Daily Archives: September 12, 2021

Lorde reveals she was on MDMA while making ‘Melodrama’ – Insider

Posted: September 12, 2021 at 10:09 am

Lorde recently discussed her reclusive creative process in her October cover story for Vogue, including the influences she's been under during each era.

As paraphrased by Vogue's Rob Haskell, the 24-year-old pop star revealed "her albums can be distinguished by the drugs she was using when making them."

Her 2013 debut "Pure Heroine," which deals with themes of teen angst and suburban isolation, was shaped by Lorde's early experiences with alcohol. Several songs seem to take place at drunken house parties, including the fan-favorite track "Ribs," which begins, "The drink you spilt all over me."

Perhaps most interestingly, Lorde said her 2017 second album "Melodrama" is associated with MDMA, an abbreviation for the drug commonly known as ecstasy. It's also known as "Molly" in some circles, particularly for those who use it as a party stimulant.

In her filmed "73 Questions" interview with Vogue, published in July, Lorde said the emotion that's most central to "Melodrama" is "ecstasy." The tracklist was designed to mirror a kaleidoscopic evening of post-heartbreak hedonism.

According to a 2019 study at the University of Exeter, people who take ecstasy report feeling "significantly greater emotional empathy" and are better at identifying others' emotions, compared with those who use other popular drugs like cocaine and ketamine.

Finally, Lorde's most recent release, "Solar Power," is linked to cannabis "not bong hits in the bedroom so much as gummies on a bluff at sunset," Haskell wrote.

Lorde previously told The New York Times' Joe Coscarellithat she originally set out to make a "big acid record."

"I had, like, one bad acid experience with this album, and I was like, 'Meh, it's a weed album.' It's one of my great weed albums," she said.

Lorde alludes to cannabis in the album's third single, "Mood Ring," which she has described as a satire of wellness culture ("We can get high but only if the wind blows just right").

You can read Insider's review of "Solar Power" here and our breakdown of all the details you may have missed here.

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‘I’ll be at front of queue to change my slave name’ – Mac Intosch – Myjoyonline

Posted: at 10:08 am

For more than three centuries the Dutch shipped more than half a million Africans across the Atlantic

Descendants of African slaves have told the BBC they will change their surnames after a Dutch city decided to make the procedure free of charge.

Utrecht council has decided to remove the 835 (715) cost and bureaucracy to help people shake off their slave names and have the option to adopt one that recognises their African ancestry.

Under existing Dutch rules, if you have a surname considered ridiculous such as Anus, Garlic, or Naked-born, there is no requirement to prove it is undesirable. However, if your name has its origins in the Dutch colonial legacy, an expensive psychological examination is often required on top of the fee.

Its not right to then ask for money to turn back the procedure, says Linda Nooitmeer, chair of the national institute for Dutch slavery history.

Her own name translates as Never Again. Even though shes relatively happy as it was chosen by her ancestors, she is thinking of changing it. She sees Utrechts move as part of the healing process, to give people the freedom and identity back.

Between 1596 and 1829 the Dutch shipped more than half a million Africans across the Atlantic Ocean to work on plantations.

They were treated as objects and possessions and their names were erased, part of what Linda Nooitmeer describes as the dehumanising process.

Everything is stripped. You were part of the cargo, like cattle. Its not only the name but rituals, language, your identity, all evidence that you were African was taken away.

The Netherlands was one of the last countries to abolish slavery in 1863, 30 years after British abolition. Even then slaves in Suriname, on the northeast coast of South America, had to wait 10 years to be fully free. Slaves were also shipped to Brazil, as well as Haiti, Curaao, and elsewhere in the Caribbean.

Anyone enslaved in Suriname had to be on a slave register, so it is known that some 80,000 people lived in slavery there in the 30 years before abolition.

Freed slaves were given artificial names, often tied to the slave owner, the plantation, or random amalgamations of Dutch cities or Dutch-sounding words, although regular Dutch surnames were banned.

Berghout and Seedorf were used as was Madretsma (Amsterdam spelt backwards) and Eendragt, a plantation name that means harmony. Other names translate as Obedient, Cheap, Tame, and Submission.

Linda Nooitmeer believes these names serve as a reminder they were once subordinate, and that the chain was never fully relinquished.

With that link to their ancestral home long destroyed, many have gone in search of their African roots to find a name that better represents who they are.

Among them was Yaw, who went to Ghana. And now Utrecht is removing the cost, he plans to make Yaw official, replacing his existing name Guno Mac Intosch.

As soon as that door opens, he gestures to the city hall, Ill be at the front of the queue.

Last year almost 3,000 people opted to switch their surnames, but only one mentioned colonial connotations. Utrechts promise to cancel the fee and paperwork has already resulted in hundreds of expressions of interest.

Maybe its not the exact same name our ancestors had, Ms. Nooitmeer explains, But it was given within the spirit from Africa. And thats really powerful to give your children and descendants. Their names are an integral part of their identity, she says.

After emancipation, some created collectives and bought the cotton fields.

For them, adopting a new name was an act of empowerment, as the owned became the owners. Ms. Nooitmeer believes they would have understood why their descendants were trying to rediscover what she calls their African energy.

A slavery exhibition was recently held at the Rijksmuseum in Amsterdam, curated by its head of history, Valika Smuelders.

We meet in The Hagues historic centre, in Lange Voorhout, which she explains was built on wealth generated by the slave trade.

Ms Smuelders is mixed-race and descended from the enslaved, enslavers and contractors. Her name incorporates Dutch, Scottish, and Portuguese and she considers it very much colonial history. For her, changing a surname is a complex, personal choice and unlikely to create an immediate rush among as many as one million people in the Netherlands.

People react very differently to circumstances. So for some, [their name] might be something that they want to embrace, she explains.

Many people who have a Dutch name plan to keep it, because numerous studies have shown a foreign-sounding name in the Netherlands can expose you to discrimination in education, housing or employment.

Yaws son pointed out that the Scottish name Mac In Tosch probably opened doors in his corporate life.

Sitting in the shadow of the slave memorial in Amsterdams bustling Oosterpark, Linda Nooitmeer remembers the moment Mayor Femke Halsema apologised for the councils role in the slave trade.

It really did something to me. I would never have imagined that even four years ago, never. So were making steps.

As I speak to Yaw outside Utrecht city hall a man comes over shouting racial abuse: Youre not African, just because youre black. If you think you are African, go back! Coming here for our benefits.

People glance up until another white man intervenes.

It is a shocking moment but Yaw takes it in his stride. For him the Netherlands is still on a journey and the recognition of peoples desire to drop their slave names represents a small but significant step.

Dutch people claim that they are really liberated and the country is liberated, then you see these things, this behaviour, he says.

The world-wide Black Lives Matter movement has made a difference, he believes, and the name-changing move is part of a process that shows greater awareness.

We are here, we built this country, and we dont let people chase us away because they say that we do not belong here.

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Nadda throws open challenge to opposition leaders to give account of work done by them in UP – Economic Times

Posted: at 10:08 am

Ahead of the crucial Uttar Pradesh Assembly polls next year, BJP president J P Nadda on Saturday threw an open challenge to opposition party leaders to give an account of work done during their respective tenures in the state.

He also launched Booth Vijay Abhiyan' in a bid to repeat the party's performance in the 2017 state polls.

I challenge the leaders of the SP, BSP and Congress to come forward with an account of their respective terms and our booth-level workers are ready for an open debate with them over the same. None of the governments led by these parties did as much work as has been done in over four years of the Yogi Adityanath government, he said at a virtual function to launch the party's Booth Vijay Abhiyan.

The saffron party had clinched 312 seats in the 403-member legislative assembly, decimating its rivals to form the government in the last assembly elections.

Claiming that the Adityanath government did in over four years what other governments could not do in 60 years, the BJP chief targeted the opposition parties for not extending enough support to people during COVID-19 pandemic.

Amid the pandemic outbreak, these parties did politics only through tweets and virtual press conferences by confining themselves in closed rooms.

History will remember that when people were in trouble, they (opposition leaders) turned themselves away from the people, he alleged.

The BJP leader noted that the UP government and BJP workers helped not only people of the state, but also those who came from other states.

He said while the BJP government worked for sabka saath, sabka vikas and sabka vishwas', the previous regimes connived to benefit only one family as they had nothing to do with the people of UP.

