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Daily Archives: August 29, 2022
How much money could Donald Trump have to pay in fines if his businesses are penalized? – AS USA
Posted: August 29, 2022 at 7:42 am
The investigation into potential mishandling of classified documents has dominated the headlines since the home of Donald Trump was raided earlier this month. On Friday the affidavit justifying the FBI search was made public, outlining the extent of Trumps legal woes, but it is far from the only investigation into the former President.
The Trump Organization is the subject of two probes in New Year investigating business affairs dating back decades.
Earlier this month former Trump Organization chief financial officer Allen Weisselberg pleaded guilty to 15 criminal tax fraud charges. Weisselberg admitted to being involved in a series of schemes that allowed top Trump executives to avoid paying taxes. Manhattan DA Alvin Bragg said Trumps eponymous firm is directly implicated in a wide range of criminal activity.
Simultaneously, New York Attorney General Letitia James is conducting a separate civil investigation into claims that Trumps business misrepresented the value of its properties to evade taxes and secure additional loans. Trump was recently questioned by state officials and reportedly invoked the Fifth Amendment 440 times in a single day.
Over the years Trump has gained a reputation for wriggling out of financial investigations, but he is attempting to see off these latest threats while fighting numerous other lawsuits. Even if he is to avoid any personal convictions for his companys business practices, Trump could be forced to foot the bill for some fairly hefty fines.
Yahoo! Finance consulted with a number of legal experts to gauge how severe the punishment could be for Trump, if prosecuted in New York.
Miriam Baer, a former Manhattan federal prosecutor, said that the financial penalties for the Trump Organization could be tough. She predicts that a conviction would lead to a very severe fine at the very least.
During Trumps first impeachment trial Norm Eisen served as special counsel, and he can offer insight into the likely legal path for Trump in these New York Investigation.
Im anticipating very, very serious penalties, said Eisen, floating the possibility of corporate death penalty if the Trump Organization is convicted of the more serious financial crimes. This could see his flagship business wound up, something that has happened to his business concerns in New York before.
The New York Attorney Generals office won a $2 million judgement against a Trump-controlled foundation and was involved in a $25 million decision against Trump University. Both of those organisations folded in the aftermath of those decisions.
Most crucially, while it is the Trump Organization that is under investigation, the former President will likely feel the consequences of any ruling that is handed down against it. Dan Alexander, a senior editor at Forbes and author of a book on Trumps businesses, explains that Trumps personal wealth will take the hit of any financial punishment.
If there are penalties placed on the Trump Organization, this wont be coming out of some other shareholders pocket or something like that, says Alexander. If they get fined $5 million or $20 million or $100 million, that will be directly subtracted from his personal net worth.
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How much money could Donald Trump have to pay in fines if his businesses are penalized? - AS USA
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A high stake debate and tension at the GOP convention: Your guide to Michigan politics – MLive.com
Posted: at 7:42 am
Hey there!
Alyssa Burr here, MLives resident statewide legislature reporter covering the Michigan Senate, to bring you your weekly recap of Michigan political news.
In this epic pic below with my fellow politics crew, you can find me to the far right repping my soon to be graduate school alma mater the one and only Syracuse University (go orange!).
MLive's politics reporters on the Michigan Capitol steps. Left to right: Ben Orner, Jordyn Hermani, Simon Schuster and Alyssa Burr.Daniel Shular | MLive.com
The MIGOP nominating convention kicked off Saturday, Aug. 27 in Lansing, but infighting within the Michigan GOP party shows no sign of letting up.
The convention includes delegates from every county who will solidify the GOPs November ticket, including lieutenant governor, attorney general and secretary of state. Its a critical opportunity for party unity, considering Democrats control the governorship, AG and SOS. But on Saturday, the Michigan Republican convention started in chaos Saturday as Mark Forton, the formerly recognized chair of the Macomb County GOP, brought a local fight to a statewide stage.
As MLive political reporter, Ben Orner reported: Minutes after the convention commenced, Forton supporters led a challenge of Macomb Countys 199 delegates. Dueling Republicans factions held county conventions in Macomb this month after Forton was voted out as county chair in April but refused to hand over the reins.
Related: Convention chaos: Snubbed Michigan county GOP chair leads swap of Macomb delegates
The Michigan GOP and co-chair Ron Weiser recognized the opposing slate of Macomb delegates for Saturdays convention, who were led by Eric Castiglia. But a vote by delegates from the other 82 counties rejected that list Saturday and swapped in Fortons, which he said is a rebuke of Weiser and win for the GOP grassroots. In a process that lasted more than two hours, county delegates on the Lansing Center floor stood and raised their credentials high in support of Fortons slate of delegates. Needing more than two-thirds of the vote, Fortons challenge was successful, as overwhelmingly more people stood to support Fortons slate than the MIGOPs preferred slate.
Shane Hernandez gets GOP Lt. Gov pick
As MLive political reporter Jordyn Hermani reported from Saturdays convention: Shane Hernandez will remain Republican gubernatorial candidate Tudor Dixons choice for lieutenant governor despite threats to his ticket.
Despite a push by former gubernatorial candidate Ralph Rebandt to whip up support for his name to replace Hernandez, those attempts fizzled out and Hernandez handily won the nomination on Saturday.
Republican Attorney General candidate Matt DePerno, in a speech nominating Hernandez to for the lieutenant governor position, said the former lawmaker understands the grassroots fights that we are in and would work to court blue collar union workers and minorities to vote Republican.
Debate debacle
With Republicans seeking to take control of the states top government offices and Democrats fighting to keep it, more conflict this week as incumbent Gov. Gretchen Whitmer and Republican challenger Tudor Dixon have yet to work out scheduling for two statewide televised debates.
As someone who has watched the governors race from almost the beginning, my colleague Simon Schuster reports that there actually may be more at stake for the incumbent governor and the political newcomer than the debate itself.
Early Wednesday, Whitmers campaign announced they accepted invitations for debates on Oct. 13 and Oct. 25.
On the other hand, Dixons campaign said they accepted the same two invitations while proposing a number of different dates. Sept. 20, 22, 27 or 28 for a debate hosted by WOOD-TV in Grand Rapids; Oct. 17 or 24 for a second debate hosted by WXYZ-TV in metro Detroit.
Simon spoke with Oakland University political science professor Dave Dulio about why this may be about more than dates on a calendar. Dulio said campaigns going into elections with the upper hand may be less open to the vulnerabilities a debate can introduce.
You see this in campaigns across the country, where those campaigns who perceive themselves as having an advantage, lets say, are less likely to want to debate, Dulio said. Im not saying thats the case with the Whitmer campaign. My hunch is that theyre pretty confident, but you know, oftentimes its the incumbent who wants to shy away from putting themselves out there.
Dixons campaign argues that no-reason absentee voting (a voting method which saw record numbers in the August primary) is enough cause to move the first debate up. For the general election, local clerks are supposed to have absentee ballots in hand to send to voters Sept. 29.
Related: Michigan voters can now request absentee ballots for November general election
The debate hosts and Dixons campaign remain mum to publicly announce next steps, but political science research shows that incumbent candidates have an innate advantage against newcomer opponents.
