance about his home city. As a Bass Pro Shops plane bounced from Tennessee to Mississippi to Alabama and Florida, the duo asked Dance about the viability of a flagship store in his home city. They kept telling me, Bill, we need a decision. Bill we need a decision, remembers Dance. But flight after flight, Dance dodged the question.

By the time the trio had finished opening the Pearl, Mississippi store, Morris was gathering cold weather gear for a long-awaited catfishing trip with Dance in Memphis. Again, Dance says he was pressed for an answer.

He said, Bill you live in Memphis, you know the people in Memphis, you know the store thats there already. You know the clientele. You need to make a decision as to whether we should do this or not.

I said, y'all are crazy as a sprayed roach. Im not making that decision.

But by the time the private jet landed back in Memphis, Dance had provided some feedback for the executive teamand it sounded like a love letter to his hometown worthy of a Sun Records single.

I told them Memphis is mid-Americas distribution center. Its the barbecue capital of the world, the lumber capital of the world, the cotton capital of the world. Its the home of rock n roll, the birthplace of the blues. The Pyramid can be seen by air, by land, and by water. It lies between two major interstates, and tourism would support it.

Unconvinced, Morris thanked Dance for his input and asked him to keep thinking. On final approach, he asked me if it was a yes or a no for a Bass Pro Shops in the Pyramid, recalls Dance.

When the trios wheels hit the tarmac, the deal still wasnt settled.

It would be up to nature to decide the Pyramids fate.

The Pyramid as seen from the Mississippi River, upstream of downtown Memphis.

Catfishing is a sport akin to freshwater big game hunting. Those who fall under the spell of these whiskered giants soon revere them, worshipping catfish in the way coastal anglers might worship tuna or marlin. Like prized saltwater species, special hooks are often employed to ensure that catfish are humanely caught and released in good health. Trophy fish are often prized for their photo opportunities and then released.

Perhaps that allure is what drew Johnny Morris to make the bet, a gamble that would put more than $100 million from the City of Memphis and several times that amount from his own pocket on the table on that chilly November day. Some people flip a coin for big decisions, explains Morris. But I told them if we catch a big catfish today, its meant to be. If we dont, thats a sign that maybe we better keep fishing and not worry about the Pyramid.

I couldnt believe it, adds Dance. I said, Johnny. Ive known you for more than 35 years and thats the stupidest thing Ive ever heard come out of your mouth. Youre going to let a catfish decide a half-a-billion dollar deal?

Morris was stone cold serious about it. If the Pyramid was ever going to become a Bass Pro Shops, someone on that boat would have to catch a photo-worthy catfish. I was just right on the ragged edge of undertaking [the project], said Morris. The time, the financial commitment...I was torn about it.

On day one of their trip, the crew headed downstream and struck out. As the second day dawned, Dance plotted their course upstream, where the Pyramid might appear as a silver glimmer on the horizon in just the right light. Meanwhile, Morriss phone was ringing with periodic, urgent messages from Hagle, the executive whod helped him corner Dance earlier that week on the plane.

Jim Hagle started calling me around 9 or 10 a.m. wanting to know whether we were going to do this thing or not, Morris explains. I told him we needed a little more time, and probably didnt say too much to him and hung up. At noon, he calls me back and says, Are we in? Or are we out? Again, I told him we needed more time and hung up.

10 minutes before three, Jim [Hagle] calls me again. I can just see the smoke coming out of his ears...

Thats when the fishing rod doubled over. Emmitt, who'd been nearly half asleep in the back of the boat, loaded up on a big fish.

Jacks rod went down and he pulled back and started reeling, cites Dance.

Jacks rod was banging on the gunnel, chimes Morris, with excitement in his voice. At the same time, Hagle is on the phone asking what in the world is going on.

From left; Johnny Morris, Jack Emmitt and Bill Dance with a 34-pound blue catfish caught on the ... [+] Mississippi River.

On November 10, 2005, Jack Emmitt caught a 34-pound blue catfish on the Mississippi River near Memphis. According to Morris, the catch was almost under the shadow of the Pyramid. Today, visitors to the former basketball arena-turned retail wonderland can still spy a photo of that fish and the trio of fishing pals above the front entrance. Below it, a plaque reads, Were gonna do it, the words Morris finally spoke to Hagle on the phone that day. Hagle relayed the message to then-mayor Herenton, and six and a half years later the kickoff party was held.

Today, the Pyramid is once again a thriving tourist destination. In its first year of operation, 2015, the building drew in more than 3 million visitorssix times that of nearby Graceland. Average sales hover between $45-55 million per year. Its a success story from a business and civic point of view.

But by a razors edge, it almost wasnt. Heres how thin the margin of error was: Hagle was set to make an announcement at a press conference 10 minutes after Emmitt hooked the fish. Without that bite, he would have called the whole thing off.

If anyone catches that fish, give it a pat on the head and a kiss, adds Dance. Shes still swimming out there somewhere, and the Pyramid wouldnt be there today without her.

Thats a true story, swears Morris. I swear to the guy upstairs. I am not making one bit of that up. Thats how that turned out.

A free standing elevator brings restaurant patrons to the top of the Pyramid. It sits approximately ... [+] where mid-court would have been during the venue's days as a basketball arena.

