Daily Archives: July 31, 2022

Pelosi should think twice about flying to Taiwan – Asia Times

Posted: July 31, 2022 at 8:52 pm

United States House of Representatives Speaker Nancy Pelosi has stated she plans to visit Taiwan at an undisclosed date in August, causing China to issue a stern warning that it could not rule out the possibility of a military response. Some people believe that this could possibly mean using fighter jets to intercept Pelosis plane.

On July 23, Josh Rogin, a columnist at the Washington Post, wrote that the US military could deploy an aircraft carrier to protect Pelosis plane. So will a war break out in the Taiwan Strait?

Different forecasts have been made about how a Taiwan Strait war could be triggered. The most common assumption is that Taiwan authorities will cross the red line in some way by substantively and irreversibly separating Taiwan from China, triggering the PLAs military reunification actions.

Pelosi has been anti-China for a long time. As the midterm elections in the US Congress are approaching while the prospects of her Democratic Party is poor, Pelosi is effectively canvassing for the Democratic Party by visiting Taiwan.

If the Democratic Party loses its majority in the House of Representatives, Pelosi will no longer keep her Speaker position and may also be held accountable by the party and take a hit to her reputation.

It is hard to say whether US President Joe Biden is discouraging or secretly supporting Pelosis Taiwan plan.

On the one hand, if the Republicans win a majority in the Congress in the midterm elections, Biden will become a lame duck President. On the other hand, if Biden provokes a US-China war during his term, he will be condemned by history. He faces a dilemma.

From Beijings perspective, both the White House and Congress represent the US. If either of them supports Taiwanese independence, China will not tolerate it. If Taiwan, or any foreign country, crosses the red line, it means the start of Chinas military reunification.

No one knows whether China will deploy fighter jets to intercept Pelosis plane. This is an option, but not the only one.

Technically, the interception is completely possible as PLA fighter jets have sufficient flight and weapon ranges. They can hold military exercises near Taiwan or stage continuous combat air patrols. If Pelosi wants to do it her own way, she can try. Repatriation, forced landing and even a direct shooting down are all options for Beijing.

Of course, shooting down the US House Speakers plane would be an act of war. But if the Speaker blatantly intrudes into Chinas sovereignty, it is no different from an undeclared war. It is justifiable for China to fight a war with military measures.

Pelosi is the third-in-line successor after the president and vice president of the US. The US military has the responsibility to ensure Pelosis safety but it does not mean that it agrees with the trip. When Biden said the US military had concerns, he accurately reflected the militarys position.

Technically, there are ways for US fighter jets to escort Pelosis plane :

No matter how strong the US-Japan relationship is, it is not in Japans interest to get involved or help provoke a war in the Taiwan Strait. Kadena is an American base, but Japan cannot escape responsibility.

It is different from the US-Japan Security Treaty, in which the US promised to offer help if Japan is attacked. In this case, it would be the US that takes the initiative to drag China into a war.

Washington Post reporter Rogin mentioned that some of Americas Asian allies expressed concern about Pelosis possible visit to Taiwan.

He was likely referring to Japan. Tokyo has remained ambiguous about whether the US-Japan Security Treaty would be activated when the US provokes a war that does not involve Japan.

This is a kind of strategic ambiguity and Japan will not take the initiative to change this strategy. Japan is not willing to be dragged into a war with China as it knows clearly that such a war will not be limited to the Taiwan Strait.

Guam is too far away. American fighter jets have to be refueled by tanker planes to extend their flight time in the Taiwan Strait. With such obvious actions, China would know when Pelosis plane will arrive.

Departing from an aircraft carrier would be ideal for the US. It does not involve any US allies and fighter jets can maintain combat readiness for a long time, with the benefit of a short response time.

However, it is not easy to mobilize an aircraft carrier, and the US may not have enough time to do it. Moreover, the role of an aircraft carrier is limited. If the PLA suddenly dispatches a large number of fighter jets, the US aircraft carrier will be trapped.

Deploying an aircraft carrier is like trying to hit a dog with a meat bun, which will definitely be eaten up. The US wont be able to retreat or rescue its aircraft carrier.

There is another problem: it is justifiable only if the US fighter jets are flying over the high seas but not in Taiwans airspace.

As Speaker of the House of Representatives, Pelosi is qualified to use US military aircraft, including the US governments special planes and even military transport planes.

It is possible that China will not take drastic action against unarmed US military aircraft arriving in Taiwan. But it is a completely different issue for US fighter jets to carry out combat operations in Taiwans airspace.

As Taiwan is part of China, it is theoretically possible for PLA fighter jets to open fire directly on foreign fighter jets in the name of intercepting armed incursions. Besides, it is not possible that Pelosis plane will enter Taiwans airspace without a military escort.

Perhaps American fighter jets will hand over to Taiwan fighter jets on the 12 nautical mile line or somewhere. But still, anything can happen when the US military, Taiwan military and PLA fighter jets are intertwined at close range. It could result in a misfire.

Other indirect options for China include the occupations of Dongyin Island, Dongsha Islands and Taiping Island and so on. Each of these islands has important strategic value, and would play a major role in the future battle of military unification.

Although the impact is indirect, China can benefit by taking the opportunity to occupy these islands. If the West takes any actions, China will implement a no-fly zone on Taiwan Island.

Politically, the US move to intensify the situation in the Taiwan Strait is not supported by its allies. Apart from Japan, Europe will also not support it.

European countries may sympathize with Taiwan if the PLA takes the initiative to attack the island. But they may not support the US if it is the one that stirs the pot.

