Daily Archives: October 5, 2021

Transphobia scholar explains why ‘the UK became TERF island’ and it’s eye-opening – PinkNews

Posted: October 5, 2021 at 4:35 am

An aspiring scholar on TikTok has broken down why transphobia is rampant in the UK and why the collection of nations has become known as TERF island online. (TikTok/@danieltalkstoomuch)

An aspiring scholar on TikTok has broken down why transphobia is rampant in the UK and why its now being called TERF island online.

One TikTok user asked if anyone knew why the UK became known as TERF island which prompted Daniel who goes by the username danieltalkstoomuch on the video-sharing app to share his insightful response on the topic.

The initialism TERF stands for trans-exclusionary radical feminist and refers to people who describe themselves as feminists but who exclude the rights of transgender people

Daniel opened the video by sharing his list of impressive credentials including that he did a dissertation project on transphobia, is starting postgraduate studies looking at transphobic dehumanisation and plans to further his studies with a PhD on TERFism.

So he knows his stuff.

Daniel then spoke about a 2020 essay that he loved called Empire and Eugenics: Trans Studies in the UK by Ezra Horbury and Christine Xine Yao. He said the studys authors point out that trans studies are a marginalised discipline in the UK, a bit more so than in the US where it is to an extent, institutionalised.

What that means is that when we talk about trans issues in the UK, were not consulting trans studies scholars were consulting TERFs, Daniel explained.

And its very easy as a result of this for TERFs to say that trans studies scholars have no evidence and when evidence does come out, its also very easy for them to ignore it, deny it exists or claim that its biased despite no actual evidence to substantiate that claim.

#stitch with @julesbuet Id love to hear other peoples thoughts on this #terfsnotwelcome #uk #terfs #whitefeminism

original sound Daniel

Alongside the discipline just not being taken seriously in the UK, Daniel said Horbury and Yao point out that there is a massive problem with intersectionality in the UK.

He explained, although the UK is the birthplace of the British Empire and many prominent eugenicists, many people refuse to recognise that and refuse to recognise even to this day that there is racism and implicit bias in our society.

And as a result of this, we have a lot of upper to middle-class white feminists in our public discourse in academia who a) have never spoken properly to a feminist of colour and b) have never had to look at something through an intersectional or post-colonial lens, he added.

He continued: And then when we have something like TERF-ism, which is a branch of white feminism that exploits narratives of white female vulnerability and has bioessentialism that has been likened to eugenicist racism, it does really well in this country under these conditions.

At the end of this amazingly thought-provoking explanation of Horbury and Yaos work, Daniel also threw in his own conspiracy theory. But he cautioned that he had no evidence to back it up so said, please take it with a grain of salt.

He pointed out that British people have such a fixation with politeness culturally that it can be really hard to call people out for their transphobic prejudices and biases. And therefore, its difficult to get anybody to learn because its seen as really impolite to accuse someone of being transphobic, he said.

Its also not really polite to be a bigot though so people will find ways to express their prejudice in such un-implicit ways and they will lie to themselves about why they hold those biases, Daniel added.

And if you can substantiate your transphobic beliefs with feminism or concern for the safety of children, that is a great way to make yourself feel better about holding those biases and to prevent people from criticising you.

Daniel isnt the only one to point out that this anti-trans bias exists in the UK.

If you look up TERF island on Twitter, several people can be seen tweeting about the rise in anti-trans sentiment and hate in the UK.

Additionally, a damning report by the Council of Europe recently singled out the UK for its baseless and concerning anti-trans rhetoric. The UK is mentioned throughout the report and referenced the rise of anti-LGBT+ hate speech on social media.

The extensive report which also named Russia, Poland and Hungary as areas of rising hate against LGBT+ people also described a marked increase in anti-LGBT+ hate speech and hate crime.

The council, which is Europes leading human rights organisation, vehemently condemned the extensive and often virulent attacks on LGBT+ rights in the community.

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LAPD chief: We have no interest in curbing free speech right – Los Angeles Times

Posted: at 4:34 am

To the editor: The Los Angeles Police Department is committed to continuing to improve our performance with regard to protests, including documentation of dispersal orders and protecting the rights of peaceful demonstrators and journalists. (Too few checks on police dispersal orders, editorial, Sept. 30)

Over time we have observed police officers confronted with violent and destructive behavior intermixed with otherwise peaceful protests. Efforts to separate peaceful demonstrators from those seeking to injure police officers or commit acts of arson and looting is difficult during a volatile incident. The department has no interest in blocking or kettling peaceful protesters who are complying with police orders.

Ensuring that department personnel from our top commanders to the officers on the front line perform with the needed precision requires ongoing training and improvements. That is just what our recent After-Action Implementation Plan intends to accomplish.

I am hopeful with the collective demands of everyone involved that our After-Action Implementation Plan is met with the necessary investment by the city to ensure our most recent experiences set the stage for lasting change.

Michel R. Moore, Los Angeles

The writer is chief of the LAPD

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Pennsbury hit with second lawsuit in two weeks. This one challenges censorship of board meetings – Bucks County Courier Times

Posted: at 4:34 am

Video: New Hope's Wedgwood Inn haunted by 12-year-old girl, owners say

The spirit of a 12-year-old girl haunts New Hope's Wedgwood Inn, owners say. Psychics say she was a runaway slave lost on the Underground Railroad.