Now, almost 30 years after the initial plans were laid for the Pyramid, some of its initial forgotten promises have come true. There really is a ride to the top, a 28-story elevator built so Morris wouldnt have to repeat his hike. At last, theres a restaurant up there, tooalbeit one brimming with catfish. As recently as this week, Mark and Donnie Wahlberg announced the addition of a brand new, tourist-centric Wahlburgers inside of the store. And Morris added one more touch that even the buildings original designers couldnt envision, a luxury 100 room hotel where the hotdog stands used to sit.

As for Hardaway, the man who opened the building beneath a national spotlight in 1991? He admits, he wasnt a Bass Pro believer at first. But I was wrong, he concludes. Its a gift to the city. I have been back inside many, many times now. We take recruits up there, right to the top. Its beautiful.

Thats something Hardaway, Seger, Dance and Morris all agree on. Perhaps, the next time you visit Memphis, you will, too.

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The Unbelievable True Story Of How The Memphis Pyramid Became A Bass Pro Shops - Forbes

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Locals have organized against Black Lives Matter, leading to street fights, standoffs – The Register-Guard

Posted: at 4:37 pm

Adam Duvernay|Register-Guard

Rarelocal episodes of violence and property destruction, videos of scenesout of Portland and asense the Black Lives Matter movement has been infiltrated by anarchists are driving some in Oregon to organizedandsometimes violent resistance.

In Eugene and Springfield, Black Lives Matter protesters now are more frequently met with opposition beyond the policepolice-supporting counterprotesters, often calling themselves patriots, who say their missionis keeping local neighborhoods safe.

Some have group affiliation. Some are just sympathetic to organized opposition to Black Lives Matter or other groups they perceive as threats. Some come to rallies and protests armed. Some come from out of town. Some are more than willing to fight protesters.

Many support President Trump and conspiracy theories about the federal government. Most see the Black Lives Matter movement as largely dangerous and misguided.

"The only thing that keeps the level of violence we're seeinginPortland from happening here is they simply do not have the numbers to do that here, and because we have been coming out, meeting them and facing them down. We're not going to allow it," said Tim Davis, a Springfield contractor affiliated with the group The American Patriots Society.

Groups like TAPS andWe the People of Lane County have attended or organizedlocal rallies and counterprotested Black Lives Matter events here and elsewhere as that movement gains longevity and daily scenes of clashes with police comefrom Portland.

"We're regular Americans that are coming together because we're afraid of what's going on against our country, against our businesses and against our families," Davis said.

But when belief meets fear, the potential for action rises, saidJoe Lowndes, a University of Oregon political science professor who's written extensively on right wingpolitics.

"The threat they describe is antifa as a terrorist organization and Black Lives Matter as a group that is only there to cause chaos," he said. "The dangeris they have created this imagined threat, and that authorizes the possibility of extreme violence in that moment."

Tyshawn Ford, a leader of local racial justice protest organization Black Unity, said his group rejects violence and destruction forits part of the Black Lives Matter movement. Though he said people of color may be righteous in using those protest tactics, he said he believes others merely are taking advantage of the movement for their own ends.

"They've been in quarantine. They just want something to do, to get that adrenaline from fighting the cops or breaking stuff," hesaid."That detracts from the movement 100%."

Despite what they say, Ford said he believes people like Davis actually know better.

"Counterprotesters ask us all the time if we're antifa. I think it's just an ignorant question," Ford said. "We don't go out covering our identities. We put on community events. We come out and show our faces. Anyone that's antifa is not going to do that."

There was a riot in Minneapolis after a white police officer there killed George Floyd, a Black man,during a May 25arrest by pressing his knee into his neck for nearly nine minutes.

Many protests remained peaceful, but downtown Minneapolis from May 27-29 was subjected to looting and property damage. Rioters burned down a police precinct.

The night of May 29,protesters in Eugene marched for the first time. The march itself was loud, went against traffic and set the tone for most protests that would follow hundreds of bodies chanting the names of people of color killed by police nationwide.

But at the corner of Seventh Avenue and Washington Street, the march stopped and some in the crowd set fires in the street with dumpsters,city property and signs torn from local local shops. An hour later, people brokein and looted nearby businesses.

Eugene police declared a riot.

Eugene police recently arrested 11 and are looking for more than 60 suspects.

Since May 29, there have been more daysthan not with some form of local activism, but no local protests, except for the night of July 25,included widespread property damage.

Those who support Black Lives Matter say marchers arefighting for racial justice.

"The movement is just going to get stronger from here. It may not be in the way of marches, but definitely our ability to capitalize on what's happening," Ford said.

In a small area of Portland over more than 60 days, however, authorities have declared a riot more than a dozen times. Images of clashes with police, tear gas cloudsand often violent arrests of the protesters there have been splashed daily across national news.

In Seattle, Austin, Oakland and elsewhere, similar scenes of violent clashes with police have played out over the summer. But across the country and Oregon, the vast majority of demonstrations are peaceful protests calling for police reform and racial justice.

How those protests and riots have been portrayed varies by outlet and viewership. But such images have played a role in promoting organization against Black Lives Matter.

Davis sees no distinction between the wider Black Lives Matter movement, powered largely by local leaders and lacking nationwide marching orders, and antifa, shorthand for a loose affiliation of far-left militant anti-fascists that resist right-wing demonstrations.