Lauding the UP government for the work done by it for developing religious places like Mathura, Kashi, Chitrakoot and Ayodhya, Nadda said, "There was a time when taking the name of Lord Rama in UP was difficult and Ram sewaks' were fired at. The Congress had refused to accept the existence of Lord Rama, but today these parties (SP, BSP and Congress) have started indulging in the politics of convenience'.

He asked as to why a grand temple of Lord Rama was not built during their governments and went on to enumerate the work done during the Adityanath government like holding grand Kumbh in Allahabad, Deepotsav in Ayodhya, Krishna Utsav in Mathura and resuming the tradition of Dev Deepawali in Varanasi.

During the previous regimes, the BJP national president further said there was crime, corruption and anarchy but now the scene is different and it is development all round, adding that UP has become riot-free, women are safe and there is law and order.

Seva is our dharma and the target is poverty alleviation and we have zero tolerance policy for corruption and terrorism. Under Prime Minister Narendra Modi's guidance and CM Adityanath's leadership, UP has written a new chapter of development by working for the progress of villages and the poor, he noted.

The northern state is leading in 44 development schemes, he said.

In an apparent reference to former Congress president Rahul Gandhi, Nadda said there are some leaders who go abroad for vacation when parliament is in session.

In an assurance to the farming community, the BJP president said there will be no change in minimum support price (MSP) and there is no need for the farmers of the country to worry.

Today, the Modi government has given freedom to the farmers in the country to sell their crops anywhere at their preferred prices, he added.

Elaborating on the achievements of the central government in the past seven years, Nadda said, "Abolition of Article 370 of the Constitution (giving special status to Jammu and Kashmir), ending of the practice of triple talaq, starting construction of Ram Janmabhoomi temple and the surgical strikes took place during the tenure of the Modi government.

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Minneapolis’ bloody summer puts city on pace for most violent year in a generation – FRONTLINE

Posted: at 10:08 am

Etta Riley has learned to listen for a hiss when she hears pops erupt outside her Minneapolis townhouse.

The hiss brings relief. It means that bottle rockets are being fired in her neighborhood, not guns.

Riley, a 57-year-old school bus driver, remembers waiting for that reassuring sound one night in May. A group of strangers had gathered on a boulevard near her house again to throw dice, blast cussing music and drink from beer cans that would litter the street come morning. The gambling worried her. She has seen it lead to fights, which lead to guns. She called 911 and watched out the window as a police cruiser passed by and didnt even slow down.

Soon a crackle filled the air. This time, there was no hiss.

Riley stepped outside that night and watched police cordon off the nearby convenience store with yellow tape. She found out Aniya Allen, a kindergartner, had been shot there. She wonders if it would have made a difference if police had really shown up that night.

Theres just too much killing going on, Riley said.

Riley lives on a block of the North Sides Cleveland neighborhood that saw a 200% rise in gunfire compared with a dozen-year average before the pandemic. The dramatic surge in shots fired there and in other pockets of the city has brought a grim new reality for some residents across Minneapolis, who are now in the throes of what is shaping up to be overall the most violent two-year period in a generation.

After decades of declining violent crime, Minneapolis recorded 84 murders last year, up from about 48 in 2019, and a toll not seen since a dark chapter known as the Murderapolis years. The 67 murders so far in 2021 are on pace to surpass that. Four of those killings took place this week in a span of 29 hours, among them one with a 12-year-old victim. At least five kids 10 years old or younger have been caught in the crossfire this year, leading to news reports featuring images of picture-day smiles over descriptions of children on life support or inside tiny coffins.

The murder count represents only a small fraction of gun crimes. Data show a record number of gunshot wounds reported since last year. In the first six months of 2021, Minneapolis surpassed shots fired citywide in all of 2019, according to ShotSpotter activations, shooting reports and other data tracked by local law enforcement agencies. This year is on track to surpass 2020s record-high 9,600 gunfire reports. The past 20 months now account for almost a quarter of the 70,000 gunshot incidents reported in Minneapolis since 2008.

You hear gunfire, its like hearing birds chirping in the morning, said Juliee Oden, 55, who lives in the Jordan neighborhood, where shots have doubled. Odens street has seen an even larger increase in gunfire. She has moved her bedroom from the front to the side of her house and acquired a steel plate to place behind her headboard in fear of being struck by the shots she hears at night. Ive listened to two situations where people have actually died, she said.

If not for the grisly news reports, many residents in Minneapolis may not have noticed the violence. Nearly 90% of the gunfire reports since 2020 came from five neighborhood clusters: Near North, Camden, Powderhorn, Phillips and Central. An analysis of gunfire incidents by census blocks further revealed how specific locations are driving up the citywide numbers. The Star Tribune interviewed dozens of people who live and work in these areas, which are by and large more ethnically and racially diverse, younger and lower income.

Its never been like this, said Kia Banks, 42. Banks works in an assisted living home in the Folwell neighborhood, where shootings are up about 140%. Her clients love their community but feel unsafe walking outside in the afternoon. I dont like to stay after dark and be driving around at night. Im afraid of that.

A block away, a mother is selling her house, fearing her kids could be the next to get caught up in a hail of stray bullets.

I just keep my kids away from the windows, and mainly I sit on my floor, because just in case, I dont want to be hit or have my kids hit, said the woman, who feared that her name appearing in this article would make her a target.

Five miles south, in the Loring Park neighborhood, Kim Valentini has started locking the doors to her store even when its open.

Living in this area for about 30 years, Valentini, 60, has seen it grow into a beautiful center of the city. A mix of new apartments and the ones built a century ago have made it one of Minneapolis densest and most eclectic neighborhoods. Thats why she chose Loring Park to open the retail arm of her charity, which provides oral surgeries for impoverished kids around the world.

But about 19 months ago, the neighborhood abruptly changed. The bottom fell out, Valentini said.

Her business has been burglarized five times. Her car has been stolen twice. Her family wakes to gunshots in the night.

Gunfire reports in Valentinis neighborhood are up almost 400% through August compared with prepandemic averages, and the neighborhoods first homicides in years have put the small community on edge.

Shots fired in neighboring Stevens Square-Loring Heights are up about 200% from average. Adjacent Lowry Hill and Lowry Hill East, part of the Calhoun-Isles cluster, jumped from a combined average of nine gunshot reports through August each year to more than 60 in 2021. Violent crime is up in all four neighborhoods.

Valentini believes police want to help, but theyre stretched too thin. At the same time violent crime is rising, police data show arrests for these offenses dropped by around one-third this year. I feel guilty, frankly, about making calls to 911 about hearing shots fired, she said. If there isnt imminent danger, I dont call.

Blocks away, Sam Turner, 40, has stopped serving dine-in customers at his 24-hour restaurant at night because gunfights, usually coming from a dice game across the street, have made the area more dangerous for staff and customers.

They shoot straight up in the air, because they dont even realize those bullets land somewhere, Turner said.

Bullets have rained down on cars, the trees and facade in front of the Nicollet Diner and nearby apartments, in one case lodging into the drywall of a neighbors bedroom, he said. Hopefully the election comes and we get some politicians who give a crap about public safety, he said.

In a city election year, the blame is pointed in all directions. Some are searching for their own ways to better their situations.

Business owners meet and share tips from north Minneapolis preachers on how to disrupt violence. The nearby Wooddale Church hosts nighttime cookouts to draw out neighbors who badly need a hot meal and much more.

Its not only violence that lurks in these streets at night. The opioid crisis never loosened its grip. Heroin and meth are easy to find and cheaper than ever. And the pandemic has taken away badly needed social services.

Its like a perfect storm of brokenness, said Wooddale Pastor Trent Palmberg.

Those who have lived in Minneapolis long enough remember the only other time the city saw these levels of violence.

It started in 1985 with 16-year-old Christine Kreitz turning up dead at Martin Luther King Jr. Park. Kreitz belonged to the Black Gangster Disciple Nation, a Minneapolis faction of the Chicago Disciples. The gangs leader ordered her assassination after mistakenly suspecting shed informed on him.

The murder marked a new era for Minneapolis crime. No one not even the skeptical police chief whod come from New York City could any longer deny that Chicago gangs real gangs had arrived in Minneapolis.

The turf wars fed an unprecedented rise in killings in what had been one of the safest major cities in America, hitting the high-water mark in 1995 with 97 murders. The city held the 12th-highest homicide rate in the nation, passing New York Citys. Residents made shirts that read Murderapolis: City of Wakes, a moniker which the New York Times canonized in a front-page story about the downfall of a city that seemed to have all the answers.