James McGinnis, Bucks County Courier Times

First, it was the masking of children that triggered a recent parent-led lawsuit against Pennsbury.

This time, allegedfree speech censorship is at issue as theschool district faceslegal action for the second time in a matter of weeks.

Four Pennsbury taxpayers Doug Marshall, Simon Campbell, Robert Abrams and Tim Daly filed a lawsuit asking that Pennsbury School Boards speech policies be deemed unconstitutional.

The plaintiffs are suing the school district, school board and the districts solicitors, Michael Clarke and Peter Amuso.

Equity, diversity and education director Cherrissa Gibson is also named as a defendant in the federal lawsuit.

Filed Friday in the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania, the suit claims Pennsbury repeatedly violated the First Amendment through its previous censorship of public school board meetings.

Each individually named defendant has either perpetuated the censorship of plaintiffs speech, personally directed that censorshipor exhibited actual knowledge of and acquiescence in the censorship, the court document reads, claiming Gibson acted as a prime ringleader.

Last spring,Pennsbury came under fire for its restricting and editing of certain public comments from its school board meetings.

Comments from the plaintiffs were cut short and removed from recordings of the public meetings, with the school board citing a violation of Pennsbury School Board Policy 903. The edited videos were then posted on district social media.

(The defendants) have done everything from shouting down citizens who dare question the official narrative; conspired to silence and denounce dissenters; and even memory holed speech based on its viewpoint, deleting speech from public records as though it was never spoken, the document stated.

Related: Pennsbury cut public comments in BOE meeting videos. When a resident blasted the move, it went viral.

In March and May, the comments of Marshall, Abrams and Daly were cut from the uploaded versions of the school board meetings, with the comments in May alsocut short during their live comments.

Following the March meeting,Gibson calledMarshalls commentsoffensiveandabusive" via emails obtained via Right-to-Know requests.

She asked that the comments, focused on diversity, equity and inclusion and critical race theory,be removed frompublic record as a Policy 903 violation.

Campbells fiery speech at the June meeting denouncing Pennsburys editing of the meetings gained national attention and his video went viral.

CRT talks in Pennsbury: Pennsbury equity and diversity plan again bashed as critical race theory agenda

Read more: Three Pennsbury parents sue school district over COVID-19 masking requirements

The 65-page lawsuit documentreferences Policy 903, part of which says the presiding officer can interrupt or stop a public comment if thestatement "is personally directed, abusive, obscene or irrelevant.

Defendants have also interpreted Policy 903 to allow them to excise such speech from the official recordings of Pennsbury School Board meetings, according to the lawsuit.

The plaintiffs also called out the school board for editing the policy in June. Prior to that, speakers during both pre-vote and post-vote comment periods werent limited to discussing only agenda items.

At the June 17 meeting, the board updated the rule. Now, speakers during the first public comment period can only address agenda items and cant speak again during the second period about topics not on the agenda.

Thelawsuitalso claims the boards members dont believe public commenters have First Amendment protections, noting a March 2014 remark from Clarke to Abrams at a school board meeting.

The suit says Clarke had attempted to censor Abrams, speaking over him and declaring, you dont have First Amendment rights in here;this is public comment during a board meeting, and as Ive indicated before, if youre going to say things that are factually inaccurate, Im going to have to correct you.

The document cites several other instances where the plaintiffs felt Pennsbury was in violation of theFirst Amendment, including during the virtual meetings held during the pandemic.

The school board accepted written comments to be read at the online meetings during that period.

Daly asserts via the lawsuit that his criticism of the board for filling vacancies with controlled votes of members of their preferred political party was neither read or posted online at the Dec. 17, 2020 meeting.

Changes in Central Bucks: Divided Central Bucks School District board to choose new temporary member Tuesday

Abrams had also submitted a written comment that same meeting.

It accused the board of violating free speech and criticized Pennsburys academic and financial performance. The comment, like Dalys, was not read or posted online.

Pennsbury officials are trampling on the First Amendment rights of parents and residents to speak their mind about their schools, said Institute for Free Speechs vice president for litigation, Alan Gura, who is representing the plaintiffs.

Pennsbury'ssupervisor of public relations, Jennifer Neill, said as of Monday afternoon that the district had not yet been served with the lawsuit.

"We will respond appropriately through our solicitor if and when we are served," Neill said.

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Book Review: Free Speech and Why You Should Give a Damn – Patheos

Posted: at 4:34 am

Free speech appears to be going in the wrong direction. Not just access to it, but the privilege to express it without fear, harm, or retribution. Not only an essential read, but a timely one Im loving what Johnathan Zimmerman is laying down in his book Free Speech: And Why You Should Give a Damn.

Something incredibly stupid and weak happens when ideas and speech are censored: we remain stupid and weak. Perhaps its the philosopher in me; perhaps the martial artist, but I like to think that all of us deep down become better when our ideas are tested in the octagon. Or maybe its the scientist in me that sees ideas like evolution and through mutation and natural selection we see what stands the test of time.

Censorship fixes the fight and provides a controlled habitat (of course, whatever the habitat the censor is comfortable with). If ideas are at their best when tested, evolved, and developed so too our shared collective thought. And its not just that potentially good ideas are gagged, but the open market of idea exchange itself. Instead of rational deliberation where all are allowed to express their views it removes the debate and our collective intellectual rigor. When the censors gags the opposing viewpoint, their motivations are now in question. Arent their ideas good enough to stand on their own merits?