Men found guilty of leading plot to kidnap Gov. Whitmer
In other news, a chapter in the plot to kidnap Gov. Whitmer came to a close earlier this week after a jury found two men guilty for their role in the scheme.
Barry Croft Jr., 46, of Bear, Delaware, and Adam Fox, 38, of Wyoming, Michigan, face up to life in prison.
They were retried on charges of conspiracy to kidnap and conspiracy to use a weapon of mass destruction after a jury in April failed to reach verdicts in their cases.
Tuesdays verdict followed nearly two weeks of testimony in U.S. District Court in Grand Rapids.
Grand Rapids Press reporter John Agar has followed the case from almost the beginning. Following the guilty verdict, he reported these five takeaways which played a role in the trial: the Fifth Amendment, FBI involvement, Hapless defendants, the protection of public officials and real-time investigative action.
Michigan abortion, voting proposals should make ballot, signature checkers say
Abortion rights activists continue to make headway as a constitutional amendment to secure abortion rights in Michigan has more than enough signatures to make the ballot, the state Bureau of Elections said Thursday.
Staff have completed signature checks of Reproductive Freedom for All, which needed 425,059 valid signatures each to make the ballot, and found RFFA submitted a record 752,288 signatures.
Bureau staff conducted a facial review of petition sheets to find errors that may dismiss entire papers. Then they took a random sample of possibly valid signatures. Each line is examined to make sure, for example, the signee is registered to vote in that papers jurisdiction and their signature matches state records.
Reproductive Freedom for All had 596,379 valid signatures, bureau staff estimated.
Another constitutional amendment to increase voting access, Promote the Vote 2022, passed the Bureau of Elections signature checks this week. PTV submitted 664,029 signatures and had 507,780 validated a figure well above what was necessary, reported fellow political team member Ben Orner.
RFFA would give Michiganders a constitutional right to an abortion, superseding a 1931 ban on the procedure currently paused in court after the fall of Roe v. Wade. PTV would mandate nine days of early, in-person voting, prohibit harassment while voting and allow people to permanently vote absentee, among other measures.
The elections bureau recommends the Board of State Canvassers approve the amendments for the Nov. 8 ballot. This means these two hot button issues could wind up being left up to the voters if the proposals go through at the boards next meeting on Wednesday, Aug. 31.
What Michigan borrowers need to know about a student loan forgiveness plan
While a student debt plan announced by President Joe Biden Wednesday has some rejoicing, others are wary of potential economic fallout they believe could happen as a result.
The Biden administration plans to forgive $10,000 per borrower and $20,000 per Pell Grant recipient who are making less than $125,000 individually or $250,000 for households. A pause on student loan repayments will also be extended one final time through Dec. 31. And the income-driven repayment plan is being overhauled to reduce costs for borrowers.
In Michigan, there are 1.4 million student loan borrowers holding $51.3 billion in debt, federal data shows. About 700,000 of those with federal student loans will see their debt cut in half or erased completely, according to the governors office.
Keep an eye out, though, as the plan will likely be challenged in court.
About 59% of Americans are worried student loan forgiveness will worsen inflation, a recent CNBC Momentive Poll found. Deputy director of the National Economic Council Bharat Ramamurti disputed these concerns saying the restart of payments will bring billions of dollars a month to the federal government.
The Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania estimated this week a $10,000 forgiveness plan with a $125,000 income limit will cost the federal government about $300 billion.
Read more in Michigan politics:
Michigan using $63M in federal dollars to aid homeless and at-risk renters
Auto crash survivors cant have lifetime benefits cut retroactively, Michigan Court of Appeals rules
$350 tax credit possible for safe gun storage, training under bipartisan bill package
House bill to ban card-only parking in Michigan may address bigger issue of socio-economic inequalities
Mental health, teacher retention focus of Whitmer roundtable with Novi school community
See more here:
A high stake debate and tension at the GOP convention: Your guide to Michigan politics - MLive.com
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We Can Be Framers Too – The Atlantic
Posted: at 7:42 am
The recent set of watershed Supreme Court opinions pulsates with the language of democratic accountability. Dobbs v. Jackson, overruling Roe v. Wade, makes its refrain the promise to return the abortion question to the people and their elected representatives. Concurring in West Virginia v. EPA, which restricts regulators ability to decarbonize the electricity grid, Justice Neil Gorsuch explained that the point of the decision was to keep power in the hands of the peoples representatives rather than a ruling class of largely unaccountable ministers. In New York State Rifle and Pistol Association v. Bruen, which struck down New York States 117-year-old limitation on carrying weapons, Justice Clarence Thomas presented the Courts severe, originalist approach to the Second Amendment as a vindication of a judgment by the people against wishy-washy federal judges who had let the restriction stand. Indeed, while these opinions have little in common besides their conservative outcomesDobbs eliminated a personal right, Bruen expanded a right, and West Virginia curtailed agency interpretations of statutes such as the Clean Air Actthey all claim to protect the rightful power of the people.
David Litt: A court without precedent
Liberal critics, in turn, have appealed to democracy in attacking the Court as radical and illegitimate. Majorities tend to support abortion rights, climate action, and gun control, they point out, so whatever mythic people the justices have in mind, they are going against those people as they actually exist today. Calls to add justices to the Court, deny it jurisdiction over certain cases, or even impeach some conservative justices all come in the name of greater democratic control. Some progressives hope to get back to a more democratic Constitution, whether it is in the spirit of the reformist Warren Court of the 1950s and 60s (the Court that gave us Brown v. Board of Education and the one-person-one-vote principle); the New Deal vision of a second bill of rights, including rights to good work and economic security; or even an abolition constitution rooted in radical traditions of freedom and equality.
But the Constitution is too fundamentally antidemocratic a document to serve democratic purposes reliably. If we want to make it genuinely and lastingly democratic, we will first have to consider changing it in the most basic way: by amending Article V, which governs amendments and so serves as the gatekeeper for living generations to say what theywebelieve American fundamental law should be. This would be a way of empowering ourselves to become founders, over and over, and not just inheritors.
The feeling that the Court is dangerously abusing its power is a new experience for many of todays liberals (not so for conservatives, who denounced the Court for decades before finally taking it over), but it is just the latest episode of a long-standing dynamic that we might call the Iron Law of Judicial Oligarchy. Because the Constitution establishes fundamental law and is itself hard to amend, judicial interpretation is always a key lever of power in American politics. Because power attracts agendas, various constituencies are always crowding around the Court. Before the Civil War, the justices upheld the prerogatives of slaveholders and the interests of the white oligarchies in the slave states, forming a key part of Southern Democrats grip on national power. Thats why, in his first inaugural address, Abraham Lincoln warned that if the policy of the Government upon vital questions affecting the whole people is to be irrevocably fixed by decisions of the Supreme Court, then the people will have ceased to be their own rulers. From the 1880s through the 1930s, the Court protected capitalist interests from populists, unions, and other radicals, striking down labor regulations, an income tax, and other forward-thinking policies. Progressives rallied against it. In 1912, Teddy Roosevelt promised to put the fear of God into judges who had struck down labor legislation. In 1924, the great reformist senator Robert La Follette of Wisconsin proposed a constitutional amendment authorizing Congress to override Supreme Court decisions that invalidated federal lawsa proposal whose insurrectionary spirit future Justice Felix Frankfurter praised in The New Republic, lamenting of the pro-business jurisprudence of his time, we have never had a more irresponsible Supreme Court.