Trump has branded antifa a terroristgroup despite its inherently unorganized nature.

Ford says counterprotesters at their marches now are a frequent occurrence.

"Now it's like every protest ... " Ford said.

He believes the appearance of right-wing counterprotesters at Black Unity and other marches truly started with the July 25 protest outside the U.S. Courthouse in Eugene.

They showed up at the Black Lives Matter protest, some carrying firearms and the set of homemade plywood riot shields made up to look like protest signs that they have carried into multiple protests and rallies. The two sides squared off near the federal courthouse, exchanging competing chants and taunts.

Then ashot was fired intothe air. A Black Lives Matter protester threw water on a counterprotester who fired a Taser in response. There were fights. Two men pointed guns at each other. A motorcycle sped through the crowd. They spilled onto Mill Street.

Though the two sides eventually broke apart, Black Lives Matter protesters continued on to the Lane County Jail where police ordered them to disperse, which they then did.

But before the night was done, many people had vandalized parts of downtown, includingbreaking the windows of the Wells Fargo bank and tagging walls and city sidewalks with spray-painted graffiti. Though some protest leaders called for destructive behavior to end, Eugene police eventually declared a riot as the vandalism continued.

"That triggered the counterprotesters coming out more to'protect' their city," Ford said.

Five days later, Black Unity brought a protest to Springfield's Thurston neighborhood. Their march was a reaction to accusations of racism leveled by a Black resident against her neighbor, who hadhanged a Halloween decoration skeleton with a noose in his yard.

The noose, a terrifying image from America's history of racial lynchings, has been used in more recent times as a hate symbol. In Thurston, the skeleton's owner said his was just one of the many Halloween decorations he keeps up year round, not a racist icon.

He told The Register-Guard before the march that he'd been threatened over the noose.

"I'm a combat veteran with severe PTSD. I really don't feel good about having a crowd of people known for throwing things and setting things on fire," David Harbick said. "You could have just told me that you have a problem with this. I would have taken it down."

Ford said that while the hanged skeleton triggered theprotest in Thurston, Black Unity changed its route from passing Harbick's house once they learned more about the situation. But he said the group still felt an educational demonstration there was needed.

Harbick said he didn't ask anyone to help him, but some who saw the social media post calling for the protest reached out to support him. Many showed up to protect his house.

Davis was one of them, and so were others from TAPS and counterprotester groups.

Before that Black Unity march was done, fights had broken out on Thurston streets.

Davis was one of the locals who went to Salem last weekendto take part in a rally at the Capitol that devolved into group-on-group clashes. He spoke for the group Open Up Oregon, which wants to see an end to mask mandates and forced business shutdowns.

Davis said it was the BLM supporters who started the violence that day. Black Lives Matter protesters that day toldthe Salem Statesman Journal it happened otherwise.

Also at the Capitol protestwas Marcus Edwards, a speaker at the July 10 "All Lives Matter" rallyat the Springfield Public Library, who told the Salem Statesman-Journal:

"These criminals, theyre trying to attack the American way of life, and if you understand how these communists work, they use every form of either political or racial tension, and they use it to create division as a divide-and-conquer strategy so that we do not pull together as an American people and rise up against the corruption at our door.

At the Springfield All Lives Matter rally, Edwards spoke to a need for unity while also defaming the BLMsupporters playing the role of counterprotesters across the street.

At that rally, like most others, the groups largely kept separated and exchanged insults and slogans, though thescene did grow tense.

But whenEzekiel Rubottom, a counterprotester, marched through therally to disrupt it with an accordion, a handful of men attendingused U.S. flags to push him to the ground, mobbing himand smashinghis instrument in the process.

Rubottom then was arrested on a years-old warrant for missing a court date in Eugene. Springfield police on July 14 said an investigation was ongoing into the incident.

"I thought at most I wouldget booed out of there. The next thing I know I'm getting pushed," he said."Then I had a sign-shield pushed at me with screws coming out of it."

Accordion player attacked at 'All Lives Matter' rally in Springfield

At a July "All Lives Matter" in Springfield, Ezekiel Rubottom was attacked by rallygoers after he walked through the demonstration with an accordion.

An Aug. 16"pro-America rally and flag wave" hosted by "the Oregon patriots" in the same downtown space had a different tenor. Billed as family friendly, members of groups like TAPS and We the People Oregon held a peaceful cookout in front of the Springfield library.A similar flag wave event was held recently in Cottage Grove.

No one came to counterprotest the gatherings. There were no fights.

Lowndes, the UO right-wing researcher, said he attended a July 25 rally in Salem where protesters on opposing sides clashed in a brief skirmish. He described meeting people who see it as their jobs to defend the nation against threats he said are largely fictitious.

Though such people often are lumped in with white supremacists, Lowndes said what brings them together is less about race and more about perceived threats to their lives.

"There is a general right wing organizing itself not around white supremacy, but the Second Amendment, around the idea antifa is a terrorist organization, around the idea Black Lives Matter is a terrorist organization and people wanting to defend the police," Lowndes said. "These protests potentially bring out more, different kinds of people."

We the People of Lane County started as a Facebook group created by Springfield resident Mark Miller. Some of its membership went to scenes such as those at the federal courthouse in Eugene and Thurston. Miller said they see themselves asguardians.

