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Daily Archives: February 7, 2022
Duke basketball overreaction post of the week: AJ Griffin is best of all time – Ball Durham
Posted: February 7, 2022 at 6:53 am
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Duke basketball forward AJ Griffin (Rob Kinnan-USA TODAY Sports)
If Duke basketball is going to reach its full potential this season, AJ Griffins ascension into stardom will be the reason why.
In this new weekly column, we take extremely small and isolated samples of Duke basketballs highs and lows and exaggerate the hell out of them. What they become are season-altering occurrences with consequences that could shape the history of the Blue Devils for all time. It should be fun
Duke basketball has had no shortage of great players. The select few from days gone by and earlier eras get to have their names and jerseys immortalized in the rafters, looming large in the lofty environs of Cameron Indoor Stadium for all to see.
For the younger iterations of Duke Blue Devils, who have come during the one-and-done era or seek the lucrative embrace of the NBA ASAP instead of sticking around for four years, their seasonal contributions and draft rankings mark the places they occupy in Duke basketball lore.
Recently under Mike Krzyzewski, there has been no shortage of lottery picks, max-contract players, and soon-to-be or already there All-Star and All-NBA standouts who once graced the court in Durham. Kyrie Irving, Brandon Ingram, Jayson Tatum, Zion Williamson, and RJ Barrett are all known by singular monikers in many pro-hoops circles and in reverent tones among the Duke basketball ones.
One player from this squad who is not named Paolo Banchero but is still poised to join these ranks, and even ascend all the way to the top, is AJ Griffin. Although the sample size is becoming less and less small with each passing game, the eye-popping potential that drips from every jump shot or explodes from every kiss-the-sky rebound or dunk continues to be just as special as it was the first time we saw it.
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Duke basketball overreaction post of the week: AJ Griffin is best of all time - Ball Durham
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Man Sells Everything, Wagers it All on One Spin of Roulette Wheel – 973thedawg.com
Posted: at 6:53 am
Thanks to movies and television we've all seen dramatic interpretations of what might happen if someone actually decided to make a huge change in their financial lives by betting everything they own at the casinos of Las Vegas. Chances are almost every one of us who has entered a casino to play a game has thought about what it would be like to wager it all and win it all.
Kaysha via Unsplash.com
You notice how none of us plays the tape all the way to the end where the other option in this "bet all strategy" could unfold. You know the option where we lose everything when our wager doesn't pan out. The fact is most of us don't walk into a casino with the idea in mind that we are going to make or break our financial future. Most of us just go for a good time, a chance to win a little money, and maybe slam a huge buffet dinner.
Then again, most of us aren't Ashley Revell.
Ashley actually had the bright idea to sell all of his possessions and see if he could double his money at the roulette wheel. So, he sold all of his clothes, his car, his house, and then he gathered his money from his bank account and flew to Las Vegas.
His plan was to take his entire personal net worth and bet it on one spin of the roulette wheel. The amount of money that Ashely was going to risk was $135,300 in American currency.
When the story broke of Revell's plans to bet it all on one spin it was picked up by the television network Sky One from the U.K. Revell, a Londoner, agreed to let the television network film his experience and he even let the network's viewers help him choose what his bet would be.
The entire experience was turned into a televisionseries called Double or Nothing. And you can see exactly what happened when Revell decided to bet it all on red at the Plaza Hotel and Casino in Las Vegas.
The events we've just chronicled for you actually happened back in 2004. Revell was back in Las Vegas to commemorate the anniversary of his big win and to help promote a new single zero roulette table at the casino. He even placed a wager on the new table but it wasn't nearly as large as the wager he made all those years sooner.
Revell's adventure also spawned a television game show that was created and produced by Simon Cowell of American Idol fame. That show was called Red or Black?
For his trouble, Revell earned just over $270,600 bucks. He used his financial windfall to invest in an online poker company. That didn't pay off as well as his single bet on roulette did though. He also used some of the prize money to travel across Europe where he met his future wife. So, I guess you could call him a big winner in more ways than one.
The most expensive home in America is for sale and it's called "The One".
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Man Sells Everything, Wagers it All on One Spin of Roulette Wheel - 973thedawg.com
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Holy Cross and Ben Franklin boys, SSA and Lusher girls among teams advancing to state soccer quarterfinals – crescentcitysports.com
Posted: at 6:53 am
Four-time defending Division II state champion Holy Cross has rolled into the quarterfinals.
Brilliant senior Ryan Jeanfreau continued his tremendous season, recording a hat trick as the second-seeded Tigers whipped No. 15 South Terrebonne 5-1 Saturday.
Ethan Carney and Stephen Treadaway each added a goal for the Tigers.
Holy Cross (20-6-1) advances to host a familiar opponent in No. 7 Ben Franklin.
The Falcons downed No. 10 Bonnabel 2-1 at Tad Gormley Stadium. It was the second one-goal win for the Falcons over the Bruins. Ben Franklin edged Bonnabel 1-0 on Jan. 19.
Armand Duplantier provided the game-winner in the second extra time period on an assist from James Fleming
Bonnabel (11-6-3) took the early lead as Fernando Polanco scored just over a minute into the match.
Ben Franklin (16-5-4) got the equalizer from Fleming nearly seven minutes later and the match stayed that way until Duplantier put in the winning goal.
Emile Creevy was excellent in-goal for the Falcons.
Holy Cross defeated Ben Franklin 2-0 on Jan. 25.
In girls Division I action, No. 6 St. Scholastica edged District 5-I rival and No. 11 Mandeville 2-1 at Hunter Stadium. It was the second win for SSA over the Skippers this season. The Doves won 2-0 on Jan. 24.
After three overtime periods, Kay Keergosien finally got the winning goal to send the Doves to the quarterfinals.
After a scoreless first half, Mandeville (18-11-1) took the lead in the second half on a goal by Caroline Fielding. The Doves got even on a goal by Shelby Donahue, sending the game to overtime.
SSA (15-6-1) advances to travel to another district rival in No. 3 Northshore in the quarterfinals. The Lady Panthers shut out No. 14 Southside 5-0. The Lady Panthers edged the Doves 2-1 on Jan. 18.
In Division III, No. 7 Lusher Charter blanked No. 10 Sterlington 3-0 at Tad Gormley Stadium.
Sydni Sanders opened the scoring in the seventh minute with a goal and carried a 1-0 lead into halftime.
Camille Eisele added a pair of second half goals to provide the margin of victory.
Lusher (14-1-2) advances to the quarterfinals to face the winner of todays match #2 Loyola Prep and No. 15 E.D. White Catholic.
