Daily Archives: March 21, 2021

2nd Amendment To Be Voted on In Shawano County – tchdailynews.com

Posted: March 21, 2021 at 5:03 pm

SHAWANO, WI- The Shawano County Board will welcome in the community and take a vote on becoming a sanctuary county for the 2nd Amendment, or the Right to Bear Arms.

The issue has been a topic of discussion since last year when other counties in the state did the same. The resolution was brought before the Public Safety Committee last year, and has been on hold due to COVID-19.

It has been a whole year now, so it is time to make a move, County Board Chairman Tom Kautza said. It did pass through a committee and was moved to the full board so I always felt it deserves its day in front of the board.

The issue sparked some public comment at the committee meeting with people speaking on both sides of the issue. Kautza says it really just asks a question.

It would just confirm that we support the Second Amendment and the Constitution.

Shawano County Sheriff Adam Bieber has been asking for this vote to take place and says it is important not only that it passes, but who votes yes.

It reaffirms their commitment to uphold the Constitution and the oath that they took.

Bieber says to him, it does not stop with the 2nd Amendment.

I would like to see all of them vote yes on it and I would love another vote that would show support for the rest of the Bill of Rights. Nobody really knows where our representatives stand until they have to vote on something.

The vote will take place at the County Board meeting next Wednesday at 3:00pm. The meeting will take place at the County Board Room and the public is welcome to attend.

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It’s confirmed: EGB set to take place on July 17th – The Tab

Posted: at 5:03 pm

It looks like summer is finally starting to look up

The news that everyone has been waiting for has finally been announced the Enchanted Garden Ball will take place on July 17th at Shobrooke Park Country House.

Celebrating its 10 year anniversary, this year it seems as if we are in for a real treat. If you dont know what EGB is, well. Think thousands of students dressed up to the max going on fairground rides, dancing in various tents, trying food from one of the food trucks, getting drunk and you should get the idea. In 2019 they even had an open air theatre screening the Champions League final!

As last years EGB was cancelled due to Covid-19, according to the events Facebook page, this years event will be making up for lost time, treating you to even more divine delights with a helping of hedonism, a dash of decadence and supreme surprises

Make sure to set a reminder because tickets go on sale at 6pm on March 26th, with prices starting at 49 for the entrance ticket. But this year, as an extra surprise, you can camp at EGB. Tickets are 55 for both entrance and camping, or you can pay 12 to upgrade your existing ticket. These tickets include early access to the grounds and, of course, a quick walk back to the campsite to avoid the long coach journey home.

Tickets from last years EGB will be automatically transferred to this years event. But dont worry, if you can no longer attend the event, you can apply for a refund up to March 28th.

So, if you dont have tickets, be ready this Friday as they are always snapped up like hot cakes.

To make sure you dont miss out on any EGB updates, click here

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OPINION/LETTER: Remove Tiverton gun sanctuary resolution – newportri.com

Posted: at 5:03 pm

Remove gun sanctuary resolution

Good morning, Tivertonians.

Many may not be aware that the prior Town Council majority members Robert Coulter, Justin Katz, Nancy Driggs and Donna Cook, jammed through a resolution giving gun owners and gun users even more rights beyond the Second Amendment.Did you know they made Tiverton a gun sanctuary town?Those four people declared on behalf of the entire town, in the name of your family and every family in town, that Tiverton declares its support of the Second Amendment and opposition to the infringement of the rights to bear arms. The protection of the Constitution already exists,what additional protection did they seek?That anyone at any time is able to carry loaded guns and ammunition in our schools or anywhere in town,and that they be ableto carry as many rounds of ammunition as they please to feed those assault rifles?

The current town resolution limits funding on police department ability to confiscate weapons, while insisting Tiverton Police exercise discretion in the enforcement of laws impacting the constitutional rights of citizens under the Second Amendment.Gun users are already protected by the Second Amendment.What about the protection of the rest of us?I urge the Tiverton Town Council to make Tiverton a sanctuary for all of us, not just gun users, and remove this disgraceful designation.