This double-edge sword is where Zimmerman takes aim. Its not justless of a carrot (maximizing human potential) with censorship, but it also guarantees the stick. In places and times of injustice or tyranny, censorship provides the vehicle for the status quo to remain. On the shoulders of giants like Frederick Douglass, Susan B. Anthony, Eugene V. Debs, and Martin Luther King Junior, Zimmerman reminds us that:

Every great champion of the poor and dispossessed in United States history has also been a champion of free speech, which allowed them to critique inequality and oppression. Thats why Douglass called free speech the greatest moral renovator of society and government. Without it, people who were oppressed and subjugated could not call public attention to their plight. Lacking other resources and privileges, free speech was their only weapon. If you took that away, they had nothing. [page 20]

If youre sympathetic to censorship, perhaps to ideas you may despise, you have to contend with the aforementioned world changers. Zimmerman cites another piercing Douglass quote:

To suppress free speech is a double wrong. It violates the rights of the hearer as well as those of the speaker It is just as criminal to rob a man of his right to speak and hear as it would be to rob him of money. (page 23)

At the far end of censorship lies this fundamental truth that the greatest movements towards justice and equality are hampered. Weve learned from the sins of the past in our own nations history(and watch these sins continue in the present with many countries where free speech is far from empowered) that this suppression is objectively wrong in Douglass words a double wrong violating the rights of the hearer as well as those of the speaker.

And for those still sympathetic to censorship for those really unethical, unscientific, and corruptibly contempt ideas/speech beware! Gagging the movement only gives it power. Zimmerman gives us a number of examples in the text where censorship only fueled fire to the movement. One in particular was Margaret Sanger and the contraception movement. In her magazine The Woman Rebel, she claimed women have the right to be an un-married mother the right to destroy The right to create The right to live The right to love It also published information on contraception all resulting in indictment, four counts of obscenity, and a potential 45 year jail sentence for which she would flee the country.

Upon her return when the charges were later dropped, she would go to a speaking engagement in St. Louis where city officials urged the venue theatre to disallow her in the door.Zimmerman urges us to consider the result: the next day, a local newspaper declared that shutting out Sanger had aroused more popular interest than her speech would have done (page 28).

Perhaps this should be a warning to academia and Big Tech that every time they muzzle what Zuckerberg or Woke University finds contemptible they are just fueling the fire of these movements.

Throughout the book, Zimmerman lays out how important the 1st Amendment has been in allowing us to criticize our leaders (Chapter 1), allowing minorities/women/LGBTQ/working-class American challenging their oppression (Chapter 2), allowing us to create art, film, and literature (Chapter 3), allowing students and teachers to speak their minds at school (Chapter 4).

In Chapter 3, I thoroughly enjoyed Zimmermans tour through the 1900s with some case studies ofpoems, books, and even pornography that many found obscene (can you imagine what they would think today?). Through these case studies, were again reminded that all have a right to their own moral standards, but censoring not only fuels the demand, but amounts to something else for the censors. In Zimmermans words, they simply wanted to impose their morality on someone else, which is the essence of censorship in all times and places (page 50).

One assertively supporting censorship becomes an exemplar of self-refutation, for such view requires use of free speech to condemn it; not to mention hypocritical as it ultimately amounts to their views should be limited as they could be harmful, just not mine. AndZimmermans mic drop:

If you believe in free speech, you have to guarantee it for everyone. Full stop. And when you start to make exceptions, watch out! The next time, the censors maybe coming for you. Sadly we keep forgetting that lesson so we have to re-learn it, over and over again (page 70).

Amen.

Zimmermans book is an outstanding and accessible read. The par excellence artwork, done by Signa Wilkinson, brings the concepts to life in a profound way. In this brief eighty-three page text lay a goldmine of fantastic historical resources on the matter, along with a relevant warning for the present day (and tomorrow).

Censorship is weak-minded and hypocritical. It violates the golden rule (and if by the government, the 1st Amendment) and ultimately empowers the muzzled. The remedy for bad ideas is good ideas. And nobody wants to watch a fixed fight let ideas stand on their own merits. If you disagree and have the heart, engage and convince. If youre morally offended/outraged, youre not required to engage/consume. Express your rights, but dont violate others and their ability to engage/consume/ideate/speak.

Progress, and actualizing human potential, is just not possible without free speech. Neither is freedom, for that matter.

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EDITORIAL: Where do the limits of student free speech lie? – Knight Crier

Posted: at 4:34 am

Milan Varia

There has always been a challenge with freedom of speech when it comes to students. But, how do these issues affect student journalists?

The Supreme Court may have ruled Mahanoy Area School District v. B.L. in favor of the student, Brandi Levy. However, answers were absent. This was not a step forward in the right direction but merely a step to the side.

No solution to the problem provides leeway for schools to punish other students for actions that could be exposing school issues.

The situation started when Levy got suspended from her school for posting profane words to her Snapchat story, which portrayed poor views on the school. It asked the question of how much authority schools had on off-campus and online school-related incidents. While ruling in favor of Levy, the court also held that schools could restrict any speech that would obstruct schooling environments. This begs another question: what are the limits of the student journalist?