Bi-District Prep Soccer Playoff ResultsBoysDivision I#1 Catholic (BR) 8, John Ehret 0#16 Lafayette 6, #17 Pineville 0#9 Southside 8, #24 Airline 0#8 Archbishop Rummel 3, #25 Zachary 0#5 St. Amant 1, #28 New Iberia 0#12 Denham Springs 6, #21 Hahnville 0#13 Captain Shreve 6, #20 Mandeville 2#4 Alexandria 6, #29 Fontainebleau 1#3 St. Pauls 7, #30 East Ascension 1#14 Northshore 3, #19 West Monroe 0#11 Byrd 4, #22 H.L. Bourgeois 1#6 Sulphur 3, #27 Barbe 0#7 Brother Martin 9, #26 Walker 1#10 Dutchtown 4, #23 Central Lafourche 1#18 Baton Rouge 1, #15 Grace King 0#2 Jesuit 3, #31 Slidell 0
Division II#16 Belle Chasse 3, #17 Woodlawn (BR) 0#9 Ouachita Parish 2, #24 McKinley 1#21 Haughton 2, #12 Northwood 1#13 Live Oak 2, #20 West Ouachita 1#19 Riverdale 3, #14 Beau Chene 0#22 Lakeshore 3, #11 Archbishop Shaw 2#15 South Terrebonne 5, #18 Sam Houston 0
Division III#16 Parkview Baptist 3, #17 Sterlington 1#9 Leesville 2, #24 Lutcher 0#12 North Vermilion 2, #21 Cecilia 1#13 Haynes Academy 1, #20 E.D. White Catholic 0#14 Loyola Prep 4, #19 DeRidder 2 (OT)#11 David Thibodaux 6, #22 Belaire 0#10 Archbishop Hannan 8, #23 Erath 0#15 New Orleans Military & Maritime 3, #18 Kenner Discovery 0
Division IV#16 St. Charles Catholic 1, #17 Lafayette Christian 0#9 Morris Jeff Community 5, #24 Evangel Christian Academy 1#12 Grace Christian 1, #21 St. Frederick 0#20 Catholic (NI) 2, #13 Westminster Christian 1#14 Country Day 3, #19 Covenant Christian 1#11 Holy Savior Menard 5, #22 Rapides 1#10 Newman 8, #23 Glenmora 0#18 St. Thomas Aquinas 1, #15 Dunham 0
GirlsDivision I#1 Dominican 8, #32 H.L. Bourgeois 0#17 Hahnville 3, #16 Live Oak 1#9 Mount Carmel Academy 9, #24 New Iberia 1#8 Byrd 4, #25 Walker 0#5 Dutchtown 4, #28 East Ascension 1#12 Fontainebleau 3, #21 Acadiana 0#13 Baton Rouge 3, #20 Thibodaux 1#4 Captain Shreve 3, #29 Denham Springs 0#3 Northshore 8, #30 Ponchatoula 0#14 Southside 2, #19 Alexandria 1#11 Mandeville 2, #22 St. Amant 1#6 St. Scholastica 8, #27 Pineville 0#7 Barbe 1, #26 Airline 0#10 Lafayette 4, #23 Sulphur 0#18 Central Lafourche 3, #15 West Monroe 2#2 St. Josephs 8, #31 Zachary 0
Division II#16 Minden 2, #17 Sam Houston 0#9 Terrebonne 3, #24 Liberty 0#12 Franklin Parish 6, #21 South Terrebonne 3#13 West Ouachita 3, #20 Belle Chasse 2#14 Ouachita Parish 3, #19 East Jefferson 1#11 Haughton 2, #22 Woodlawn (BR) 1#10 Tioga 8, #23 Archbishop Chapelle 0#15 Beau Chene 5, #18 Bonnabel 3
Division III#16 Cabrini 1, #17 Haynes Academy 0#9 Lutcher 5, #24 David Thibodaux 0#12 DeRidder 1, #21 Leesville 0#13 North Vermilion 3, #20 Cecilia 0#19 Pearl River 1, #14 South Plaquemines 0#11 West Feliciana 3, #22 Brusly 0#10 Sterlington 8, #23 Patrick Taylor 1#15 E.D. White Catholic 4, #18 Grant 0
Division IV#16 Dunham 5, #17 Vermilion Catholic 1#9 McGehee 8, #24 Delta Charter 0#12 Ascension Episcopal 6, #21 Evangel Christian Academy 1#13 Covenant Christian 4, #20 Holy Savior Menard 3#19 Country Day 4, #14 Highland Baptist 1#11 Episcopal of Acadiana 7, #22 Thomas Jefferson 0#10 Grace Christian 1, #23 Westminster Christian 0#18 Northlake Christian 1, #15 St. Frederick 0
Regional Prep Playoff ResultsBoysDivision I#1 Catholic (BR) 5, #16 Lafayette 0#9 Southside 2, #8 Rummel 1#12 Denham Springs 2, #5 St. Amant 1#4 Alexandria 5, #13 Captain Shreve 1#3 St. Pauls 4, #14 Northshore 1#6 Sulphur 3, #11 Byrd 2#10 Dutchtown 2, #7 Brother Martin 1#2 Jesuit 4, Baton Rouge High 1
Division II#1 St. Thomas More 1, #16 Belle Chasse 0#9 Ouachita Parish 3, #8 Parkway 1#5 Caddo Magnet 3, #21 Haughton 1#4 Neville 4, #13 Live Oak 0#3 East Jefferson 1, #19 Riverdale 0#6 Benton 8, #22 Lakeshore 1#7 Ben Franklin 2, #10 Bonnabel 1#2 Holy Cross 5, #15 South Terrebonne 1
Division III#1 Vandebilt Catholic 6, #16 Parkview Baptist 1#9 Leesville 3, #8 St. Michael 0#12 North Vermilion 2, #5 St. Louis Catholic 0#4 Bossier 5, #13 Haynes Academy 0#3 Lusher 6, #14 Loyola Prep 1#11 David Thibodaux 2, #6 Teurlings Catholic 1#10 Archbishop Hannan (10-9-3) at #7 Morgan City (13-4-3), 4 p.m. Sunday#2University High 8, #15 New Orleans Military & Maritime 0
Division IV#1 Pope John Paul II 6, #16 St. Charles Catholic 1#9 Morris Jeff Community 3, #8 St. Martins Episcopal 0#5 Ascension Episcopal 1, #12 Grace Christian 0#4 Northlake Christian 4, #20 Catholic (NI) 0#3 Episcopal 3, #14 Country Day 2#11 Holy Savior Menard 1, No. 6 Ouachita Christian 0#10 Newman 8, #7 River Oaks 0#18 St. Thomas Aquinas 3, #2 Episcopal School of Acadiana 1
GirlsDivision I#1 Dominican 5, #17 Hahnville 1#9 Mt. Carmel Academy 1, #8 Byrd 0#5 Dutchtown 3, #12 Fontainebleau 2#13 Baton Rouge (15-9-4) at No. 4 Captain Shreve (24-1-3), 2 p.m. Sunday at Lee Hedges#3 Northshore 5, #14 Southside 0#6 St. Scholastica 2, #11 Mandeville 1#7 Barbe 1, #10 Lafayette 0#2 St. Josephs Academy 6, #18 Central Lafourche 0
Division II#1 St. Thomas More 8, #16 Minden 0#8 Ben Franklin (13-6-2) 7, #9 Terrebonne 0#5 Benton 7, #12 Franklin Parish 0#4 Neville 1, #13 West Ouachita 0#3 Vandebilt Catholic 8, #14 Ouachita Parish 0#6 Lakeshore 8, #11 Haughton 0#7 Teurlings Catholic 7, #10 Tioga 0#2 Caddo Magnet 7, #15 Beau Chene 0
Division III#16 Cabrini (8-5-3) at #1 University High (13-3-4), Noon Saturday#9 Lutcher 5, #8 North DeSoto 0#12 DeRidder (7-11-4) at #5 Archbishop Hannan (12-5-3), noon Saturday at Lakeshore#4 Parkview Baptist 2, #13 North Vermilion 0#19 Pearl River (9-8-1) at #3 St. Michael (13-4-5), noon Saturday at Burbank Complex#11 West Feliciana (15-7-1) at #6 St. Louis Catholic (12-6-4), 2 p.m. Saturday#10 Sterlington (8-6-3) at #7 Lusher Charter (13-1-2), Noon Saturday#15 E.D. White (11-12-4) at #2 Loyola Prep (11-5-4), 4 p.m. Sunday
Division IV#1 Catholic-NI 5, #16 Dunham 2#9 McGehee (13-6-2) at #8 Calvary Baptist (11-6-3), 2 p.m. Sunday#5 Pope John Paul II 4, #12 Ascension Episcopal 3#4 Ouachita Christian 3, #13 Covenant Christian 0#19 Metairie Park Country Day 2, #3 Houma Christian 1#11 Episcopal School of Acadiana 2, #6 Episcopal 1#7 Sacred Heart-NO 6, #10 Grace Christian 0#2 Newman 1, #18 Northlake Christian 0
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Charlie English’s "The Gallery of Miracles and Madness" Links Psychiatry, Modern Art, and Hitler’s War on the Mentally Ill – History News…
Posted: at 6:53 am
In the wake of the horrific slaughter of the First World War, artists struggled to make sense of the tremendous loss and suffering from the brutal industrialized war. Thanks to German psychiatrist and doctor of art history Hans Prinzhorn, many artists found inspiration in the art of mental patients that broke boundaries while expressing psychological pain and unbridled emotion without regard for convention or tradition.