When the US debates whether its China strategy should be vague or clear, Europe has always remained silent. In fact, it is an implicit statement.

Taiwanese authorities are also feeling anxious. On the one hand, they are eager to get more support from the US. But on the other hand, they are also afraid that US support will lead to a confrontation with China. They know that Taiwan cannot handle such a situation.

In any case, Taiwan will be the biggest loser as the confrontation will bring a devastating blow to the island. It may suffer from a smashing destruction or a no-fly zone blockage.

National reunification is the long-cherished wish of the Chinese people. Peaceful reunification is the first choice but military reunification remains an option.

The threshold for military reunification is very high. But Pelosis visit to Taiwan may force the PLA to resolutely cross the threshold. It is what Taiwan is worrying about.

Taiwan authorities keep linking the situation in the Taiwan Strait with Ukraine, but Taiwan really does not want to become another Ukraine.

Taiwan is in a dilemma as it cannot dissuade or encourage Pelosi from visiting. In the US, the anti-China sentiment is high. But the US is not ready for a war.

The US has lost its deterrence a long time ago. The chance for the US losing a war against China is increasing. In fact, it is meaningless for the US to try to show off its military power in front of China, which is now a real superpower.

The US itself is in a bad economic situation with stagflation. It is very likely that the US economy will start contracting before interest rates are raised to a high level. By that time, there will be no room for interest rate cuts to stimulate the economy. For the US, a war with China would be the last straw to break the camels back.

The US is entering stagflation, which is the most dangerous and difficult economic situation. It is why Biden is eager to talk to China.

The world economy will face a rare financial decoupling if the US raises interest rates and China cuts its. Whether funds should flow to the US for hedging or to China for growth, this is an important decision for global investors. It is also a big test for the US about whether it can remain as a superpower.

The US, which now lacks the confidence to control the world, does not want to face such a test. The US dollar also wants to avoid this test.

Militarily, the US army has long lost its advantage in the Taiwan Strait, and it is also losing its advantage in the Western Pacific.

The US military is facing serious problems of aging equipment and has lagged behind China in terms of key weapons such as hypersonic and theater missiles. It has been struggling to support Ukraine in the traditional battles and will not be able to fight against China.

The US military is still strong and it is possible that the US can mobilize forces from all over the world to the Asia-Pacific.

However, given that the war in Ukraine has been protracted and the threat from Russia has become clear, such mobilization will shake the US alliance system and fundamentally endanger the strategic interests of the US.

Biden wants to pressure China but cannot bear the consequences of a confrontation. He does not want to be pulled by Pelosis Taiwan trip into a confrontation against China in an untimely manner.

Pelosi only wants to boost her popularity. If Biden can exert his influence to make Pelosi abandon her Taiwan trip, it would benefit Sino-US relations.

But Biden could not publicly dissuade her, nor could the US accept that its Taiwan policy was being swayed by China. He used public opinion to achieve his goal.

Influential columnists like Rogin have no shortage of inside sources and they come to him when needed. If the US public opinion opposes her trip, Pelosi will have to reconsider it.

If US public opinion supports it, Biden can shirk responsibility and justify the US confrontation with China.

Interestingly, US public opinion has so far remained low-key except for a few Republicans. In the US, no politician dares to openly challenge the anti-China strategy, which is now politically correct, so people stay silent.

Only former Secretary of State Mike Pompeo said he wanted to ride on Pelosis plane to visit Taiwan. Perhaps no sponsor wants to buy him an air ticket.

For confidentiality reasons, Pelosi has been tight-lipped about whether and when she will visit Taiwan. This is very strange. Why cant she make it public? Perhaps she does not want the PLA to prepare for the interception of her plane. Or simply, she herself is hesitant.

Pelosi is a politician older than Biden. She puts her own political legacy as a top priority, over the interests of the Democratic Party and the US.

Today, the US is divided ideologically but there is a high degree of consensus on the anti-China issue. Pelosi is trying to benefit from such anti-China sentiment.

US politicians promotion of anti-China sentiment is a bad thing for the US, but actually not so bad for China. If the US has to rely on attacking an opponent to reach consensus, it has lost its direction and initiative in the beginning.

Also, if the US does not put enough effort into basic developments that are unrelated to its opponent, it will be stuck in deeper economic stagnation and fall apart.

For the US, rebuilding social harmony, economy and cultural self-confidence are its most important tasks. These problems cannot be solved by opposing China. But now the US is blaming China for everything. It is actually self-misleading.

It seems that the US is putting a lot of pressure on China but it is actually delaying the cure of its illness and weakening its foundation. Blaming others is a typical loser mindset. Some US people are aware of this.

A country has to follow its own direction and rhythm to develop itself. Its rivals moves are a less important thing.

In the global competition, a large country should take the initiative to lead the worlds economy and culture. But a country will only show its weakness by spending time blaming others and covering up its incompetence.

The US sees the anti-China sentiment as a great mountain but China sees it as a small pile of stinky garbage. Pelosi may think she is building a tower on top of a mountain but China sees that she is only throwing a piece of debris on some garbage.

For China, economic outreach to the Global South is key to breaking through American efforts to contain Chinas drive for economic predominance.

China has to solve the problem of generating its own independent growth momentum, after breaking through the critical point of the Matthew Effect, the economic maxim that rich countries get richer and poor countries get poorer.

Americas comprehensive and unlimited anti-China campaign can slow down Chinas development, at the cost of a greater deceleration of the United States. But China is not only putting in place a dual cycle, that is, promoting domestic consumption as well as exports.