For those in school, reporting is often done on important school board decisions and issues that need exposure. If a student publishes an investigative piece, and the student body rallies behind the article, the student may receive punishment.

While this may seem like a stretch, student journalists have had their content censored before. At Maury High School in Norfolk, Virginia, students were forced to take down a filmed report on their schools infrastructure. The schools building was aging poorly and had not seen many renovations since 1910. Students on the paper felt as if they were pointing out the obvious, but all that is left of the report is a link that no longer works. The school said the teacher in the video said things that violated the schools policies.

At first, this might seem to justify the reasoning behind the censorship. However, Mark Goodman, a professor of scholastic journalism at Kent State University and former executive director at the Student Press Law Center said if the story was accurate, there is no educational reason to take the video down. Del. Chris Hurst, a Democratic delegate from Southwest Virginia, also agreed that this was not a justified removal and felt that this censorship was beyond pale.

The school silenced the voice of the journalist. This punishment does not reflect on the students record, but it is the removal of free speech. In this situation, student reporters are covering a serious school concern that directly affects all current and incoming students, but their voice was silenced.

At Radford University, a school faculty member stole 800 newspapers written by the student staff. The cover story was about a professor who had recently passed away- telling his story in his memorial. The school cited that they found it could be too soon and triggering. Inherently, the action of the students is not offensive in any way. Yet schools are still stopping the spread of their voices.

These two issues are a small representation of a larger problem that has plagued the voices of students who want to be the light. This not only disempowers student journalists but also extends to those in things like activism clubs and student political associations.

Some may argue the courts decision provides an example to follow, but the lines of student free speech are very blurry. If there is a lack of clear-cut solutions, schools can continue to take advantage of the student journalist. The student could take legal action, but it will just perpetuate a tiring cycle that lacks clarity.

With no new answer, test, or standard, issues like this are bound to persist.

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Conceal and Carry Restrictions Can Help Protect Freedom of Expression – nyclu.org

Posted: at 4:34 am

The Supreme Court is set to hear arguments in an important legal challenge to New Yorks concealed carry law. The law requires people registering for concealed carry gun licenses to demonstrate proper cause in order to do so, and in particular to demonstrate a specific need for self-defense if they seek to carry a gun for that purpose.

The question in the case is whether the Second Amendment permits New York to restrict the carriage of firearms in this manner. The meaning, intent and reach of the Second Amendment remain a matter of deep controversy, but the Supreme Court has made clear that Second Amendment rights are not absolute. Regulations on carrying guns in public, both open and concealed, have been common measures throughout American history as a means of maintaining peace and safety in public places. On September 21, the ACLU and the New York Civil Liberties Union filed a friend-of-court brief in the Supreme Court in New York State Rifle & Pistol Association v. Bruen, arguing that New Yorks limits on carrying guns in public spaces are constitutional. In particular, we argued that states have an important, and historically grounded, interest in restricting the carrying of guns in order to make public spaces safe for democratic participation, including First Amendment activity such as assembly, association, and speech.

What important First Amendment interests are at stake when it comes to carrying guns in public? We sat down with David Cole, ACLU national legal director and Perry Grossman, senior staff attorney with the New York Civil Liberties Union, to address some key questions.

How and why are concealed carry restrictions a First Amendment issue?

States have many justifications for regulating the public carrying of weapons, concealed or otherwise, but one especially important justification is that such restrictions can facilitate civic engagement by promoting safety in public spaces and reducing the chances that any disagreements do not lead to lethal violence.

Democratic self-governance depends on the free-flowing, sometimes heated exchange of ideas, including views that may be shocking, upsetting, or infuriating. Streets, sidewalks, parks, and other public spaces are essential spaces for airing views that may be controversial or unpopular. When people dont know who may be carrying a concealed weapon, but know that state law allows most, if not all, people to do so, they may rightly fear voicing opinions or assembling with groups that may be controversial or unpopular. One cannot know whether or when an armed person will turn to violence in response to a remark that offends them. Regulating concealed weapons in public promotes robust public debate and even harsh criticism by reducing the likelihood that heated arguments will escalate to intimidation and violence.

What is your response to concerns that criminal laws restricting the possession and carrying of guns continue to be disproportionately applied against Black people?

Black and Brown communities are undeniably disproportionately targeted, policed, and harmed by our criminal legal system, and there is no reason to believe gun law enforcement is any exception. We condemn such discrimination. Discriminatory law enforcement, of gun laws or any other laws, violates the Equal Protection Clause, and warrants serious attention from courts, the police, and our political leaders. But the question presented here is whether the Second Amendment prohibits the states from imposing any restrictions on carrying guns in public, regardless of their motivation or enforcement. Research shows that Black communities are disproportionately harmed by gun violence and that restrictions on gun possession can reduce that harm. Where criminal laws governing firearm possession are either motivated by discrimination or enforced in discriminatory ways, those laws should be challenged under the Equal Protection Clause and other anti-discrimination laws. At the same time, states should not be prohibited from enacting gun restrictions that can reduce injuries and deaths.

Have the ACLU and NYCLU historically advocated proactively on Second Amendment issues? If not, why now?

