Daily Archives: February 15, 2022

There’s No Such Thing as ‘the Latino Vote’ – The Atlantic

Posted: February 15, 2022 at 5:38 am

Latinos and their ancestors have lived in the Americas for 500 years, yet it feels like many Americans are perpetually in the act of discovering usespecially when elections are looming. We are instrumental to the emerging Democratic majority that Blue America longs for, that Red America fears, and that never quite seems to arrive.

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The 2020 census showed that Latinos accounted for more than half of the countrys population growth over the previous decade; as a matter of math, we are indeed a large part of the countrys future. What this means for the countrys politics is less clear.

The conventional wisdom that Latinos are reliable members of a liberal coalition of people of color has never been exactly right: Between a quarter and a third of Latinos have voted Republican in almost every presidential election for the past half century. Donald Trump grew his share of the Latino vote in 2020 compared with 2016, and he may be growing his share still. A November Wall Street Journal poll found that Hispanic voters would be evenly split if Trump ran against Joe Biden in 2024. They were also evenly split when asked whether they would vote for Democrats or Republicans if the midterm elections were held that day. The survey pool was admittedly a small one, but the possibility of a continued rightward shift is shaking Democrats confidence.

Geraldo L. Cadava: How Trump grew his support among Latinos

How, I am often asked, can so many Latinos be willing to vote for Trump or his acolytes after he spent four years in office maligning them?

In some ways, its an insulting question, because it presumes that non-Latinos know our interests better than we do. I didnt support Trump, but my grandfather did. For a long time, Latinos like him have gravitated toward the Republican Party because of their belief in free-market capitalism, their opposition to big government, and their religious and cultural conservatism. Many appreciated the booming economy of the Trump years, and worry about inflation today. Its ridiculous to imagine that Latinos would all think, or vote, the same. There are more than 60 million of usrepresentatives of different national groups, with different accents, histories of migration, and cultural tastes. Has such a varied group ever formed a solid bloc?

The Experiment Podcast: Latinos are a huge, diverse group. Why are they lumped together?

But Americas inability to wrap its head around a fifth of its population suggests a deeper misunderstanding. It has to do with an ignorance of Latino historya messy history of colonization that is far more important to grasping our political diversity than any poll result could ever be.

Too few Americans learn this history, in part because Latinos are rarely central to the ideological debates over race and racial justice in America. Or, more precisely, we are props in those debates, our story reduced to a simple tale of oppression consisting of the violent erasure of our Indigenous heritage, resistance against colonialism, and victimization by imperial powers. In this view, only Latinos who are unconscious of their own inheritance would fail to align themselves with the left. As Representative Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez of New York put it in an interview, Latino politicians often advance really problematic policies because they dont know who they are.

But who we are is complicated, and the future that many Latinos imaginefor ourselves and for our countrydoes not fit neatly into the prevailing culture war. To understand that, it may be helpful to pause the angst over which box Latinos will check on their ballots this year or in 2024, and consider what can be learned from the past.

Throughout history, Latinos have been both colonized and colonizers. By this, I dont mean simply the obvious: that Latinos are mestizos, the mixed-race descendants of Indigenous Americans, Spaniards, Middle Easterners, Africans, and other ethnic and racial groups. I also mean that Latinos have identified not only as survivors of imperialism and its ills, but also as supporters of imperial and national powers. As the historian Serge Gruzinski put it in The Mestizo Mind, the different groups that came together to forge Latino identity were like prisoners in a maze, bound to one another by the pain of conquest and the imperative to build new societies from the ashes.

From the September 2018 issue: The next populist revolution will be Latino

That pain, of course, was extraordinary. The spread of the Spanish and American empires was achieved through great violence against African and Indigenous people and their mixed-race descendants. They were slaughtered, enslaved, and raped, their cultures and religions destroyed. These are necessary and hard truths, and they became more widely acknowledged in the mid-20th century, when decolonization movements swept the world and more people began speaking out against the legacies of white supremacy.

When that happened, more Latinos began to identify with their Indigenous and African roots, in opposition to the old imperial powers. Some called for an Indigenous revival: Puerto Ricans claimed Tano identity, and the Young Lords, an activist group fashioned after the Black Panthers, fought for Puerto Rican independence. Chicanos referred to the Southwest as Aztln, the mythical homeland of the Aztecs. In 1972, Rodolfo Acua published his influential history Occupied America, which argued that Mexican Americans were internally colonized subjects of the United States.

Activists in the U.S. saw their histories and futures as linked to those of other colonized populations. They founded advocacy groups, ran for office, and argued that people of color should work together to build power. They have since shaped how Latinos are portrayed in the news and in popular culture.

As Latinos themselves, they are unimpeachable experts on Latino identity. But the punditocracy of Democratic politicians, strategists, and consultants has painted an incomplete picture of Latino history. Many Americans have ceded to them the representation of all Latinos, instead of seeking out more complex narratives.

They seem to have forgottenor dont want to rememberthat in the centuries since the initial collision of Europe and the New World, many Latinos have chosen to align themselves with the imperial and national projects of Spain, the United States, or the independent nations of Latin America. Across the 19th century, many Latin Americans viewed the United States as the economic and political model for their own countries, seeking alliances with, and maybe even annexation by, the northern colossus.

In the 1830s, Mexicans fought on both sides of the Texas Revolution. After the Mexican-American War in the 1840s, when the United States took half of Mexicos land, the overwhelming majority of Mexicans who lived in the former Mexican territory chose to stay and become U.S. citizens. In a bizarre episode from the 1850s, during a power struggle in Nicaragua, one faction invited the American mercenary William Walker to come civilize their country. He rigged the vote and got himself elected president for almost a year, until his supporters soured on him.

At the close of the century, after Puerto Rico and Cuba won their independence from Spain, some wanted the United States to remain involved in the governance of the islands, even if that meant freedom from one empire through absorption by another. A contingent of prominent Puerto Ricans tried, and are still trying, to convince the United States and fellow islanders that Puerto Rico should become a state. (In a 2020 referendum, just over half of Puerto Ricans said they supported statehood.)