China also divides the external export cycle into two sub-cycles: Europe and the United States on one hand, and the Belt and Road/Asia, Africa and Latin America on the other.

In fact, the US government and politicians know clearly that anti-China should only be a slogan.

An armed confrontation with China is something that the US can say but cannot do. This is why Biden wanted to talk to Chinese President Xi Jinping. (Editors note: Biden and Xi held a two-hour phone call on Thursday to discuss trade, Taiwan and Ukraine war matters.)

Pelosi may have expected Chinas strong opposition to her Taiwan trip. She wants to be praised for having resisted huge pressure from China.

US public opinion will not oppose politically correct issues, such as being anti-China and supporting Taiwan. Even if there is any noise, Pelosi still has enough political resources to silence them.

If the Republican Party supports her trip, then it is a bipartisan consensus. If not, she can attack the Republicans. It seems to be a sure bet for her.

As Speaker of the House of Representatives, Pelosi has authority in domestic affairs and legislation while diplomacy and security are the responsibility of the president. Pelosis visit to Taiwan has a symbolic meaning and may trigger an unprecedented national security crisis.

I hope Pelosi, who always talks about ideology but actually cares more about businesses, will understand that her Taiwan visit will create a huge crisis that will affect many things.

Chen Feng is editor of Guancha.cn, which originally published this article in Chinese as an exclusive manuscript. It is republished in English translation here with kind permission.

The content of the article is purely the authors personal opinion, and does not represent either news platforms opinion. It may not be reprinted without authorization.

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All About the Utopia That Was Once in Perth Amboy, NJ – Montclair Girl – The Montclair Girl

Posted: at 8:50 pm

A beautiful waterfront and a lineup of delicious seafood restaurants are some of the highlights of Perth Amboy a Central Jersey town thats full of culture. What many may not know is that this Middlesex County town has a fascinating past dating back to the 1800s. Raritan Bay Union was a utopian community in Perth Amboy, New Jersey that existed for seven years (1853 1860) as an effort to manifest gender, class, and racial equality through intentional living.Read on to learn all about the 19th-century utopia in Perth Amboy.

The Raritan Bay Union community was started in 1853 bywealthy investor Marcus Spring and his force of a wife, Rebecca Buffum Spring. Rebecca, a Quaker, was an avid follower of the great abolitionist, John Brown, and was determined to do all she could to end slavery. Both were convinced that society would change once it had witnessed moral living in action. The two were no strangers to the concept of utopian communities. They founded Raritan Bay Union after leaving the secular North American Phalanx community in Colts Neck Township,Monmouth County, New Jersey out of frustration with that societys pluralistic lack of focus.

These intentional cooperative communities were incorporated by founders who then sold shares to stockholders who became members.Like the Shakers before them, they wished to plan and create a more perfect society. The latter half of the nineteenth century, during the decades leading up to the Civil War, was an especially intense period of American ideological fervor. Critiques of the still-new United States government drove the most optimistic to believe they might lead by example.

New Jersey locals made occasional attempts, well into the beginning of the twentieth century, to build a perfect society set apart from the corrupting influences of mainstream life. In 1906, Upton Sinclair, author of the scathing social critiqueThe Jungle, founded the Helicon Home Colony in Englewoodthough it burned down after only half a year. Emma Goldman, who famously fought for racial equity, womens reproductive rights, and freedom from the government while claiming, If I cant dance, I dont want to be part of your revolution, participated in the Stelton Colony in Piscataway NJ.

One aspect that set the Union apart from most other intentional communities was its economic design. Members were not forced to surrender their private property for the purposes of the group. Though the Union was meant to correct outside social inequalities and to save labor and money for members who would work collectively, members could live communally or in private residences. Along with their shared work within thecommunity, they were expected to participate in social events and exchange knowledge gained in their individual intellectual pursuits.

Read More: All About the Hamilton House Museum in Clifton, NJ

A major aspect of the Union was its boarding school. The school was considered radical in its time. Female students were encouraged to participate in activities that were, at the time, generally limited to males. They were taught to speak in public, engage in physical sports, perform in theatrical plays, and be actively involved in social agitation for the causes espoused within the community.

The schoolwas run by Theodore Weld, a well-known abolitionist and journalist who was married to the equally famous abolitionist, Angelina Grimk. Sisters Angelina and Sarah Grimk were teachers in the school, along with several other noted social reformers. There, they taught the children of other abolitionists, including Elizabeth Cady Stanton.

Black leadership was glaringly absent from this and other utopian communities of the era. Sarah Grimk tied the subordination of enslaved people and free women together, identifying both as unjustly deemed mentally inferior while being denied access to education. Prominent Black speakers came often to give presentations to the community andstudents. Yet, while the Grimk sisters championed the education of their Black nephews sons of their brother, Henry the Union school was hardly interracial.

In this, and other ways, the Union was a place of contradiction. Contradictions around race abound in the history of Perth Amboy. The Perth Amboy wharf was New Jerseys primary inbound port for selling enslaved people kidnapped out of Africa during the colonial settlement era. Yet, that same city would, in 1870, be the place whereThomas Mundy Peterson became the first free Black person in the US to votein an election after the passage of the 15th Amendment to the Constitution.

See More: Around the World in 80 Days: From Hoboken to Jersey City

The Union did not remain intact for long. The inconsistencies of beliefs and intentions that had driven the Welds to leave the Phalanx community and to found the Union emerged in their Perth Amboy community too. Perhaps unsurprisingly, not everyone who signed on to the overarching themes of racial, class, and gender equality shared the same ideas of how to express and live their idealism. Some of the variances in perspective amongst members were centered on philosophies of education and others on aspects of community life. Some members and visitors simply found the community stifling.