What has been unusual in the past 70 yearsthat is, all of living memoryis that the Court has been mostly seen as, on balance, a liberal institution, partly on the strength of now long-past desegregation and voting-rights cases, partly because of high-profile LGBTQ-rights cases in more recent decades. That progressive reputation has been largely misplaced for a while. The Court has been expanding protection for big money in politics since 1976, with dramatic developments since Citizens United in 2010. It cut the legs from under the Affordable Care Acts Medicaid expansion in 2012 and from Voting Rights Act enforcement in 2013. It announced a personal right to bear arms outside militia service in 2008. But the term that ended in June 2022 sounded a trumpet blast that no one could ignore. The Court is now seen for what it is: a node of conservative power in American government that will persist for years, regardless of elections and popular opinion.
The flip side of the Iron Law of Judicial Oligarchy is a recurrent populist counterblast to the Courts power, which denies the Courts legitimacy in the name of democracy. Who are these old, politically connected lawyers to tell us what our fundamental law is? Who do they think they are (as Justice John Roberts asked in dissent in Obergefell v. Hodges, the 2015 case establishing a right to same-sex marriage)? Progressives asked the same question when the Court was striking down labor laws a century ago. Todays liberals belong to a party, and often to movements, in which elite lawyers have long been overrepresented, and going to court has tended to be the first response to any new political conflict. They are rediscovering that the Court is an oligarchic institution and trying to remember how to be its populist critics. This is a change in worldview, even in identity, for people who have spent their lives regarding the Court as the bulwark of constitutional legitimacy, even against decades of growing counterexamples.
Adam Serwer: Republicans cowardly excuses for not protecting marriage equality
The Constitution produces judicial oligarchy (and inspires populist backlash) through several of its features: federal judges life tenure, their nomination by the president (twice in this century elected by someone who won the Electoral College but lost the national popular votesomething that would have happened again in 2020 with a switch of fewer than 50,000 votes), and their confirmation by the Senate (whose Republican majority during Donald Trumps presidency represented significantly less than half of the countrys population).
But the root of judicial oligarchy is that the Constitution is almost impossible to change. Article V requires that amendments be ratified by three-quarters of the states, either through the state legislatures or in special conventions. (The convention route has happened only once, when the Twenty-First Amendment repealed Prohibition in 1933.) The upshot is that it takes only 13 states to block a proposed amendment. And to send an amendment to the states in the first place, the proposed language must be approved by a two-thirds vote of both houses of Congress.
There is an alternative route, in which two-thirds of state legislatures call on Congress to establish a special convention, which then proposes language to the states; this has never happened. With these hurdles in place, its no wonder that no meaningful amendment has been ratified in 50 years, nor that the fundamental changes in constitutional law for the past centuryupholding the New Deal, pressing desegregation and voting rights, embracing and then rejecting abortion rights, protecting money in politics, establishing a personal right to bear armshave all come through judicial interpretation of the Constitution, not democratic decisions to update the Constitution itself.
It may be hard to see the judicial monopoly on constitutional change (and, by the same token, on constitutional stasis) as the problem with the Constitution, because we are so accustomed to it. How else could a constitution work? But there is an answer right on the face of our Constitution, which opens with the words We the People. That we is the subject of the first sentence of the Constitution, and it goes on to ordain and establish everything that follows. On its own terms, it is law because we made it law.
Nikolas Bowie and Daphna Renan: The Supreme Court is not supposed to have this much power
But that we isnt us. When that language was ratified in 1789, its we was all male, nearly all white, and mostly restricted to property holders. Every one of its members lived in an 18th-century agrarian republic and died a very long time ago. Even the Fourteenth Amendment, the basis of many modern constitutional rights, was ratified in 1868 by male citizens of a patriarchal country that had just abolished formal slavery. Almost all of those men have been dead for a century or more.
As striking as the demographic differences are between who counted as the people in 1789 or 1868 versus today, the most fundamental problem is the tyranny of the past over the present. If todays Americans could freely decide that the Second Amendments right of the People to keep and bear arms should remain our fundamental law today, it wouldnt really matter that the language was, in a sense, proposed to us by members of a very different, long-ago society. The real scandal of the Constitution is that it gives the living people no real choice in the matter. Past generations dictate our fundamental law.
Indeed, even if those past political processes had been much more inclusive, they would still belong to the past. If we take seriously the democratic principle of ratification that the phrase We the People suggests, then nothing can make another generations fundamental law count as ours except our consenting to it. In American constitutional law, silencethe fact that we have not amended the Constitutioncounts as consent. But because amending the Constitution is nearly impossible, our silence is compelled, then laundered into consent.
Plenty of efforts have been made to square this circle, but none has really worked. The justices of the Supreme Court interpret an old and rather brief Constitution, and they do so under constant pressure from talented lawyers to find new meanings in phrases such as equal protection of the laws, words like liberty, or the general pattern of authority that the Constitution creates among the states and the national government. No wonder so many of the justices opinions seem to come down to what W. E. B. Du Bois in Black Reconstruction impatiently called incantation and abracadabra.
At the moment, the most notorious abracadabra is originalism. The method of the Courts recent gun-rights decisions, and deeply influential in its rejection of Roe (although Justice Samuel Alito presented his analysis in Dobbs as more traditionalist than strictly originalist), it purports to anchor constitutional interpretation to the public meaning the words had when they were ratified. Originalism strikes its critics as ancestor worshipworse, the selective worship of some Americans white, property-holding, male ancestors. But as the late Justice Antonin Scalia often explained, the basic theory of originalism is that the Constitution changes only when the people mobilize to change it. The alternative, he warned, was that it would change whenever five justices changed their minds, which would put ultimate political power in the hands of the Court. Originalism makes what sense it does because it is a way of defining the justices power as compatible with democracyat least notionally.
Due to its premise that legitimate constitutional change comes only from the people, originalism would be a pretty solid way to interpret a constitution that living majorities had meaningful power to change. Were the amendment process a lower hurdle, it really would make sense to say that if we havent made new fundamental law, that must show that we are content with the old law. But our Constitution is not that kind.
Because constitutional text is effectively closed to change, anti-originalist justices have felt justified in finding new constitutional meanings in the old language. After all, the world changes; who else but judges will change the Constitution accordingly? The passage of time brings new insights, former Justice Anthony Kennedy replied to Justice Scalia in Obergefell, and only expansive interpretation can bring those insights into the old text. Freedom and equality have very different meanings in our lives today than in 1868, when the Fourteenth Amendment was adopted. Why should the Constitution be stuck when the rest of us are moving on, using old words in new ways?