Susan Scanlon,Tiverton

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Only the arts can help us understand our lives in lockdown – Telegraph.co.uk

Posted: at 5:03 pm

In fiction too the record is sparse. The novel One of Ours (1922), by Willa Cather, is the first and last depiction of the pandemic for almost a generation. In 2017, the writer Laura Spinne wrote: There is no cenotaph, no monument in London or Moscow, or Washington DC. The Spanish flu is remembered personally, not collectively. So why did this period of cultural history fail to manifest? And if this omission was deliberate, what was to blame?

Firstly, there was the rise of Modernism. From 1920 onwards, the idea of wiping the slate clean with a tabula rasa emerged with the Modernists. This was typified in Le Corbusier designs for a new Paris (Plan Voisin, 1925) in which he planned to destroy two square miles of historic Paris and replace it with modernist tower-blocks, his machines for living. Modernists, like the Bauhaus, the Soviet Constructivists, the Italian Futurists and the British Vorticists, depicted the pre-1918 years of war, plague, overcrowding and contamination as symbols of the imperialist structures they wanted to tear down.

Bauhaus furniture and architecture, such as that of Marcel Bruer (1902-1981), was even created in direct reaction against the pandemic. Bruers minimalist pieces were made of hygienic wood & tubular steelto facilitate cleaning. Out went the heavy, ornate Victorian furniture with its contamination by viruses, dust and the dated values of Empire, and instead a radically new utopian International Style was invented.

The Modernists, and the many Communists among them, consigned the memory of the 1918 pandemic to the pyre of progress.In literature, modernism took hold with Pound, Shaw, Stein, Wolfe, Joyce, Proust, HD and DH Lawrence, and they too swept away social values and language structures.

The second reason for the historical erasure of the 1918 pandemic was hedonism. This was the Roaring Twenties with its exuberant explosions of wealth and decadence. As F. Scott Fitzgerald said: The parties were bigger, the pace was faster...the buildings were higher, the morals were looser, and the liquor was cheaper. The Roaring Twenties was like a party with hangover amnesia, erasing the time that came before it.

But there was also the fact that the pandemic was eclipsed by the memorialisation of the First World War. In a 2014 paper, Elizabeth Outka, associate professor of English at the University of Richmond, in America, noted that the two tragedies of the First World War were entangled into a single tragedy. The flu dead, she claimed, were counted among the war dead, and infectious disease had been a leading cause of death among armed forces during the war.

Now, in 2021, there are calls for a reborn Modernism to wipe the historical slate clean once again. This is The Great Reset, proposed by the World Economic Forum, and voiced in unison by an alarming number of world leaders. Its creator, Klaus Shwabe, represents the recovery after Covid as a unique window of opportunity [for global leaders] to reflect, reimagine and reset our world with a utopian plan to create a greener, smarter, fairer world. All of this echoes the idealistic projects of Le Corbusier and the Communists from the Twenties with their universalist beliefs in blank slate solutions for all the world. Have we learned nothing?

So it has fallen to artists to save our memories. In terms of culture made so far that addresses the pandemic, there is the play Bubble a tender tale of love under lockdown, by James Graham. There is also Peaky Blinders creator Steven Knights film Locked Down, about a struggling marriage, starring Chiwetel Ejiofor and Anne Hathaway. It would be a great shame if this kind of cultural production ceased as soon as the pandemic is declared over.

The crisis has forced us to explore so much about ourselves; the horrors, but also the unexpected versatility of people inventing solutions together. There have been upheavals in work and in family structures in divorce, cohabitation and child rearing. The modern family has been forced (with support bubbles) into new formations. Generations have been either pushed together or further apart.

Then there are the vast changes in travel, in the meaning of national borders, the impact on places of worship; the questioning of the idea of globalisation and of a career. Ive seen formerly career-driven people give up their ambitions and commit to delivering food to old people. I know of millennial couples who were postponing having kids for economic reasons suddenly decide to try for a baby, because of Covid.

And these personal questions weve had to grapple with: what is it like to home school three kids? What is it like to slowly go bankrupt or to keep (an illegal) romantic affair alive during lockdown? How does it feel to lose someone and not get to say goodbye?