While visiting in 1856, Henry David Thoreau let it be known that he did not appreciate the degree to which members were expected to participate in community society. He was specifically aggrieved by his inclusion at each evenings dance social. Less a revolutionary than a recluse, it isnt terribly surprising that Thoreaus notion of utopia did not include the famous dancing demanded byEmma Goldman.

The end of the Union as an incorporated venture did not mean the total dissolution of the community. In the post-Union years, Marcus Spring attempted to draw literary and artistic intellectuals to the spot. In 1864, Marcus invited artist George Inness to come to live at Eagleswood, the new name for the school and surrounding area. Often called the father of American landscape painting, Inness paintings of New England and theEast Coastsparked an art movement referred to as Tonalist that could be described as artworks set into edit mode with the warmth mode turned all the way up, bathing scenes in rich yellow and red hues. Rather than pay rent, Inness presented Spring with his painting Peace and Plenty (1865) which isnow on view in Gallery 760 of the American Wing at the MET Museum.

(Photo credit:metmuseum.org)

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Comment: 988 crisis line will help, but care needed after call | HeraldNet.com – The Daily Herald

Posted: at 8:50 pm

By Kailey Fiedler-Gohlke / For The Herald

As the new 988 mental health hotline rolls out across the country, theres growing concern among officials and advocates alike that the system is not ready to meet demand.

In Washington, one of only four states that managed to pass comprehensive legislation (House Bill 1477) to sustainably fund its 988 call centers, the outlook surprisingly isnt any better. Already, more than a third of crisis calls made in Washington are rerouted out of state to backup centers, where operators inevitably wont be as familiar with local needs or resources. The state continues to struggle to fill call center jobs and the situation only stands to get worse as more people turn to 988 for help.

The hope is that 988 will eventually allow people experiencing a mental health emergency to easily reach a trained crisis counselor 24 hours a day, seven days a week, via call, text, or chat, and be met by mobile crisis teams; drastically reducing police involvement on mental health calls to the few, limited circumstances when public safety is at risk.

But our vision for mental health care shouldnt start and stop at the moment of crisis. We need a more comprehensive and compassionate continuum of services, one that holistically supports a persons wellbeing, and works to prevent crises to begin with.

As the chief executive officer of HERO House NW, a group of clubhouses based in Bellevue, Everett and Seattle, Ive seen firsthand how our model of care has been able to help people whose lives have been disrupted by mental illness to recover and thrive.

Clubhouses like ours provide a safe, dedicated environment for people living with serious mental illness, where they can get access to practical services including job training, housing support, education and affordable, healthy meals that consider all of a persons needs, not just their clinical ones.

While medication and therapy treat the symptoms of serious mental illness, clubhouses address the deep social isolation that so often accompanies these conditions. By bringing people into an intentional community and building the necessary trust, were able to work with members to improve their health without turning to coercion and forced treatment, all while reducing the negative impacts of incarceration, homelessness and neglect that people with serious mental illness disproportionately face.

This approach, rooted in respect and human dignity, has a long, proven history of incredible results ever since Fountain House first pioneered the model in the late 1940s. To this day, clubhouse members are more likely to be employed and stably housed, and have lower health care costs than others living with serious mental illness.

For Lisa, a member of Bellevue Clubhouse, our community gave her the confidence, acceptance and strength of purpose to make major changes in her life, including going back to school. Shes now joined our board as a clubhouse representative working to aid others in their recovery and tells me that: We may have to deal with a serious mental illness for the rest of our lives, but we can still have meaningful lives, one day at a time.

While 988 wont be perfect overnight, it shows theres bipartisan support among state officials, policy makers and the public at large to advance mental health care; working towards a continuum of services that should leverage the power of clubhouse communities as an important tool for a persons recovery.

To accomplish a truly effective care response, we need to give people in crisis more than a number to turn to. Expanding clubhouse capacity should be a critical part of our strategy and approach, recognizing that its a model shown to save lives, save money, and improve outcomes with grace.

Kailey Fiedler-Gohlke is chief executive officer of HERO House NW in Bellevue, a member-led community for people living with serious mental illness that is modeled after Fountain House and part of Fountain Houses national clubhouse network.

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Denver residents give input on $2 million in city infrastructure spending – CBS Colardo

Posted: at 8:49 pm

On Saturday, the City of Denver held a public meeting at the Rodolfo "Corky" Gonzales Library to hear from residents about how they would you spend $2 million in Denver. City officials have been asking residents in different neighborhoods for input on project ideas on how to improve infrastructure in the city.

"I would put some lights stop lights in different areas," said Rosa Marie Vergil-Garcia, a Denver resident.

It's all part of the first ever participatory budgeting process giving community members a say in how to spend millions in capital funds for those in the far northeast area, east Denver and southwest Denver, among others.

"I think it should be spent on ecology and water-based planning that has mobility stacked on top of that, so that we're planning for people and the planet," Heidi Newhart said.

Officials are trying to be intentional with outreach by connecting with historically underserved communities, by going to food banks, public housing sites and even Denver County Jail.

"We've heard a lot about lights and parks to make safer neighborhoods. We've heard a lot about transportation issues, things like bike lanes or filling out wide sidewalks where there are gaps," said Kiki Turner, the deputy of communications for the department of finance with the City and County of Denver. "We know that sometimes people might not trust the city or an unfamiliar face, but they will trust their local leaders, so we're trying to empower those residents and those groups."