Each side can clearly see Du Boiss abracadabra in the other. Each is partly right about the others democracy problem. Living constitutionalism is sincerely motivated, but its originalist critics are not wrong: It does amount to saying that, on key issues, the Ruler of 320 million Americans coast-to-coast, is a majority of the nine lawyers on the Supreme Court, as Justice Scalia pungently put it. By the same token, with a frozen constitutional text, originalism can handcuff a diverse and changing country to old and unwelcome principlesa colonial-era right to bear arms, or, as Justice Thomas has proposed, a constitutional ban on most federal environmental law (ecology having been far from the Founders minds).
But even saying that originalism keeps us trapped in the past takes it too much on its own terms: What it does, rather, is carry us into the future in the way preferred by a handful of right-wing jurists. Its appeals to a certain kind of constitutional democracy do not make it any less a version of judicial oligarchy. Originalism is not conservative in the sense of preserving legal principle. Rather, it is radical: a recipe for uprooting key features of modern law, including (at least) labor and safety regulations as well as environmental law. And originalists have no special mind-meld with the founding generation or with constitutional principle. Like anyone else playing the judicial-review game, they decide questions of fundamental law through the votes of nine politically connected judges.
Ryan D. Doerfler and Samuel Moyn: Reform the Court but dont pack it
The real irony in originalisms march to the heights of judicial power is that, under the banner of loyalty to law, history, and the prerogatives of democracy, originalists (and the rest of the conservative legal movement) pursued a strategy that showed just the opposite conviction: In an oligarchy, power belongs to those who choose and train the oligarchs. Over more than four decades, the Federalist Society has recruited, trained, and placed a right-wing legal elite in the countrys top institutions. It has done so because conservatives in the 1970sthe last decade when it was really possible to regard courts as vehicles of broad progressive reformsaw the legal profession as suffused with broadly liberal politics and jurisprudence. Legal liberals regarded their hegemony as the natural and proper state of the law. They recruited, trained, and placed their own legal elite, and thus provided the model for right-wing institution-building. The difference was that many liberals had grown complacent enough to forget that they were engaged in an ideological battle for control of oligarchic institutions. The conservative insurrectionaries did not forget.
Both originalism and living constitutionalism are versions of judicial oligarchy, fought out in battles for control of the courts. They cannot be anything else in a country with a frozen Constitution and partisan courts. The judicial opinions that the public reads are a kind of bookkeeping, documenting the balance of power. The Dobbs opinion had been written for years, in originalist dissents from abortion cases, in Federalist Society talks and journals. Justice Alitos 79 pages, plus appendices, is how the Supreme Court writes 63. That is six votes out of some 330 million Americans. But then again, Obergefell had only five.
So do we need to line up with our preferred oligarchs and fight like hell for control of judicial seats? Quite understandably, this has been the progressive attitude. It has the virtue of pragmatism. But it has the vice of accepting that we live under a basically undemocratic Constitution.
A more directly democratic approach would bring that pregnant phrase We the People back to life in the 21st century. This would mean amending Article V so that living generations could amend the Constitution and make a fundamental law that is actually our law.
The concrete results could be dramatic. Based on public-opinion polling, they might well include reinstating a baseline national abortion right, allowing for gun regulation that promotes public safety, and reauthorizing Congress and state legislatures to limit the campaign spending of corporations and wealthy individuals. Constitutional amendment could reform or eliminate the Electoral College, empowering national majorities to choose the president. It would be an opportunity to take on gerrymandering for House seats and the Senates two-seat-per-state structureboth major vehicles for minority rule.
There would be a more basic benefit too. A constitution makes democratic sense as a fundamental law, a limit on what legislatures and executives and even majorities of citizens can do with government power, if and only if those who live with it can consent to it when they wish, and change it otherwise. This was very clear to some of our Constitutions Framers, such as James Wilson (also an early Supreme Court justice), who insisted that the people would be able to change the Constitution whenever and however they please. This is a right of which no positive institution can ever deprive them. Although James Madison wrote that the Constitution he did so much to design was marked by the total of exclusion of the people in their collective capacity from any share in governmentthat is, our system boxes out direct democracyhe also held that the power to alter or abolish its established government always resided with the majority. (He justified the Constitutions arcane amendment process by denying that the United States was a nation; he considered it a hybrid of a nation and a confederationa position that far fewer citizens would find plausible today than in 1787.) To boil it down: Constitutional commitments have authority, as the Constitutions first words indicate, because they are the peoples commitments.
Its fine and good for judges to enforce these commitments and inevitably disagree about their meaning, as long as the people can give the final word. Originalisms basic problem is that living generations have no real way of consenting to the old Constitution. Living constitutionalisms basic problem is that living generations have no decisive way of stating what fundamental law they would prefer. Enhancing the democratic power to change or reaffirm the Constitution would solve both problemsand dissolve the need for both originalism and living constitutionalism as we know them.
How should we go about changing the Constitution, if we could? There is a lot of value in giving constitutional change a separate track from ordinary politics, so it does not become just another partisan football. Constitutional principles should come from the people in a different sense than laws, presidential elections, or midterms do. One way would be to hold a constitutional convention every generation, staffed by a blend of specially elected delegates, senior public officials, and, perhaps, citizens selected jury-style to represent everyday experience. The convention might proceed in two stages: state, local, or regional versions channeling their results and some of their personnel into a national convention. The convention would propose any constitutional changes its members endorsed, which would then go to a special national referendum. Offered, say, a proposal to reinstate Roe, authorize campaign-finance regulation, or rebalance the Senate, the people would speak via this process as a we.
Constitutional conventions have about the same odor in liberal circles as citizen sheriffs and the posse comitatuscranky tricorne-hat stuff interesting only to the populist right. This impression gets a boost from the ongoing conservative effort to call a convention through state legislatures, with the goal of amending the Constitution to require a balanced budget, term limits for federal regulators, and perhaps some other right-wing goals. But nothing about constitutional revision is intrinsically conservativequite the contraryand if it seems cranky, that is only because liberals became too comfortable with the idea that the Constitution was basically democratic enough and that the courts were politically congenial. Those conceits are hard to sustain now.
The most basic reason for constitutional change is not partisan at all, despite the fact that the right benefits from a frozen, anti-majoritarian Constitution and liberals are currently angry at the Supreme Court. Re-creating a constitutional politics for living citizens would make democratic self-rule a reality for everyone. The highest civic compliment we could pay one another would be to prefer the results of deliberation and voting today to an old Constitution interpreted by a few judges.
Could it really happen? After all, we start out in the world of Article Vs high barrier to change.
The first thing to see is that it will never happen if we dont think it will. Mass movements for constitutional change did succeed in the past, before all constitutional politics went to the courts. Mobilized citizens stripped the power to appoint senators from their state legislatures (and forced those same legislatures to ratify the change), authorized a federal income tax, granted women the vote, and, for better or worse, adopted and then repealed Prohibition.
Second, as noted, important constitutional Framers argued that the right to reform the Constitution belonged inalienably to the people. There is something to be said for an open, fully democratic effort to put a change to Article V directly onto a national ballot, to stand or fall with the choice of the living majority. Constitutional rules are important, and backroom or minoritarian coups are always illegitimate, but if a constitution is about letting a people set their own fundamental law, then the people should be able to act democratically in order to make a more democratic constitution.