All of this should be the subject of our art and our fiction right now. We should not be wishing the next year away, killing time, using culture as escapism. We have a social and moral duty to leave a record of all these powerful changes for future generations. We cant leave a chasm in culture like the one that occurred around the pandemic of 1918. If we fail to learn from the past as the Spanish philosopher George Santayana once said then we are doomed to repeat it.

Ewan Morrisons How To Survive Everything - a novel about a teenage girl abducted by her pandemic-survivalist father - is published by Contraband.

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Your Turn: The virus won’t take a spring break – SC Times

Posted: at 5:03 pm

Daniel Whitlock, St. Cloud Published 8:12 a.m. CT March 19, 2021

Most colleges will have spring break sometime between March 9 and April 21.An annual migration of young women, resplendent like colorful butterflies with dazzling white orthodontic smiles, will migrate to the white sands of Florida and Texas. They will be followed, in pursuit, by young wannabe he-men with straight white teeth, well-groomed hair, over-built pecs and arms and booming voices. The rites of spring!

Undoubtedly the COVID-19 virus will hitchhike its way to the busy beaches of the South and is preparing to have its own unbridled hedonism, during and after spring break.

In this gravid environment, the virus is laying plans to develop variants of itself, in effect giving itself a genetic promotion so that it can spread easier and kill more people.

Daniel J. Whitlock(Photo: Submitted photo)

The virus never sleeps and will be an unplanned companion at spring break.Its always working, planning and taking whatever opportunity it can.Spring break, with its partying and invasive privilege, presents the ideal chance to invade, multiply and eventually spread itself to every community in the country, in a more dangerous mutated form, a variant." This environment is perfectly tuned, allowing this COVID-19 to take full advantage of a unique opportunity.

Fortunately for the revelers, their youth, absence of obesity, paucity of diseases like diabetes, hypertension and heart disease make them generally resistant to COVID-19 infection that results in serious hospitalization and death.Tens of thousands may become infected but will just suffer mild cold-like symptoms. Oh, to be young!

But the virus never sleeps.Its business is invading a persons cells, to steal the cells metabolic machinery and make copies of itself.When the cells of the lung die from this invasion, thousands of new baby COVID-19 viruses are released and expelled in breath, by vigorous young adultsin close contact.

Multiply this invasion of millions of individual cells with the thousands of viruses created in each cell. And then multiply that by the tens of thousands of beach revelers and you have a lot of virus running amok.

Because of the large number of viruses created, there is also the increased chance that a variant may be created. Viruses, and possibly a new variant, will be spread by celebrators, in bars, by kissing, shouting and being closer than the CDC suggests.Masks will not be a deterrent because most beach states are, irresponsibly, loosening their restrictions paving the way for the success of the virus. Spring break is nirvana for the virus.

The energetic young partiers on a beach are ripe to become super-spreaders of a new variant, to each other and to their communities once they return.They and the virus can generate variants and amplify the spread and aggressiveness of COVID-19.This is a potential disaster.

What Im describing is obviously a worst-case scenario. Its not highly probable but it is possible.And this is a legitimate warning.

However, we learn a lot from planning for the worst case, because it reveals weakness and vulnerabilities in a system vulnerabilities that may return to haunt us. For example, planning for a worst-case scenario in Texas, for a grid failure resulting from a snowstorm, might have saved many lives even though it was not a probable happening.

Plunging into a week of feeling good, especially in the context of yearlong lives of isolation, is understandable but dangerous.Spring break should make us all cautious, especially those of us with college and high school age kids who crave the southern beaches to let off steam.

The virus never sleeps or takes a break.Its always looking for an opportunity to improve its ability to spread and kill.

Daniel Whitlock retired from St. Cloud Hospital CentraCare after 16 years as its vice president for medical affairs. He has no current ties to CentraCare other than as a patient. He and his wife live in St. Cloud and have enduring ties to Quiet Oaks Hospice House.

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The future of the European Rave BRUSSELS BEHIND THE SCENES Weekly analysis and untold stories With – The Brussels Times

Posted: at 5:03 pm

BRUSSELS BEHIND THE SCENESWeekly analysis and untold storiesWith SAMUEL STOLTON

Other Brussels behind the scenes stories:Reporting on Brussels away from BrusselsThe Privilege of the VaccinatedEuropes Wine DilemmaEurope is lyingDesperate for an injection

The future of the European Rave

It came as no surprise when the European Commission recently disclosed that it had not been keeping tabs on the spate of underground raves and illegal festivities occuring across the EU during the coronavirus pandemic.