Prinzhorn encouraged his psychiatric patients to draw and paint as a form of therapy, and then he published a groundbreaking collection of their work in 1922. Modern artists such as Paul Klee, Salvador Dali and Max Ernst were influenced by these raw, unfiltered images.
In the 1930s, Adolf Hitlera megalomaniac who saw himself as a great artist condemned the work of the artist-patients, as well as most forms of modernist art, as an insane deviation from the traditional realism he admired. In the late thirties, Hitlers Nazis mocked avant-garde artists and compared them with the mentally ill artists in their exhibits of Degenerate Art. And, by the early 1940s, the Nazi regime had murdered the more that 70,000 psychiatric patients, including several of Prinzhorns patient-artists, in a euthanasia program designed to exterminate so-called life unworthy of life, meaning the mentally and physically disabled. Aktion T4, as the program was known, paved the way for the Holocaust.
In his moving and riveting new book, The Gallery of Miracles and Madness: Insanity, Modernism, and Hitlers War on Art (Random House), acclaimed author Charlie English presents this complex history. He weaves together the life of Prinzhorn, his artist-patients, the rise of failed artist Hitler, eugenics and The Master Race, and the horrific Aktion T4 to advance racial hygiene and create an Aryan master race by killing those with disabilities.
Based on extensive research, Mr. Englishs book takes the reader into the lives of Prinzhorn and talented patients such as Franz Karl Bhler and Agnes Richter, and then illuminates Hitlers cruel world. The gripping storytelling creates suspense even though the reader knows of the tragedy to come.
The Gallery of Miracles and Madness is an urgent tribute to the creative spirit as it exposes the horrors of totalitarianism. Mr. English provides a humane and timely historical account with cautionary lessons for readers today and into the future.
Charlie English, a celebrated British nonfiction author, has written two previous books, The Storied City (published in the UK as The Book Smugglers of Timbuktu) and The Snow Tourist. He is a former journalist for The Guardian, where he served in several positions including arts editor and head of international news. Also, he has appeared on NPR and the BBC and written for numerous newspapers and magazines including The New York Times, The Telegraph and The Independent, and lectured at the Royal Geographical Society, where he isa Fellow. He lives in Londonwith hiswife and children.
Mr. English generously responded by email to a series of questions on his recent book.
Robin Lindley: Congratulations Mr. English on your powerful new book The Gallery of Miracles and Madness. You take a deep dive into art, psychiatry, and the policies of Nazi Germany. This book seems a departure from your previous work. What sparked your interest in this often-neglected history?
Charlie English: Thank you Robin. I realize it seems a long way from The Book Smugglers of Timbuktu, though in fact there are similarities. Both books are about culture under totalitarianism, one being set during Al Qaedas rule over Timbuktu, the other in Nazi Germany.
Im drawn to cultural stories, and when I discovered the Prinzhorn collection some years ago it seemed to speak to me. A history that directly links so many fascinating areas of twentieth century historyfrom modern arts interest in insanity to Hitlers ability as a painter to the Nazi mass-murder programswas one that I thought that deserved to be told and understood.
Robin Lindley: Your book begins with a focus on Dr. Hans Prinzhorn, a psychiatrist who collected the art of mental patients in early twentieth century Germany. He was also trained in art history. What are a few things youd like readers to know about Prinzhorn?
Charlie English: I guess youd say Prinzhorn was a Renaissance man, a war veteran, a medic, a baritone singer, an intellectual. He achieved something really astonishing in the space of two to three years, rather less time in fact than it took me to write my book. But his brilliance did not lead him to a good place, and he made a lot of poor decisions, not least his support, for a short time, for Hitler, who still seems to me to represent the polar opposite of Prinzhorns earlier work, which promoted psychiatric art as valid art. His biography shows, I think, that people are usually flawed and the truth is always complicated.
Robin Lindley: Why was Prinzhorn interested in inspiring and collecting the art of mental patients?
Charlie English: Several reasons. One is that this was an active field of enquiry for art at the start of the 20th century: Freud had revealed vast hidden depths inside every human being, and modernists saw mental illness or perhaps madness as a way to explore that, while escaping all the hated trappings of the bourgeoisie and so-called civilization.
Beyond that, Prinzhorn was psychologically fragile himself, perhaps a sufferer of PTSD, and an art critic and a medic. The stars aligned for him, you could say. His education meant he was unusually, perhaps uniquely qualified for the task of exploring the art of schizophrenic patients.
Robin Lindley: Several of the psychiatric patient artists you discuss were already recognized artists. Who are a few of the patient artists that stand out to you?
Charlie English: There are hundreds of artists in the collection, and for the book I needed to focus the story on a handful at most. The hero, if you like, is Franz Karl Bhler, an artisan-blacksmith before he was incarcerated as a schizophrenic. He had been a genius at metalworking, and won a gold medal at the Worlds Fair in Chicago in 1893, so he was trained in the design aspects of his craft, but he also managed to teach himself to become a great fine artist after his mental collapse. Others in the collection include Else Blankenhorn, a very great talent whose worked inspired Ernst Ludwig Kirchner, among others. The Surrealists favourite Prinzhorn artist was August Natterer, who depicted his psychotic episodes in his work. Like many Prinzhorn images they have an intriguing, uncanny quality.
Detail ofHexenkopf(The Witch's Head), c.1915, August Natterer
Robin Lindley: You write about how some of these mentally ill artists influenced surrealists, expressionists and other modernists. What did you learn about the influence of these ill outsider artists?
Charlie English: I was astonished by their influence over the major art movements of the time. If you think how substantial Surrealism was, for instance, and then discover how dependent those artists were on psychiatric patients art, it gives you a whole new understanding of where certain iconic twentieth century works came from. Evidence for artistic influence is often hard to pin down, as few artists are keen to discuss or write about the people they borrowed ideas from, but the Prinzhorn collections influence is really very well documented by dozens of art historians. Prinzhorns achievement, you could say, is to have expanded the idea of what art is, and widened the circle of permitted art-makers.
Robin Lindley: How did other medical professionals view Prinzhorns interest in the art of his psychiatric patients?
Charlie English: You have to remember that at the time opinion was highly polarized between arch-conservatives and the avant-garde, rather as I think it is now. Conservative psychiatrists really hated the idea that madness was polluting fine art, which they held up as something spiritual, superior, quasi-religious. The far right realised that they could capitalize on this natural distaste for the moderns.