Latinos who cast their lot with the United States had their reasonseconomic, political, and cultural. Many felt that Spain was tradition-bound and backwards-looking, while the U.S., a modern liberal democracy, represented progress. Some established businesses that relied on U.S. investment, sent their children to school in the North, treasured its social and religious liberties, and converted from Catholicism to evangelicalism. It is certainly the case that many of those seeking inclusion have been excluded from full citizenship or stymied by racism. But that experience hasnt always shaken their faith that the United States stands for opportunity and prosperity, nor has it blunted their patriotism.

The French West Indian philosopher Frantz Fanon, in 1952s Black Skin, White Masks, argued that colonized people identify with their colonizerswanting to walk, talk, and dress like them, and to have sex with thembecause of a colonial inferiority complex. His views are echoed by many liberal Latinos today, who consider their more conservative counterparts sellouts, as if they are somehow not real Latinos.

Watch YouTube videos of people revealing the results of their DNA tests, and the discomfort can be palpable. An Afro-Latina in one was taken aback because she wanted to be more Black, and didnt want to be a part of colonization. A man in another was trippin, he said, because hed learned that he was 31 percent Spanish. On a podcast, the journalist Maria Hinojosa said she had to come to terms with the fact that I have conquistador blood in me, but that she deliberately identifies more with her Indigenous heritage.

Many Latinos prefer to identify with a particular thread of their ancestry as a way of connecting with a culture that they feel was stolen from them, and theres nothing wrong with that. But no one thread tells the whole story. A contemporary of Fanons, the French Tunisian writer Albert Memmi, argued that the colonizer and the colonized are inextricably tied to each other and can even inhabit the same body. They define their struggles and desires in relation to each other. To be connected in this way has a psychological cost, but it is also a fact.

When it comes to Latino history, I find Memmis take more useful than Fanons. I have always been curious about my identity as a Latino. My dads family is Mexican, Colombian, Panamanian, and Filipino. My moms family is white, from Germany, Scotland, and England. They lived across the street from each other in the borderlands of Tucson, Arizona, in the 1970s, when both of my grandfathers were stationed at Davis-Monthan Air Force Base.

My parents got divorced, and much of my childhood was divided between these two families. I was educated in the predominantly white communities of Irvine, California, and then Princeton, New Jersey, where my father worked as an English professor. Summers and breaks I spent in Tucson, where my moms brother called me green bean, because I was half gringo and half beaner. My paternal grandparents spoke to me in Spanish, but I began studying the language formally only when I was in middle school. My father schooled me more in the writings of Ralph Waldo Emerson and Walter Benjamin than in those of Octavio Paz, Gloria Anzalda, or Sandra Cisneros.

In college and grad school, I tried to make up for what I had missed, and worked toward becoming a scholar of Latino history. Its possible that all of the reading and writing Ive done since has been an effort to understand both sides of my identity, and how my experience fits within the broader patterns of that history. If youre wondering whether my argument about Latinos as both colonizers and colonized is the result of my own identification with both, youre right. How could it be otherwise?

A design change in the latest census allowed people to more easily identify themselves as mixed-race. This helps explain why the percentage of Hispanics who said they were of two or more races instead of, for example, only white or only Black increased dramaticallyby 576 percent. At the same time, demographic and cultural shifts have meant that there are both more mixed-race Americans and more Americans who understand themselves as mixed-race. Those who believe that race is a pernicious and artificial construct should welcome the ways in which Latinos are embracing more complicated narratives of themselves and their country.

From the July/August 2017 issue: How the Democrats lost their way on immigration

Americans of all races are engaging in debates about our national origins because we sense that something is broken. I admire how the 1619 Project, from The New York Times, challenged us to reconsider U.S. history, with slavery and its afterlives as the cornerstone. One problem with the project, though, and with the Trump administrations answering 1776 Commission, is that the framing of each reinforces a Black-versus-white vision of American history. Addressing the legacy of slavery is vital. But adding Latino history (itself, in part, a history of slavery) to the story of American origins would help us think in brown, the color of impurity, as the writer Richard Rodriguez described it some 20 years ago.

America has always been many things at once. If we limit our understanding of the nations beginnings to the British colonies, then how could Latinos and members of other groups be anything besides outsiders and latecomers who should be compelled to assimilate? The slogan America is a nation of immigrants is supposed to make us feel included. But we are all original Americans, and we all shaped the United States before there was a United States.

By recounting this long history, I am not trying to suggest what Latinos should believe. I am only saying that when we vote, we arent just casting ballots about health care or education policy. We are expressing political identities that have evolved over centuriesfor and against expanding empires and nation-states; for and against more radical forms of egalitarianismin ways that dont always fit neatly into the rhetoric of the left-right divide.

This is why many Latinos support tougher border controls to limit the influx of undocumented immigrants, whom they may see as threatening their own privileges or sense of belonging as U.S. citizens. It is why many find the Republican Partys emphasis on love of country so appealing.

Understanding this history wont allow anyone to predict the Latino vote with pinpoint accuracy. But it would at least help free us from the myth that Americans vote according to ahistorical ideas of inherited guilt or innocence. And it should remind us that we are in some way bound to one anotherthat for better or worse, what it means to be Latino and what it means to be American are intertwined.

This article appears in the March 2022 print edition. When you buy a book using a link on this page, we receive a commission. Thank you for supporting The Atlantic.