BRUSSELS BEHIND THE SCENES is a weekly newsletter which brings the untold stories about the characters driving the policies affecting our lives. Analysis not found anywhere else, The Brussels Times Samuel Stolton helps you make sense of what is happening in Brussels. If you want to receive Brussels behind the scenes straight to your inbox every week, subscribe to the newsletter here.

Former French Minister and now right-wing MEP Thierry Mariani lamented that secret parties had been taking place across France ever since the first lockdown most notably a recent case in Brittany on new years eve, attended by around 2500 people and drawing international crowds.

As such, Mariani had wanted to know what the Commission had been doing to follow up on such illegal gatherings, and whether EU polices forces had been coordinating on the most efficient ways to combat these assemblies.

In short, EU Home Affairs Commissioner Ylva Johansson said that such items come under the competence of EU national authorities, and that, as far as the Commissions knowledge extends, the issue had not yet been raised to relevant working parties in the Council of the EU.

This got me thinking: In what ways could the ideology of the rave, historically borne out of the strife of post-war economic hardship and the desire to break down cultural silos, evolve to meet the new social discontent wrought by a semi-captive experience, living under the spectre of a global pandemic?

It was the subcultures of post-world war II Britain that proved fertile ground for the emergence of the raver. A hangover of ennui from the War coupled with a foreboding cynicism for a nascent consumerism that was gaining a foothold across the Atlantic, had begun to attract the countrys subcultures to a place of common revel, where experimentation and hedonism was in ample supply a curative breaking of bread for Britains abandoned youth, in a world making itself anew.

After a brief affair with the mods in the 1960s, however, it wasnt until the 1980s that rave culture across Londons illegal warehouse party scene truly took hold as a counter-reaction to hyper-consumerism, which had started to cartelize musical tastes. Young people sought diversion and difference in musical expression free from dominant cultural norms. They had wanted to challenge the isolationary codes that had resigned musical preference to siloed demographics.

The rave was truly a broad church which appealed to the primal instincts of individuals to congregate in a judgment-free environment with people from all walks of life. Even in my own experience, I recall being somewhat taken aback by how this domain could be a place where previously disparate social classes and subcultures were able to come together in a form of degenerate harmony. My personal stomping grounds in the early post-millennial years in the garden of England the forests and fields of rural Kent, played host in the twilight hours to a contingent of goths, Indie kids, grungers, and wannabe jungle and drum-and-bass MCs.

The illegality of raves is an essential component to its authenticity. For whatever reason trespassing, drugs, public disturbance without the knowledge that the activity was in some fundamental way prohibited, there would have been a lack of sincerity and a large dose of hypocrisy for the denizens of the rave to stomach. For the raves populous, there drives through the veins an unbridled yearning to rebel against authority.

A similar force has struck many of Europes disenfranchised youth over the past year. Resigned to their own homes and denied any wider human contact, their existence has been reduced to predominantly cerebral landscapes, with little in the way of social interaction other than that playing across the vacuous terrains of social media. In the current context, with the restrictions that we now have, it has become so much easier to dissent the rewards of freedom expand coterminously under new and more prohibitive regions of law and order.

So, during the pandemic reports of twilight parties on Lisbon beaches, clandestine gatherings in Berlin parks, and revelries in English motorway underpasses, were, frankly, to be expected. Lets not forget that even Belgiums very own Prince Joachim couldnt resist attending an illegal gathering in Spain to which he came in for a 10,000 fine.

This week the Commission also unveiled its plans to roll out a Digital Green Pass effectively a voluntary certificate that would allow the vaccinated and those tested negative for the coronavirus to travel across borders without hindrance. For its part, the Spanish party haven of Ibiza is eagerly waiting in the wings for this initiative to get off the ground.