"Black Unity, or whatever flag you want to call it, went there to intimidate people and to threaten people. It was not about anything else," he said. "They come with this disguise of Black Lives Matter. But listen to these people and what comes out of their mouths."

Miller said he believes the Black Lives Matter movement is not the grassroots endeavor it's portrayed to be and is funded by nefarious sources. He said he believes antifa members are the ones primarily responsible for property destruction in Eugene.

And he believes members of groups like his have done the job of keeping the peace.

"By our presence, they've cleaned it up a little bit," Millersaid. "We will not tolerate, particularly in Springfield, criminal behavior."

A June Black Lives Matter protest in Klamath Falls drew hundreds ofcounterprotesters, many armed, bent onprotecting homes and businesses from riots. There were rumorsantifa was coming to the protest, but the antifa threat that night was unfounded.

On July 31, hundreds gathered outsideNew Hope Christian College in south Eugene to protectthe cross that once stood on Skinner Butte from a threat that never materialized.

Threats to tear down that "racist" symbol its history is otherwise were circulated on social media, possibly as a hoax. Neither antifa members nor other groupsshowed up.

Many who did go see antifa and BLM-aligned groupsas a threat demanding opposition.

"Much of the community has risen up spontaneously. We didn't call them, they called us and they showed up en masse," college President Wayne Cordeiro said at the time. "They are saying we are tired of this and we're not going to stand it anymore."

Lowndes said this kind of organization is happening in Oregon, but also nationwide.

Incidents in Eugene and Springfield such as these, in which the opposition to racial justice marches isn't police presence but other civilians, are infrequent but troubling, he said.

"My fear is we're going to see more of this," Lowndes said. "As the election gets closer, I think we're going to see things get more heated."

The July 29 Black Unity march in Thurston was designed to be peaceful and educational, but the night ended as one of the summer's most violent and confrontational.

Before the beginning of the march which at its midpoint saw a locally unprecedented brawl between protesters and cops there was a chance for dialogue.

Ford was one of the Black Unity members to cross the street out ofJesse Maine Memorial Park and talk with people who said they'd come to protect the neighborhood.

"We're here for people like you guys that think we're antifa and we're going to come through your neighborhood and bust your houses and bust your cars up, to show you that we are here to peacefully protest," Ford told them.

"Well, why do you guys let antifa come with you? Don't let antifa come with you," said a man who only would identify himself to The Register-Guard that day as Will.

"Black Unity has done multiple marches. We did one through Thurston where we did not break anything. We do not march with antifa.That's not our group," Ford told them.

Ford wasarrested later that evening in a violent skirmish with Springfield police.

Though that tense conversation ended with some moderately mollified because, as Will said, "we like what we're hearing so far, you're not here to destroy," any progress they made evaporated by night's end. After the fight with police,the sun went down and theBlack Unity marchers were confrontedbycounterprotesters at the park.

Groups face off after Thurston protest march

Groups of counterprotesters confronted Black Unity demonstrators in Springfield's Thurston neighborhood after a march last month.

The protesters were trying to leave, but the last leg of their march included taunts, threats and their own chants"whose streets?" "our streets" thrown back at them. In front of the park, groups squared off face to face, and there were sporadic fights.

"We're supposed to fight them! That's why we're here," shouted one man who was angry with hisfriends' chastisementsafter he fought with a Black Unity protester.

The Civil Liberties Defense Center has been deploying legal observers at protests in Eugene and Springfield to witness police conduct and behavior, already having filed two lawsuits against Eugene police during the protest season. Executive DirectorLauren Reganwas on the ground performing that role in Thurston during the Black Unity march.

She said CLDS will file another lawsuit against Springfield police concerning "blatant collusion" between certain officers and "knownand obvious white supremacists."

A Springfield police spokesman said those allegations are baseless.

"The suggestion that SPD has 'colluded' with counterprotesters, specifically during the Thurston protest, is not supported by evidence. There are several occasions where our officers turned away counterprotesters who were asking to 'assist'officers with crowd control," Springfield Police Department spokesman Sgt. David Grice said in an email.

Springfield police arrested one counterprotester for assault that night.

Miller said he and others lined up behindpolice barricades where Black Unity marchers fought with police. He said they were there to support police in case of violence.

"We didn't have to do anything but stand there," Miller said.

Miller said We the People of Lane County also tried to stop the Thurston protest before it happened by starting a rumor on its own Facebook page, knowing it was being monitored,that Proud Boys and federal officers would be joining the counterprotest.

Regan said she's been a legal observer for more than 20 years, but that never before in the local community has she felt afraid for her safety while doing her job.

"I'm constantly looking around for, basically, violence, fascists and racists that are pulling out guns, pulling out machetes, pulling out wasp spray and aiming it at innocent human beings," Regan said. "When you have to use a thick neck and a gun in order to try and scare your adversaryor scare someone who disagrees with you, that is a sign you recognize your position is incredibly weak and you're on the wrong side of history."

Thurston residents had mixed reactions to the night's protests and fights.

Some were displeased Black Lives Matter protesters came at all, and more still that some of the protesters after the fight with police shouted obscenities and threats at peoplethey perceived as a foe. Some were happy to see self-appointed defenders come to Thurston in an attempt to balance the scales and protect property from harm.