Until recently, Second Amendment jurisprudence was fairly well-settled and stable. Given the amendments reference to a well regulated Militia and the security of a free State, the courts for nearly 100 years took the position that the Second Amendment protected only a collective right, not an individual right. That longstanding view was upended in 2008 when the Supreme Court in District of Columbia v. Heller ruled that the Second Amendment protected an individual right to possess common firearms in the home for self-defense. Two years later, in McDonald v. City of Chicago, the court ruled that the Second Amendment also limited the ability of state and local governments to restrict possession of common firearms in the home. So Second Amendment jurisprudence at the Supreme Court is still in its infancy. This is only the third gun rights case the court will decide since the early 20th century.

We filed a brief with the Supreme Court because in our view, this Second Amendment case has important free speech and First Amendment implications.

Is there a meaningful difference between concealed carry and open carry in terms of their effect on public life?

Whether carried openly or concealed, weapons in public places present safety risks that can inhibit the full exercise of First Amendment rights. Where states have adopted more permissive public carry laws, there have been recent examples of guns interfering with free speech, free assembly, and even the democratic process itself. Open carry can disrupt the public square through the intimidating display of lethal weapons. For example, in 2020, armed protesters forced the suspension of the activities of democratically-elected state legislatures in Michigan and Oregon.

Permissive concealed carry laws can have similarly pernicious consequences. People carrying concealed weapons have used their guns to threaten, injure, or kill people or disrupt speakers and protests espousing views with which they disagreed. Permissive concealed carry can deter people from speaking freely, protesting, or otherwise engaging in civic life by undermining confidence in the safety of spaces where public exchange takes place. Concealed carry restrictions will reduce the fear of intimidation and violence that can deter people from participating in civic life in public places.

What research supports the link between the proliferation of guns and a chilling effect on the exercise of First Amendment speech and assembly rights?

An analysis of more than 30,000 public demonstrations in the United States between January 2020 and June 2021 found that protests in which people are carrying arms are more than six times as likely to escalate into violence or destruction as unarmed demonstrations. The relatively greater eruption of violence or destruction at armed protests is consistent with social science research on the weapons effect, showing that the presence of weapons is likely to make both the carrier and non-carrier more aggressive. Research aggregated by the Harvard Injury Control Research Center shows that the presence of guns can escalate arguments into incidents of intimidation and violence and the utility of guns as instruments of self-defense may be limited. Research further shows that most Americans are not impervious to the psychological effects of guns in their community, and that by a margin of more than three to one, more guns make others in the community feel less safe rather than more safe, with women and members of minority groups substantially more likely to report feeling less safe than men and whites.

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Letter: Kids with speech issues have right to free therapy – The Westerly Sun

Posted: at 4:34 am

A friend who knows that I am an advocate for child speech therapy e-mailed me the compelling letter to the editor from Michael Niemeyer of Westerly that titled Tell legislators early intervention needs help. Mr. Niemeyer made the strong argument for more funding and attention for the Early Intervention program, as special needs children need a variety of therapies, such as physical therapy and speech therapy. I thought that his statement of how a society treats its most vulnerable was powerful. If I may, I would like to point out something in terms of therapy for children which may interest Sun readers.

Parents of children with speech issues should know that every child in the U.S. has the right to FREE speech therapy due to federal legislation passed 43 years ago. The free therapy can begin in preschool and run throughout the high school years. It covers all the types of speech problems. A brochure titled Special Education Law and Children Who Stutter is available for download on the website of the Stuttering Foundation (www.stutteringhelp.org), a site which has great resources for children and adults who stutter. Again, the free speech therapy encompasses all speech problems, and not just stuttering. If more parents knew about this amazing benefit of free speech therapy, then more children could be helped.

It is saddening that in the last 12 years while the topic of national health care policy has been prominent in the news that no media outlet ever once mentioned this amazing benefit of free speech therapy. The U.S. has the best policy in the world for children with the speech problems, even better than some nations with well-known socialized medicine policies. There are so many different speech problems that plague the lives of children. Kids need this free speech therapy.

Ed Herrington

Naples, Fla.

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Supreme Court will likely kill Roe v. Wade and gun restriction laws this term – MSNBC

Posted: at 4:34 am

Its opening day for the most important court in the land, the U.S. Supreme Court. While there might not be a marching band present to usher in the first day of the new term on Monday, there will surely be some fireworks this Supreme Court season.

This year we barely had time to miss the Supreme Court.

This year we barely had time to miss the Supreme Court. Typically, justices sign our yearbooks in June with a perfunctory HAGS! (Have a Great Summer!) and disappear for months as they give well-paid speeches in far-off places. This year, they stuck around, busying themselves with many so-called shadow docket decisions. They allowed Texas restrictive abortion law to go into effect and gave a big thumbs down to President Joe Bidens attempt to extend the federal eviction moratorium and to his effort to end former President Trumps Remain in Mexico policy.

Now they return to their regularly scheduled programming. Theyve already set oral arguments in a number of key cases that could reshape our legal and political landscape and exacerbate societys existing fault lines.

On Dec. 1, the court will hear arguments about the constitutionality of Mississippis law, which bans almost all abortions after 15 weeks of pregnancy. The law is at odds with current Supreme Court precedent, set almost 30 years ago in a case called Planned Parenthood v. Casey, in which the court upheld the essential holding of its landmark decision in 1973 in Roe v. Wade. The Casey court held that once a fetus is viable, states can ban abortions, but pre-viability, states can only implement restrictions that do not present an undue burden on a womans ability to obtain an abortion.