What about the dangers of majority rule? Generations of Americans have learned that constitutional barriers protect us from the tyranny of the majority. Would a more democratic Constitution dissolve those barriers?
There is no reason to expect that it would. A periodic convention to reassess the Constitution is a far cry from rolling referenda on whatever question arouses a moments passion. The First Amendment, the Fifth Amendment, the equal-protection clause, and so forth would be re-ratified in almost any imaginable constitutional processperhaps with some clarification that, for instance, freedom of speech does not mean unlimited money in politics. In any case, if majorities really wanted to reject these principles root and branch, courts would not save them from themselves for long.
Any government can hurt people. Power is always dangerous. Recent Supreme Court decisions are a reminder that channeling power through old texts and the decisions of robed lawyers does not mean it ceases being power. Democracy is the gamble that, all things considered, we are our own best rulers, and can trust one another further than we can trust any version of minority rulejudicial, geographic, class, or otherwise. To come closer to that principle, we need a Constitution that empowers us, the people (no need for capitalization), to set our own fundamental law.
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White nationalism, fueled by social media, is on the rise and attracting violent young white men – Arizona Mirror
Posted: at 7:41 am
White nationalists keep showing up in the hearings of the U.S. House committee investigating the Jan. 6, 2021, insurrection.
Evidence is mounting that white nationalist groups who want to establish an all-white state played a significant role in the violent attack on the U.S. Capitol that left five dead and dozens wounded.
Thus far, the hearings have documented how the Proud Boys helped lead the insurrectionist mob into the U.S. Capitol building in Washington, D.C, journalist James Risen wrote in the Intercept.
Based on July 12, 2022, testimony from a former Oath Keepers member, the white nationalist group coordinated with the Three Percenters, another group of white nationalists, and the Proud Boys in mobilizing their extremists groups to rally in Washington, D.C., on Jan. 6, as asked by President Trump in his Dec. 16, 2020, tweet.
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As a cultural anthropologist who has studied these movements for over a decade, I know that membership in these organizations is not limited to the attempted violent overthrow of the government and poses an ongoing threat, as seen in massacres carried out by young men radicalized by this movement.
In 2020, for instance, the Department of Homeland Security described domestic violent extremists as presenting the most persistent and lethal threat to the people of the United States and the nations government.
In March 2021, FBI Director Christopher Wray testified to Congress that the number of arrests of white supremacists and other racially motivated extremists has almost tripled since he took office in 2017.
Jan. 6 was not an isolated event, Wray testified before the Senate Judiciary Committee. The problem of domestic terrorism has been metastasizing across the country for a long time now, and its not going away anytime soon.
The Southern Poverty Law Center, a nonprofit civil rights group, tracked 733 active hate groups across the United States in 2021.
Based on my research, the internet and social media have made the problem of white supremacist hate far worse and more visible; its both more accessible and, ultimately, more violent, as seen on Jan. 6 at the U.S. Capitol and the shooting deaths of ten Black people at a Buffalo grocery story, among other examples.
In the 1990s, former KKK leaders including David Duke rebranded white supremacy for the digital age.
They switched KKK robes for business suits and connected neo-Nazi antisemitic conspiracies with broader anti-Black, anti-immigrant and anti-Islamic racism.
From the 1990s to the late 2000s, this movement largely built discreet online communities and websites peddling racist disinformation.
In fact, for years one of the first websites about Martin Luther King Jr. that a Google search recommended was a website created by white nationalists that spread neo-Nazi propaganda.
In 2005, the white nationalist website Stormfront.org had 30,000 members which might sound like a lot. But as social media expanded, with both Facebook and Twitter opening to anyone with an email address in 2006, its views got a lot more attention. By 2015, 250,000 people had subscribed to become members of Stormfront.org.
Between 2012 and 2016, white nationalists on Twitter saw a 600% increase in Twitter followers. They have since worked to bring white supremacism into everyday politics.
The Tech Transparency Project, a nonprofit tech industry watchdog group, found that in 2020 half of the white nationalist groups tracked by the Southern Poverty Law Center had a presence on Facebook.
Without clear regulations preventing extremist content, digitalcompanies, in my view, allowed for the spread of white nationalist conspiracies.
Racist activists used algorithms as virtual bullhorns to reach previously unimaginable-sized audiences.
White nationalist leaders, such as Richard Spencer, wanted an even bigger audience and influence.
Spencer coined the term alt-right to this end, with the goal of blurring the relationship between white nationalism and white conservatism. He did this by establishing nonprofit think tanks like the National Policy Institute that provided an academic veneer for him and other white supremacists to spread their views on white supremacy.
This strategy worked.
Today, many white nationalist ideas once relegated to societys fringes are embraced by the broader conservative movement.
Take, for instance, the Great Replacement Theory. The conspiracy theory misinterprets demographic change as an active attempt to replace white Americans with people of color.
This baseless idea observes that Black and Latino people are becoming larger percentages of the U.S. population, and paints that data as the result of an allegedly active attempt by unnamed multiculturalists to drive white Americans out of power in an increasingly diverse nation.
A recent poll showed that over 50% of Republicans now believe in this conspiracy theory.
In 2016, during Trumps presidential campaign, Vice Magazine co-founder Gavin McInnes formed the Proud Boys to further the goals of the alt-right by protecting white identity with the use of violence if necessary.
Proud Boys members are affiliated with white nationalist ideas and leaders, but they deny any explicit racism. Instead, they describe themselves as Western chauvinists who believe in the supremacy of European culture but also welcome members of any race who support this idea.
Along with pro-gun militias such as the Oath Keepers and Three Percenters, the Proud Boys are an experiment in spreading white nationalist ideas to an online universe of potentially millions of social media users.
Data from manifestos posted online by white nationalist groups shows that many mass shooters share a few common characteristics they are young, white, male and they spend significant time online at the same websites.
The alleged shooter in the killing of 10 Black people in a predominantly Black neighborhood in Buffalo on May 14, 2022, described his reason as wanting to stop what he feared as the elimination of the white race.
His fears that people of color were replacing white people came from 4chan, a social media company popular among the alt-right.
In 2019, nine African American church members were murdered in Charleston by a young white man who became radicalized through Google searches that led him to openly white supremacist content.
Massacres in a Walmart in El Paso, Texas, at two mosques in Christchurch, New Zealand, and at a synagogue in Poway, California, all took place after the shooters began spending time on 8chan, an imageboard popular with white supremacists and the home of QAnon posts.
For many of these individuals, the most important part of their radicalization was not about their home life or personality quirks, but instead about where they spent time online.
The reasons men join groups like the Proud Boys and Oath Keepers and even some liberal groups is less clear.
A former Proud Boy member offered one reason: They want to join a gang, Russell Schultz told CNN on Nov. 25, 2020. So they can go fight antifa and hurt people that they dont like, and feel justified in doing it.
Antifa is a loose-knit group of usually nonviolent activists who oppose fascism.
Other former extremist group members describe seeking camaraderie and friendship, but also finding racism and antisemitism.