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There's No Such Thing as 'the Latino Vote' - The Atlantic

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Coulton’s Catch-up | Bill to assist biodiversity – Daily Liberal

Posted: at 5:38 am

community, Coulton's Catch-up

On February 9, the Agriculture Biodiversity Stewardship Market Bill was introduced to parliament. This Bill will create a framework to support new income streams for farmers, improved biodiversity, and international recognition of Australia's biodiversity stewardship credentials. The Bill builds on the Agriculture Biodiversity Stewardship Package, which aims to improve on-farm land management practices and develop a market-based approach for rewarding farmers to deliver biodiversity services. The Agriculture Biodiversity Stewardship Package demonstrates that a market can deliver financial returns to farmers by piloting projects that deliver biodiversity outcomes alongside carbon and enhance remnant vegetation. The Australian Government is building on the success of these pilots to provide a long-term pathway to market for farmers. Australian farmers are amongst our most essential caretakers of the land - they manage 58 per cent of Australia's landscape. Access to public-interest journalism is critical to the health of Australia's democratic system. However, the economics of public interest journalism is challenged, especially in regional areas. The government will provide $10 million over two years for the Journalist Fund creating employment opportunities for cadet and trainee journalists and professional development opportunities for journalists working in regional news businesses. The Journalist Fund is an excellent opportunity for local news outlets to secure new talent, upskill existing talent, and ensure local stories are captured and reported. The Australian Government is ensuring residents have access to high-quality local content and regional coverage. The importance of streaming services investing in local content-ensuring that they continue to do so through the Streaming Services Investment and Reporting Scheme and asking the ABC to report on its regional footprint. For more information on the Media Policy Statement, including details on the measures, visit http://www.infrastructure.gov.au/2022-media-policy-statement. To view the Streaming Services Investment and Reporting Scheme Discussion Paper and have your say, go to: http://www.infrastructure.gov.au/streaming-services-reporting-and-investment-scheme Australia will reopen to all fully vaccinated visa holders, welcoming the return of tourists, business travellers, and other visitors from 21 February. These changes will ensure we protect the health of Australians while we continue to secure our economic recovery. Australia's health system has demonstrated its resilience throughout the COVID-19 pandemic, including the recent Omicron wave. With improving health conditions, including a recent 23 per cent decline in hospitalisations due to COVID, the National Security Committee of Cabinet agreed Australia is ready to further to progress the staged reopening of our international border. Visa holders who are not fully vaccinated will still require a valid travel exemption to enter Australia and be subject to state and territory quarantine requirements. The Saluting Their Service program has seen hundreds of worthy projects across Australia funded in recent years to help local communities pay tribute to Australians who have served during wars, conflicts and peacekeeping operations. The latest round has funded three projects in the Parkes electorate, Moree, Emerald Hill and Gilgandra. The North West Nashos will use this $9650 grant to construct a Moree Anzac Centenary Park memorial to commemorate all National Servicemen. Emerald Hill Progress Association will receive $2700 to remember local World War I veterans. Gilgandra Returned and Services League Sub-Branch will utilise $4207 to upgrade the Coo-ee March Memorial Park. This funding is part of the Australian Government's $32 million investment in the Veterans' Affairs grant programs.

/images/transform/v1/crop/frm/gQFChmftLwURjFztaywNzt/472dea54-1e13-4967-943f-df5cae7ab98b_rotated_270.JPG/r0_1870_4000_4130_w1200_h678_fmax.jpg

February 13 2022 - 8:00PM

Federal Member for Parkes Mark Coulton, a proud supporter of regional media.

On February 9, the Agriculture Biodiversity Stewardship Market Bill was introduced to parliament. This Bill will create a framework to support new income streams for farmers, improved biodiversity, and international recognition of Australia's biodiversity stewardship credentials.

The Bill builds on the Agriculture Biodiversity Stewardship Package, which aims to improve on-farm land management practices and develop a market-based approach for rewarding farmers to deliver biodiversity services.

The Agriculture Biodiversity Stewardship Package demonstrates that a market can deliver financial returns to farmers by piloting projects that deliver biodiversity outcomes alongside carbon and enhance remnant vegetation. The Australian Government is building on the success of these pilots to provide a long-term pathway to market for farmers.

Australian farmers are amongst our most essential caretakers of the land - they manage 58 per cent of Australia's landscape.

Access to public-interest journalism is critical to the health of Australia's democratic system.

However, the economics of public interest journalism is challenged, especially in regional areas.

The government will provide $10 million over two years for the Journalist Fund creating employment opportunities for cadet and trainee journalists and professional development opportunities for journalists working in regional news businesses.

The Journalist Fund is an excellent opportunity for local news outlets to secure new talent, upskill existing talent, and ensure local stories are captured and reported.

The Australian Government is ensuring residents have access to high-quality local content and regional coverage. The importance of streaming services investing in local content-ensuring that they continue to do so through the Streaming Services Investment and Reporting Scheme and asking the ABC to report on its regional footprint.

Australia will reopen to all fully vaccinated visa holders, welcoming the return of tourists, business travellers, and other visitors from 21 February.

These changes will ensure we protect the health of Australians while we continue to secure our economic recovery.

Australia's health system has demonstrated its resilience throughout the COVID-19 pandemic, including the recent Omicron wave. With improving health conditions, including a recent 23 per cent decline in hospitalisations due to COVID, the National Security Committee of Cabinet agreed Australia is ready to further to progress the staged reopening of our international border.

Visa holders who are not fully vaccinated will still require a valid travel exemption to enter Australia and be subject to state and territory quarantine requirements.

The Saluting Their Service program has seen hundreds of worthy projects across Australia funded in recent years to help local communities pay tribute to Australians who have served during wars, conflicts and peacekeeping operations.

The latest round has funded three projects in the Parkes electorate, Moree, Emerald Hill and Gilgandra.

The North West Nashos will use this $9650 grant to construct a Moree Anzac Centenary Park memorial to commemorate all National Servicemen.

Emerald Hill Progress Association will receive $2700 to remember local World War I veterans.

Gilgandra Returned and Services League Sub-Branch will utilise $4207 to upgrade the Coo-ee March Memorial Park.

This funding is part of the Australian Government's $32 million investment in the Veterans' Affairs grant programs.