These are changes that Vergil-Garcia hopes doesn't displace the people in those areas.

"I want to see the people stay in their own houses and be safe," she said.

The process of gathering ideas is the first phase of the program. Ideas can still be submitted until July 31 at 11:59 p.m. After that, proposals will be developed and voted on, and infrastructure projects could be started as early as next year.

To submit ideas, visit Let's Budget, Denver: How Would You Spend $2 million in Denver?.

Marissa Armas is a bilingual reporter who's thrilled to be back home in Colorado reporting on her community. Born and raised in Denver, Marissa's a proud Latina, with roots in El Salvador, Guatemala and New Mexico.

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25 Chicagoland moms are participating in a three-year pilot program to further invest in their academic careers – Chicago Tribune

Posted: at 8:49 pm

Every other Friday, 25 Chicagoland mothers head to the South Austin neighborhood to participate in an initiative that will help support these young women in their academic careers.

The Academic Coaching program is part of New Moms, an nonprofit organization that provides services and coaching for young mothers around housing, job training and family support.

Since 1983, New Moms began working with mothers who are 24 years old or younger. Each year, New Moms partners with more than 300 young women who are looking to improve their lives for themselves and their families.

In January, the three-year pilot program partnered with the City Colleges of Chicago to increase degree attainment.

We created the Academic Coaching program with the goal of increasing degree attainment for young moms in Chicagoland, said Stephanie Held who is the marketing and communications coordinatorfor New Moms. We believe intentional investment in the postsecondary persistence and achievement of young moms will have lasting positive influences on families and communities.

Moms participate in a positive parenting practices session led by Kyra Walker-Tate, back to the camera, for moms in the academic coaching program at New Moms on July 22, 2022, in Chicago. (Stacey Wescott / Chicago Tribune)

In Illinois, 22% of all undergraduates are parents, according to the Institute for Womens Policy Research. Single moms in Illinois who graduate with a bachelors degree are 67% less likely than high school graduates to live in poverty and 45% less likely with an associates degree.

Additionally, there is an explicit racial equity piece to our goals because women of color are not graduating from college at the same rate as their white peers, much less student parents, Held said. An intentional investment like this program will provide a strong return on investment to families and communities leading to more mothers of color graduating from postsecondary schools and working in family-sustaining, living-wage jobs.

Over the next three years, the Academic Coaching program aims to understand how a peer network can help support young moms enrolled in college and see what kind of impact monthly monetary support has on student parents, according to Held.

Recruitment for participants was done among New Moms, an existing network including mothers who are co-enrolled in the Housing, Job Training and Family Support programs and alumni from those programs, according to Held.

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The application process included having applicants submit a letter of recommendation and a letter of intention reflecting on how the program would help them persist during their college career.

Childcare volunteer Anna Morato helps out with children whose moms are participating in the academic coaching program at New Moms on July 22, 2022, in Chicago. (Stacey Wescott / Chicago Tribune)

During the program, the 25 moms will receive a $500 monthly stipend while enrolled in the program, according to the City Colleges of Chicago.

City Colleges of Chicago is dedicated to eliminating barriers and addressing inequities that impact access to higher education for underserved communities, Juan Salgado, chancellor of the City Colleges of Chicago said in a statement. The new academic coaching program is a powerful example of our shared investment in supporting young parents as they pursue their education.

Along with biweekly individual and group coaching, the academic coaching program provides transportation and child care support.

Should a mother take longer than three years to finish their degree, they will still be enrolled in the program and continue getting academic support until graduation and beyond.

Many student parents will start college and never finish, Held said. We want to see the city rally around this underserved and growing group and invest in ways in supporting them.

tatturner@chicagotribune.com

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Bakari Sellers tells local audience progress has been made but there’s work to be done – Journal Times

Posted: at 8:49 pm

SOMERS There were two questions posed by Bakari Sellers to the attendees of the P2F Conference on Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion held Tuesday and Wednesday at the University of Wisconsin-Parkside.

How far have we come? And where do we go from here?

Sellers was the keynote speaker for the conference that brought together organizations and businesses from the area to discuss practical and intentional applications of diversity, equity and inclusion principles.

In asking the questions, Sellers made clear the ensuing discussion was not just for communities of color but for everyone.

Sellers described it as the journey were on together for a more perfect union.

There is a duty everyone has, he said, to leave the country better than you found it.

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History

Sellers covered a lot of history in his short speech:

These events were not a long time ago, Sellers said. If Emmitt Till had lived, he would be younger than Nancy Pelosi and a year older than President Joe Biden.

Bakari Sellers spoke of the courage of Mamie Till, the mother of Emmitt Till, who was the victim of racist violence in Mississippi in 1955 when he was just 14 years old. Mamie Till insisted her son have an open casket, so people could see the violence done to her son. She also allowed photographers to take pictures, which were then distributed across the country. Sellers told the young people in the audience to take out their phones and Google Emmitt Till's funeral photo to understand how Mamie Till sparked a generation of civil rights activism. Shown here, Amarion Schroeder looks on while Dr. Arletta Frazier pulls up the famous photo.

Communities of colorare still struggling, he continued, and pointed to the lack of access to affordable housing, clean water and barriers to the ballot box in many cities.

Kids still go to school where the heating and cooling does not work, the infrastructure is dilapidated, and they are literally punished for the zip code they were born into, Sellers said.

Weve made a lot of progress, Sellers told those in attendance, but we still have yet a ways to go.