Because fetal viability typically begins at about 24 weeks of pregnancy, there seems to be no way to honestly square Mississippis law banning abortions at 15 weeks of pregnancy, with the Casey standard. Twenty-four weeks is more than 15 weeks, and a ban is more than an undue burden. By agreeing to review Mississippis abortion law, at least four members of the court have almost certainly signaled that theyre comfortable overturning Roe and Casey. That number is likely closer to six, the same number that voted to allow Texas abortion law to remain in effect.

On Nov. 3, the court will hear arguments in the second most controversial and consequential question facing justices this term: whether the state of New York can mandate that people who want to obtain a license to carry a concealed gun show good reason, such as self-defense.

The Supreme Court, much to the chagrin of some of its more conservative justices, has largely shied away from taking big Second Amendment cases since it struck down a District of Columbia law in 2008 that banned the carrying of unregistered handguns and barred the registration of handguns, but allowed the chief of police to issue one-year licenses for handguns. The D.C. law also required that people who legally own registered firearms keep them in a nonfunctional state (for instance by binding them with trigger locks) in the home. Justice Antonin Scalia, writing for a majority of the court, famously concluded that the Second Amendment includes an individual right to bear arms, as opposed to a right given only to the militia, and that this right includes the ability to own a functional gun in ones home for self-defense.

The courts decision in the gun case it will hear Nov. 3 will tell us how much power states have to restrict a persons ability to carry a gun outside of the home. In addition to New York, California, Delaware, Hawaii, Maryland, Massachusetts, New Jersey and Rhode Island also place restrictions on the carrying of concealed weapons outside the home. All of those laws could be on the chopping block.

The court will be addressing much more than abortion and gun control this term.

On Wednesday, the court will consider whether the government can prevent a prisoner at Guantnamo Bay from obtaining information in a suit against CIA contractors who tortured him. The legal issue in the case is whether the government can use the state secrets privilege to prevent the release of national security information. The courts decision could affect other pending cases, such as the separate case of five men being charged in the U.S. Military Tribunal at Guantnamo Bay for aiding the men who perpetrated the Sept. 11 attacks.

The court will be addressing much more than abortion and gun control this term.

A week later, on Oct. 13, the court will hear arguments in a case concerning Dzhozhar Tsarnaez, who, along with his brother, is one of the two Boston Marathon bombers. Tsarnaezs death sentence was thrown out by an appeals court because the trial court failed to ask potential jurors about the media coverage they had consumed about the case and excluded evidence from the sentencing phase about his brothers involvement in a separate murder case. The Supreme Court will determine if the death sentence should be reinstated.

November will be First Amendment month at the Supreme Court as justices hear one case addressing the freedom of religion and two dealing with the scope of the free speech clause. On the first of that month, the court will hear the case of death row inmate John Ramirez, who claims, in part, that he has a constitutionally protected right to have his Baptist pastor put his hands on him and pray out loud while he is put to death. Texas has thus far denied those requests. The previous cases to reach the court in this area address whether a death row inmate can have a spiritual advisor present in the execution chamber, not what actions that advisor can take once inside.

On Thursday the court agreed to hear a challenge filed by a Christian group, Camp Constitution, against the city of Boston. Camp Constitution wanted to use a City Hall flag pole to raise its flag, which bears a Latin cross. What about the separation of church and state? you ask. Well, Camp Constitution complains that Boston allows tons of other groups to use its flag poles, such as those celebrating gay pride and Juneteenth. Both lower courts to review the case ruled in favor of the city.

In a case regarding the free speech clause of the First Amendment, on Nov. 2, the court will consider the Houston Community College Systems Board of Trustees public censure of one of its members for things he said about the other board members. That member claimed the censure violated his First Amendment rights, a claim the federal district court dismissed, finding that the censure was no more than a statement of the boards dissatisfaction. The court of appeals disagreed. The case asks more broadly whether a local elected body has the power to censure one of its members as a result of that members speech.

And there is another yet-to-be-scheduled case dealing with the free speech clause, this one addressing the ever-expanding problem of money and politics. When Texas Sen. Ted Cruz loaned money to his re-election campaign in 2018, he admits he did so to challenge a federal law that caps at $250,000 the amount of money candidates can raise post-election to repay their personal loans to the campaign. Cruz loaned his campaign $260,000 the day before the election and wants to be able to raise money after the election to pay back his full $260,000 loan. He says the law violates the First Amendment by burdening political speech without a sufficient reason. The government says the law is necessary to prevent corruption or the appearance of corruption that could occur when candidates fundraise after the election to help retire their personal debts to the campaign.

This is the Supreme Courts first full term with its new six-to-three conservative majority.

This is the Supreme Courts first full term with its new list of players and a solid six-to-three conservative majority. Justice Amy Coney Barrett was sworn in a few weeks after last years term began.

Only fools make predictions, so here we go. Ten months from now, when the courts term ends, Roe and Casey will no longer be the law of the land. They will either be expressly or implicitly eviscerated. States will no longer possess the authority to restrict peoples ability to carry concealed weapons outside the home, or that authority will be severely narrowed. Cruz, and his colleagues, will be able to raise as much money as they want after an election to repay their personal loans to their campaigns.