Excerpt from:

Coulton's Catch-up | Bill to assist biodiversity - Daily Liberal

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32 acts showing true love on the farm, for Valentine’s Day – Daily Liberal

Posted: at 5:38 am

news, national, Valentine's Day, true love, farming, Farmer Wants a Wife, Valentine's Day 2022, acts of love, kindness, agriculture

Ahhh, love. As the reality television series Farmer Wants A Wife continues to prove, the concept of romance and agriculture are closely related. It tickles the heart, simmers the emotions, seasons life and knows what the correct tractor gear is without asking, in order to pull that downright stubborn ute that won't start again. Farmers and agriculture producers have long been the romantic types - all those Instagram-worthy rural sunsets, wide verandahs for deep conversations, and natural rugged beauty that comes from a life in the sun swallowing dust. But true love goes beyond red roses, sparkling jewellery and Hallmark poetry. READ MORE: Love is a verb, and nowhere is this more true than in rural production. With this in mind, here are 32 acts of devotion (if not exactly passion) from the paddock. 1. A meal dropped out to the header during harvesting. 2. Turning a blind eye to the mud off the boots through the kitchen. 3. Delivering on the requested manure for the rose garden. 4. Sitting through Escape to the Country. 5. Having the in-laws over for lunch at 12 noon, Sunday... during Landline. 6. Remembering the song from the bridal waltz. 7. Knowing how many sugars in the tea for the smoko cuppa. 8. Buying a copy of (insert favourite magazine here) while doing a town run for that o-ring. 9. Knowing the e-mail password but not deleting all those industry body newsletters until he/she has had a "proper read" of them. 10. Eating the undercooked meatloaf, with a smile. 11. Pulling the washing off the line before rotary hoeing that dry block beside the house. 12. Using the hat rack. For hats. (And maybe stockwhips.) 13. Taking all four kids to the sale while mum ducks into town. 14. A new saddle. 15. Holding hands at the races, in front of the crowd. 16. Remembering the golden syrup on the camping trip. 17. Answering the wife/husband's phone even when the number shows it's his/her mother calling. 18. Keeping the family photo as the smartphone background, even after purchasing the new ute. 19. "Getting" the gates without being asked. 20. Removing the dead possum out of the roof. 21. Not questioning a late arrival back from the shed. 22. A welcome hug despite the lingering smell of manure/fertiliser. 23. Pushing that last piece of vanilla slice across the table. 24. Sticking around until that critical lost bolt is found on the shed floor. 25. Offering to drive "that stretch of road". 26. Diplomatically delivering the news the best-loved jeans no longer fit. 27. Doing a leather treatment on the better half's boots. 28. Providing hints for, but not the clearly obvious answer to, that Wordle he/she is stuck on. 29. Tagging along to help pull out that sheep/calf stuck in a dam. 30. A coffee delivered to the yards. 31. Offering up the "good swag" first. 32. Jumping in to get the fecal samples.

/images/transform/v1/crop/frm/F96xjWybVc3FcQiiSwA3u6/374632bd-251a-456f-81ac-f77f1592045e.jpg/r0_127_3985_2379_w1200_h678_fmax.jpg

February 14 2022 - 3:00PM

As the reality television series Farmer Wants A Wife continues to prove, the concept of romance and agriculture are closely related.

It tickles the heart, simmers the emotions, seasons life and knows what the correct tractor gear is without asking, in order to pull that downright stubborn ute that won't start again.

Farmers and agriculture producers have long been the romantic types - all those Instagram-worthy rural sunsets, wide verandahs for deep conversations, and natural rugged beauty that comes from a life in the sun swallowing dust.

But true love goes beyond red roses, sparkling jewellery and Hallmark poetry.

Love is a verb, and nowhere is this more true than in rural production.

With this in mind, here are 32 acts of devotion (if not exactly passion) from the paddock.

1. A meal dropped out to the header during harvesting.

2. Turning a blind eye to the mud off the boots through the kitchen.

3. Delivering on the requested manure for the rose garden.

5. Having the in-laws over for lunch at 12 noon, Sunday... during Landline.

6. Remembering the song from the bridal waltz.

7. Knowing how many sugars in the tea for the smoko cuppa.

8. Buying a copy of (insert favourite magazine here) while doing a town run for that o-ring.

9. Knowing the e-mail password but not deleting all those industry body newsletters until he/she has had a "proper read" of them.

10. Eating the undercooked meatloaf, with a smile.

11. Pulling the washing off the line before rotary hoeing that dry block beside the house.

12. Using the hat rack. For hats. (And maybe stockwhips.)

13. Taking all four kids to the sale while mum ducks into town.

15. Holding hands at the races, in front of the crowd.

16. Remembering the golden syrup on the camping trip.

17. Answering the wife/husband's phone even when the number shows it's his/her mother calling.

18. Keeping the family photo as the smartphone background, even after purchasing the new ute.

19. "Getting" the gates without being asked.

20. Removing the dead possum out of the roof.

21. Not questioning a late arrival back from the shed.

22. A welcome hug despite the lingering smell of manure/fertiliser.

23. Pushing that last piece of vanilla slice across the table.

24. Sticking around until that critical lost bolt is found on the shed floor.

25. Offering to drive "that stretch of road".

26. Diplomatically delivering the news the best-loved jeans no longer fit.

27. Doing a leather treatment on the better half's boots.

28. Providing hints for, but not the clearly obvious answer to, that Wordle he/she is stuck on.

29. Tagging along to help pull out that sheep/calf stuck in a dam.

30. A coffee delivered to the yards.

31. Offering up the "good swag" first.

32. Jumping in to get the fecal samples.

Originally posted here:

32 acts showing true love on the farm, for Valentine's Day - Daily Liberal

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ANOTHER VIEWPOINT: The message of trucker’s protest – Daily Journal

Posted: at 5:38 am

Canadian truckers opposed to a COVID-19 vaccination mandate used their rigs last week to block the Ambassador Bridge connecting Windsor, Ontario, and Detroit, the busiest international land-border crossing in North America.

This latest act in a week-long show of civil disobedience is more akin to political life in France or the U.S. That it happened in restrained Canada is a signal to the political class across the West: Large swaths of humanity are done with COVID-19 restrictions, mandates and excessive meddling in their lives. They want to go back to making their own health-risk assessments.