Sellers

Sellers is the son of civil rights activist Cleveland Sellers, who survived the 1968 Orangeburg Massacre in which South Carolina state troopers opened fire on students, injuring 28 and killing three. The state troopers were acquitted of using excessive use-of-force, but Cleveland Sellers was convicted of rioting and served a year in prison at hard labor. He was later pardoned.

The younger Sellers would follow in his fathers footsteps but in endeavors not available to the previous generation. He became the youngest black official in the countrys history when he was elected in 2006 to the South Carolina House of Representatives at just 22 years old.

He now works as an attorney and is a New York Times best-selling author and CNN political commentator.

What next

As for what is next, Sellers said, That question is damn hard and it gives me anxiety. Its something I think about every day.

He noted it was a question discussed by Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. in the book titled, Where Do We Go From Here?

Sellers explained King did not ask open-ended questions or give choices. For King, there was either freedom or bondage, justice or injustice, chaos or community.

For Sellers, the answer to where we go from here lies in the ability to love your neighbors even when they dont love you.

Sellers said that was an action item, but also a hard one, especially for members of the black community.

Thats the challenge, he said. Thats the burden. Thats very, very difficult.

Sellers admitted it was aspirational for him.

I dont want anyone here to think Ive achieved this, but He aint done with me yet, Sellers said.

The second thing he advised was learning to dream with your eyes open.

I fundamentally believe theres nothing irredeemable about this country, Sellers said, We just have to reimagine what she looks like.

He explained that meant reimagining systems of oppression that are bearing down on so many, deconstruct those and reimagine those so theyre equitable for all.

P2F

The conference where Sellers made his remarks was organized by Payne & Frazier Consultants, located in downtown Racine.

The P2F Conference on Diversity, Equity and Inclusion had the support of the Payne Family contingency. From left: Dr. Deonte Moss, Dr. Krontayia Payne-Moss, Kayla Payne, Alonzo Payne, and Kimberly Payne.

Malik Frazier (far right) was very excited to hear from his mom, Dr. Arletta Frazier (shown center), that Bakari Sellers would be the keynote speaker at the P2F Conference on Diversity, Equity and Inclusion. Arletta said when he was young, she always ensured that he read books, which sparked his interest in politics. While Sellers may be one of his heroes, Malik said his mom continued to be his inspiration. However, when the time came, Malik did not pursue a political career. He works as a deputy with the Racine County Sheriff's Office and is in the Army Reserve.

Kimberly Payne and Dr. Arletta Frazier formed the company five years ago. They specialize in community engagement, offer training in diversity, equity, and inclusion, and work with vulnerable populations, which includes the Right Direction mentoring program through Racine Unified School District that assists at-risk youth.

Payne told the attendees of the conference, I have a simple desire to do good work that matters in our community.

The P2F Conference for Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion: Understanding Our Past and Present Building our Future was designed to provide professionals and community members with practical DEI information.

Payne explained people might attend DEI conferences but are challenged to implement what they learned once they returned to their offices.

She said the information provided at the conference was designed to be useful and usable. The conference was also an opportunity for people to discuss changing demographics and cultural identity development.

Payne added they sought to challenge participants to explore and examine their own biases, their own cultures, and explore how they engage with others as a result of that.

Dr. Arletta Frazier said the second day of the conference would include topics of DEI by design; that is, what DEI should look like for the individuals organization and the intentional actions that could be undertaken to apply the principles discussed at the conference.

She said the conference was an opportunity to really design what DEI means to them and how it was going to look moving forward.

Additionally, the attendees would develop an understanding that diversity is actually a broad term.

We always want to put diversity as black and white, due to the climate that were living in right now, especially since George Floyd, so we want to always put a color to it, Frazier said. But diversity is broad and much larger than that.

The conference also sought to educate people on the necessity of creating environments that are equitable for all; that is, removing barriers that hinder people from being successful.

Dr. Arletta Frazier said it was important that young, Black men in the community be at the keynote speech by Bakari Sellers. She wanted them to see a successful Black man, to understand what was possible. Dontavious Steeves, front, and Giovanni King, back, both had questions for Sellers. King wanted to know if Sellers was running for president. He replied he was not.

Frazier explained it is not enough to hire people from diverse backgrounds. Organizations must also ensure their diverse populations are successful in those positions, that their voices are respected and brought to the table.

The keyword, she continued, was intentional. Having a professional environment where diverse populations thrive does not happen by chance; instead, it happens when those in charge take deliberate actions intentional actions to ensure a thriving workforce.

Anny Morrobel-Sosa, UW System vice president for academic and student affairs, speaks during a press conference on campus Wednesday announcing a project funded through a Workforce Innovation Grant that will draw on regional partnerships to teach employable skills to incarcerated students while and work to reduce racial disparities in education, income and incarceration.

Anny Morrobel-Sosa, UW System vice president for academic and student affairs, speaks during a press conference on campus Wednesday announcing a project funded through a Workforce Innovation Grant that will draw on regional partnerships to teach employable skills to incarcerated students while and work to reduce racial disparities in education, income and incarceration.

Wisconsin Department of Corrections Secretary Kevin Carr speaks during a press conference Wednesday at UW-Parkside announcing a project funded through a Workforce Innovation Grant that will draw on regional partnerships to teach employable skills to incarcerated students and work to reduce racial disparities in education, income and incarceration.

UW-Parkside Chancellor Debbie Ford speaks during a press conference on campus Wednesday announcing a project funded through a Workforce Innovation Grant that will draw on regional partnerships to teach employable skills to incarcerated students and work to reduce racial disparities in education, income and incarceration.