There are other consequential cases that the court will consider that could change our understanding of the contours of the First Amendment and the state secrets privilege. But if the only two cases the court heard all term were the abortion and gun control cases, we can already predict that thanks to at least five people in a country of almost 330 million, our world is about to look a lot different.

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Supreme Court will likely kill Roe v. Wade and gun restriction laws this term - MSNBC

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Using transdisciplinary approaches to find solutions to wicked problems – Times of Malta

Posted: at 4:33 am

A conference on the theme Transdisciplinary approaches for societal change how different backgrounds come together to address wicked problems will be held in Malta on November 13 from 9am to 5.30pm. The conference, which is aimed at educators, researchers, artists, entrepreneurs and innovators, will conclude the four-year SciCulture project funded under the Erasmusplus programme.

The project is led by the University of Malta in partnership with Science View, Greece; the University of Exeter, UK; the University of Bergen, Norway; and Delft University of Technology, The Netherlands.

Its aim was to nurture transdisciplinarity and innovative problem-solving through the blending of arts, science and entrepreneurship. The organisers said that during this last leg of the projects four-year journey, the conference will look at: what has emerged from the project participants attempts to respond to wicked problems; how innovative pedagogical approaches unified different backgrounds in the search for a common goal; and how design- thinking can support creativity and transdisciplinarity in an effort to go beyond individuality.

The conference will focus on three areas: 1) Collaboration, creativity and innovation in education; 2) Responsible research and innovation (RRI) in education and research; and 3) Posthumanism for problem-solving and innovative pedagogies.

The conference will consist of presentations by international keynote speakers, workshops and roundtables, and will offer participants the opportunity to network and discuss with other professionals from various fields. Participants will also have the opportunity to learn about SciCultures toolkit, which helps to integrate transdisciplinarity, design and creative pedagogies in courses. The project is supported by the European Commission and is funded under the EUs Erasmusplus programme. Participation in the conference is free but places are limited. Anyone interested in taking part is to register before October 29 via the link https://www.eventbrite.com/e/end-of-project-conference-tickets-171768593487.

For further details, visit the website below or the projects Facebook page.

http://www.sciculture.eu

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Using transdisciplinary approaches to find solutions to wicked problems - Times of Malta

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New Zealand: The struggle to find a decent home – Al Jazeera English

Posted: at 4:32 am

Wellington, New Zealand Tougher rules for property investors and speculators came into force this month in New Zealand, as part of a government effort to tackle the countrys worsening housing crisis.

Under the new law, property investors will no longer be able to deduct mortgage interest from their taxable incomes

The government is trying to focus on re-establishing housings primary role as a home rather than a financial asset and address the countrys housing shortage, soaring property prices, and homelessness.

The move follows a rise in house values of 145 percent during the past 10 years, according to Real Estate Institute New Zealand. Rental rates have also risen by 37 percent in the last 10 years, according to Statistics New Zealand.

As of 2018, 42,000 people in the country were living without shelter, or in temporary or shared accommodation and Ministry of Social Development figures suggest more than 23,000 people are on the public housing register.

The dire situation has already attracted the interest of the Human Rights Commission, which in August announced plans to conduct a national inquiry into housing.

Chief Human Rights Commissioner Paul Hunt says over the last 50 years successive governments have failed the New Zealand public.

In the 1970s there was a Royal Commission of inquiry into housing, which led to the creation of a national housing council that was disbanded just 10 years later.

Looking back this was an important body that had oversight of the growing problem, he said. We took the eye off the ball and left everything to market forces.

The Human Rights Commission doesnt favour a public or private approach thats for the government of the day to decide, but whatever approach is chosen it must deliver and in recent years theres no doubt whatsoever it has failed.

Traditionally, New Zealand has been active in drafting international human rights law including the right to a decent home but it has not been so good at bringing those rights back home, he says.

These treaties have been ratified, so theyre legally binding but somehow theres an attack of amnesia when politicians and officials fly back home over the Pacific, he said.

The right to enjoy a safe, secure, decent home is critically important for wellbeing. Without a decent home, its very difficult for people to be active members of society.

Al Jazeera spoke to some New Zealanders about their experience of finding a home.

Jim* was living on the streets of Wellington, New Zealands capital when Al Jazeera spoke to him. He had been homeless for more than two weeks but was hoping to move in with family in another part of the country.

Jim has been on sickness benefit since he was hit in the back of the head with an axe five years ago, he says. He does not remember the circumstances leading up to the accident other than waking up in a hospital where he was told he was lucky to be alive.

He has been in and out of public housing since the accident, but securing permanent financial help has proved difficult because his head injury means he will never be able to work.

Jim found himself without a roof over his head after a stint in a halfway house came to an end.

It was his first time on the streets, but he said people tended to be helpful providing food, daily showers, and the homeless community had been welcoming.

You really just want to be left alone and not harassed. Im taking it day by day. Ive got good shoes, a blanket, and Im as comfortable as I can be.

Engineer Benjamin Duyvesteyn, 25, moved to Raglan on New Zealands North Island for a two-year stint but in April 2020 when his relationship with his brother deteriorated, he moved into a tent.

Working a number of odd jobs and with no rooms available in Raglan, he says, it made more sense to live in a campground for 15 New Zealand dollars ($10.40) a night than to move to Auckland, the countrys biggest city, and pay between 200 and 250 New Zealand dollars ($138.65 and $173.33) a week to live in what he describes as a shoebox.