The Ambassador Bridge, which carries some $323 million in goods daily in cross-border trade and an estimated $137 billion last year, reopened Tuesday morning. Yet truckers continue their protest in Ottawa, which is disturbing the peace and worse in that usually peaceable Canadian capital.

The truckers should be prosecuted if they break the law, as we argued for Occupy Wall Street and Black Lives Matters protesters on the left. But as the Omicron virus shows itself to be less lethal and positive test rates fall, the truckers are sending a message to democratic governments that its time for the pandemic emergency orders to end.

For two years the truckers were classified as essential workers and therefore exempt from vaccine mandates. An estimated 85% of them are vaccinated. Yet Liberal Party Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, who heads a minority government, has chosen this moment to order that truckers be vaccinated if they want to cross back into the country from the U.S.

The Canadian left is sneering at the truckers and their supporters, suggesting theyre nothing more than right-wing Trumpians. Mr. Trudeau has smeared them as a few people shouting and waving swastikas. But the push-back against COVID-19 overreach has gone global. In January police fired water cannons at an estimated 50,000 European protesters in Brussels registering their exhaustion with restrictions and mandates. Since December protesters have gone to the streets elsewhere in Europe and in New Zealand and Australia.

A majority of Canadians dont support the Ottawa protests, according to polls. But a recent survey by the Angus Reid Institute found that a majority favors lifting restrictions, suggesting the Trudeau mandate, which went into effect on Jan. 15, was a political miscalculation. By energizing a significant part of the electorate, until now less present in public discourse, he has set off a backlash, deepened Canadian polarization, and raised the stakes in a showdown with the truckers.

Mr. Trudeau insists he has the power to require that truckers show vaccination at the border and will therefore stand his ground. Meantime, Canadas provincial premiers are gradually easing COVID rules. On Tuesday Saskatchewan Premier Scott Moe announced that the provinces vaccine passport, negative test requirement and mask mandate will be lifted by the end of the month. Also on Tuesday, Joel Lightbound, a Liberal Party member of Parliament from Quebec, criticized Mr. Trudeau for a COVID-19 agenda that he said is dividing the country and damaging public confidence.

The lesson for the COVID-19 police is that when youve lost even Canadians, arguably the most law-abiding people on the planet, youve lost the political plot. Time to adopt a new strategy more tolerant of the need to return to life not dominated by pandemic fear and government commands.

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ANOTHER VIEWPOINT: The message of trucker's protest - Daily Journal

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The BC Government Tapes: Pipelines and Reconciliation – TheTyee.ca

Posted: at 5:38 am

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The BC Government Tapes: Pipelines and Reconciliation - TheTyee.ca

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One of the world’s most photographed spots on our doorstep – Daily Liberal

Posted: at 5:38 am

news, national, news, tourism, australia

Australia is home to one of the 10 most beautiful villages in the world. That's according to online "comparison company" Uswitch, which has used social media posts as the barometer for its rankings. Posts to Instagram and Pinterest were used to elevate Mission Beach, between Townsville and Cairns in Queensland, to Australia's best. Well, certainly one of the most photographed and shared to social media, that is. Mission Beach has a regular population of about 3500 people living in banana and sugar country but there's no doubt it is very popular on the tourist trail. The town is squeezed between hills and the coast, Dunk Island is just four kilometres offshore and it is surrounded by World Heritage-listed rainforest. Of course, there is the beach itself, 14km of white sand with private coves and secluded spots. There's plenty to photograph. That's why Uswitch recorded 608,703 Instagram posts from Mission Beach in its survey. And for those thinking to buy a weekend getaway, or even to move there the real estate prices really depend how close you want to be near this famous coast. Blocks of land a five minute walk away are selling for $170,000 apiece and quality homes in the premier spots are selling for more than a million dollars. Uswitch's top 10 best most beautiful:

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February 12 2022 - 10:00AM

Australia is home to one of the 10 most beautiful villages in the world.

That's according to online "comparison company" Uswitch, which has used social media posts as the barometer for its rankings.

Posts to Instagram and Pinterest were used to elevate Mission Beach, between Townsville and Cairns in Queensland, to Australia's best. Well, certainly one of the most photographed and shared to social media, that is.

Mission Beach has a regular population of about 3500 people living in banana and sugar country but there's no doubt it is very popular on the tourist trail.

The town is squeezed between hills and the coast, Dunk Island is just four kilometres offshore and it is surrounded by World Heritage-listed rainforest.

Of course, there is the beach itself, 14km of white sand with private coves and secluded spots. There's plenty to photograph.

That's why Uswitch recorded 608,703 Instagram posts from Mission Beach in its survey.

And for those thinking to buy a weekend getaway, or even to move there the real estate prices really depend how close you want to be near this famous coast.

Blocks of land a five minute walk away are selling for $170,000 apiece and quality homes in the premier spots are selling for more than a million dollars.

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Striving for diversity, equity and inclusion in the arts – Temple University News

Posted: at 5:37 am

A curator, writer and funder, as well as an academic, Linda Earle champions inclusion and the exploration of new platforms and ideas in the arts. She is a professor of practice and the associate graduate director in the Art History Department for the arts management MA at the Tyler School of Art and Architecture.

There are different systems of even thinking about art experiences that I think are just coming more strongly into view now. People are understanding that you just dont go into communities and extract cultural value and put it on a wall, Earle said. And I think thats a change that has been formative.

We spoke with her about how organizations and artists can push for greater equity, how the arts scene is developing and what needs to be done to bring about institutional change.

TN: What impact has philanthropy had historically on the visual arts and how has that affected diversity?Linda Earle: Philanthropy has had a huge impact on the shape of our institutions. It has benefited artists, too, and given them platforms and affected practices, because they need facilities in which to make their work. There has not been a long history of government patronage in this country. It has evolved over time, from a model that focused on supporting the arts through institutions to including, more recently, a system of grants for individual artists. Now, arts funders are incorporating strategies in their own grant making to promote diversity, equity, inclusion and access. And access in all of its dimensions, including in terms of disability, as well as demographics, class and economics.