Robin Lindley: Wasnt Prinzhorn attracted by some aspects of Nazism before his death in 1933?
Charlie English: Yes. During the economic crisis of the early 1930s there was a sense of pending catastrophe, which Hitler did his best to encourage, blaming the Jews and the left and the avant-garde. Prinzhorn, like other conservatives, felt Germany needed a strong leader, and thought Hitler could be that person. It seems very surprising given Prinzhorns earlier ideas, but he even offered to work with Hitler on a program of German cultural renewal. He was politically naive, and later realized he had made a mistake. He died soon after Hitler came to power, so we cant know what would have become of him during the period of Nazi rule.
Robin Lindley: Hitler also looms large in your book. The young Hitler was a starving artist. You stress that he saw himself as an artist through his life. Some readers may not be familiar with his actual art. How did his contemporaries see his art work and his personality?
Charlie English: As a teenager Hitler was determined to become an artist. He believed he was brilliant, of course, and that it would be childs play for someone of his great talent to get into Vienna Academy of Fine Arts, so when they rejected him, he was devastated and furious. Theres no doubt that he had some ability for drawing buildings, but he was terrible at figures. Read into it what you will, but the people in his paintings just dont seem to have interested him on any level.
After his rejection, he was homeless for a time, and made a living copying out tourist postcards depicting famous buildings, but even he would later dismiss these works as of no value. His real talentas observers from Albert Speer to Thomas Mann have pointed outwas for the art of politics, the spectacle, the rallies, the insignia, the speeches, the set designs
Robin Lindley: How did Hitlers artist persona play into his leadership style and beliefs about himself?
Charlie English: Hitler came to believe he was an artist-Fuhrer, a mythical Romantic idea for a type of leader that Germany was said to produce in times of crisis. This combined politician and seer would allegedly be able both to envisage the future of the German people and to bring it about, however abhorrent the methods. Hitlers propaganda consistently presented him in this way.
Goebbels once wrote that for the Fuhrer the people were no more difficult to work than clay was for the sculptor. It seems clear that Hitler took this almost literally, as he would try to genetically reengineer the Germans to fit his Aryan ideal.
Robin Lindley: After a failed putsch in 1923, Hitler was arrested andas you writehe was examined and diagnosed as a psychopath. What brought evaluators to this conclusion?
Charlie English: I wouldnt say this was a formal diagnosis, but the prison psychologist Alois Maria Ott spoke with him after he was admitted to the jail and described him much later as prone to hysteria and a morbid psychopath, with flecks of spittle showing around his mouth. Of course, Hitlers first great political gamble had just gone catastrophically wrong.
The issue of his sanity has been controversial since none of the many formal psychiatric opinions that exist come from people who actually examined him. Also, it used to be argued that calling him mad somehow let him off the hook for his crimes. These days, the binary concept of mad or sane seems less relevant, and I dont think many people who know his biography would argue that Hitler wasnt a deeply disturbed individual.
Robin Lindley: During his year in jail, Hitler wrote his hated-filled screed Mein Kampf. He was already attacking Jews and the weakness of the Weimar state. When did he become acquainted with eugenics and the idea of a German Aryan master race?
Charlie English: Eugenics was already a popular scientific concept at the turn of the twentieth century. A British polymath, Sir Francis Galton, invented the term in the 1880s, and sterilization was enthusiastically practiced in the United States. Hitler is said to have been inspired by some of these American programs.
The idea of an Aryan master race was older: it grew out of mid-nineteenth century concepts of so-called scientific racism, which separated people into a hierarchy of races, with the Nordic whites and Aryans at the top and the Jews at the bottom. One of the most bizarre aspects of these theories was that the only people who could have good ideas were the Aryans, and every other world culture could only continue what the Aryans had taught them or else destroy it by their bungling. One conclusion of this theory required that the ancient Greeks be categorized as Aryans, and in fact the Nazis did try to co-opt every good thing that had ever happened in historyincluding classical culturefor the German-Aryans.
You wonder at peoples credulity when faced with this nonsense, but, a bit like QAnon or another conspiracy theory, it didnt really have to make sense, it was just a labyrinthine way of justifying the emotional prejudices people felt about a particular issue. The Nazis adapted the language to support these racial concepts, promoting words such as Volksgemeinschaft (ethnic cultural community), Rassengefuhl (racial feeling), and Kulturbolschewismus (cultural Bolshevism).
Robin Lindley: What was the Degenerate Art exhibit that Hitler promoted? How did Hitler view works by recognized modernist artists and the mentally ill? Why was Nazi mockery of modern art so important to Hitler? What threatened him about expressionism and other styles?
Charlie English: Entartung, or degeneracy was another nineteenth century concept that went hand in hand with eugenics and race theory.
Degeneracy theory stated that a peoples racial health could be read in its cultural output, and that a race that had been polluted by foreign geneticsi.e., by racial intermarriage, notably with the Jewsproduced symptomatic art that no pure Aryan could understand. Art, then, was a barometer of cultural health and surprise, surprisemodern art was an indicator of the excessive Jewish influence on German culture.
It was Goebbelss idea to capitalize on this theory by organizing shaming shows of modern art designed to reinforce the idea that modernism=Jewishness=mental illness. These Degenerate Art shows included works from the Prinzhorn collection, as further evidence that madness and modernism were a Jewish conspiracy against the German people. They would be included in the exhibitions alongside professional works with sarcastic captions claiming that a really sick patients effort was better than that of the professional modern artist.
Josef Goebbels inspects the Degenerate Art Exhibition, February 1938
Photo Bundesarchiv,CC BY-SA 3.0 de
The Degenerate Art shows were vital for the Nazi propaganda effort. They toured the country for years, and are still the most popular art exhibitions of all time in terms of footfall: around four million people are believed to have seen them.
Robin Lindley: The Nazis T4 program, a precursor of the Holocaust, involved destruction of life unworthy of life, including those with genetic illnesses, the mentally ill, and others. How did Nazi eugenics evolve from sterilization policies in the mid-1930s to mass murder by 1939?
Charlie English: Once the principle of racial cleansing was establishedand Hitler had hinted at such a program in Mein Kampf in the mid-1920sthe question was how to do it without attracting too much public protest.
Months after Hitler came to power, a sterilization law was passed which meant that psychiatric patients with particular conditions could be forcibly neutered. As war loomed, Hitler decided to go further, starting to actually murder the mentally ill, to eliminate them from the gene pool and save the cost of their care. He knew that the conflict would provide political cover for this program, which could be explained as the sort of emergency measure required in times of war. A group of administrators in his private office were tasked with establishing the program, later known as Aktion T4. They brainstormed methods of mass-murder, and came up with the idea of gas chambers. These were put into action from early 1940. These tools and methods would later be used in the Holocaust, often by the same people.
Robin Lindley: Its heartbreaking that there was little public outcry about the T4 mass killing of disabled people. Did most Germans know of the mass murder? Who cared about it?
Charlie English: A large number of people knew. It was impossible for instance to disguise the smell of burning corpses that emanated from the incinerators, or to stop the soot gathering on peoples houses.
There was some resistance to Aktion T4 but this was entirely insufficient to prevent the murder of 70,000 or so people by the state. Only a few individuals spoke up, including the Bishop of Munster, and Lothar Kreyssig, a district judge in Brandenburg. The propaganda had been highly effective: people mostly either did nothing or tacitly supported the killings.