Then, for reasons still being debated, the crime rate plunged. By 2001, the murder count dropped to less than half of the mid-90s years. Violent crime has ebbed and flowed in years since, but its continued to trend downward until June 2020.

There are varying theories for whats driving the violence among those who live in the areas most affected: the Highs and Lows gangs divided by north Minneapolis geography are beefing, and leaving a trail of bodies, sometimes the wrong ones, in their wake; the illegal gun market makes it too easy to find a firearm; and the pandemic left people out of work and home from school. Theres also the movement to defund the police, which many in these areas believe is tied to the violence one way or another. Some say it is sending a message to good police that they are not wanted, driving hundreds to quit and leaving the remaining force too small to respond. Others believe police are retaliating against the movement by slowing productivity, showing how bad the city can get without them.

Riley sees the bad cops, like the ones who caught a man trying to rob the convenience store near her house, then continued to beat him after putting on the handcuffs. She thinks the ones who quit in response to calls for more accountability are cowards. But she knows there are good ones too, the ones shes met in public meetings and sees patrolling her alley the next day, trying to help. Shes known Charlie Adams, the Fourth Precinct inspector, since they were kids in the projects and everyone called him Boobie. Today she calls Adams and his kids the North Side Blue Bloods, after the Tom Selleck TV show about a multigenerational law enforcement family.

If [police] do wrong, discipline them, said Riley. I aint saying defund them or get rid of them, because you know there are good cops. You cant punish the good ones for the bad ones.

Jordan neighborhood resident Dave Haddy, 48, says he supports reforming police, but he doesnt believe politicians have laid out a sufficient plan to replace the current model if the charter amendment to do so passes. We need good police, Haddy said. Im sorry, but the people advocating [defunding police] the most dont live in these scenarios. Ask North Siders, at least the ones I talk to. They are not for abolition. They are for competent, just policing.

Danecha Gipson, 28, says the problems date back further than just last year, and the answer is more complicated than more uniforms on the streets. Weve got a lot going on that the communities have been sweeping under the rug for years, she said.

A few years ago, Gipson left her job as a nursing assistant to work for the Cleveland Neighborhood Association. She helped start programs that gave kids stipends in exchange for delivering groceries or doing chores for elders. But there arent enough constructive opportunities to keep youth off the streets, especially during a pandemic, she said.

These kids here are taking their hurt from home and taking it out on the community, she said.

Tears spill down Julie Wards cheeks when she thinks about Trinity Ottoson-Smith, the 9-year-old girl shot while jumping on a trampoline at a birthday party this year. Ward lives two blocks from the shooting site with her granddaughter Aubrey and heard the shots.

That girl was the same age as [Aubrey], said Ward, 66. We have a trampoline. That vision, I just cant get it out of my head. If she got shot, oh, my God, it would kill me.

Aubrey skips across the street, her long braids bouncing with each stride, to where neighbors host an ice cream social on a humid evening in August. I do want to move, said Aubrey. I want to see what that feels like.

Her street is lush and dotted with character-rich homes, many well-maintained by their owners, interspersed with long-neglected and wilted ones. Some are recently vacant. Ward moved here in the late 1980s. One day she was in the backyard with her kids when two men darted through her property with guns akimbo. Shes known since then her neighborhood has a dark side. But she fell in love with her house and her neighbors. Not until this year has she ever contemplated moving. Im scared, she said. I dont want to go. But its too close.

Ogi Carter hears the shots in her Folwell neighborhood, too. She woke up recently to someone firing slowly into the air from a moving car. The next morning she found shells in front of her home. It shouldnt be like that, she said.

But Carter, 47, who immigrated from Bosnia, wishes people could see the North Side she sees. When a tornado hit in 2011, her neighbors helped remove a tree that landed on her house. Carter fell in love with the neighborhood then. What makes it a community is really the people that live here, she said. We look out for each other.

Haddy says the lack of concern for rising crime is emblematic of a difficult truth: Some people have always valued north Minneapolis less than the rest of the city.

If any other neighborhood in this city had three children shot in the head in a span of three weeks, the National Guard wouldve been called out, he said. But we didnt get [anything.] We get excuses and we get finger-pointing. And the people who say they are supporting us with all of their efforts, where are they?

Outside Rileys house, the community built a memorial for Aniya Allen. Rest in Heaven, reads one sign. Another shows Aniya and two other children killed this summer under the caption: Do you know who shot me? Police offered a $180,000 reward for that answer. The cases remain unsolved.

Riley sees the memorial every day. Politicians rallied here after Aniyas death, but now they dont come by. The raucous partyers have reclaimed the block to gamble.

I just feel like were the forgotten area, she said.

Andy Mannix covers federal courts and law enforcement for the Star Tribune.

Jeff Hargarten is a data journalist for the Star Tribune focusing on data-driven reporting and visualization.

This story is part of a collaboration with the Star Tribune through FRONTLINEs Local Journalism Initiative, which is funded by the John S. and James L. Knight Foundation and the Corporation for Public Broadcasting.

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Last nights debate: Trudeau gets caught up, OToole has his moments and Singh misses the mark – Maclean’s

Posted: at 10:08 am

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Jason Markusoff, of Macleans,has the rundown you need on Thursday nightsEnglish language debate, which did not go well for the prime minister.

Time and again, the Liberal leader was attacked on his governments record and tried to swing back aggressively. If it wasnt Jagmeet Singh hitting him on taking Indigenous kids to court, it was Erin OToole criticizing his ability to meet climate change targetsto which Trudeau replied that 2030 remains nine years away, in one of multiple moments in which he flashed visible irritation, or got unusually combative. At the outset of this campaign, it seemed Trudeau might coast to victory on the strength of his record. But some of the Liberals shortcomings look glaring if cannily framed, and his opponents did that on Thursday.

Markusoff writes that the moderation squeezed most of the light out of this affair.

Lead moderator Shachi Kurl, a pollster and former journalist, rapidly cut off many attempts to pivot from one topic to the next, and hawkishly watched the clock to ensure all of the myriad elements of the program had their slotted times. It led to a moment thatsome observersbelieve will raise anger in Quebec, and potentially draw votes to the Bloc: Kurl wound up arguing with Yves-Franois Blanchet, the Bloc Qubecois leader, who claimed hed been shorted when it came to timing. This came after shed begun the debate with a tense exchange with Blanchet over Quebecs controversial Bill 21 banning religious symbols from public workplaces. At another point, Kurl offered Trudeau an absurdly paltry five seconds to respond to various critiques of his record. Some past debates have gone wildly off topic or off-kilter and would have benefited from a moderator with a tighter leash. Kurls leash often seemed like a choke chain, stifling many exchanges from blossoming into actual, you know, debates.

Also in Macleans:

Shannon Proudfoot finds Trudeau still struggling to explain why we are all engaged in this exercise.

The greater energy hes displayed over the last week, as his campaign finally seemed to get its shoes on, was turned up too high and of the wrong kind to be useful to him on Thursday. Of course, as the incumbent he went in with more baggage and more soft underbelly exposed than the other party leaders. But the very first question he had facedamid a barrage of similarly pointed questions to each of the leaders in successioncentred on the core question hovering over the entire proceedings: why are any of us here right now?

Your correspondent is inclined to think that OToole looks likelier to be prime minister after he did well, Trudeau did not, and the moderator picked a fight with Blanchet.

The election isnt over, but it almost is. Advance voting begins today. Millions may vote by the mail. Trudeau will surely try to pivot before long to making pleas to soft New Democrats, but it will get harder to make that work as more votes go into boxes. And the Blanchet storywhich looks set to take off in Quebec todaycould put the Liberals on the defensive in the territory they desperately need if they are to stave off a Tory challenge.

Justin Ling thinks Jagmeet Singh did a good job of roasting Trudeau but a poor job at selling himself as a PM-in-waiting

But when it came to offering voters specifics of how he would govern, or even a compelling emotional reason why hes better suited to lead than the others, Singh largely repeated the script hes been reading for the whole campaign. Would he scrap the Trans Mountain pipeline upon being elected? Who knows. Where would his investments go to get CO2 emissions down by 50 per cent? Couldnt say. How would he protect Indigenous ancestral rights to logging, fishing and hunting? No idea. Voters at home would certainly come away from Thursdays debate knowing that Singh wants to make the rich pay their fair share, as if that were ever in doubt. But that often sounded like the deepest policy proposal he had under his belt.