Previously, funders in the arts focused on tentpole organizationsthe most visible kinds of organizations, like the PMA [Philadelphia Museum of Art] or the Metropolitan Museum of Artand responded mostly to their diversity plans and how they were planning to bring diverse audiences in, rather than considering equity for the whole field and and the role that institutions of color were playing in their communities, and directing resources their way. There was a center to the margins and top-down approach to supporting diversity and culture in general. Now, funders are looking for ways to support cultural production with a multidirectional strategy. Theyre looking to support community-based organizationsorganizations that represent traditions, organizations that represent innovation within a certain cultural frameworkas well as the larger organizations. And theyre looking at how they allocate their funds to really consider whether they are creating an equitable cultural landscape.

Broadening access and inclusion in this city and elsewhere is a matter of being very intentional: How do you make people feel that this institution belongs to them and they belong in the institution?

-- Linda Earle, professor of practice in fine arts management and associate graduate director in the Arts History Department for the arts management MA

TN: How can institutions strive for cultural equity and how can artists do the same?LE: Artists have been involved as activists since the 1930s and theyve been politically involved in bringing issues of cultural equity to the forefront. The 1930s were a time of inequity in general, and artists were politicized and the political atmosphere was very charged because of the Depression. There were huge work programs, part of the WPA [Works Progress Administration], for artists. Thats part of the DNA of community-based arts organizations now. The WPA seeded a different kind of cultural landscape by creating community workshops, arts education and arts appreciation programs, so that the frame of art appreciation and participation really expanded, then, and again in the 1960s. And at every juncture artists have been at the forefront in encouraging that kind of diverse cultural participation. I think now artists are dealing with more than just philanthropy. Theres also the marketplace, which is booming. The collectors are part of the boards of institutions and artists have been looking very closely at that crossoverwhere the donor and collector classes and the 1% intersectespecially in a time of extreme wealth inequality. Artists have offered a deep critique of how power asserts itself through boards of institutions and through the financial infrastructure of those institutions. Actually, institutional critique is its own art form now, as well as an activity, and I think those are both outlets for some really meaningful artist participation in moving the needle in terms of cultural equity.

TN: What more needs to be done to bring about institutional change?LE: Much more needs to be done. Thereve been calls for change since I can remember and Ive been in this field almost 50 years. Ive seen waves of nudging change and then it starts going into retrograde. I think what happened with the pandemic and with George Floyds murder was a real reckoning, and the question now is how to deliver systemic change. My approach to teaching arts management is to look at all of the practices that comprise management of an organization and what the lineages of those practices are, so that students can begin to not just critique practices, but also understand how they affect an organizations expression of values. Then, students can use what is useful and transform what is not.

For example, we look at how institutions project themselves to the public through admissions policieshow lobbies look, how welcomed people feel, or not, in the spaceand try to understand that thats the result of a number of practices. Sometimes the practices are intentional, sometimes theyre unconscious and the result of following tradition. Places look the way they do for specific reasons and institutions may not have been intentionally excluding people, but have ended up doing so anyway. Think about the dont touch atmosphere in many institutions. We dont want people to destroy art, but how then do we collapse the space in other ways between the art and the audience? We have to be conscious of physical accessibility, but also psychological accessibility. Those stairs in front of the PMA, which you no longer have to use. When they were the only access point, they said to people who werent fully mobile, This is not for you. That wasnt the intention, but thats what happens when you have steep stairs and no handrails. I think broadening access and inclusion in this city and elsewhere is a matter of being very intentional: How do you make people feel that this institution belongs to them and they belong in the institution?

Change also includes giving culturally specific and community-based organizations the tools and resources to serve their communities and not only sustain themselves, but also thrive. Throughout all of the vicissitudes of the pandemic and racial reckoning, institutions of color were considered vulnerable because they didnt have huge endowments or large groups of staff. Actually, many more of them survived than people thought, partly because theyre resilient and partly because theyve dealt with a lack of resources. They tend not to get into huge debt because they dont have good enough credit to do so. But we know that to sustain yourself long term, you have to be able to take risks, you have to retain staff and you have to pay your staff well. These are the infrastructural things that have to be developed in smaller organizations. I think its the job of funders and public funding to figure out how to build capacity in those organizations, so they can serve their constituents without losing their integrity. Its been done before and there are marvelous models out there.

TN: How has the art world changed? Whats on the horizon?LE: Social media has played an enormous role in the transformation of relationships between artists and the public, because artists have direct access to the public. Thats been a really interesting development. Well see how that changes the landscape. I also think most people I know in the arts are both frustrated by the glacial pace of change, but also very excited about what has changed, and the possibilities of what can be changed. Well see how generational change affects things too. I would hope to see more and more diverse groups of peoplein terms of age, race, ability and ethnicityjoining boards and getting involved in governance and policymaking on a public level with the arts. Because the arts have an important role to play in democracy, especially in terms of social imagination and thinking about new possibilities. During my research [at the Pew Center for Arts and Heritage] I met an archivist, Steven Fullwood, who is working with another archivist, Miranda Mims, on something they created called the Nomadic Archivists Project. They educate African Americans about archives in general and Black archives in particular. I attended a virtual talk Fullwood gave where he said, Ive been to the future and someone is looking for you. And that was a very moving statement about imagining the future and moving towards it, knowing that whats accomplished now will be accessible in the future.

Edirin Oputu

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Strategic philanthropy and the need to improve institutional resilience – The Times of India Blog

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Disadvantaged communities are facing a disproportionate brunt of the impact of COVID-19, especially economically and many of the nonprofits that work with these communities are struggling. Indian philanthropy can help improve the resilience of these organisations but the task will not be easy and multiple steps will be required. Aside from increasing investment, it is important to prioritise the capacity of non-profit organisations as well as foster peer learning efforts in the social sector space. If there is one lesson from the last few years, it is that collaborative and community-led efforts will be crucial in the coming years.