Others just found both to be a nuisance. Some were frightened. Some felt put in the difficult position of having to comfort their childrenor explain the violence and profanity.

Charlie Vermilyea lives on the street where most of the protester vs. counterprotester collisions occurred that night. She described a night of fear, suspecting neither Black Unity nor TAPS nor anyone else who came from outside Thurston was there for peace.

"It's a nice, quiet, peaceful neighborhood. Most of those people weren't from our neighborhood,"Vermilyea said. "They were looking for trouble."

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Locals have organized against Black Lives Matter, leading to street fights, standoffs - The Register-Guard

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Riot in Portland as armed pro and anti-Trump groups fight with clubs, shields and bricks – Daily Express

Posted: at 4:37 pm

The two sides fought with clubs, shields, pepper spray and rocks whilst using shields for protection.A number of protestors on each side were armed and according to a local reporter at least one right-wing protestor drew and aimed a firearm, but did not fire.

The violence, which lasted about an hour, took place outside Portlands Justice Centre.

Hundreds of nationalist and right-wing protestors gathered for a back the blue rally supporting Portlands police.

They were joined by activists from the Proud Boys, a group accused of promoting right-wing extremism by the Anti-Defamation League.

Supporters of the Black Lives Matter movement and self-styled anti-fascist groups gathered to confront them.

In a statement the Portland Police Bureau (PPB) said: On Saturday, August 22, 2020 several different groups gathered in Downtown Portland around noon.

Over the course of the next two hours, the groups remained in the streets. Individuals yelled at each other and there were some physical interactions which quickly resolved themselves.

Some members from both groups threw projectiles and deployed aerosols like pepper and bear spray at each other. At times, fireworks were thrown and smoke canisters were deployed.

Each skirmish appeared to involve willing participants and the events were not enduring in time, so officers were not deployed to intervene.

READ MORE:Nigel Farage FURIOUS as 'terrifying' BLM protests hit London

Later the right-wing protestors dispersed and police declared an unlawful assembly.

Near daily protests in support of the Black Lives Matter movement have taken place in Portland since the killing of George Floyd by police at the end of May.

On Friday night Portland police declared a riot after their officers were attacked with rocks and windows on their patrol cars smashed.

In a statement PPB Chief Chuck Lovell said: Crowd management events are complex, especially when they involve groups with differing ideologies with members who wish to engage in physical confrontations.

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PPB had to be judicious with our limited resources today especially since many of our members worked during the riot this morning and had very little sleep.

Our resources are finite and we also have emergency calls for service to manage across the City.

We are investigating criminal acts when we are aware of them and ask for any victims to come forward so we can build the best case we can for enhanced outcomes for prosecution.

In July President Trump caused controversy by deploying federal officers to Portland against the wishes of the local mayor.

After a series of violent clashes with protestors over several weeks most of the federal officers were withdrawn.

President Trump has hit out repeatedly at unrest in Portland.

Early on Saturday he tweeted: Another bad night of Rioting in Portland, Oregon.

A small number of Federal troops there to protect courthouse and other Federal property only (great job!).

Wanting to be asked by City & State to STOP THE RIOTS.

Would bring in National Guard, end problem immediately. ASK!

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Riot in Portland as armed pro and anti-Trump groups fight with clubs, shields and bricks - Daily Express

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The Two Biggest Cons in Town: BLM and ANTIFA – The Published Reporter

Posted: at 4:37 pm

Protest in downtown Portland. Police officers, sheriffs, the Department of Homeland Security, Antifa, and BLM meet in the street. Portland, Oregon,June 29, 2019. Editorial credit: Robert P. Alvarez / Shutterstock.com, licensed.

DELRAY BEACH, FL To listen to the Democrats and the pundits on CNN and MSNBC, and the anti-racist racists, youd think that both the BLM and the ANTIFA anarchists were both peaceful demonstrators just airing their grievances about police brutality.Can you believe that? Even during the Democrat convention there was no mention of the damage and the carnage committed by these two peaceful groups.

You wonder what planet the Democrats are living on as they continue to ignore the damage and havoc that these two groups have caused around the country.

These so-called civil rights organizations, are financed, to a great extent, by that patron saint of anarchy, George Soros, who has donated millions to these groups who want to overthrow our government.They use the deaths of black men or women as an excuse to go on these rampages in the various Democrat-run cities.They couldnt care less about the persons being killed, they just needed the killing to justify their abhorrent behavior.

Both BLM and ANTIFA are Marxist oriented groups who want to overthrow our government. They make no bones about it. But, why would so-called law abiding citizens and corporations donate money to their cause? From what it looks like, it is a shakedown racket pure and simple. These naive people and companies think that they are going to buy peace from these groups, that might pick them out as targets for their mayhem in the future. Little do these misguided people and companies realize that you cant appease these anarchist groups of their goal of undermining our country into one day becoming a Marxist/Socialist state.

The groups BLM and ANTIFA, are creatures of the social media. They wait for some incident to happen, mainly between the police and a black person, then they mobilize their forces through the social media outlets to congregate for action where the incident occurred. The undisciplined mob, mostly people in their teens and twenties, who respond to the call for action, come prepared for battle with bricks, bats, hammers, frozen water bottles, fireworks etc. to throw at or taunt the police or other counter groups who oppose them. The problem is that the politicians, who run the cities and states being attacked, turn a blind eye on the rioters and make excuses for their behavior, which makes the situation worse. Most all of these cities and states are run by liberal Democrats, thats not a political statement, that is an irrefutable fact.