Quebec plot twist: A dispute between the moderator and Blanchet made headlines in Quebec on Thursday night, seeming to presage a vote-moving phase of the campaign in that province.Le Devoirled with the dispute (translation), as did La Presse (translation).

The only debate in English by the leaders of the electoral campaign turned into a trial of the laws adopted by the National Assembly of Quebec on the secularism of the State and the protection of the French language. During an evening when cacophony also reigned supreme, Bloc Qubcois leader Yves-Franois Blanchet was forced to defend Legault government policies in his second language while the other leaders, with the exception of the Party leader green, remained silent. Raising the curtain of the debate, Mr. Blanchet received a frontal affront. The affront did not come from one of his opponents, but from the moderator of the debate, Shachi Kurl, who launched the exercise by repeatedly asking him how he could support discriminatory legislation, by speaking of Bill 21 and Bill 96.

Francophone Quebecers appear to be affronted by the conflict, whichmay rattle an until-now fairly stable campaign in that province, and raise questions about the conduct of the debate.

Aside from that, the consensus seems to be that Trudeau struggled.

In the Star, Susan Delacourt concludes that Trudeau must be asking himself why he called the election.

Every one of the leaders walked into these debates with a lot to save even political careers but no one as much as the Conservative and Liberal leaders. OToole needed to preserve the fragile momentum hes accumulated to date in this election. In effectively batting away Trudeaus standard anti-Conservative attacks, he may have succeeded. Trudeau, meanwhile, needs to save his Liberals from defeat in the election he unleashed on the country. This pile-on wont have helped.

In the Globe, John Ibbitson comes to a similar conclusion.

On Thursday night, as the minutes ticked away, Mr. Trudeau failed to launch his attack, because he so seldom had an opening.

Where we stand: As the leaders gathered for the debate, Macleans polling wizardPhilippe J. Fournier concluded that the race is tightening: CPC 34 (0), LPC 32 (-1), NDP 20 (+4), BQ 6 (-2), PCP 4 (+2), GPC 3 (-4). Projected seat count: LPC 142 (-15), CPC 134 (+13), NDP 34 (+10), BQ 26 (-6), GPC 2 (-1). Bracketed numbers show changes since 2019 election. Fournier wonders if the Conservatives have room to grow.

Before dissolution, I had hypothesized that the CPC was stuck in a high-floor, low-ceiling scenario with Canadian voters. The CPC surge early in the campaign was testament to Erin OTooles effectiveness at getting himself better known to Canadian voters, and several early polls in this campaign showed OTooles personal numbers rising days prior (see thisAbacus Data pollfrom Aug. 20). However, while some would suggest the Conservatives may have peaked too soon in this campaign, it is plausible that they simply peaked, and that the 34 to 35 per cent mark represents the partys new ceiling.

Enter Legault: On Thursday, after the second of two French language debates, Francois Legault pronounced himself concerned with the centralizing tendencies of the Liberal, NDP and Green platforms and said nationalists should hope for a Conservative minority, La Journal de Montreal reports(translation).I am a nationalist.I want Quebec to be more autonomous, to have more power, and there are three parties, the PLC, the NDP and the Green Party, which want to give us less autonomy.I find it dangerous.

Rescue operation: Writing in the Gazette,Tasha Kheiriddin theorizes that Legault may have felt the need to come to OTooles rescue after a flat debate performance.

Quebec commentators were not impressed with OToole, including columnistChantal Hebert, who quipped that On his last big opportunity to establish a stronger connection with Quebec voters and to impress them, (OToole) missed the mark. So in rode Legault to the rescue. If his endorsement turns the tide for OToole, it could put the Tories over the top and put the new government firmly in Legaults debt.

A lament: Speaking of debates, the reviews of Wednesday nights French language debate are mixed. In Macleans, Paul Wells laments that the debate wasnt what it could have been even though good people were doing their best.

For starters, the participating news organizations want maximum on-screen time for their journalists. Every organization that participated in the consortium sent a prominent colleague. None preferred to sit the night out, for the sake of simplicity and clarity. Thats how you get five people in moderator/interrogator roles. And ifLa Presses Paul Journet wasnt all that interested in pressing leaders on their non-answers to questions from Hlne Buzzetti of the newspaper syndicate Les Coops de lInfo well, that brings us to the parties interest. The parties want minimum on-screen time for their leaders. Or at least, they want the smallest amount of risk for every second of screen time. How much time did Erin OToole want to spend explaining that the only source of cost reduction in his platform is the abolition of Liberal day-care plans, and that in every other way his party has become as spendy as Trudeaus? Zero.

In La Presse,Michel C. Auger, writes that the debate was over before it began, because the Conservative platform calls for the elimination of child-care deals, aquestion (OToole) will have to explain himself on for the remainder of the campaign. (Translation)

PPC gravel link: The Peoples Party of Canadaremoved the Elgin Middlesex London riding association president Shane Marshall after it was allegedthat he isthrew gravelat Justin Trudeau at a rally in London on Monday, CBC reports.

Marshall is known in anti-lockdown and white-supremacist circles, said Peter Smith, of theCanadian Anti-Hate Network.This is a person who expresses, through memes and videos as well as his appearances at multiple protests dressed in a balaclava waving a flag from Canadas colonial past, an explicitly white nationalist view. Police are investigating.

Far right haters: The hate we are seeing in this campaign is alarming, writes Fatima Sayed in Macleans, pointing out the links between white supremacy and the anti-vax movement.

Hate, too, is a virus and it grows rapidly if left unaddressed. And its been left unaddressed in Canada for far too long. There is alinkbetween the anti-vaxx movement and far-right groups that we need to talk about. (Note: the movement is separate from vaccine-hesitant people who have legitimate concerns.) An upcoming study by Amarnath Amarasingam, Stephanie Carvin and Kurt Philips for the Institute for Strategic Dialogue documents the connections, finding that anti-mask, anti-lockdown and anti-vaccination movements in Canada are predominantly propagated by the far-right. Some of the most vocal critics of lockdown measures and vaccines are leaders of far-right groups or political parties, including People Party of Canada (PPC) leader Maxime Bernier.

BTW: If this newsletter hasnt slaked your thirst for debate and election commentary, join Macleans all stars at 12:30 p.m. for a Twitter Space discussion:https://twitter.com/i/spaces/1ynKOBlBQLrxR?s=20

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Last nights debate: Trudeau gets caught up, OToole has his moments and Singh misses the mark - Maclean's

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Battleground Baltimore: The past month or so of Baltimore police malfeasance – The Real News Network

Posted: at 10:08 am

Back in June, the Baltimore City Council approved a $22 million budget increase to the Baltimore Police Departments budget, going against the demands of hundreds of Baltimoreans who showed up for two taxpayers nights to tell Mayor Brandon Scott and members of Baltimore City Council, defund the police.

That the City of Baltimore has to scramble together on two nights to say something and hope that it changes is not a participatory process, Rob Ferrell of Organizing Black said at the time.

As Battleground Baltimore previously reported, the budget increase was, at least in part, a done deal before Taxpayers Night. Thats because even if the council and the mayor had been motivated to vote no to an additional $22 million for the police, the federal consent decree likely would have fined the city for defunding. It is just one more example of how police are rewarded for their corruption and dysfunction, and the rest of the city loses. A consent decree imposed on the city after Freddie Gray died in police custody in 2015 now nullifies the will of the people and gives elected officials who dont actually want to defund a convenient excuse.

None of this is exactly newpolice officers in Baltimore are often failing miserably to keep people safe while burning through their departments $500 million-plus budgetbut the stranglehold police have over the city and its elected officials has been made especially stark over the past month or so. The month of August, especially, offered up a laundry list of dysfunction and misconduct by Baltimore Police that made a strong case for defunding.

The departments crime lab is backlogged, among many other problems, as the Baltimore Sun reported. The police are disproportionately enacting traffic stops in majority Black neighborhoods, as The Real News reported. As Baltimore Brew reported, it was only last month that it was publicly revealed that a police officer who killed a teenager in 1993 had remained with the department for years despite being stripped of his duties, collecting a paycheck and racking up overtime for almost three decades. The BPDs move to the former Baltimore Sun building continues to skyrocket in cost, as Baltimore Brew reported. The Baltimore City States Attorneys Office indicted Baltimore police officer Christopher Nguyen for reckless endangerment. It was also only last month that the longstanding practice of allowing police officers to work overtime shifts even if they were on vacation ended.