A survey of 55 nonprofit organisations found some worrying findings. 71% of nonprofits had enough cash to cover barely 9 months of operations while only 40% of nonprofits could cover more than 80% of their personnel costs. More than half of the organisations had a highly restricted funding base with little flexibility to repurpose funds. According to the Centre for Social Impact and Philanthropy in May 2020, 54% of non-profit organisations surveyed could cover fixed costs for a year, while an astounding 30% could cover only six months or less. Several of these organisations reported considering drastic measures including suspension of core programmes and downsizing if funding for indirect costs was not forthcoming.

There are a few recommendations for key stakeholder groups that would strengthen the philanthropy ecosystem and build a more inclusive, equitable India.

Leading the way

With philanthropists largely redirecting funding to COVID relief programmes, the accessible pool of CSR funds is expected to diminish drastically. This will seriously threaten the institutional and financial health of nonprofits and hamper their ability to impact vulnerable communities. This highlights the need for funders to urgently support non-profit organisations with flexible capital to strengthen their institutional resilience. Offering non-financial assets in the form of capacity building opportunities, resilience-building tools and advisory support are also important ways that funders can help aid non-profits in the long run.

COVID has unveiled deep fault lines around the inequities that seep through the Indian development sector. Whether it was the millions of migrant workers who fled back to their hometowns, the thousands of families going hungry or children dropping out of schools, there has never been a more important time for the philanthropic community to help provide care for Indias most vulnerable communities. Philanthropists need to make an intentional shift to foster more equality and inclusivity which includes funding more organisations that work with the most marginalized communities, especially at the intersection of caste, class, gender, and poverty, as well as incorporating a G.E.D.I. (Gender, Equality, Diversity and Inclusion) lens within the culture and principles of their philanthropic initiatives. The pandemic has also re-emphasised the value of rural, localised, community-led efforts. Grassroots organisations with the greatest proximity to vulnerable communities have a critical role to play in engaging and supporting these communities through the pandemic.

There is also a growing need for philanthropists to expand their focus beyond large, well-established city-based nonprofits to also support more grassroots organisations in rural areas. Such organisations can enable last-mile efforts in remote areas where government services are unable to reach those in need.

Improving resilience

COVID-19 has endangered the long-term sustainability of nonprofits. There is an urgent need to significantly invest in strengthening their institutional resilience so they can weather external shocks like pandemics or recessions, where their interventions will be needed the most. This involves undertaking focused efforts to fundraise for flexible capital and participating in capacity building opportunities such as webinars, workshops, mentorship and 1:1 advisory support. Establishing a community that facilitates peer learning would enable organisations to collectively grow.

In a similar vein, engaging in increasing their collaborative efforts by joining forces with multiple stakeholders will enable nonprofits to drive collective impact. The situation is dire for many communities and there is a need for non-profits to move away from siloed efforts and participate in multi-stakeholder collaborative efforts. Collaborative platforms offer non-profits the opportunity to drive deeper and faster impact by leveraging greater resources, a wider network and more diverse skillsets.

Nonprofits must look to extend this sense of collaboration to the communities they work with as well. Models, where nonprofits or external stakeholders assess community needs, design and implement solutions, are common. While these may be effective in delivering immediate aid, they have been shown to be disempowering to communities and less sustainable over time. Approaching communities as partners or owners (rather than mere recipients), and actively involving them in the creation and implementation of programmes is a more effective model to build lasting community resilience.

An ecosystem of philanthropy

While philanthropy in India has grown and matured significantly over the last decade, there remains much to be done when compared to the countrys needs. Intermediaries need to play a crucial role in filling critical gaps in Indias philanthropic infrastructure by enabling the creation of common goods and platforms that the sector at large can leverage. This includes building and facilitating multi-stakeholder collaboratives to drive collective impact at scale, thought leadership and peer learning by increasing data collection and research initiatives.

Data and research around strategic giving are fragmented and efforts are taking place in silos. In the short term, this limits the innovation of concrete investment-ready vehicles and in the long term, enhances the existing lack of a cohesive mainstream narrative around philanthropy in India.

Intermediaries must look to strengthen the overall resilience of nonprofits by investing in capacity building, especially at the grassroots level. Building leadership capabilities among grassroots organisations will be particularly important given the rising significance of local, community-based organisations during the pandemic. While there are several initiatives focused on the economic empowerment of grassroots leaders, there are limited initiatives focused on providing them leadership training and development. Many of them miss out on opportunities due to language and technology barriers and lack of contextualized offerings that cater specifically to their needs.

Building a future together

As Omicron continues to run rampant across the country, it is vital that Indian philanthropy continues to adapt and evolve as per the needs of the situation. Given the difficulties faced by disadvantaged communities as a result of the pandemic, it is incumbent on all stakeholders philanthropists, non-profit organisations and intermediaries to make collaborative efforts to improve grassroots realities. Increasing the resilience of non-profit organisations and improving their capacities will ensure that Indias COVID recovery is equitable and leaves no one behind.

Views expressed above are the author's own.

END OF ARTICLE

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Iowa Wolves Partner With Principal and ArtForce Iowa to Cel – CSRwire.com

Posted: at 5:37 am

Published 02-11-22

Submitted by Principal Financial Group, Inc.

DES MOINES, Iowa, February 11, 2022 /CSRwire/ The Iowa Wolves, the NBA G League franchise of the Minnesota Timberwolves, along with Principal and ArtForce Iowa are excited to announce a collaboration to create and present unique player jerseys in celebration of the many diverse communities in Iowa, with an ensuing jersey auction to benefit local non-profits.

The creation and design of the jerseys has been led by ArtForce Iowa, a local non-profit with the mission to create opportunities for youth living on the margins through art. The community celebration jerseys designed by ArtForce Iowa youth will debut Monday, February 14, for an evening promoting Black History Month, with proceeds from the jersey auction going to Ill Make Me A World in Iowa: Iowas African American Festival.

We cant wait to share these jersey designs with everyone. From day one on this project, the team at ArtForce Iowa has absolutely crushed it with their intentional and meaningful approach to these designs and the importance of celebrating community, said Chip Albright, Vice President of Marketing of the Iowa Wolves. None of this would have been possible without the vision and commitment from leaders at Principal seeking innovative ways to support their local community here in Des Moines.