This coming election for president is going to be one of the most important elections in our lifetime.If the Biden/Harris team gets elected, youll see more disgraceful attempts at the overthrow of our country. That is why it is so important that President Trump gets re-elected in November.He will be the law enforcement president that, hopefully, will bring back sanity in our lives, without the constraints of him having to get re-elected. He will be free to do the right thing in putting this insurrection down.He is and will be the law enforcement president that we so dearly need.

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The Two Biggest Cons in Town: BLM and ANTIFA - The Published Reporter

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Two standards of justice | Letters to the Editor | thecourierexpress.com – The Courier-Express

Posted: at 4:37 pm

Cannon Hinnant, a five-year-old white boy from North Carolina who was innocently riding his bicycle on the sidewalk was intentionally shot in the head at point blank range by a black man, Darius Sessoms, his next door neighbor. Cannon was probably only guilty of most things a 5-year-old boy would be guilty of, maybe stealing a few cookies from the cookie jar, terrorizing the family pet, not brushing his teeth but you can be certain, unlike George Floyd, he did not spend eight combined years in prison, and was not being busted for selling drugs the day he met his inevitable demise.

There is no political gain in telling the story of Cannon Hinnant. Why is this happening? Where is the outrage? Where are the burning buildings? Thats right, that would not make any sense whatsoever, it would not change one thing. Cannon is dead and Darius Sessoms will face a jury of his peers for the unthinkable murder that he committed, and the Hinnant family will spend the rest of their lives grieving over the terrible loss of their son. Period!

So why the difference in reaction to a death of people of different skin color? The difference is the socialist organization Antifa, and Black Lives Matter. Antifas radical views intersect with socialism, communism and anarchism, and the organization opposes capitalism and authority. Antifa leans to the far left, and the Democratic Party has very similar aspirations, though Antifa is not a unified organization, but rather a movement without known leadership structure. Antifa focuses on fighting the far right, they believe Trump threatens Americas multi-racial democracy, and their quest for socialism, and they want Trump out of office. If Antifa gets its way, violence and fear will replace the rule of law and the U.S. Constitution. A nation divided will soon fall, and that is their objective.

Antifa capitalizes on Black Lives Matter crowds to intersperse among them, and they ramp up the hysteria to a fever pitch, to an overblown state to where facts dont matter. Antifa gets maximum usage of BLM by having unwitting accomplices to share the looting and destruction of privately owned businesses, government buildings, statues, monuments and other markers of Americas past and success.

Antifa is determined to create chaos and point the finger at racism and capitalism as problems with our society in an effort to have Socialists Biden and Harris elected. BLM is motivated by the idea of having the taxpayers cut a check for $14 trillion for reparations for slavery. Biden/Harris will reciprocate with reparations if elected.

The MSM is an accomplice for sensationalizing and abetting those who are out to destroy this once great nation, as well as Democratic/Socialist mayors and governors who sympathize with, and take a hands off approach to the mayhem unleashed by Antifa. If you watch the MSM, there is a constant barrage of misinformation about oppression of the black community, when in fact, that magnitude of racism does not exist; however, the news media persists in perpetuating a false narrative about racism. Lawlessness and Socialism go hand in hand; you cant have one without the other! Remember that on election day!

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Two standards of justice | Letters to the Editor | thecourierexpress.com - The Courier-Express

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Facebook’s Ban on Far-Left Pages Is an Extension of Trump Propaganda – The Intercept – First Look Media

Posted: at 4:37 pm

The Facebook like sign is seen at Facebooks corporate headquarters campus in Menlo Park, Calif., on Oct. 23, 2019.

Photo: Josh Edelson/AFP/Getty Images

On Wednesday, Facebook announced an expansion of its Dangerous Individuals and Organizations policy, removing or restricting hundreds of pages associated with groups that it claims promote violence. Nearly 800 QAnon groups, committed to pernicious disinformation and potentially deadly conspiracy theories, have been removed. Facebook also shut down the pages of far-right militias, like the New Mexico Civil Guard, an armed vigilante organization, whose leaders sport swastika tattoos.

Alongside groups openly committed to genocidal white supremacy, which constitute a very real threat to Black and Indigenous communities, as well as other people of color, Facebook also shut down the pages of numerous antifascist, anti-capitalist news, organizing, and information sites. The move follows a pattern now well-established by the Trump administration and unchallenged by most every mainstream media outlet that draws indefensible false equivalences between organized, racist fascists, and the antifascists who vigorously oppose them.

Among the pages removed were those of antifascist news and research site, Its Going Down, a media platform that publishes news, analysis, and reports on social struggles, as well as investigative work to expose white supremacist and neo-Nazi networks. Crimethinc, a bastion of left-wing, anarchist publishing and thought since the 1990s, saw its Facebook page removed too. The pages of groups organizing around the ongoing and potent antiracist uprisings were also shut down, including the PNW Youth Liberation Front, a network of youth collectives in the Northwest committed to direct action protest.