But more than any other issue, racial demographic changes are providing recruitment opportunities for white nationalists, many of whom believe that by the year 2045 white people will become the minority in the United States.
In July 2021, the most recent date for which statistics are available, the U.S. Census Bureau notes that of the estimated population of 330 million American citizens, 75.8% are white, 18.9% are Hispanic, 13.6% are Black and 6% are Asian.
What is also becoming clearer is that the spread of white nationalism endangers the idea of a democratic nation where racial diversity is considered a strength, not a weakness.
This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.
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A cop’s eye view of the January 9 encounter with Antifa – San Diego Reader
Posted: at 7:41 am
The Antifa group was ordered to either disperse or face getting arrested. Theres a certain verbiage we have to say, its a script that we read from, said Captain Novak.
On January 2 of 2021, a Patriot March in San Diego was announced on social media, to begin at 2 pm on January 9 at the foot of Crystal Pier in Pacific Beach. The flier billed it as a peaceful protest, but in the end, it was not peaceful: members of the activist group Antifa clashed violently with the Patriot March protesters before they even began marching.
In December of 2021, prosecutors in District Attorney Summer Stephans office charged at least seven people on the Antifa side in connection with the events of that day. And in June of this year, those charges were dropped in favor of a grand jury indictment that included 29 felony counts, including the conspiracy to commit riot. The indictment came after the grand jury heard 13 days worth of testimony about the events surrounding that day, including testimony from police who were on the scene.
Captain Matt Novak told the grand jury that in his 28 years as a police officer, he had never experienced that level of rioting. He said that he had responded to more than 25 protests since Febuary of 2020 in his areas of command, which included downtown San Diego. Usually, that meant shutting down streets and walking alongside the demonstrators in order to maintain public safety. His experience with counter-protestors? Sometimes one or two people would come by to heckle the group. He noted that when 300-400 Black Lives Matter supporters had marched down Pacific Beachs Garnet Avenue, the event was very peaceful, all individuals coming to peacefully protest through the area. No problems.
This time, he said, We did have some indication that Antifa might be coming vague intel about people coming down from Los Angeles. However, I didnt expect any more from Antifa than I had at any of the other [protests]. He put his SWAT team on standby near (but not next to) the rallys start point, and put 20 patrol officers off to the side. In addition, he arranged for nine motor officers, eight bike officers, and an additional 22 officers in case they were needed. We dont want to intimidate anybody, and what we dont want to do is deplete the entire city of officers, because were still responsible for the entire city.
An Antifa Twitter account called SDAGAINSTFASH sent out messages the night before the rally, including this: Plan to arrive an hour early to already have [Patriot] meet point occupied. Antifa apparently wanted to assemble first on the spot, so that arriving Patriots would have to walk toward them. The MAGATS dont plan to be there before 2, so hopefully well have a decent crowd for them to approach.
Captain Novak said he was just finishing giving a briefing to his officers at around 12:30 pm when he heard over the radio, Hey, theres some crowds down here. He was at Belmont Park, a little south of the pier at that moment, still trying to stage his officers.
Then he heard, There are people dressed in black.
Which immediately tells me a lot, said Novak, that we may have Antifa black bloc there.
Then he heard, Theres a fight at the pier.
It started earlier than we thought it would, said Novak. Radio reports described black bloc persons moving in small groups over several blocks. Witnesses heard some of them directing their comrades, Keep moving, keep moving. Police had access to a helicopter, but it did not arrive until about an hour after the first radio calls about trouble, about 1:34 pm.
Sergeant Ross Bainbridge, a 17-year veteran of the SDPD, was scheduled to begin his shift that day at 2 pm, but he told the grand jury he got caught in heavy traffic trying to get to the beach. The prosecutor asked, Why didnt you use lights and siren to pass through traffic?
He replied, They hadnt called for an emergency response at that point. So I was listening to the [radio] calls as it was transpiring and it was obvious that things werent going well rather quickly, as we were getting updates on the crowd being agitated, and a large crowd. And I could sense there was not enough cops where they needed them, and that things were kind of happening more quickly than they had anticipated. I think the idea was that all of this was going to happen later in the afternoon, and it happened earlier than they expected. Sgt. Bainbridge didnt make it to the designated staging area at Belmont Park before his order changed, They changed it to, everybody respond Code Three, which is lights and sirens, back up to Hornblend and Mission. When he arrived at about 2:15 pm, there was already a line of officers spanning the street. He put on his riot gear, which includes a special helmet, a riot baton, and a gas mask, and got into the line facing the Antifa group. He said they were aggressive: They had basically formed their own spanning line in front of us and had refused to back up or move.
Officer Jonathan Swankosky was also in the line, and he described the initial launch of projectiles. It just started off with rocks here and there, and eggs, bottles, trash can lids, sticks, anything commonly found or seen thats throwable and not secured.He saw people in an alley trying to roll out a dumpster into the middle of the roadway, but added, I dont know if that was going to be pushed towards us. Then he saw a glass bottle coming at him. It broke on the ground next to him; a shard of glass flew up and cut his hand. The crowd had become hostile towards the police and were attacking us, he said.
Captain Novak said that after Antifa had gathered, police had been able to form a line to block them. He ordered another police line to form in front of the Patriot group, thus creating a buffer zone between them. He said he was in the center, between the two police lines, and that the Patriots yelled at Antifa across the buffer zone, but did not throw anything or commit any violent acts. The Antifa group, meanwhile, used shields and skateboards and people up front to protect themselves and to block our view. So people in the back are throwing objects and we cant see where they come from. At first, the captain was not wearing riot gear. I had my officer go get it for me when I had those rocks bounce next to me, he said. The grand jury saw bodycam footage showing police getting struck by rocks, glass bottles, eggs, and water bottles. As soon as we stabilized in this area and we started receiving the bottles, the rocks, and the eggs had started hitting our officers, I called an unlawful assembly, Novak testified.
The Antifa group was ordered to either disperse or face getting arrested. Theres a certain verbiage we have to say, its a script that we read from, said Novak. He directed a motor officer to use his radio so the whole crowd could hear. The official statement was read three times in both English and Spanish. Then the police helicopter repeated the order. Altogether, the official riot declaration was made more than nine times.
Officer Swankosky saw one of the protestors with pepper spray in their hand, spraying it towards my officers. So he called that out to the SWAT team, which then deployed pepper balls powdered pepper spray at 3:25 pm, roughly one hour after the first declaration of unlawful assembly. Swankosky said that when that happens, It gets really hot. He said Antifa are experienced with police tactics, and they wear gloves, which enables them to handle the balls. They would typically throw it back at us. Antifa used shields and skateboards and a trash can lid to block the pepper balls.
Popping sounds could be heard in police bodycam video. Sergeant Bainbridge said that was the sound of SWAT shooting pepper balls. Pepper balls hit the ground and break, and a dust cloud rises to drive people away, he said. Or, if a rioter is holding an object and is ready to throw it, a pepper ball could be fired to directly hit that person to prevent him from throwing it, the sergeant testified. Reviewing the video, Bainbridge noted that one rioter was up closer to us, making that, like, punching motion or jabbing motion with his skateboard. The rioter retreated more slowly than the rest of his group, His gas mask is helping him defeat the pepper ball, the sergeant noticed. Then he said, Well, he was holding a skateboard, and it appears he dropped his skateboard and then grabbed his genitals afterwards, it looked like. The rioter then dropped to the ground.