And the Baltimore Police unions stance on vaccination is not encouraging.

On Aug. 31, Baltimore Citys Fraternal Order of Police and the Baltimore City firefighters union released a joint statement, commenting on Mayor Brandon Scotts policy requiring all city employees to either be vaccinated or take a weekly COVID-19 test.

It is our desire to remain engaged in collective bargaining over the implementation of this policy, the statement said. We look forward to working amicably with members of Mayor Scotts administration to ensure this policy and its associated procedures are implemented fairly, equitably while protecting our members [sic] personal concern and autonomy.

In April 2020, towards the start of the pandemic, a Perkins Homes resident recorded a Baltimore Police sergeant intentionally coughing on people after they greeted him with, Hey Officer Friendly with the cherry cheeks. The name of that sergeant, who was suspended, was never released by the police. In Jan. 2021, Baltimore Police Sergeant James Rhoden used his influence to get the then-hard-to-obtain COVID-19 vaccine for a family member. He is no longer with the police department.

In other cities, the police have aggressively negotiated against vaccination. In Portland, police were simply exempted from the citywide mandate for vaccination. In a scene that might seem familiar to Baltimore residents who are used to a Democratic mayor regularly caving to police, Portland Mayor Ted Wheeler said, I am disappointed that we cant hold all of our City employees to the same vaccine requirement.

COVID-19 is the leading cause of death for cops in 2021, killing 110 police officers nationwide so far.

Baltimore City public school students didnt only have to worry about returning to school in person amid a surging pandemicmany also stepped into schools without functioning air conditioning. Temperatures upwards of 90 degrees forced the early dismissal of hundreds of students at two dozen schools without working AC when schools reopened on Aug. 30.

Despite their school closing early on the first two days of class, Baltimore City College High School senior Samreen Sheraz told Battleground Baltimore that school is off to a good start.

Students are getting the normal school environment back, which means they have motivation, and support from peers and teachers, Sheraz, a member of Students Organizing a Multicultural and Open Society (SOMOS), said. It is much easier to get it in person rather than online.

While Sheraz approved of the districts mask mandate and social distancing policies, they said a better job could be done enforcing it.

The safety protocols are implemented efficiently in classrooms only, Sheraz said. The protocols get a little ignored during lunch and dismissal, which can be dangerous to many.

In cities like Baltimore with a large digital divide, being able to learn in person again has been a helpful; 200,000 mostly low income Baltimore households with school-aged children lack access to high speed internet or a computer, a May 2020 Abell Foundation report found.

Being in school helps the brain to be focused on studying and the improvement of our grades, Sheraz explained.

The districts COVID-19 dashboard reports a .15% COVID prevalence rate among 88,000 students and staff. 132 positive cases have been reported in the past 10 days, according to the district, which says 80% of staff and 90% of principals are vaccinated.

There could be much better communication with the schools, staff, and students, because as of now I dont believe that Baltimore City Schools has been very transparent about their plans, if cases keep rising, Blanca Rosalez, a SOMOS member and high school junior, told Battleground Baltimore.

Some parents and teachers have taken to social media to express frustration over the lack of a district-wide plan for students who are forced to quarantine when weekly testing of all unvaccinated students and staff begins next week.

There is no plan for quarantined kids; instead there is only school-by-school, teacher-by-teacher. More inequity for kids. Likely to worsen as asymptomatic testing begins and more kids are quarantined, public school parent Melissa Schober said.

Brittany Johnstone, a school psychologist and special services vice president of the Baltimore Teachers Union, tweeted: Were just at the tip of the iceberg. Testing beginning on 9/13 will mean a rapid increase in known positive cases (which the district admitted to in their email to staff) and we have absolutely no clarity on how to educate students who are required to be at home.

This past week, Gov. Larry Hogan called the lack of AC in some city schools unbelievable. Back in 2018, City College students protested Hogans lack of funding for city schools when high heat forced students that attended schools without functioning AC to be dismissed early.

With its history of disinvestment, Sheraz worries about whether city schools will have enough resources while the pandemic continues with no end in sight.

School funding is a recurring issue and it has been repeating over the years, Sheraz said. Schools would need more resources such as hand sanitizer, clorox wipes, and tissues to maintain the safety of students and staff.

This week, the House Cannabis Legalization Workgroup had its first meeting to discuss how legalization and regulation of cannabis would be implemented and how legalization could be implemented in a more racially equitable way.

During the meeting, the workgroup noted the tax revenue generated in Colorado, the first state to establish a legal, regulated industry and a state whose demographics reflected Maryland. Colorado has gone from generating around$600 million in 2014, when the regulated industry began, to more than $2 billion in 2020.

But racial equity was the workgroups focus.

We will do this with an eye towards equity and in consideration to Black and Brown neighborhoods and businesses that have been historically impacted by cannabis use, Delegate Luke Clippinger, the chair of the workgroup said.

Maryland has remained woefully behind on cannabis. In 2014, cannabis was decriminalized if a Marylander was in possession of 10 grams or less, and as of 2017, there is medicinal cannabis, but legalization has yet to happen. Actually, even increasing the decriminalization threshold to the more-common one ounce has not happened. A legalization workgroup in Maryland announced in 2019 that it would not recommend legalization during the 2020 session, and so, the energy happening right now is welcome but also falls woefully behind where many advocates believe the state should be at this point. Getting legalization right has long been a concern in Maryland, and even now, the workgroup is discussing a referendum in 2022 with the regulated industry arriving, if that passes in 2023.

In the meantime, as those in Annapolis figure out how to get legalization and racial equity right, Maryanders continue to be arrested on cannabis charges, and those who are arrested are disproportionately Black.

A 2020 ACLU report noted that a Black Marylander is more than two times as likely to be arrested for cannabis as a white Marylander, and possession arrests still made up 50% of all drug arrests.

When The Maryland Food & Abolition Project asked J.G., someone who was incarcerated during COVID-19, about the food situation inside the Maryland Correctional Training Center in Hagerstown, Maryland, he did not hold back.

Its not like its sometimes you get a pretty good meal now and then. No, this is consistent. This is an everyday situation. And the kitchenI dont think theyve ever passed an inspection. Because OSHA would close the place down. Thats how bad it is, J.G. said. Roaches and mice and other insects and stuff crawling all over the place. So they prepare your meals in filth, basically.

That comes fromthe first part of the Maryland Food & Abolition Projects I Refuse to Let Them Kill Me: Food, Violence, and the Maryland Correctional Food System, a shocking report on how poor the food given to prisoners is, released earlier this week. The report was published by the Maryland Food & Abolition Project on Sept. 9, the 50th anniversary of the Attica Prison Uprising, and just a couple of weeks after their report Violence, Hunger, and Premature Death: How Prison Food in Maryland Became Even Worse During COVID-19.

For lunch, you get a bag, and everything in the bag tastes and smells the same. You get a juice box. You get a sandwich, which is two pieces of bread, some cheese, and a slice of meat, Mark, who was formerly incarcerated at Eastern Correctional Institution in Westover, Maryland, said. The meat is bad. They call it sweaty meat, because lunch meat sweats, it gets the oily skin on it or stuff on it and then it turns white. You also might get a piece of fruit and a pack of cookies, but everything tastes the same. It tastes like the sandwich. And thats lunch.

These reports offer the kind of deep dive into the cruelty endured by Marylands prisoners that local press rarely covers at alllet alone comprehensively. As journalist and political prisoner Mumia Abu Jamal observed in 2013, far too often, the media offer the episodic, while they ignore the systematic.

You can read the first part of The Maryland Food & Abolition Projects I Refuse to Let Them Kill Me here and Violence, Hunger, and Premature Death here. Over the next two weeks, the Maryland Food & Abolition Project will release the next five parts of I Refuse To Let Them Kill Me.

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50 years later: The legacy of the Attica uprising – WBFO

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Chuck Culhane is traveling to Attica Prison Thursday to participate in a vigil honoring those who lost their lives 50 years ago within the prisons walls.

He does not believe the vigil will garner any headlines.