Lumping anarchists and anti-fascists together with far-right militias who explicitly support the current administration is a strategic move to muddy the issue, said a statement from Crimethinc in response to the bans. This is the same operation that William Barr the attorney general performed in creating a Department of Justice task force focused on anti-government extremists that targets self-proclaimed fascists and anti-fascists alike. In the case of the Department of Justice, this enables them to point to far-right and militia attacks in order to demand resources with which to crack down on those who are on the front lines of defending communities against such attacks.

Both rhetorically and through specific policies, the government has obfuscated and downplayed the threat of white supremacist extremism, while sensationalizing the risks posed by the far left.

With its latest bans, Facebook is following this same playbook.

With its latest bans, Facebook is followingthe governmentsplaybook.

The demonization of antifascists has become a centerpiece of President Donald Trumps reelection propaganda, which functions both to criminalize dissent and delegitimize Black liberation struggle. Following the intolerable events of the Charlottesville, Virginia, Unite the Right rally in 2017, Trump famously praised very fine members of the white supremacist coalition and blamed both sides for the murderous far-right violence that occurred a stance thats since been crystallized in his policies.

Facebooks decision to treat leftist social justice platforms as equivalent to racist militia groups is merely an extension of the governments position. For months, Donald Trump has demanded this crackdown in a series of social media posts explicitly blaming anarchists and anti-fascists for the countrywide wave of protests precipitated by persistent police violence in the United States, said the Crimethinc statement.

Earlier this month, as I wrote, Sen. Ted Cruz, R-Texas, chaired a farcical Senate Judiciary Subcommittee hearing on stopping anarchist violence. The senator repeatedly chastised Democrats for failing to condemn antifa for a murder that was in fact carried out by the far right and refused to be corrected. Both Its Going Down and Crimethinc were mentioned during the hearing, within baseless overtures on the threat of the far left.

In the three decades since Crimethincs founding, the Facebook ban is the first thing like this that has occurred, said a participant in the collective, who asked for anonymity out of concern for far-right retaliation and state scrutiny. Of course, none of the antifascist groups removed by Facebook expected any better from the social media leviathan. We ultimately arent surprised by this move and personally all hate Facebook, the Its Going Down Twitter account said, noting that it was nonetheless a vehicle to connect with people.

At stake is not the moral standing of Mark Zuckerburgs turpitudinous monopoly, but rather the further entrenching of a false equivalence, which stifles antifascist dissent at a time of emboldened state and movement fascism.

It bears repeating, ad nauseam, that the far right has carried out 329 murders in the last three decades; none have been attributed to antifa. Between 2009 and 2018, white supremacist and far-right extremists were responsible for 73 percent of extremist murders in the U.S. And thats not even to mention the state-sanctioned, racist killings carried out by the police.

Theres no doubt that a number of the leftist platforms removed in the Facebook sweep advocate for disruptive dissent and protest. Antifa practice certainly involves a willingness to physically confront organized white supremacists in the streets. But Facebooks bans, echoing Trumps myths, equate the violence of disruptive antiracist protest with the violence of neo-Nazis murdering immigrants and people of color.

This line of thinking continues to equate protest disruption and property destruction with far-right movements who fundamentally want to harm and kill large segments of the public, Its Going Down tweeted.

For Facebook to treat even militant, antiracist, antifascist organizing as a violence comparable to that of white supremacist militias is a statement, in no uncertain terms, about which lives it deems to matter.

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Facebook's Ban on Far-Left Pages Is an Extension of Trump Propaganda - The Intercept - First Look Media

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Oregon professor arrested during Portland Antifa riots – Campus Reform

Posted: at 4:37 pm

A professor at Oregon Health & Science University was arrested during an Antifa riot on Sunday in Portland, Oregon.

OHSU Assistant Professor Daniel Liefwalker was arrested around 3 a.m. for trespassing, a class C misdemeanor, according to a booking page on the Multnomah County Sheriff's Department's website. An OHSU Human Resources representative confirmed to Campus Reform that Liefwalker is currently employed by OHSU as a Research Assistant Professor.

"Rocks and bottles were thrown, paintball guns fired, and lasers targeted officers during a riot Saturday night into Sunday morning."

The OHSU HR representative declined to comment further and the OHSU media relations office did not respond in time for publication.

According to Oregon State University's website, Liefwalker also spoke at OSU's fall conference in September 2019. The event pagecontains a photo of Liefwalker that matches the booking photo and links to Liefwalker's faculty bio on the OHSU website.

OSU also tweeted a photo of Liefwalker speaking there in 2019.

[RELATED: Texas A&M prof arrested at statue protest. Socialist groups helps bail him out.]The Post MillennialEditor-At-Large Andy Ng reported the incident on Twitter.

The riots on Saturday night into Sunday morning involved protesters throwing rocks and other miscellaneous items at police.

"Rocks and bottles were thrown, paintball guns fired, and lasers targeted officers during a riot Saturday night into Sunday morning," according to a Portland Police Press Release.

Portland Police released a statement on the riots, saying that "in this case, there were hundreds of individuals and many weapons within the groups and an extremely limited amount of police resources actually available to address such a crowd."

According to the press release, police declared the gathering as an "unlawful assembly" at 11:41 p.m., and warned those rioting that if they did not disperse, they would be subjected to arrest, citation, or crowd control agents."

However, according to the release, few followed the warning. A total of 23 people were arrested Sunday night and into Monday morning.