Sergeant Bainbridge guessed that he was there an hour before he got the order to move forward and start taking people into custody.I know that its a big decision to make, he said, Its going to get pretty ugly. He said he attempted to make two different arrests. His attempts were not successful.The sergeant said he grabbed the Antifa member nearest him. Then, the rioters, from behind this person, grabbed onto them by both their arms and their legs. So they had several different people pulling this person away from me, and they were able to kind of pull him down and back into the crowd rather quickly. (He said he was unsure if the person was male or female.)
While Bainbridge was trying to make that first arrest, he saw another Antifa person rush him, I saw him coming towards me fast. His bodycam video was played: it showed a tall man with a stick, wearing all black and a helmet, and with a balaclava over his face. The attacker took hold of the sergeants riot baton.You can see that the suspect has got a grip on it, on the forward part of it. With his other hand, he brought his stick forward. Bainbridge said he took hold of this second person, but Antifa grabbed him away too, pulling him by his backpack. The sergeant could hear directions from the Antifa crowd: Somebody yelling like a command for them to back up. The attacker dropped his stick during the melee, and it disappeared under the police line. The stick was later collected by police and shown to the grand jury as evidence.
Besides the police bodycam video, there was also aerial video taken from the police helicopter, which eventually arrived. The video confirmed that the first arrest attempt was made at 3:32 pm, one hour after the first unlawful assembly declaration was made at 2:34 pm. The de-arrested persons could be seen changing clothes as they were pulled back through the Antifa crowd.
The police were there to protect the public, but several members of the public did get attacked. Later, some people complained bitterly that police officers who were on scene saw those individuals being attacked and did nothing. Captain Novak admitted that he has seen videos of his officers not responding to violence happening in front of them. We did pull some victims out of the crowd, but we werent able to get to some of them, he testified. The captain said that the police used military-style tactics, meaning, You have to work together as one entire team. You cant just have one officer or one team go off on their own, because what can happen is they can get drawn into something.
The next court date for all 11 defendants named in the indictment in downtown San Diego is September 8, 2022.
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A cop's eye view of the January 9 encounter with Antifa - San Diego Reader
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TUPOC in the spotlight: Antifa rallies amidst eviction threats – Rebel News
Posted: at 7:41 am
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On Wednesday, August 25, 2022, a group known as The United People of Canada' or by the acronym TUPOC was set to be evicted by a bailiff at midnight, according to a source with links to the group.
The United People of Canada describes itself as a diverse, intergenerational fraternal organization. They attempt to build strong families and communities, and [solidify] a prosperous future for all Canadians.
Rebel News observations show that it is a freedom-oriented group that offers the opportunity for like-minded individuals to gather and spend time together. Some of the members participated in the Freedom Convoy back in February, peacefully protesting Prime Minister Justin Trudeaus COVID-19 mandates.
The media has been focusing on the fact residents in Ottawas Lowertown community are allegedly scared of TUPOC.
The details surrounding a potential eviction are very vague and unclear, as the media and TUPOC give two different versions of the story. The group claims they have an active lease of the property signed and also say the landlord refuses to accept the payment, despite having signed a lease.
The potential for an eviction caused Antifa-type groups online to be very excited, and organize a watch party/protest at the St. Brigids Church at midnight, saying that they would bring popcorn.
On August 25, a more tense situation occurred when an older man, who opposes TUPOC, allegedly hit a woman who was part of the freedom-oriented group with his truck while on the the groups private property.
Some action occurred towards midnight, not due to the eviction situation but because of the protesters.
Around 1:30 a.m., officers from the Ottawa Police Service arrived on scene, causing some protesters to leave the area. The situation calmed down, and most of the protesters left by 2:30 a.m.
I stayed and spoke with a lady to figure out what she had to say about these Antifa protesters accusations of the group being hateful and dangerous.
I also was on the ground during the second day, where more protesters showed up. To view the full, in-depth report of the situation, watch the video above.
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TUPOC in the spotlight: Antifa rallies amidst eviction threats - Rebel News
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Instagram could be cloning another rival – this time it’s BeReal – WRAL TechWire
Posted: at 7:39 am
By Catherine Thorbecke, CNN Business
Over the years, Facebook has used Instagram to compete with rivals like Snapchat and TikTok by cloning their signature features. Now, a newer, fast-growing service appears to have caught the companys attention: BeReal.
Instagram is testing a feature called IG Candid Challenges that appears strikingly similar to the core concept ofBeReal, an app that has been dubbed the anti-Instagram for its focus on more authentic posts. On BeReal, users receive prompts at one random time each day to, you guessed it, BeReal. Then they have two minutes to snap and post an unfiltered front-and-back photo of what they are up to at that moment.
Similarly, the Candid Challenges option prompts Instagram users everyday at a different time to share a photo to their Stories within a two-minute time frame, according tophotos of the new feature shared on social media. It also appears to use dual-camera shots a selfie and a rear-camera photo at the same time which is one of BeReals hallmark features.
A Meta spokesperson confirmed to CNN Business that the IG Candid Challenge feature is being tested internally, without offering any additional information on it. This feature is an internal prototype, and not testing externally, said Christine Pai, a Meta spokesperson.
Instagram, Facebook apps track users data without explicit consent, analysis finds
BeReal launched in late 2019 but gained immense popularity earlier this year. The app has been downloaded 43.3 million times since its launch, with more than 40 million of those installs happening in 2022, according to datafrom Apptopia. This summer, BeReal earned the top spot on Apples App Store in the United States. It was founded by an entrepreneur in France, but Apptopia data indicates the United States is its top market.
BeReal did not immediately respond to CNN Business request for comment.
Instagram previously appeared to mimic one of BeReals popular features earlier this summer, with thelaunch of an option dubbedDual. The feature lets users record using the phones front and back cameras simultaneously.
In recent years, Facebook and its parent company Meta have come under criticism from lawmakers and some users for attempting to beat back competition by cloning core features. Just last month, Instagram faced a backlash from users, includingmembers of the Kardashian family, who expressed frustration that the app was becoming too much like TikTok. Instagram eventuallywalked back some of its changes.
In going after BeReal, Meta may be battling to hold on to younger users, who seem to have flocked to the newer service. But Meta must also confront the reasons why some find the app enticing. One BeReal user and Georgetown University studenttold CNN earlier this yearthat he believes the app is popular because its an antidote to the pressures to look perfect online.
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Innocent driver’s shock as police swoop on ‘cloned’ car in Hereford – Hereford Times
Posted: at 7:39 am
THE driver of this smart luxury car in Hereford had a shock when they were surrounded police with dogs.
Officers believed the white Range Rover had been 'cloned' an illegal practice in which criminals copy the identity of another vehicle by stealing or duplicating their registration plates.