Robin Lindley: Your description of the last days of the Prinzhorns psychiatric patients is poignant and moving. Karl Bhler, a once prominent artist, was one of victims. How were the T4 victims located and then killed? What did you learn about the killing centers?
Charlie English: One of the most shocking aspects of the story is that the victims were identified, judged and murdered by the medical profession. Asylums were told to report people who had been diagnosed with certain conditions, including schizophrenia and alcoholism, or people who had been in the care system for several years. The names and medical notes of such people were sent to medical reviewers, who then decided if they fit the criteria for murder that Hitlers office had set out. Most of them did. After that, lists of selected patients were sent back to the asylums, and a special transport squadron came to pick them up on the appointed day. They were taken to the killing centers, which had been designed to look like hospitals, and put in sealed chambers disguised as shower rooms. A doctor turned on the gas and killed them all. The bodies were robbed of gold teeth and burnt.
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Eagleson Avenue: The family accomplishments behind the new street name – The Herald-Times
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The name of a well-traveled street in Bloomington now honors a prominent local Black family.
Once known as Jordan Avenue, the section of the street from East Davis Street to East 17th Streethas beenrenamed Eagleson Avenue. A ceremony Tuesday celebrated the new name.
Previously named after David Starr Jordan, Indiana University's seventh president, the street's name came under scrutiny in recent years due to Jordan's support of eugenics selective breeding of humans based on the idea that some people have superior genes.
This past year, both the Bloomington Plan Commission and the IU Board of Trustees approved changing the street's name toinstead honor a family of Black Bloomingtonians who have made their mark on the community and the nation for more than a century.
Pictures: Eagleson Avenue replaces Jordan Avenue in Bloomington
The Eagleson-Bridgwaters story in Bloomington began in the 1880s, whenHalson Vashon Eagleson Sr. arrived. Born into slavery in 1851, he would become a prominent barber with a large family that would make its mark onBloomington and Indiana University.
The businessmanhelped found both the Bethel AME Church in Bloomington and an orphanage in Unionville. He raisedsix childrenwith two wives, and many of the children andtheirdescendants would attend Indiana University at a time when it was noteasy for Black Americans to pursue higher education.
Halsons oldest child,Preston, was bornin 1876 in Mitchelland graduated from high school in Bloomington at the age of 16 in 1892. Preston attended IU and became the first African American to take part in intercollegiate athletics at the university.
Previous: Bloomington approves renaming Jordan Avenue after prominent Black family
Preston was aforce on the footballteam throughouthis undergraduate career, despite theracial prejudice he sometimes encountered from rival fans and teams. He was denied service at multiple hotels, prompting his father to take legal action. Preston would go on to become thefirst African American toearn an advanced degree from IU, receivinga master of arts in philosophy.
Preston's brother Halson V. EaglesonJr., born in 1903, also faced pushback as he pursued his education. A leader of the IU marching band, he was kidnapped before he could perform at a game with Purdue. That did not stop him from becoming the first black student to earn an "I" letter in the marching band and a doctorate in physicsbefore starting a career as an educator and consultant.
Preston's son Wilson Vashon Eagleson Sr., born in 1898, continued the family's educational efforts at IU, earning his undergraduate degree in 1922 and marrying Frances Marshall, whowas the first black woman to graduate from IU. Marshall embarked on her own career in academia, and her name lives on at IU in theNeal-Marshall Black Culture Center.
The family continued to have an impact in Bloomington and beyond throughout the 20th century.
Another of Preston's children, Elizabeth Eagleson Bridgwaters, born 1908, would get her undergraduate degree from IU in 1930. Elizabeth would make her mark as director of the Housing and Neighborhood Development Department for the city of Bloomington,president of the local school board and as a mayoral candidate. She served on the first Civil Rights Commission of Bloomington and spearheaded other civic groups like Citizens for Constructive Progress.In addition to being named Monroe County Woman of the Century in 1999, Elizabethreceived statewide recognition for her work, including the Sagamore of the Wabash.
More: Bridgwaters led by example
Wilson V. Eagleson Jr.,son of Wilson and Frances Eagleson, began his studies at IU in 1940but left to join the Army Air Corps during World War II. The Tuskegee Airman flew in combatand hada 30-year career in the Air Force before retiring in 1970.
Contact Patrick McGerr atpmcgerr@heraldt.com, 812-307-5636, or follow@patrickmcgerr on Twitter.
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Minority women most affected if abortion is banned, limited – ABC News
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JACKSON, Miss. -- If you are Black or Hispanic in a conservative state that already limits access to abortions, you are far more likely than a white woman to have one.
And if the U.S. Supreme Court allows states to further restrict or even ban abortions, minority women will bear the brunt of it, according to statistics analyzed by The Associated Press.
The numbers are unambiguous. In Mississippi, people of color comprise 44% of the population but 80% of women receiving abortions, according to the Kaiser Family Foundation, which tracks health statistics.
In Texas, theyre 59% of the population and 74% of those receiving abortions. The numbers in Alabama are 35% and 70%. In Louisiana, minorities represent 42% of the population, according to the state Health Department, and about 72% of those receiving abortions.
Abortion restrictions are racist, said Cathy Torres, a 25-year-old organizing manager with Frontera Fund, a Texas organization that helps women pay for abortions. They directly impact people of color, Black, brown, Indigenous people ... people who are trying to make ends meet.
Why the great disparities? Laurie Bertram Roberts, executive director of the Alabama-based Yellowhammer Fund, which provides financial support for women seeking abortion, said women of color in states with restrictive abortion laws often have limited access to health care and a lack of choices for effective birth control. Schools often have ineffective or inadequate sex education.
If abortions are outlawed, those same women often poor will likely have the hardest time traveling to distant parts of the country to terminate pregnancies or raising children they might struggle to afford, said Roberts, who is Black and once volunteered at Mississippis only abortion clinic.
Were talking about folks who are already marginalized, Roberts said.
Amanda Furdge, who is Black, was one of those women. She was a single, unemployed college student already raising one baby in 2014 when she found out she was pregnant with another. She said she didnt know how she could afford another child.
Shed had two abortions in Chicago. Getting access to an abortion provider there was no problem, Furdge said. But now she was in Mississippi, having moved home to escape an abusive relationship. Misled by advertising, she first went to a crisis pregnancy center which tried to talk her out of an abortion. By the time she found the abortion clinic, she was too far along to have the procedure.
Why cant you safely, easily access abortion here? asked Furdge, 34, who is happily raising her now 7-year-old son but continues to advocate for women having the right to choose.
Torres said historically, anti-abortion laws have been crafted in ways that hurt low-income women. She pointed to the Hyde Amendment, a 1980 law that prevents the use of federal funds to pay for abortions except in rare cases.
She also cited the 2021 Texas law that bans abortion after around six weeks of pregnancy. Where she lives, near the U.S.-Mexico border in the Rio Grande Valley, women are forced to travel to obtain abortions and must pass in-state border patrol checkpoints where they have to disclose their citizenship status, she said.
Regardless of what legislators say, Torres insisted, the intent is to target women of color, to control their bodies: They know who these restrictions are going to affect. They know that, but they dont care.
But Andy Gipson, a former member of the Mississippi Legislature who is now the states agriculture and commerce commissioner, said race had nothing to do with passage of Mississippis law against abortion after the 15th week. That law is now before the Supreme Court in a direct challenge to Roe v. Wade, the court's 1973 ruling that legalized abortion nationwide.