That's emblematic of the attitude towards prisoners, he said. Towards people inside, that they don't exist. They weren't killed. And so a few of us are going to go out there and just read the names of individuals at the prison. The names of all the people, including the guards.

What is the lasting legacy of Attica a landmark event that encapsulates a generation of social progression, yet an event that also left at least 43 incarcerated persons and prison guards dead? On the 50th anniversary of the uprising, the conversation around its legacy is varied.

Culhane serves as a Prison Task Force Coordinator at the Western New York Peace Center:

I was back in prison, he says. I was sent to a maximum security place and it was, I recall, low grade terror. I did quite a few years inside. I never experienced anything like that. I mean, people were just terrorizing and really ways every day, and it was very dispiriting to see that kind of behavior with the guards.

Culhane said lessons regarding the rights of incarcerated people have yet to be learned.

And unfortunately, the vast majority of the changes have been for the worse, not for the better, he said.

The prison population has shrunk to just under 32,000 in New York State in the last 50 years, but the conditions the men living within the walls of Attica advocated for improvements to food and medical care, religious freedom and wages were abandoned in Atticas aftermath, said Soffiyah Elijah, executive director of Alliance of Families for Justice.

Sadly though, most, if not all of those improvements have now disappeared, she said. So the concerns and the demands that the men raised 50 years ago are still major concerns today.

Elijah was formerly the executive director of the Correctional Association of New York. Her insight on the plight of incarcerated people leaves her believing more can be done to rehabilitate and reintegrate them into society.

I would say when it comes to incarcerated people, we can clearly see that we're not living in a more enlightened society, she said.

Elijah points to how hard it has been to get incarcerated people supplies to fight against contracting COVID-19 as an example of how little attention is paid to their welfare.

From not giving them PPE, from not giving them tests, not providing for vaccines," she said, "advocates had to work day and night to push for those things, advocates and family members of incarcerated people.

And racism within a prison system where a majority of the incarcerated are non-white is a problem.

The racism amongst staff, the virtual lack of any Black and brown staff members and most of the Upstate prisons, Elijah said. That was a problem back in 1971 and remains a problem to this day.

One lasting legacy of Attica that both Culhane and Elijah agree on is growing prison reform and prison abolition movements in the state.

The advocacy groups on the outside have been somewhat successful, Elijah said, and reaching out to elected officials to bring these concerns to their attention so that more members of the New York State Legislature are aware and have been using their role as legislators to visit the prisons, to inquire, to question and to challenge what's happening inside the prisons.

A recent example of the success of these movements is the signing of the HALT bill by then-Gov. Andrew Cuomo in April. The bill bans long-term solitary confinement in prisons and jails across the state.

Culhane said the push towards rehabilitation programs and restorative justice practices within the prison system are ways to keep people out of prison for good.

Well in New York, he said. I would say, yeah, just in numbers, getting people out, you know, not sending them to prison for offenses that are not, you know, particularly nonviolent and where there's alternatives like restorative justice programs that do something for victims of crime and do something for society instead of this punishment ethic thats insane.

Elijah still believes the prison system as a whole is rotten and must be abolished.

I don't believe at this point you can do this form any more than slavery could be formed, she said. I think it has to be completely destroyed. I think it is incumbent upon all of us in society to figure out a much more people-centered approach to addressing aberrant behavior by human beings.

In a society still separated by the haves and have-nots, Elijah said these issues can be solved if we all worked together.

If we can put human beings on the moon and other planets, she said. Then we can figure out how to level the playing field so that everybody's dreams and aspirations has a fair chance of being realized.

The legacy of the Attica uprising has given us many teachable moments to reflect and improve on.

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Marxist Nature of Black Lives Matter Exposed in New Book – Daily Signal

Posted: at 10:08 am

America has spent years fighting communism outside its borders, but now a Marxist threat is growing from within the country, Heritage Foundation senior fellow Mike Gonzalez says.

Gonzalez, author of BLM: The Making of a New Marxist Revolution, says the Black Lives Matter organization has encouraged Americans, especially young people, to embrace communist ideology.

In 2020, there were 633 riots according to the U.S. Crisis Monitor run out of Princeton [University], and 95% of those riots in which we know the identity of the perpetrator Black Lives Matter members were included, Gonzalez says.

Through his book, Gonzalez hopes to open peoples eyes to the true nature of Black Lives Matter.

Gonzalez joins The Daily Signal Podcast to discuss the book and why hes standing against the communist influences in our culture today.

Also on todays show, we read your letters to the editor and share a good news story about a New Jersey community that is going above and beyond to make sure all returning military personnel receive the welcome and thank you they deserve.

Listen to the podcast below or read the lightly edited transcript.

Virginia Allen: I am so pleased to be joined by Heritage Foundation senior fellow Mike Gonzalez. Mike is the author of the brand new book BLM: The Making of a New Marxist Revolution. Mike, the book is out today, congratulations.

Mike Gonzalez: Thank you, Virginia. Yes, Im very happy.

Allen: You really didnt mince words with the title of this book: BLM: The Making of a New Marxist Revolution. Thats pretty straightforward. But I do want to begin with defining some terms. What exactly do you mean by new Marxist revolution?

Gonzalez: When we talk about Marxists, were talking about communists. They have tried to take over America for many decades, for many centuries, really. They have always seen America as a rich country, the world leader, at least since World War I. They want to see us as a top target, but they failed miserably.

In all the years as a Soviet Union, they tried to infiltrate us or tried to influence Americans and they failed. This time through Black Lives Matterand I can get into whyMarxism and Marxist communists have come very close, the closest theyve ever come, to changing our way of life and that is what is happening right now.

Allen: I found it really fascinating that as youre going through the book, youre explaining that very thing, this changing culture and how the Black Lives Matter organization has an agenda. You actually started the book by talking about Frederick Douglass. That fascinated me. Why did you feel the need to give that historical perspective and talk about a figure like Frederick Douglass before diving into this larger conversation about Black Lives Matter?

Gonzalez: Yeah, Chapter 1 starts with Frederick Douglass, the introduction obviously starts with Jan. 6. I explain my understanding of Jan. 6, but I start the book proper on Frederick Douglass because Frederick Douglass really is the best known abolitionist in U.S. history. He was a man of noble character. He was a man of courage. I started with his fight with a sadistic master to whom he had been loaned and how he said he became a man by beating this man who owned them on loan.

I started with him because throughout his life, he was anti-socialist. I describe in the book a meeting in which he spoke and there was a socialist. One of the quirky, weird, odd things about communists and socialists, by the way, [Karl] Marx and [Friedrich] Engels never established a difference between socialism and communism, but they used the terms interchangeably. The socialist speaking with Frederick Douglass really was not putting an emphasis on the abolition of slavery. He was putting an emphasis on the abolition of wage labor.

Communists believed that wage laborin other words, what we all dois a continuation of slavery, which is crazy, just as communism is crazy. Frederick Douglass could not stand that this man was saying these things.

To Frederick Douglass, abolition was about one thing: It was about ending slavery, ending this blight upon our country. To communists, abolition is a completely separate thing. They want to abolish the family, the state, and all the institutions. In 1848, when this meeting takes place, Frederick Douglass understood that what we needed to abolish was slavery.

Allen: Yeah. That historical context is so critical for this broader conversation. I loved in the introduction, you really clearly lay out the mission for the book. You say, This book exists to fill the void in public awareness. You go on to say, If journalists will not report on the real nature of the Black Lives Matter organizations and their leaders and if the federal government cannot gather information on First Amendment-protected activities, this book will attempt to correct the record and analyze all the aspects of what transpired in 2020, as well as the historical forces that led up to those events.

So what then is that real nature of the Black Lives Matter organization and their leaders?

Gonzalez: First of all, I want to make it very clear that I agree with demand on the federal government not being able to collect information on First Amendment-protected activities. Im saddened by the fact that journalists did not vet, in fact, refuse to vet and did not cover the Black Lives Matter movement.

They covered for them. They de-emphasize or deny the Marxism of their foundersPatrisse Cullors, Alicia Garza, Opal Tometi, and also Melina Abdullaheven though they themselves are quite open about it and make videos saying, Yeah, Im a Marxist and Ive being trained as a Marxist.

They say this all the time and journalists, when they report on itwhich is very, very seldomthey say, I think I quote a PolitiFact fact check, in which he said, Well, Marxism these days, its really considering life through an economic lens.