Sometimes will then use the cloned vehicle in further crimes or to avoid speeding or parking fines.
OTHER NEWS:
As it turns out, the driver had bought the car believing it to be genuine.
Officers from Hereford's operations patrol group and West Midlands police dogs were involved in the operation.
They said: "The driver got quite a shock. Enquiries are ongoing."
According to the RAC, 1,105 motorists contacted the Driver and Vehicle Licensing Agency (DVLA) in March 2020 to object that their vehicle had been wrongly linked to offences almost twice as many cases as the 656 seen in April 2019.
The DVLA says: Any motorist who believes they have been a victim of number plate cloning should contact the police.
"They should also contact the issuing authority of any fines or penalties they receive with appropriate evidence that shows their vehicle was not in the area at the time.
DVLA enforcement officers assist the police and trading standards in their enforcement against number plate suppliers, including those who trade illegally using the internet.
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Innocent driver's shock as police swoop on 'cloned' car in Hereford - Hereford Times
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We Are One is our gaming highlight from Gamescom 2022 – MIXED Reality News
Posted: at 7:39 am
Image: Fast Travel Games / Flat Head Studios
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Have you ever wanted to clone yourself or travel through time? We Are One offers just that, making it our favorite VR game of Gamescom 2022.
Gamescom 2022 had some interesting VR games to offer. Especially big productions like the graphics powerhouse Hubris or The Walking Dead: Saints & Sinners 2 stood out. But there were also small gems like the charming diorama puzzler PathCraft or the successful Quest 2 implementation of Maskmaker.
One of our last play dates at the game fair took us to the booth of the publisher Fast Travel Games. For over two hours, we were able to fight our way through waves of enemies, experience sword duels and explore space in various VR games. However, the most fun VR experience we had was as a small plant sapling in the virtual forest.
Austrian developer studio Flat Head Games introduced us to a VR game with a special twist: We Are One is a co-op single-player game. Thats right you play in a team with yourself. This is made possible by a clever time-loop mechanic.
As an offspring of Mother Nature, I fight against evil machines and harmful giant beetles. Every action I perform in one of the time loops is exactly reproduced by a clone in the next loop.
So to solve any of the puzzles, I have to plan ahead and remember well what I did in the past, when and how. Once I have rehearsed an action with a clone, I can observe it as it acts in the loop. This way I check if what I entered makes sense and how I can use it to plan the next actions for the next clone.
If Im smart about it, I orchestrate a team of clones to defeat the seemingly overpowering enemy using time jumps and time loops.
Im standing in a forest under attack by nasty logging robots. Between me and the saw-blade spitting logging machines lies only a tree trunk for cover. Along the trunk are several fixed points where I can sprout my plant clone from the earth.
To beat back the robots, I have to think ahead. Weapons and ammo are unevenly distributed across the five spawn points. In each time loop, I have to make sure that the clone after me is supplied with a shooting club and ammo.
So I start first at the action point in the middle of the trunk. There I find the seeds that serve as ammunition for my plant guns but the guns are on the left, at the other end of the cover.
I wait for the pause between whirring saw blades and throw the ammo to the spawn points of my future clones where the weapons are lying around. In doing so, I have to estimate when these clones should appear at each point and how much ammo each clone will need.
With all these thoughts and actions, I dodge the saw blades flying around my woody head.
I finish programming the first clone and look at my first iteration from the starting point. Knowing what I just did, I now move outside to a position with the plant cannons. Once there, my first clone begins its actions: He ducks away under the saw blades and then throws the ammunition in my direction.
In stylish Superhot VR fashion, I catch the ammo, load the gun, quickly duck out from under a saw blade, and finish off the robots on my side. Then I throw the gun over to one of the still unused cloning spots.
No sooner have I placed myself at this spot than the groundhog greets me: all previous clone actions continue while I physically crouch behind virtual cover and wait for the gun to be thrown to me. The rest is a formality.
With a little skill and practice, I can literally choreograph my clone army and end up with a stylish puzzle dance. However, the teamwork in the time loop doesnt always work out smoothly: depending on how stupid I am in the clone programming, I end up without ammunition or a weapon and have to correct my mistake(s).
But be careful! I can only repeat the last loop. If I screw up twice in a row, I have to restart the level and plan better.
Besides the incredibly fun gameplay, We Are One also convinces with a smooth presentation and a charming comic look. Well see if the developers can maintain that standard throughout the entire game early next year when We Are One is released for PC VR and Meta Quest 2. If you already want to get an idea, you can find playable demos on SteamVR or Metas App Lab.
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We Are One is our gaming highlight from Gamescom 2022 - MIXED Reality News
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Molecular Biology Enzymes, Kits, and Reagents Market Analysis/Forecast 2020-2021 & 2022-2028: Burgeoning Demand for Personalized Medicines &…
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DUBLIN--(BUSINESS WIRE)--The "Molecular Biology Enzymes, Kits, and Reagents Market Forecast to 2028 - COVID-19 Impact and Global Analysis By Product, Application, and End User" report has been added to ResearchAndMarkets.com's offering.
The molecular biology enzymes, kits, and reagents market was valued at US$ 10,987.17 million in 2020 and it is projected to reach US$ 41,104.71 million by 2028; it is expected to grow at a CAGR of 17.8% during 2021-2028.
The growth of the market is attributed to a few key driving factors such as healthy funding for genomics, declining cost of sequencing procedures, and increasing prevalence of chronic diseases. However, the dearth of skilled professionals hinders the market growth.
The molecular biology enzymes, kits, and reagents market is witnessing substantial growth amid the COVID-19 pandemic. The majority of the healthcare research organizations, market players, and academic centers are actively engaged in the research and development activities to develop new vaccines and therapeutic platforms for novel coronavirus that causes COVID-19.
This extensive rise in research and development activities is expected to boost the demand for molecular biology kits and reagents, which, in turn, would drive the growth of the molecular biology enzymes, kits, and reagents market in the coming years.
Based on product, the molecular biology enzymes, kits, and reagents market are bifurcated into enzymes and kits & reagents. The market, by enzymes, is further segmented into polymerases, ligases, reverse transcriptases, phosphatases, proteases and proteinases, restriction endonuclease, and other. The kits & reagent segment held a larger market share in 2020, and the same segment is estimated to register a higher CAGR during the forecast period.
The molecular biology enzymes, kits, and reagents market, based on application, is segmented into epigenetics, sequencing, synthetic biology, polymerase chain reaction, cloning, and other. In 2020, the sequencing segment held the largest share of the market. However, the polymerase chain reaction segment is estimated to register the highest CAGR during 2021-2028.
In terms of end user, the molecular biology enzymes, kits, and reagents market is segmented into biotechnological and pharmaceutical companies, hospitals and diagnostic centers, and academic and research institutes. The biotechnological and pharmaceutical companies segment held the largest share of the market in 2020, and the same segment is estimated to register the highest CAGR from 2021 to 2028.
Key Market Dynamics
Market Drivers
Market Restraints
Market Opportunities
Future Trends
Companies Mentioned
For more information about this report visit https://www.researchandmarkets.com/r/ji0bmj
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