In the meantime, half-hearted attempts to stage virtual raves just dont cut the mustard there lacks the fundamental communal coercion that throbs throughout the rave model. In a weird way, such virtual raves where each participant logs into a live feed with a synthetic nightclub background, only serve to exasperate further our profound isolation from one another running in direct contrast to the principles of the rave dynamic.

Of course, I dont condone in any way such illegalities, but I do hope that the coronavirus does not change the essential components of the rave. Perhaps thats the point of it all: The rave shouldnt in any way evolve but should remain tightly woven into its primal tapestries. Lets hope the rave, for now, remains as it is, until we are once again let loose on the forests, nightclubs, and abandoned buildings of Europe.

BRUSSELS BEHIND THE SCENES is a weekly newsletter which brings the untold stories about the characters driving the policies affecting our lives. Analysis not found anywhere else, The Brussels Times Samuel Stolton helps you make sense of what is happening in Brussels. If you want to receive Brussels behind the scenes straight to your inbox every week, subscribe to the newsletter here.

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Crawford County becomes third county in Arkansas to pass a Second Amendment rights ordinance – Van Buren Press Argus-Courier

Posted: at 5:03 pm

Followed by a round of applause by residents,the Crawford County Quorum Court passed an ordinance Tuesday securing the Second Amendment rights of the county by a 12-0 vote.

A piece of the ordinance says the county will treat any act of the Arkansas Legislature that abrogates the Second Amendment as void and unenforceable in Crawford County.

Crawford County is now the third county in Arkansas to become a "Second Amendment County." Scott County approved a similar ordinance in 2020 followed by Independence County that same year.Thesame ordinance failed when voted on in Sebastian County in June of last year.

During the February Crawford County Quorum Court meeting, a group of residentsrequested court draft a Second Amendment sanctuary ordinance. Justice Jayson Peppas chose to sponsor the measure.

The ordinance was brought to the table during the March 15 meeting.

Ordinance 2021-19 states, "Crawford County residents have a long-standing belief in the Bill of Rights of the United States Constitution and the Declaration of Rights in the Arkansas Constitution."

According to the ordinance, there is a community perception that individual liberty rights, particularly the right to bear arms, are under attack.

During the February meeting, county resident Steve Whitlock referenced President Joe Bidens's call on Congress to enact stricter gun laws. These proposed laws include comprehensive background checks on all gun sales, banning some weaponsand high-capacity magazines.

"I am thrilled that the vote was unanimous and not vetoed," Peppas said. "The community initiated this and then provided great support."

There are seven sections within the ordinance that lay the groundwork for the county's position moving forward.

The first is that Crawford County is now declared a "Second Amendment County."Second, the right to bear arms is protected by the Constitution, and county officials shall uphold each and every provision of the Bill of Rights. Third, unconstitutional laws are void.

The county will treat any act of the Arkansas Legislature that abrogates the Second Amendment as void and unenforceable in Crawford County.

Fourth, the ordinance states that liberty rightsbelong to the people.

The ordinance states, "Crawford County officials and employees shall neither interpret nor construe any legislation in any manner that would deny or disparage the Bill of Rights."

The fifth section details that liberty rights shall forever remain inviolate. The section states that individual liberty rights enumerated in the Bill of Rights and the Arkansas Declaration of rights, including the right to keep and bear arms, are excepted out of the general powers of government and shall forever remain inviolate.

The sixth, says that Crawford County officials and employees shall use the county's state political subdivision police power as is necessary and constitutionally justified, and complies with the requirements of due process.

In the event that a person feels that their right to keep and bears arms has been violated, the seventh section states that they may seek redress through the civil process.

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Commissioners hear from citizen wanting further support of Second Amendment in county | Huron County View – Browncitybanner

Posted: at 5:03 pm

BAD AXE Last month, the Huron County Board of Commissioners passed a resolution acknowledging its support of the Second Amendment.

While more of a symbolic action affirming the citizens of Huron County have the right to bear arms, the resolution also cautions against any future legislation at both the state and federal levels that may potentially infringe on that right.

At this months meeting, the board heard from one resident that would like to see the county take further action by specifically addressing the countys position on what are known as red flag laws.