[RELATED: Professors nationwide offer assistance, advice, and support to Antifa-like rioters]

Campus Reformreached out to OSU and Liefwalker but did not receive responses in time for publication.

Follow the author of this article on Twitter:@Jess__Custodio

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Oregon professor arrested during Portland Antifa riots - Campus Reform

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Letters To The Editor: August 26, 2020 – The Rhino Times of Greensboro – The Rhino TImes

Posted: at 4:37 pm

Antifa Takes It To The Next Level

Dear Editor,

It appears that not only is the lawless rioting, looting and general destruction of private and public property spreading, based on a recent video out of Kenosha, Wisconsin, that shows at least two or three individual armed with rifles and pistols confronting a sheriffs vehicle with at least one actually squaring off against an armored vehicle with a rifle. (By the way, it was one of those scary black rifles the left wants take away.)

First, this demonstrates a major level of escalation on the part of the BLM/Antifa/socialist leftist rioters that the mainstream liars keep calling peaceful protesters. Add this to the video of a different mob, some of whom were armed, marching through a suburban neighborhood, blocking traffic and at one point an armed individual took a threatening stance and squared off against a man in his pickup just trying to get home.

Second, what kind of idiot squares off against an armored vehicle with a rifle? Someone needs to be held responsible for allowing these overgrown children to play with guns.

Then you had a guy badly beaten for trying to help a trans individual that was being assaulted and mugged by a mob made up of folks that are supposed to be out there for them. Obviously theyre starting to eat their own. Or could it be they really dont care about those people and have been using them as cover their real agenda.

Yes, there was a confrontation between left and right extremists and that was dangerous and stupid. Its one thing to stand your ground and defend yourself and everything you believe in, its another to go looking for a fight. I also saw tactics being used by the Antifa mob that showed coordination and training.

My whole point is the facade is starting to fall away. They have tested the waters by having a few individuals that they could later deny if it went sideways show up armed. I strongly suspect you are going to start seeing more and it will inevitably escalate to the next level with someone, police most likely, being shot. If and when that happens it will be Katy bar the door, and because politicians have let it get to this level the police will be hard pressed to get back the control that will have been lost. When this happens that will be, I believe, the beginning of the real fight.

Alan Marshall

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Letters To The Editor: August 26, 2020 - The Rhino Times of Greensboro - The Rhino TImes

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Take that, Trump – or Antifa! Dueling narratives over appeals courts partial rollback of anti-riot law – RT

Posted: at 4:37 pm

A 1968 law the Trump administration has used to prosecute people involved in the past months rioting has been partially rolled back as a federal appeals court realized - 52 years later - some of its parts were unconstitutional.

The 4th Circuit Court of Appeals has nixed a portion of the 1968 Anti-Riot Act that criminalized encouraging, promoting, or urging a riot, arguing it infringed on First Amendment free speech protections in a Monday decision. However, organizing or inciting a riot remains a crime, as does crossing state lines to participate in rioting.

Mondays case concerned two California men who admitted to having personally committed multiple violent acts during the 2017 Unite the Right rally in Charlottesville - meaning the nullification of the free speech portion wasnt relevant to their fate. However, supporters and critics of President Donald Trump seized on the decisions implications for the Justice Departments prosecution of Antifa and other far left extremist groups allegedly responsible for the rioting that has erupted in cities across the country in the wake of the killing of George Floyd by Minneapolis police.

Attorney General William Barr warned rioters back in May that he planned to use the 1968 law to prosecute those who came from out of state to riot, claiming the violence in cities like Minneapolis and Chicago was planned, organized, and driven by far left extremist groups and anarchic groups using Antifa-like tactics.

While the 4th Circuits decision may impinge somewhat on the Justice Departments ability to charge rioters, its an improvement - at least, for the Trump administration - over a 2019 decision that deemed the entire Anti-Riot Act unconstitutional for the same First Amendment reasons.Back then,it concerned another Charlottesville-related case - against three alleged members of far-right group Rise Above Movement. They hadnt even traveled to Charlottesville but merely posted supposedly inciting material. The case - and the law - were thrown out, though prosecutors have appealed the ruling.

Politico appeared to view the decision as a victory, noting the convictions of the two Charlottesville attendees had been upheld and the Justice Department was deprived of an unconstitutional tool for charging riot cheerleaders .

However, conservative provocateur Mike Cernovich hailed the decision as bad news for Antifa, viewing the decisions affirmation of crossing state lines to riotbeing a crime as a victory.

The Trump administration announced its crackdown on Antifa and far left extremists in the days following Floyds killing as rioters laid waste to Minneapolis and other cities and have in some cases sent in federal troops. Over the weekend, Portland police declined to intervene in a mass brawl between Antifa and Proud Boys or even declare the melee a riot, citing a lack of crowd-control resources and over two months of violent actions against police.

The county District Attorneys apparent refusal to charge protesters with low-level offenses may also have been a factor in the officers hands-off approach. Oregon state police left Portland earlier this month after making a similar complaint, noting that of over 500 people arrested, just 50 had been charged. While federal troops were also dispatched to the city for several weeks to protect its courthouse, they also withdrew earlier this month amid a media uproar over dubiously legal tactics, including grabbing protesters off the street in unmarked vans.

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Take that, Trump - or Antifa! Dueling narratives over appeals courts partial rollback of anti-riot law - RT

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