UW-Parkside Chancellor Debbie Ford speaks during a press conference on campus Wednesday announcing a project funded through a Workforce Innovation Grant that will draw on regional partnerships to teach employable skills to incarcerated students and work to reduce racial disparities in education, income and incarceration.

UW-Parkside Communications Professor Jonathan Shailor, center, stands to be recognized during a press conference on campus Wednesday, announcing a project funded through a Workforce Innovation Grant that will draw on regional partnerships to teach employable skills to incarcerated students and work to reduce racial disparities in education, income and incarceration. Shailor has led the Shakespeare Project at the Racine Correctional Institute since the 1990s, a partnership between Parkside and the Racine prison which provides a chance for inmates to study and perform the works of William Shakespeare.

Anny Morrobel-Sosa, UW System vice president for academic and student affairs, speaks during a press conference on campus Wednesday announcing a project funded through a Workforce Innovation Grant that will draw on regional partnerships to teach employable skills to incarceratedstudents while and work to reduce racial disparities in education, income and incarceration.

We always want to put diversity as black and white, due to the climate that were living in right now, especially since George Floyd, so we want to always put a color to it. But diversity is broad and much larger than that.

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Bakari Sellers tells local audience progress has been made but there's work to be done - Journal Times

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Revisiting the Courier & Press’ diversity pledge in 2022 – Courier & Press

Posted: at 8:49 pm

Once a year, Gannett asks its local newsrooms (including the Courier & Press) to update readers on a 2020 pledge the news organization made to better reflect its communities.

At the Courier & Press, our 2022 diversity report is a mixed bag. Our racial make-up 92 percent white and 8 percent Black represent the largest two segments of what Census data says is Evansville's population (86 percent and 6 percent, respectively).

When it comes to gender diversity, the Courier & Press falls short. Last year, our newsroom was one-third women, and that fell in 2022 to just over one-fourth.

More:Gannett newsrooms making steady progress in overall diversity

Two departures from our leadership ranks over the past 12 months, including Cindi Andrews' move to senior news director at the Indianapolis Star, have left us without women in management roles. Andrews was the first female executive editor in our newspaper's history.

When we've had career opportunities open at the Courier & Press, we have pushed to make sure we explore a diverse, deep pool of talent to fill each role. Still, as with many industries, local journalism has dealt with upheaval in the labor market and the accompanying worker shortages.

But we'll keep working at it. Different perspectives and different backgrounds help us see issues in more ways. That leads to a clearer picture, which we can then, hopefully, present to you as more effective (and more accurate) community journalism.

Evansville Courier & Press:2022 newsroom diversity snapshot

Those of us working in the Courier & Press newsroom today know that the concept of diversity stretches across several categories race, ethnicity, age, gender andthought and we need to reflect those differences in our coverage.

We have a journalist on staff whose role is to examine culture and diversity in the community, a position that we created in 2021. It has helped us to be more intentional in our approach to examining issues that affect people of color and others who may feel underrepresented in local media.

Tri-State diversityTri-State's racial makeup is changing. The 'why' is complicated.

As Andrews wrote in last year's update, and I wholeheartedly support: "Ultimately, we want to know that we're writingfor,notabout,various segments of the population."

You'll notice we still run few jailhouse mug shots. That's a policy that seems like an even wiser choice now after a local sheriff told the Courier & Press that he considered mug shots to be for "entertainment value" and that he arbitrarily removed the mug shot of a government body's attorney following his June arrest.

Know that whatever progress we makeor don't makein our reporting, hiring and reflection of our community, we will report back to you about it in a year.

We are accountable to you.

Ryan Reynolds is interim editor of the Courier & Press. You can reach him via email at ryan.reynolds@courierpress.com or follow him on Twitter, @ryanreynolds.

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Donald Trump said it would be ‘very hard for me not to run’ against Joe …

Posted: at 8:48 pm

Former President Donald Trump.Joe Maiorana/AP Photo

Donald Trump said it would be "very hard" not to run against Joe Biden in 2024.

The former president discussed when and if he would announce his candidacy while appearing on a talk show.

While not confirming whether or not he would run, Trump said: "in my mind, I've already made the decision."

Former President Donald Trump said it would be "very hard" for him to not run for president against Joe Biden in 2024, in the latest hint about his intent to run.

While appearing on The Clay Travis and Buck Sexton Show on Friday, the former president was asked: "Knowing what you know and seeing what you see of Joe Biden, how do you not run in 2024?"

"Very hard for me not to run, to be honest," Trump responded.

"And also, the polls indicate that, from the Republican standpoint, it would be easy. And I think from, like I was up 11 points against Biden the other day. I don't think he's gonna run."

Trump went on to discuss poll numbers, and claimed that he now has "the best poll numbers now I've ever had."

Recent polls have consistently suggested that Trump would beat Biden in a potential match-up, according to polling data aggregator RealClearPolitics.

Trump's most likely contender in a Republican primary for 2024 would be rising star Florida governor Ron DeSantis.

Although he has beaten Trump in some conservative straw polls, others suggest Trump would win.

After discussing upcoming midterms, talk show host Sexton asked Trump if he was going to announce his candidacy when it would be.

Trump went on to muse over the benefits of announcing before or after midterms, and claimed: "if we do badly, they'll blame me no matter what even if I had nothing to do with it."

A detailed view of a golf bag belonging to Eric Trump reads "Trump 2024."Jonathan Ferrey/LIV Golf via Getty Images

Sources close to the president have previously suggested he is more likely to announce before midterms.