Red flag laws are laws allowing courts to prevent people who show signs of being a danger to themselves or to others from having access to firearms (as by ordering the seizure of weapons).

Today we have legislation disguised as laws that would make our land a safer place, they call these red flag laws, said Bad Axe resident Wendy Smith, reading from a letter she sent to each Huron County Commissioner for review. These laws do absolutely nothing to address the real problem that exists, which is mental health.

In almost every case where a gun has been used to commit a homicide, the person was found to be mentally unstable, a felon committing another felony or some else that, under our current laws, has no legal way to obtain a firearm. And yet each of these still do obtain a firearm. Another law on top of the other useless laws will not make Michigan or Huron County a safer place to live.

Smith said she circulated a petition throughout the county over the last month and collected a total of 1,465 signatures from other Huron County residents that vow to protect the Second Amendment.

The Second Amendment is the only right that has been under attack for the last 20 years, the letter states. Its the only inalienable right that has been attacked without opposition. Twenty years of gun control legislation has infringed on our Second Amendment rights. It has eroded the true meaning of the rights our forefathers give us.

Smith went on to ask that commissioners pass another resolution that will allow the right of the countys law-abiding citizens to keep and bear arms.

Pass a resolution that clearly upholds the Second Amendment in its entirety, she said in the letter. And lastly pass a resolution that shows your solidarity with the people with whom you were elected to serve.

Smith also obtained a letter of support of her cause from Huron County Prosecuting Attorney Timothy J. Rutkowski, which she also read to commissioners.

I strongly support the U.S. Constitution and all the amendments, including the Second Amendment, Rutkowski said in his letter. We must be true to our oaths of office and stand up in support of these rights for the residents of Huron County, Michigan and the United States. We must have the stamina, the courage, the creativity even on a local level to do what it takes to resist these efforts to strip of our rights, including our rights to bear arms.

Following Smiths presentation, Chairman Sami Khoury said he received an additional six or seven pages of signatures in support of the initiative.

Commissioner John Bodis suggested the countys corporation council and Safety Commission review the resolution, prior to it being presented at the following commissioners meeting. It was then forwarded on to the Safety Commission for review.

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Vladimir Putin draws up new kill list of opponents and six of the targets are living in Britain… – The Irish Sun

Posted: at 5:03 pm

VLADIMIR Putin has drawn up a kill list with six of the targets living in the UK, it has been reported.

The Kremlin strongman is planning a post-pandemic assassination campaign, saying no scum can hide from us, a Russian intelligence officer warned one of the targets.

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Russian agents have been accused of attempting to kill former KGB officer turned defector Sergei Skripal and his daughter Julia using the Novichok nerve agent in Salisbury in 2018.

The murder of former Russian spy Alexander Litvinenko in London, using radioactive polonium 210, is also highly likely to have been ordered by the Kremlin.

Now other Russians living in the UK - Vladimir Ashurkov, Mikhail Khodorkovsky, Evgeny Chichvarkin and Boris Karpichkov are also on Putins hit list, the Mirror reports.

Also being targeted are long-time Kremlin-foe Bill Browder, an American-born UK citizen, and Christopher Steele, a former MI6 officer.

Steele was identified in 2017 as the author of the "dirty dossier" that claims Russia collated a file of compromising information on Donald Trump.

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Vladimir Ashurkov, 49, was forced to step down as an investment banker in Russia because of links to Kremlin-foe Alexei Navalny, whose Anti-Corruption foundation he now heads.

Navalny was himself targeted with novichok and was jailed after returning from treatment in Germany, a move that sparked widespread demonstrations in Russia.

Ashurkov, who was granted asylum in 2015, told the Mirror he hoped the UK authorities were working to thwart any assassination attempts.

I have no doubt Russian security services are capable of executions anywhere in the world, he said.

There are at least 10 unexplained deaths in the UK. I feel safer on the streets of London than in Moscow, but nothing can ensure total safety.

Mikhail Khodorkovsky is a 57-year-old Siberian oil billionaire, now living in exile in London, who spent eight years in jail after being charged with fraud in 2003.

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Amnesty International declared him a prisoner of conscience and he was released from jail in 2014.

If Putin wants to kill me no bodyguards will help. I am a well-known opponent of Putin, he said.