Principal is proud to be a part of such an exciting collaboration, said Jo Christine Miles, Director of Principal Foundation and Community Relations. Art and sports are universal languages that possess an unparalleled ability to unite, inspire, engage, and inform. Principal is excited to see how our efforts to blend them together leads to new understandings and opportunities for our local community. We commend ArtForces thoughtful and beautiful designs, and the Wolves openness to provide the stage to share this art with the community and for the benefit of local organizations.

The opportunity to create social justice minded jerseys for the Iowa Wolves was an experience I know that so many of us in the ArtForce Iowa community will continue to treasure, said Emma Parker, ArtForce Iowa Program Director. Knowing that the voices and ideas from our community will be worn by the players and seen by the greater community is truly an honor. I hope that we can continue to provide unique opportunities like this to the young people who call Des Moines home in the hopes of strengthening our communities and understanding of one another.

The list of themed community celebration games is below. All games will be played at Wells Fargo Arena starting at 7 p.m. and will include opportunities to win the jerseys in an auction benefitting local non-profits.

For details on the auction, visitiawolves.com.

Iowa Wolves Contact: John Meyer, Media Relations Specialist(515) 564-8555, john.meyer@iawolves.com

Principal Contact: Melissa Higgins, Public Relations(515) 878-0133, higgins.melissa@principal.com

ArtForce Iowa Contact: Christine Her, Executive Director(515) 777-3182, christine@iowaartsineducation.org

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Principal community relations supports the communities where affiliates of the Principal Financial Group, Des Moines, IA 50392 operates. Insurance products and plan administrative services provided through Principal Life Insurance Co., a member of the Principal Financial Group, Des Moines, IA 50392.

Principal, Principal and symbol design and Principal Financial Group are trademarks and service marks of Principal Financial Services, Inc., a member of the Principal Financial Group.

Principal (Nasdaq: PFG) helps people and companies around the world build, protect and advance their financial well-being through retirement, insurance and asset management solutions that fit their lives. Our employees are passionate about helping clients of all income and portfolio sizes achieve their goals offering innovative ideas, investment expertise and real-life solutions to make financial progress possible. To find out more, visit us atprincipal.com.

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Patagucci: Materialism and Higher Education The Bates Student – The Bates Student

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I head to the gym on a chilly weekday evening. Inside, everything is where it should be. Most of the machines are full. People dont make eye contact, look away if you catch their glance and reach for their phones between sets. We all have AirPods in and we know what were there for. We slide weights off racks, place them back onto other racks and rearrange them into better orders to get the optimal workout.

I stare at the beige ceiling and do 12 reps, repeating this three times before sliding the weights back off. When I rest, I try to look down at the ground, but notice that peoples clothes have names in the corner. So do mine. More sliding of weights, but this time onto a different machine. Outside, a light snow falls, covering the sleek SUVs that fill the parking lot. They have leather seats, remote start features and a pair of skis in the trunk.

A friend of mine almost took this semester off, but she decided to stay and make the best of it. She doesnt share this with the droves of people that took leaves this semester, last semester or really for any combination of Bates time units since the pandemic began. Although I cant speak for all of them, I know several of their stories: students exhausted with the demands of our academic machinery, the ostentatious feeling of our wealthy bubble and the search for meaning in a four-year degree, all made far more challenging by the strain of the pandemic.

When this friend was in the midst of planning her then-certain semester off, she chose seven pairs of pants and a little over seven tops that she considered her best and piled the rest in cardboard moving boxes for Goodwill. Its this kind of anti-materialist, pro-follow-what-matters feeling that I have often heard about: A wanting to not be a part of these rooms full of people with branded clothes, BMW keys in their pockets, prepared food to eat and words to sift through their expensive reasoning machines, but nothing to really get done other than lacrosse, theater or some other form of underwater basket weaving.

Instead, they look for something that feels more in touch with reality. My friend, who had found more meaning on her gap-year than from Bates academic experience, wanted to find a place like the farm where she stayed rent-free in exchange for her work, something that would provide concrete sustenance to some people.

A different friend told me that their non-Batesie sibling withdrew their admission from an ivy-league school in exchange for a membership in an intentional living community, citing that they found much more meaning in meeting the tangible needs of a tight-knit group. I heard of someone who took a year off to go work at a Colorado brewery, another who went to live in a backcountry ski hut. Others took mental health breaks, citing the various stressors of Bates for taking their leave but often wanting the comfort of home and family instead.

Much more than other colleges, Bates as a whole feels proud that it is grounded, more in touch with reality and less a part of the capitalist machine than more elite colleges with grindier students and bigger endowments. But I think what irritates so many people is that this feels like a thin veneer under which lies the same problems that people had with these other colleges.

People dont flex Gucci or whatever, but they don their Patagonia puffers and crunchy apparel for a reason. People seem bohemian enough until you realize that you needed straight As to make the deans list, which made up 25% of the student body last semester. People volunteer instead of intern, but they still do their fair share of interning, working at environmental groups and a milieu of nonprofits with names you know. They probably arent paid, but not to worry, its for the resume, not the paycheck. Not only that, but they can choose to take time off from school to follow what they think will make them happy.

To be fair, I think the moral bar is set pretty low for college students at large, and Bates clears that bar with flying colors. But I think we might have confused our glaze of intentionality with the careful examination that the fullest extent of that intention requires.

In other words: why do we choose Patagonia instead of some used, non-name-brand clothes? Why go for the deans list and transform ourselves into the information processing machines and commodities that Bates makes us? Are we doing it to serve our wider communities, to do the most good we can, to be good effective altruists? Or are we doing it because of inertia, because our parents have written the check, both for our college and our Subaru, and they expect us to go? And if we choose to opt out to pursue happiness in whatever form what are we giving up, and for who? And should we be doing what makes us happy?

I ask as someone guilty of most of these questions, but I dont think I have a clear answer for any of them. I think that digging for a solution, though, will help Bates get closer to what it wants to be.

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