Gipson, a Baptist minister who is white, said he believes all people are created in the image of God and have an innate value that starts at conception. Mississippi legislators were trying to protect women and babies by putting limits on abortion, he said.
I absolutely disagree with the concept that its racist or about anything other than saving babies lives, said Gipson, a Republican. Its about saving lives of the unborn and the lives and health of the mother, regardless of what color they are.
To those who say that forcing women to have babies will subject them to hardships, Mississippi Attorney General Lynn Fitch, a white Republican, said it is easier for working mothers to balance professional success and family life than it was 49 years ago when Roe was decided.
Fitch, who is divorced, often points to her own experience of working outside the home while raising three children. But Fitch grew up in an affluent family and has worked in the legal profession both factors that can give working women the means and the flexibility to get help raising children.
Thats not the case for many minority women in Mississippi or elsewhere. Advocates say in many places where abortion services are being curtailed, theres little support for women who carry a baby to term.
Mississippi is one of the poorest states, and people in low-wage jobs often dont receive health insurance. Women can enroll in Medicaid during pregnancy, but that coverage disappears soon after they give birth.
Mississippi has the highest infant mortality rate in the U.S., according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Black infants were about twice as likely as white infants to die during the first year of life in Mississippi, according to the March of Dimes.
Across the country, U.S. Census Bureau information analyzed by The Associated Press shows fewer Black and Hispanic women have health insurance, especially in states with tight abortion restrictions. For example, in Texas, Mississippi and Georgia, at least 16% of Black women and 36% of Latinas were uninsured in 2019, some of the highest such rates in the country.
Problems are compounded in states without effective education programs about reproduction. Mississippi law says sex education in public schools must emphasize abstinence to avoid pregnancy and sexually transmitted diseases. Discussion of abortion is forbidden, and instructors may not demonstrate how to use condoms or other contraception.
The Mississippi director for Planned Parenthood Southeast, Tyler Harden, is a 26-year-old Black woman who had an abortion five years ago, an experience that drove her to a career supporting pregnant women and preserving abortion rights.
She said when she was attending public school in rural Mississippi, she didnt learn about birth control. Instead, a teacher stuck clear tape on students arms. The girls were told to put it on another classmates arm, and another, and watch how it lost the ability to form a bond.
Theyd tell you, If you have sex, this is who you are now: Youre just like this piece of tape all used up and washed up and nobody would want it, Harden said.
When she became pregnant at 21, she knew she wanted an abortion. Her mother was battling cancer and Harden was in her last semester of college without a job or a place to live after graduation.
She said she was made to feel fear and shame, just as she had during sex ed classes. When she went to the clinic, she said protesters told her she was killing the most precious gift from God and that she was killing a Black baby, playing into what white supremacists want.
Hardens experience is not uncommon. The anti-abortion movement has often portrayed the abortion fight in racial terms.
Outside the only abortion clinic operating in Mississippi, protesters hand out brochures that refer to abortion as Black genocide and say the late Margaret Sanger, founder of Planned Parenthood and a proponent of eugenics, desired to eradicate minorities. The brochures compare Sanger to Adolf Hitler and proclaim: Black lives did not matter to Margaret Sanger!
The Mississippi clinic is not affiliated with Planned Parenthood, and Planned Parenthood itself denounces Sangers belief in eugenics.
White people are not alone in making this argument. Alveda King, an evangelist who is a niece of the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr., is among the Black opponents of abortion who, for years, have been portraying abortion as a way to wipe out people of their race.
Tanya Britton, a former president of Pro-Life Mississippi, often drives three hours from her home in the northern part of the state to pray outside the abortion clinic in Jackson. Britton is Black, and she said its a tragedy that the number of Black babies aborted since Roe would equal the population of several large cities. She also said people are too casual about terminating pregnancies.
You just cant take the life of someone because this is not convenient I want to finish my education, Britton said. You wouldnt kill your 2-year-old because you were in graduate school.
But state Rep. Zakiya Summers of Jackson, who is Black and a mother, suggested theres nothing casual about what poor women are doing. Receiving little support in Mississippi for example, the Legislature killed a proposal to expand postpartum Medicaid coverage in 2021 -- they are sometimes forced to make hard decisions.
Women are just out here trying to survive, you know? she said. And Mississippi doesnt make it any easier.
Associated Press reporters Noreen Nasir in Jackson, Mississippi, and Jasen Lo in Chicago contributed to this report.
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15 Advantages and Disadvantages of Federalism ConnectUS
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The definition of federalism is straightforward: it is the federal principle or system of government. Throughout history, it has been a political system where 2+ governments share authority over the same geographical area. Most of the democratic countries in the world today use this method of governing, including Australia, Canada, India, and the United States.
Even the European Union is an example of federalism.
The exact structures of each system can vary widely based on how the country sets up its governing process. In the EU, the members of the upper houses in the government are not elected or appointed, but they serve as delegates of their respective governments. For the United States, there are local, country, and state governing authorities which all have a unique set of laws and regulations for people to follow.
Some choose to use a central system of government that regulates the entire country. Others do not. Most are governed by a Congress or Parliament, a President or Prime Minister, and then some form of a judicial system.
There are several pros and cons of federalism to consider when looking at it as a political system.
1. Federalism provides a structure that diffuses governmental power.Many forms of federalism look to create checks and balances throughout society as a way to create an equal governing process. By diffusing power to multiple branches of office, like the U.S. does with the executive, legislative, and judicial segments, it becomes more challenging for one division to take over the country. When power is not centralized in a government, then there are fewer issues with individual corruption that can impact the entire nation.
2. Federalism creates a protection against tyranny.This form of government will also make it challenging for a single branch of government to obtain complete control over the structure. There is no way to obtain runaway power in this structure unless voters approve of that process first. Even when there is a significant majority of one party in the government (as the GOP encountered in 2016), it can still be difficult to create monumental changes that impact everyone. This process is one of the primary reasons why democratic countries choose this form over the other governing options which are available.
3. Federalism is an efficient process.Because the U.S. provides some of the power to the states, it creates efficiencies in the governing system because delegation is possible. Local governments receive the right to begin solving some of their own problems. If this structure was not available, then you would get cookie-cutter regulations that may not apply to some geographical areas. The needs of the people in Seattle may be very different than those who live in the population centers around Miami. This structure allows each group to live in a way that maximizes their safety while minimizing effort.
4. Federalism increases the level of participation by individuals.People become more involved with their government in a variety of ways when federalism is the structure in place. Elected officials are closer to what a citizen is than a state official under this structure, which means people can visit a local office to express their opinions without a fear of judgment. When we have a chance to embrace diversity as a culture, then it is an opportunity to draw upon each of our strengths to create something amazing. Other forms of government do not offer such an opportunity.
5. Federalism encourages a system of cooperation. Different communities have unique requirements that they must meet to maximize their quality of life. Instead of mandating that everyone follows the same set of laws, this system allows each community to create a foundation that works the best for their needs. If you travel to almost any town, city, or village in the United States, then you will discover a different set of laws, rules, and regulations to follow. Many of them are similar, but there are also several which are not.
6. Federalism encourages innovation in governing.Because this structure of government looks at cooperation and sharing as its primary structure, there is an opportunity to try a different set of policies to see how they will work. This process can create positive or negative results. A recent example in the United States of this advantage is the requirement to drug test working adults who receive welfare benefits. Some governments are trying it, while others or not. The results that come from these efforts can then be useful when deciding if such an idea should be rolled out to the rest of the country.