Browder became a thorn in the side of the Putin after he tried to expose the "looting" of his investments in the country by corrupt officials.

This needs to be taken very seriously, said Browder.

"Putin tried to kill Navalny with novichok and anyone on Putins hitlist, including me, must take precautions. Putin is not constrained by any moral or geographical boundaries.

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Boris Karpichkov, 62, is also a former spy who defected to Britain, arriving in 1998 with two suitcases of secrets with him.

He survived two attempts to poison him when he was making a visit to New Zealand.

He says Putin's targets - such as himself - are keen for their names to be public as it is the only way to stay alive.

It makes it more difficult for Putin to deny responsibility if one of us is killed, he said.

Billionaire Evgeny Chichvarkin, 46, made his fortune after founding the countrys largest mobile phone retailer and reportedly picked up Navalnys medical bills.

He now runs Hedonism Wines in central London, which charges up to 120,000 a bottle, and the upmarket Mayfair private dining rooms Hide.

Steele and Chichvarkin have not commented on the reported hit list.

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One of the six was sent details of Putins intentions by a sympathetic Russian intelligence officer.

The same officer reportedly also warned Skripal was earmarked for assassination and has said Putin has stated: We have long arms. No scum can hide from us.

The spook tells the target: They are out to shut you up completely. Take the precaution of quickly changing your place of residence, even if only temporarily.

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House Judiciary OKs 2nd Amendment bill; law enforcement worries it may hamper cooperation with feds – Yahoo News

Posted: at 5:03 pm

Mar. 20MORGANTOWN The House Judiciary Committee passed a bill Friday morning aimed at protecting the state from federal gun control overreach, but law enforcement expressed worries that the bill could hamper task force efforts to fight crime.

HB 2694 is called the Second Amendment Preservation Act. It says no state agency, political subdivision or an employee of either of those acting in an official capacity may "knowingly and willingly participate in any way in the enforcement of any federal act, law, order, rule, or regulation regarding a firearm, firearm accessory, or ammunition if the act, law, order, rule, or regulation does not exist under the laws of this state."

It also bars use of public funds for the purposes mentioned.

A committee substitute removed criminal penalties described in the introduced version and included exceptions for multi-agency task force investigations of drug crimes and for violations of federal law detected during unrelated law enforcement activity.

The bill requires the attorney general to publish model policies for guidance.

Delegates peppered committee counsel with various hypothetical "what if " questions. They learned that if the FBI arrested someone participating in a US Capitol insurrection who carried a gun, the bill could prohibit the suspect from being housed in a state jail. It could also limit cooperation in extradition cases where the suspect flees to West Virginia.

Problems begin to arise, they learned, because state firearms laws do not mirror in every respect federal laws and most firearms cases in West Virginia involve federal law.

Adam Crawford, a Kanawha County deputy and detective, spoke for the Fraternal Order of Police about their issues, "We understand the concerns and fears of potential federal overreach, " he said. The problem is that federal firearms law are often used to put criminals away. There's frequent "bleedover " between drugs, guns, money and violent crimes, he said.

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"It's hard to limit and restrict how police work functions, " he said. The bill might let violent criminals walk because police can't assist in federal firearms violations.

"It's just unclear to us why this is getting mixed in. With all these other issues we have, " he said.

Many federal crimes carry stiffer penalties that state crimes, Crawford said, and task forces will often use them to put the criminals away longer.

West Virginia police, he said, often make use of the National Integrated Ballistics Network to investigate local shootings where there are difficulties, such as lack of witness cooperation, and submit information to NIBN and find that the gun was used in a different shooting. The bill could hamper such use of federal databases. "The biggest fear I have is it's going to cease a lot of the cooperation we have."

Pressed by bill supporters about whether the added exception offered reassurance on his concerns, Crawford said his questions remain.

Crawford's doubt weren't sufficient to sway the supporters and the bill passed in a voice vote. It heads to the House floor.

Tweet David Beard @dbeardtdp Email dbeard @dominionpost.com

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House Judiciary OKs 2nd Amendment bill; law enforcement worries it may hamper cooperation with feds - Yahoo News

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