Duyvesteyn ended up living under canvas for 10 months.

It wasnt great. Ive definitely had better times in my life, he told Al Jazeera. The campground didnt have any washing equipment or hot water. It was freezing over winter. I would use a laundromat in town to wash my clothes. Id use a battery pack to charge my phone. If it rained I wouldnt be able to get dry before going to bed.

There were rats the size of cats. Once I found a rat inside my tent so thats why I would basically live out of the supermarket and buy each meal each day. But it was something I had to do. I was working full time so it meant I saved a bit of money.

Duyvesteyn moved in with friends in early 2021.

Kelly-Jayne Ferry and her two daughters had been living in the Mount Victoria area of Wellington, the capital, for three years when their property manager gave them 42 days notice that the lease would not be renewed.

Im very sad to leave our home, Ferry told Al Jazeera. After renting for so many years Im left with this constant lingering fear at the back of my mind that we might have to move again soon, which has meant Ive never really invested in making a place nice.

The search for a new place that is suitable, affordable, and close to the girls school has been sobering, she says.

The lack of cohesion between pricing and quality has blown me away, Ferry told Al Jazeera. Its depressing. You may view a house where the paint is peeling, the walls are filthy, and nothings been done to it for 50 years, and with little sunlight. And then you view a place thats a beautiful ocean view apartment and its the same price. Wheres the line, and how does that work?

Ferry found few properties available and that what was on offer was generally designed for young professionals who were able to pay up to 300 New Zealand dollars ($208.89) per week for a room in a house or tiny apartment.

Landlords will often push the limits of what they can get away with, Ferry says.

I really feel sorry for people who dont know what the law is, or if they dont have the confidence to speak up. But even if you do speak up, theres always the chance youll jeopardise your wellbeing and the safety of having a home because in challenging them youve given them a reason to kick you out, she said.

Ferrys move was delayed as a result of COVID-19, but she and her children have now found a warm and dry house in Roseneath, a suburb of Wellington.

So life is good, until next time we have to move!

Freelance video editor Rachel Lydia Barker, 26, has spent her adult life renting flats or houses, but as a result of COVID-19 she is now living with her parents in Wellington.

Barker is from a middle-class, reasonably wealthy background.

She inherited some money from her grandparents, and her parents have been saving since she was born, but despite having a huge amount of help, the cost of living relative to house prices means she cannot afford to buy a house in the city.

Barker says it would be cheaper to service a mortgage than to rent, but there is no way she will be able to save enough money for a deposit. Of course Id prefer to pay off a mortgage than be paying the same amount in rent with the possibility of being displaced at any point.

She is planning on going to Australia to join her sister, who has just bought an apartment in Melbourne. Barkers sister realised she would earn substantially more abroad and after two-and-a-half years, in addition, to help from her family, she secured a deposit.

My parents are pretty heartbroken. Theyre English and decided to move to New Zealand for a better quality of life. I was eight at the time and New Zealand used to be a haven. It still is in many ways but the cost of living is increasingly similar if not more than cities such as New York or London and without some of the perks those cities have to offer.

Nigel Mander, a former professional clown in his sixties, has been renting since his mother passed away 12 years ago.

After travelling the world, he moved into a derelict shop and lived there for five years. I didnt publicise it too much as I didnt want to get offside with the [municipality]. There was wiring and water damage, the roof leaked, but it was cheap and it worked until the owner chucked me out.

Ever since Mander has led a transitory life moving from house to house at the mercy of various landlords and friends, but he says he has no regrets.

My living situation hasnt been very stable and its left me with underlying feelings of insecurity but I dont let it get me down. I tend to throw caution to the wind and I press on regardless. Ive never been much of a saver and Ive travelled extensively.

We need to change peoples attitudes around housing. It shouldnt be about owning your own castle or having properties as investments, but rather if youve got a spare room or a spare house, there might be people and lonely people who could use the company who would be grateful for the accommodation. The community aspect is lacking, I think.

There are certainly enough houses to go around, but when greed comes into play, where people decide to own 20 houses or to keep them empty because its less hassle than renting them out, thats what I have a problem with.

Writer Murdoch Stephens, 40, has been living in rented accomodation since he was 18.

In the spring of 2019, he was sharing a flat n Mount Victoria one of Wellingtons wealthier suburbs with five others when the area made headlines after being infested with monster rats.

At the time he was having challenges with the flat rent had increased by 18 percent and there were infrastructural issues, but he could not get in touch with the landlord. It became a joke that perhaps the landlord was a giant rat living in the garden, which became the premise for his book, Rat King Landlord.

What we dont talk about are the subtle consequences of the housing crisis; people staying in relationships that they shouldnt for fear of changing their living situation, or fragmented communities because people are shuttling from suburb to suburb, for example.

As a writer, you dont make much money at the best of times, but I particularly worry about younger people who increasingly dont have the opportunity to pursue creative careers because the cost of living means its not an option.

Stephens is not interested in disparaing landlords, politicians, or personalising the issue. The housing problem is structural and will take a paradigm shift in thinking to fix, he says.

Everyone is short-changed in this environment. We dont have the language to change it or any language that articulates a collective response.

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New Zealand: The struggle to find a decent home - Al Jazeera English

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