No, it isnt. Marxism is what it is, what it says it is. Its communism. It is getting rid of the market economy, getting rid of capitalism, which Alicia Garza, Opal Tometi, and Patrisse Cullors say they want to do. They want to get rid of free markets. They want to get rid of our ability to own property and sell that property or sell our labor for a wage. They dont even like our system of representative democracy.

Opal Tometi has been very praiseful of the Chavismo in Venezuela. She was photographed with Nicolas Maduro. She believes in this type of direct democracy, which is not a democracy at all. Its just a dictatorship of one party.

So this is what they want to do. They want to abolish the family. In fact, the Black Lives Matter Global Network Foundation had it on their website that they wanted to really make deep changes to the family system.

I wrote about it with my colleague, Andrew Olivastro, in a piece that was read by over a million people. Within a month, they did what all Stalinists do: They airbrushed that out of their website. All of a sudden that was gone, except that it is in other parts of the literature. They cannot hide this. They want to abolish the American way of life. This is what theyre about.

They hide themselves behind a very good slogan: Black lives matter. Who could be against that? If you dont think that black lives matter, I dont even want to talk to you. They hide themselves. If they call themselves Red Ideas Matter, it would be much more representative of who they are, but of course, like all communists, they hide themselves behind these noble sentiments, like black lives matter.

Allen: Thats really helpful context, Mike. I know you talk about the fact that, for so long, and during the Cold War, America was fighting the Soviet Union and we were fighting communism from afar, but now what we see is that were fighting it within our own borders, were fighting it from within.

Talk a little bit about how the organization Black Lives Matter is responsible. Are they responsible? Should we blame them for what we see now in this new interest that we see young people having in socialism and in new fascination with communism? Is Black Lives Matter really to blame for that?

Gonzalez: Yeah, let me put it together. First of all, its a really sad irony that as we celebrate this year, the 30th anniversary of the dissolution of the Soviet Union, that were seeing communist ideas gain such currency in our system.

We spent all these resources, all this time and energy and lives fighting socialism, fighting communism, fighting what [former President Ronald] Reagan called the evil empire, the Soviet Union, which was finally dissolved on Christmas Day 1991. The significance of the day is underlining the noble and moral character of our crusade against communism.

It is because of what happened in 2020, the year of turmoil and the riots. There were 633 riots, by the way, at least according to the U.S. Crisis Monitor run out of Princeton. And 95% of those riots in which we know the identity of the perpetrator, Black Lives Matter members were included.

It is because of this that critical race theory all of a sudden jumps the university walls and enters K-12 in full force. Were seeing as a result of last year, our classrooms completely change and teachers. It was happening before, but it really enters into full force.

We see also critical race theory entering the military, the houses of worship. And corporate America has completely surrendered to this ideology. Sports and every aspect of our lives is because of this. It is because of what happened last year.

The manipulation of the tragedy of George Floyds death, which is a tragedy, the manipulation of this into making people believe the leaders of all our key institutions that we are systemically racist and that our criminal justice system is systemically racistthey threw in the towel and accepted all of this.

And were telling our soldiers to read critical race theory texts, which say that the Constitution is illegitimate. These are people who volunteered to defend the Constitution from enemies, foreign and domestic, and yet, were telling them to read Kendi and all these other writers, Ibram X. Kendi, who say the Constitution is an illegitimate document.

This is happening because of the year of unrest that we had the riots and demonstrations, the upheaval, that people want to forget. Nobody wants to talk about it, but we cannot forget what we had after May 2020 for many, many, many months. Ive written the book just to shine a light on this and say, We cannot give in.

In fact, youve seen resistance from the American people. Ive crossed the country and speak to groups from coast to coast and I get hundreds of people, Im not that electrifying a speaker, and people turn out because they demand information about critical race theory. They want to know whats going on. They want to have it explained to them.

The resistance is now coming from the grassroots. The American people are standing up and saying, No, I dont want these things taught to my children. I dont want to be trained and go through these reeducation camps at my place of work. This is a form of workplace harassment, so theyre fighting against what Verizon is trying to do, what American Express is trying to do, and even The Salvation Army has these training programs.

Allen: Well, Mike, I really appreciate the research that you have done on critical race theory. You really are the expert at Heritage on that subject. I encourage all of our listeners, if you want to read Mikes pieces on this, you can check him out on The Heritage Foundation website.

Mike, you mentioned the riots last year that obviously took the nation by storm and really changed so much in our country. I was fascinated that in the book, you mentioned how Antifa in some ways became a distraction from Black Lives Matter. I was really, really interested in that point. Talk a little bit about that.

Gonzalez: I say that in a way to castigate politicians. Politicians from both parties are not courageous or as courageous as they should be. They dont want to talk about Black Lives Matter because black lives matter, because of the slogan. They are very shy to talk about these organizations, which are distinct from the concept.

Antifa, which is a much more white phenomenon, these are anarchists. Theyre violent anarchists. As I see it, they dont have a thought-out academic discipline, like Black Lives Matter has critical race theory behind it. Theyre all practitioners of critical race theory. Antifa doesnt have that. Antifa is anarchism and its just pure violence, almost for the sake of violence. I think they have goals like overthrowing the state, but they dont have a well-thought-out program.

Black Lives Matter has bills in Congress. Black Lives Matter has a curriculum that is being taught in many of our childrens schools already. Black Lives Matter has a foreign policy. They came out and supported the communist government of Cuba. As the communist government was rounding up protesters, beating them up, and putting them into prison through kangaroo trials, BLM came out and supported them. BLM came out in support against Israel as Israel was fighting the terrorist group Hamas earlier this year.

So Black Lives Matter has a foreign policy and it has a gazillion dollars. They raised $10 millionwell, no, sorry, they raised $100 million last year. It has all these assets that Antifa does not have.

Allen: You mentioned the money and you have a whole chapter in the book specifically titled Following the Money, what did you discover as you looked at the money coming into and out of the Black Lives Matter organization?

Gonzalez: There are all these corporations that have gone woke. There are many reasons being given why.

Vivek Ramaswamy, a colleague, he does a lot of [anti-critical race theory] work, has another book out in which he talks about how this is really easy for the CEOs to go woke. This is costless to them, but were seeing all these foundations raising money.

A lot of times, as I point out in the chapter devoted to this, these foundations have links, longstanding links, to Marxist groups, such as the Sandinistas. One of these groups is a [pro-Peoples Republic of China], pro-Maoism group in San Francisco, the Chinese Progressive Association, which is the financial sponsor of two of the Black Lives Matter affiliates.

The Chinese Progressive Association in San Francisco was founded to support the Peoples Republic of China against mainland China, against Taiwan. It was founded in the 70s for that reason.

Allen: In your writing of this book, in the research that youve done on the Black Lives Matter organization and critical race theory, ultimately, in your assessment, whats the end goal for Black Lives Matter? What are they aiming for? You say that they have public policy, they have bills in Congress. Whats their end-all, be-all?

Gonzalez: Their goal is what Alicia Garza said in 2019, when she was visiting a group of Maine leftists. She said, What we want to do is dismantle the organizing principle of society. She said that, and thats what they want. They want to dismantle the way were organized. They want to dismantle the American system.

They say that were systemically, structurally, institutionally racist, because they want to pull out all the institutions and want to change all the institutions, all the structures in the very system of America. That is their goal and they hide behind this good slogan that black lives do matter in order to pursue the complete overhaul of the United States.

Look, we have problems, problems that we need to solve, obviously, but were still the fairest, most prosperous country in the world where real human flourishing can take place. Thats the reason why people fall from airplanes out of the sky to come to this country, and theres no line of people leaving to get out.

Theres a very, very long line of people coming to get in because they see, they understand that America is the land of hope for the working man and woman of the world, of any race. These are people coming of all races. If we were a racist country, systemically racist country, we wouldnt have so many people of all races wanting to come in here and succeeding here and thank God for that.

Allen: This might be a naive question, but why? Youre saying that they want to fundamentally change America, they want to unravel the traditional structure of the family, of capitalism. Why?

Gonzalez: Well, on the family itself, it was Marx and Engels who put that in The Communist Manifesto of 1848 that they wanted to abolish the family.

I dont think anyone embraces evil qua evil. I think that they do believe that this is an oppressive system. Critical race theorists, just like critical legal theorists, just like critical theorists in the 1930s and 20s, believe that the West has a superstructure that is oppressive. They admit that capitalism produces the goods, but they say thats whats bad about capitalism, because it produces material well-being and that it perpetuates a very oppressive system.