While remaining coy about whether or not he will run, the former president said that he had already made up his mind.

"I'll make a decision fairly soon. And my I must tell you and I think I can say this in my mind, I've already made the decision," the former president said.

Recent photographs from earlier this week showed Trump's son Eric's golf bag had "Trump 2024" emblazoned on it, in another hint that he intends to run for a third time.

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Donald Trump doing ‘tele-rally’ for Tudor Dixon on primary eve – Detroit News

Posted: at 8:48 pm

  1. Donald Trump doing 'tele-rally' for Tudor Dixon on primary eve  Detroit News
  2. Betsy DeVos Is Still on Donald Trump's Side Mother Jones  Mother Jones
  3. Donald Trump Slammed by MAGA Supporters After Tudor Dixon Endorsement  Newsweek
  4. Trump Backs Tudor Dixon for Michigan Governor After Months of GOP Tumult  Business Insider
  5. Former president Donald Trump endorses Tudor Dixon for governor  MLive.com
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Will Ivana help Donald Trump with tax breaks from beyond the grave? – The Guardian US

Posted: at 8:48 pm

When Ivana Trump, Donald Trumps first wife, was buried last month near the first hole of Trump National Golf Club in Bedminster, New Jersey, few immediately guessed that her graves location might also serve her ex-husbands long-held tax planning purposes.

Tax code in New Jersey exempts cemetery land from all taxes, rates, and assessments and her grave, as such, potentially has advantageous tax implications for a Trump family trust that owns the golf business, in a state where property and land taxes are notoriously high.

According to documents published by ProPublica, the Trump family trust previously sought to designate a nearby property in Hackettstown, New Jersey, as a non-profit cemetery company.

But Ivana Trump, who died earlier this month at 73 after a fall at her home in New York Citys Manhattan, is the first person known to have been buried at the golf course, where Donald Trump and his family spend a lot of time in the summers.

Under New Jerseys tax code, cemetery companies are not only exempt from real estate taxes, rates, and assessments or personal property taxes, but also business taxes, sales taxes, income taxes, and inheritance taxes, according to Insider.

Brooke Harrington, a professor of sociology at Dartmouth College in New Hampshire, tweeted on Saturday that she had looked into claims that Ivana Trumps resting-place might also benefit her ex-husbands tax planning from beyond the grave.

As a tax researcher, I was skeptical of rumors Trump buried his ex-wife in that sad little plot of dirt on his Bedminster, NJ golf course just for tax breaks. So I checked the NJ tax code & folksits a trifecta of tax avoidance. Property, income & sales tax, all eliminated, Harrington wrote, after opinions accusing Trump of being primarily motivated by the possibility of a tax break began popping up on social media.

Harrington later tweeted the full New Jersey tax code for cemetery land. While there is no stipulation for the amount of human remains necessary in order to qualify for the break, sales of wreaths, larger evergreen arrangements, flowers and other similar items are taxable.

While saying she was surprised about the tax suggestions she also accused Donald Trump of burying his wife in little more than a paupers grave and as a result disgracing the three children they had together, Ivanka, Don Jr and Eric.

Previous reports have suggested that her former husband has planned to build different types of cemetery operations at the Bedminster golf course.

Last week it was the venue for the Saudi Arabia-backed LIV Golf tournament and was the focus of protests by some families of victims of the September 11, 2001, terrorist attacks on the US, after Donald Trump previously joined opinions that the kingdom was behind the Al-Qaida plot to hijack passenger jets and crash them into World Trade Centre in New York and the Pentagon.

US public radio station NPR reported in 2012 under the online headline Fairway to Heaven that Trump planned to build himself a mausoleum on the property, prompting some local objections. That proposal was later expanded to a cemetery that could contain upwards of a 1,000 possible graves.

That plan was later dropped and replaced with a design for a 10-plot private family cemetery in the same spot, and refined again into a proposal for a commercial 284-plot cemetery, the station reported.

Ivana Trump was buried in a plot close to the first tee of the golf course, following her funeral in Manhattan on 20 July. Her resting place is currently marked with a rudimentary wreath of white flowers and an engraved granite stone.

However it is unlikely that the 1.5 acre plot would deliver tax exemptions to the entire Bedminster property any break only applies so long as the plot is less than 10 acres.

But every break counts, and the former president has previously designated the plot as a farm because some trees on the site are turned into mulch used for flower beds, according to the Washington Post.

Trumps notions to partially designate the golf course as a cemetery date to at least 2014. Plans then filed with local and state authorities listed a proposal for a pair of graveyards one for the family, another with 284 plots for sale. The Washington Post noted that buyers, presumably avid golfers, could pay for a kind of eternal membership to the club.

But Trump, true to form, had not at that time settled on a course of action. Robert Holtaway, a Bedminster town official, said he had doubts about the cemetery plans. It never made any sense to me. But, he added, we dont question motives. Were there as a land-use board.

Trump already has a plot at All Faiths Cemetery in Jamaica, Queens, close to his mother and father, but plans for his Bedminster mausoleum were suitably grandiose: 19 feet high, in stone, with obelisks, and planted smack in the middle of the course.

Trump has kept silent about his plans for how the Eternal Donald will be commemorated in the earthly realm. In 2007, then aged 60, he told the New York Post that the golden course mausoleum was a rational choice.

Its never something you like to think about, but it makes sense, he told the papers Page Six column. This is such beautiful land, and Bedminster is one of the richest places in the country.

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