7. Federalism allows the government to become more responsive to individual needs.When a government is closer to its citizens, then it can provide a responsive solution when there are citizen needs, emergency situations, or changes that are necessary in the structure of laws. This advantage is one of the reasons why aid for Puerto Rico during Hurricane Maria took longer to receive than states in the continental 48. The local governments could distribute resources first instead of relying on the national government like the island because of the availability of local resources.
1. Federalism often protects the will of the majority at any cost.Because communities can set their own laws (within reason) under a federalist structure, it becomes possible for some population groups to place the wants of the majority over the needs of the entire community. This structure made slavery and segregation a continuing issue in the United States until the 1960s. It was partially responsible for the division in the 1800s that eventually led to the Civil War. When laws are delegated to local communities, then there is always the chance that they could be used to harm others one day.
2. Federalism can encourage the passing of ridiculous laws.The structure of federalism encourages local communities to self-govern in the most efficient manner possible. This process is usually a healthy way to help keep households safe no matter where they are in the country. It can also be used as a way to pass ridiculous laws as a way to make a political statement, discourage tourism, or some other specific result. Here are just a few of the craziest laws you can find in the U.S. right now.
It is illegal in Arizona for a donkey to sleep in a bathtub. If you go to Colorado, then it is illegal to keep a couch on your porch. You are not allowed to sell the hair of a dog or cat in Delaware. Hawaii made it against the law to place a coin in your ear. You cannot drive a horse in Indiana above a set speed limit of 10mph.
3. Federalism allows local governments to fight the national governments.The local governments can decide to fight the existence of some specific national laws by going through the justice system of the country. This process involves filing a lawsuit to block the implementation of what the community feels is a potentially harmful requirement. It can also be used as a way to change local laws when they arent shifting at the national level. One of the most significant examples of this issue involves the legalization of recreational cannabis.
Thats not to say that all actions are a disadvantage. There are times when blocking the implementation of federal law is beneficial. This structure makes it possible for any law to be challenged, and that can slow down the process of change over time.
4. Federalism allows national governments to fight the local ones.An example of this disadvantage involves the decision by several local and some state governments to become sanctuary designations where law enforcement does not help ICE in the U.S. with immigration detainment. The U.S. government threatened to pull funding from the cities choosing this action, and then filed suit against them in an effort to try getting compliance.
The structure of this government can create inefficiencies in the system because the national government might not like the way the local officials choose to oversee their communities. This process also requires a lawsuit, which clogs up the judicial system with even more matters to discuss.
5. Federalism can create oppositional competition.Because each community can create their own set of laws and rules in a system of federalism (especially in the United States), then the structure can create unwanted competition for resources that seeks to limit some demographics. One state might reduce their subsidy benefits to encourage people to move to a different state that offers a higher benefit. Another government might offer a significant tax break to a company that encourages them to place offices in one location and not another.
6. Federalism can create uncertainty.Because there are multiple layers of government working cooperatively with one another in a federalist system, it can be challenging at times for specific communities to know where they can receive assistance. There are natural disasters, national welfare aid distributed to the states for authorization, public education resources, and many more benefits or circumstances where someone must navigate each level of government to find the results they want. Knowing who is responsible for specific issues can make it difficult for any aid to make it to its intended destination.
7. Federalism can be inefficient.There are efficiencies to consider with delegation that make this governing structure such an inviting option. Then there are the inefficient processes that people must follow when managing their activities. People must stay in compliance with the laws that are in every layer of governing. That means some people in the U.S. must follow four different sets of laws. Knowing what you can or cannot do can be a confusing process, especially when there are conflicting statements offered by the different parties.
8. Federalism can be structured to benefit only the rich.Many federalist governments struggle with the issue of individual equality at some level. For the United States, it is the wage and wealth gaps to consider. The top 1% of income earners own a majority of the wealth increases experienced since 2009. Many women only make 80% for doing the same job that men do when they look at their salary. These structures can be challenging to change when there are some many obstacles that are put in the way thanks to the checks and balances of this system.
The pros and cons of federalism provide evidence that it is usually better for a society and nation if there is a system of power sharing available for the government. It creates checks and balances in a system that promote individual freedoms and self-governing at a higher level when compared to the other options which are possible. Although there are challenges to face in any type of government, most people who live in a federalist system say that they wouldnt change the structure whatsoever.
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Why are people calling Bitcoin a religion? – The Conversation AU
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Read enough about Bitcoin, and youll inevitably come across people who refer to the cryptocurrency as a religion.
Bloombergs Lorcan Roche Kelly called Bitcoin the first true religion of the 21st century. Bitcoin promoter Hass McCook has taken to calling himself The Friar and wrote a series of Medium pieces comparing Bitcoin to a religion. There is a Church of Bitcoin, founded in 2017, that explicitly calls legendary Bitcoin creator Satoshi Nakamoto its prophet.
In Austin, Texas, there are billboards with slogans like Crypto Is Real that weirdly mirror the ubiquitous billboards about Jesus found on Texas highways. Like many religions, Bitcoin even has dietary restrictions associated with it.
So does Bitcoins having prophets, evangelists and dietary laws make it a religion or not?
As a scholar of religion, I think this is the wrong question to ask.
The dirty secret of religious studies is that there is no universal definition of what religion is. Traditions such as Christianity, Islam and Buddhism certainly exist and have similarities, but the idea that these are all examples of religion is relatively new.
The word religion as its used today a vague category that includes certain cultural ideas and practices related to God, the afterlife or morality arose in Europe around the 16th century. Before this, many Europeans understood that there were only three types of people in the world: Christians, Jews and heathens.
This model shifted after the Protestant Reformation when a long series of wars began between Catholics and Protestants. These became known as wars of religion, and religion became a way of talking about differences between Christians. At the same time, Europeans were encountering other cultures through exploration and colonialism. Some of the traditions they encountered shared certain similarities to Christianity and were also deemed religions.
Non-European languages have historically not had a direct equivalent to the word religion. What has counted as religion has changed over the centuries, and there are always political interests at stake in determining whether or not something is a religion.
As religion scholar Russell McCutcheon argues, The interesting thing to study, then, is not what religion is or is not, but the making of it process itself whether that manufacturing activity takes place in a courtroom or is a claim made by a group about their own behaviors and institutions.
With this in mind, why would anyone claim that Bitcoin is a religion?
Some commentators seem to be making this claim to steer investors away from Bitcoin. Emerging market fund manager Mark Mobius, in an attempt to tamp down enthusiasm about cryptocurrency, said that crypto is a religion, not an investment.
His statement, however, is an example of a false dichotomy fallacy, or the assumption that if something is one thing, it cannot be another. There is no reason that a religion cannot also be an investment, a political system or nearly anything else.
Mobius point, though, is that religion, like cryptocurrency, is irrational. This criticism of religion has been around since the Enlightenment, when Voltaire wrote, Nothing can be more contrary to religion and the clergy than reason and common sense.
In this case, labeling Bitcoin a religion suggests that bitcoin investors are fanatics and not making rational choices.
On the other hand, some Bitcoin proponents have leaned into the religion label. McCooks articles use the language of religion to highlight certain aspects of Bitcoin culture and to normalize them.
For example, stacking sats the practice of regularly buying small fractions of bitcoins sounds weird. But McCook refers to this practice as a religious ritual, and more specifically as tithing. Many churches practice tithing, in which members make regular donations to support their church. So this comparison makes sat stacking seem more familiar.