They are crazy, and Im not a psychologist, but you have to believe that Patrisse Cullors, Alicia Garza, Opal Tometi, and Melina Abdullah believe that we live in an oppressive society. Obviously, they havent traveled, or they havent traveled extensively outside of the U.S.

I have lived in at least seven countries, at least a year, as a foreign correspondent. I lived in Kabul for a month. And I can tell you that compared to the rest of the world, not only are we not oppressive, but were pretty, pretty good.

Allen: Where do we go from here then and what is really your hope as readers read the book, what do you want them to take from it?

Gonzalez: I want to open peoples eyes. I want to convince people who are either ambivalent about Black Lives Matter or actually believe that this is a noble endeavor and noble organizations, as a concept, of course its noble, but as organizations, no theyre not. And I want to convince people of that.

I also want to stiffen up the resolve of the American people that, no, we shouldnt allow this here. The American people are exceptionally attached to liberty. We have always been. This is something that has been remarked upon by social scientists and foreign visitors for centuriesG. K. Chesterton and before him, Alexis de Tocqueville and Herbert Marcuse, who hated it.

I want the people who already are suspicious of the BLM organizations to stiffen their spine against this and make sure that this does not take hold. I also want to reach out to people who do believe that these are good organizations, who have been misinformed, who have been manipulated into believing that we live in an oppressive system with systemic racism.

Allen: So critical. Well, the book is BLM: The Making of a New Marxist Revolution. You can get it on Amazon. Mike, final words, anything youd like to add before I let you go?

Gonzalez: Yes. As I said, America, I dont want to pretend that we do not have our faults. No system ever is going to be perfect on earth because its dealing with flawed individuals, right? Man is flawed, but this is a good country. I traveled the country, I go everywhere. Americans are good people. We have a good system. So before we think about completely overhauling and pulling out the foundations, we should really think hard: Is this really what we want to do?

Allen: Critical. BLM: The Making of a New Marxist Revolution, get it on Amazon. Mike, thank you so much for being here.

Gonzalez: Thank you, Virginia.

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Government reacts to driver shortage: 50000 more tests promised – Tina Massey

Posted: at 10:08 am

London, UK: The government has recognised industry calls to deal with the driver shortage with plans to speed HGV driver licence tests.

Up to 50,000 more HGV driving tests will be made available each year by shortening the application process and the tests themselves, the government said.

Transport Secretary Grant Shapps said in a written statement to the House of Commons, the government would now overhaul regulations to boost capacity so drivers will be able to get a licence to drive a maximum weight articulated truck without first getting licences for lower weight categories.

This is expected to make around 20,000 more HGV driving tests available every year. Shapps said the changes, which still need to be approved by parliament, will generate additional test capacity very rapidly.

These changes will not change the standard of driving required to drive an HGV, with road safety continuing to be of paramount importance.

The industry is sceptical about the plans, hinted at earlier this week, reiterating calls for temporary work visas to woo back around 20,000 EU drivers who have left the industry something the government has rejected.

Richard Burnett of the Road Haulage Association said the industry was losing 600 drivers a week and it would take nearly two years to fill the net shortfall.

Logistics UK welcomed the increase in testingcapacity but said these promises need to be implemented quickly if they are to make significant difference to the currentshortagein time forChristmas.

Elizabeth de Jong, policy director, Logistics UK said the impact of todays measures is unlikely to make a significant difference on the driver shortage if they cannot be implemented in time for the industrys Christmas peak, with DVSA, DVLA and the wider training industry needingtime to apply the changes and adapt theiroperations.

She also warned of safety implications of the change. Logistics UK had strongly voiced our concerns about the proposed abolition of the B+E driver category, as this could pose a risk to road safety.

This is a sensible move but its not enough to fix the problem, Paul Jackson, managing director, Chiltern Distribution, told the BBC on Thursday.

We dont put newly-qualified drivers straight behind the wheel on their own. We buddy them up with experienced drivers for the first eight to 10 weeks and the insurance costs for new drivers are also much higher.

We desperately need to put HGV drivers on the list of skilled workers we can bring in from abroad, Jackson said.

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Dzivielevski Joins partypoker After "Special Year" of Poker Results – PokerNews.com

Posted: at 10:06 am

Nearly seven years on since finishing runner-up to Fedor Holz in 2014's WCOOP Main Event for $1.2 million. Yuri Dzivielevski is the latest poker pro to join partypoker as an ambassador.

The Brazilian poker player won his first Gold Bracelet taking down Event #51: $2,500 Mixed Omaha Hi-Lo 8 or Better, Seven Card Stud Hi-Lo 8 or Better at the 2019 World Series of Poker. Then secured his second WSOP title a year later winning Event #42: $400 PLOSSUS [Day 2], $1M GTD.

These results online and live have contributed to the more than $15 million Dzivielevski has won playing poker, which sees him sit in 10th on Brazil's All Time Money List.

Head to the PokerNews Live Reporting Hub for the latest WPT World Online Championships news

With a poker resume that many would be envious of, Dzivielevski's career began with humble beginnings, similar to that of many poker professionals who now play the highest stakes.

"I started playing home games with friends and then started to learn some techniques from my brother," Yuri Dzivielevski told PokerNews. "Having gained some experience from this, I decided to try to make a living from poker for a year when I was still quite young. Now, more than a decade later, here I am, and I am extremely happy with my story."

"I believe this is one of the greatest achievements a professional player can make"

Now more than ten years removed from playing poker with friends around the table, it is hard to believe that the two-time WSOP Gold Bracelet winner felt like he needed to achieve anymore in the poker world. partypoker going all-in on Dzivielevski has allowed him to achieve one of his all time poker career goals.

"Since the very beginning of my career I have always dreamed of being a sponsored professional. I believe this is one of the greatest achievements a professional player can make and being recognised by partypoker as someone who can add to the brand is very special. I feel extremely privileged."

Related: Schemion and Proudfoot Bag WPT World Online Championship High Roller Titles

Dzivielevski is just one of a star-studded stable of partypoker Ambassadors that have joined the site in recent years, and he is not the only one waving the Brazilian flag whilst representing the site.

"I am very good friends with Joo Simo and Dayane Kotoviezy, and I have played with almost all the Team partypoker pros. I have a lot of respect for everyone on the team and I can't wait to get to know them better."

With an online poker resume that features WPT Online Series final tables, as well as MILLIONS and WSOP Online titles, it's clear that Dzivielevski is at the top of his game. One of the most consistent performers in recent months, this new partnership reflects the standard of poker that he has been delivering.

"This year has been the most special of my career, in terms of results. After all this, entering into this partnership with partypoker is something very special. Its a brand I really admire and feel proud to represent. I love playing poker and I am also very curious and competitive. This makes me motivated to solve problems and create new strategies to stay ahead of the competition."

With two Brazilian's making it to the final table of this year's WSOP Online Main Event, as well as his own WSOP success, Dzivielevski gives an insight to the secret ingredients that Brazilian's possess that has helped the South American country become a poker powerhouse on a global scale.

"Brazilians are competitive, intelligent, creative and passionate. All these things are very present in poker and I believe this is the reason why Brazil is having so much success in poker."

Read More: "A Brazilian Storm is Coming" says Joao Simao After WSOP Bracelet Success

Admirably, Dzivielevski wants to be the catalyst that sees more people hit up the poker tables, whether online or in a poker room. One characteristic all great players share is their ability to grow the game and the newly sponsored pro is going to give it his all to do this.

"Yes. One of my goals in life is to inspire people and make them as happy as I am. I hope this achievement of becoming a partypoker team pro inspires the poker community. Everything is possible when you give 100% of yourself and stay true to yourself."

Check out live updates from the 2021 WPT World Online Championship

Before Dzivielevski gets back to his ambassadorial duties, he let PokerNews know his aspirations of crushing the high roller scene when they are back in circulation. He also gave a very wholesome answer on what he's putting 100% focus into before the curtain closes on what has been a very successful 2021.

"I'm 100% focused on poker and my family, so my main goal for this year is to win as many tournaments as possible and create great memories with the people I love the most. Talking about career goals, Im excited to play some high roller live tournaments when they are back. Ill give my best and I hope to create good memories in this field too."

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