While for some people religion may be associated with the irrational, it is also associated with what religion scholar Doug Cowan calls the good, moral and decent fallacy. That is, some people often assume if something is really a religion, it must represent something good. People who stack sats might sound weird. But people who tithe could sound principled and wholesome.
For religion scholars, categorizing something as a religion can pave the way for new insights.
As religion scholar J.Z. Smith writes, Religion is not a native term; it is created by scholars for their intellectual purposes and therefore is theirs to define. For Smith, categorizing certain traditions or cultural institutions as religions creates a comparative framework that will hopefully result in some new understanding. With this in mind, comparing Bitcoin to a tradition like Christianity may cause people to notice things that they didnt before.
For example, many religions were founded by charismatic leaders. Charismatic authority does not come from any government office or tradition but solely from the relationship between a leader and their followers. Charismatic leaders are seen by their followers as superhuman or at least extraordinary. Because this relationship is precarious, leaders often remain aloof to keep followers from seeing them as ordinary human beings.
Several commentators have noted that Bitcoin inventor Satoshi Nakamoto resembles a sort of prophet. Nakamotos true identity or whether Nakamoto is actually a team of people remains a mystery. But the intrigue surrounding this figure is a source of charisma with consequences for bitcoins economic value. Many who invest in bitcoin do so in part because they regard Nakamoto as a genius and an economic rebel. In Budapest, artists even erected a bronze statue as a tribute to Nakamoto.
Theres also a connection between Bitcoin and millennialism, or the belief in a coming collective salvation for a select group of people.
In Christianity, millennial expectations involve the return of Jesus and the final judgment of the living and the dead. Some Bitcoiners believe in an inevitable coming hyperbitcoinization in which bitcoin will be the only valid currency. When this happens, the Bitcoin believers who invested will be justified, while the no coiners who shunned cryptocurrency will lose everything.
Finally, some Bitcoiners view bitcoin as not just a way to make money, but as the answer to all of humanitys problems.
Because the root cause of all of our problems is basically money printing and capital misallocation as a result of that, McCook argues, the only way the whales are going to be saved, or the trees are going to be saved, or the kids are going to be saved, is if we just stop the degeneracy.
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This attitude may be the most significant point of comparison with religious traditions. In his book God Is Not One, religion professor Stephen Prothero highlights the distinctiveness of world religions using a four-point model, in which each tradition identifies a unique problem with the human condition, posits a solution, offers specific practices to achieve the solution and puts forth exemplars to model that path.
This model can be applied to Bitcoin: The problem is fiat currency, the solution is Bitcoin, and the practices include encouraging others to invest, stacking sats and hodling refusing to sell bitcoin to keep its value up. The exemplars include Satoshi and other figures involved in the creation of blockchain technology.
So does this comparison prove that Bitcoin is a religion?
Not necessarily, because theologians, sociologists and legal theorists have many different definitions of religion, all of which are more or less useful depending on what the definition is being used for.
However, this comparison may help people understand why Bitcoin has become so attractive to so many people, in ways that would not be possible if Bitcoin were approached as a purely economic phenomenon.
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Why are people calling Bitcoin a religion? - The Conversation AU
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‘Early days of the Gold Rush are over’ for bitcoin but it still has portfolio value, Betterment says – CNBC
Posted: at 6:51 am
It's been another wild week for bitcoin.
The cryptocurrency surged 11% on Friday, bringing it back above $40,000 for the first time in two weeks. A few days earlier, it had slumped below $37,000.
But while bitcoin remains volatile, Betterment's Dan Egan says it is turning into a portfolio staple.
In the early days of bitcoin, for example, it was seen as a sudden path to riches now, it acts more like a "digital gold asset" that may provide a market hedge, he told CNBC's "ETF Edge" on Monday.
"It's definitely maturing into more of an alternative like gold or precious metals," Egan said. "You should have a little slice of it in your portfolio just for diversification's sake."
Still, bitcoin prices are well off the highs set in November. The crypto traded at close to $70,000 at its peak.
Alternative exposure to bitcoin can be found in the ETF space. Bitcoin prices jumped last year following the launch of the first bitcoin futures ETF, ProShares Bitcoin Strategy ETF (BITO), in October.
This futures ETF is useful for both long- and short-term investors, ProShares' Simeon Hyman said in the same "ETF Edge" interview.
"The futures market, if anything, is a better reflection of price and more liquid," he said. "BITO, in and of itself, trades lots of volume every day, and there are options on it as well."
Last week, the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission rejected Fidelity's application for a bitcoin ETF, but BITO still holds promise, Hyman added.
"The futures market [has] multiple exchanges that converge to the price of those futures," he said. "There are key advantages when you combine that with the ETF structure that make it a pretty compelling value proposition."
The BITO ETF is up 5% this month, though it has fallen 12% for the year.
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'Early days of the Gold Rush are over' for bitcoin but it still has portfolio value, Betterment says - CNBC
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Top 3 Price Prediction Bitcoin, Ethereum, Ripple: BTC bears to go extinct beyond $53,000 – FXStreet
Posted: at 6:51 am
Bitcoin price has seen tremendous gains over the past three days as it attempts to overcome a massive hurdle. While altcoins like Ethereum and Ripple have corresponded to this bullishness, investors need to exercise caution with fresh investments as a retracement could be around the corner.
Bitcoin price has risen 18% over the past four days and is currently hovering below the 50-day Simple Moving Average (SMA) and the weekly resistance barrier confluence at $42,816. If this uptrend is a bull trap, BTC is likely to see rejection followed by a retracement to the immediate support level at $8,481.
A breakdown of the said barrier will knock the big crypto down to $34,752. In an extremely bearish case, Bitcoin price could revisit the $30,000 psychological barrier and collect the liquidity resting below it.
BTC/USD 1-day chart
If BTC produces a daily candlestick close above the breakers upper limit at $44,387, however, it will invalidate the bearish thesis. While this development will alleviate the sell-side pressure, it does not mean that Bitcoin price has flipped bullish.
A daily candlestick close above $52,000 will produce a higher high and suggest the possible start of an uptrend.
Ethereum price has followed the big crypto and pierced the bearish breaker, ranging from $2,789 to $3,167. Any further bullish momentum will push ETH to climb higher and retest the 50-day SMA at $3,242.
Assuming BTC retraces, investors can expect Ethereum price to face rejection at $3,242, leading to a 25% pullback to the weekly support level at $2,324.
In a highly bearish case, Ethereum price could revisit the $1,730 weekly support level and collect the sell-side liquidity resting below it.
ETH/USD 1-day chart
Regardless of the bearish outlook, the Ethereum price can invalidate the short-term bearish outlook if it produces a daily candlestick close above the $3,167 resistance zone. A bullish scenario could be kick-started, however, if buyers push ETH to produce a swing high at $3,413.
Ripple price broke out of its consolidation and rallied 25% from $0.604 to $0.754. This impressive move is currently retesting the weekly resistance barrier at $0.740, which rests below another hurdle that extends from $0.757 to $0.807.
Rejection at this multi-resistance zone seems likely considering the situation in which Bitcoin is in, and investors can expect the Ripple price to retrace 16%, returning to the consolidation zone at $0.628.
XRP/USD 1-day chart
A daily candlestick close above the supply zones upper limit at $0.807 will signal a resurgence of buyers and indicate their willingness to move higher. In this case, Ripple price could set up a higher high by rallying 12% to $0.911.
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Top 3 Price Prediction Bitcoin, Ethereum, Ripple: BTC bears to go extinct beyond $53,000 - FXStreet
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