Daily Archives: October 23, 2023

Cornhole tourney to aid Freedom House – Bonner County Daily Bee

Posted: October 23, 2023 at 10:46 pm

It's a chance to have fun and help others at the same time.

On Saturday, Nov. 4, the first 7B Cornhole Tournament will raise fund for Freedom House, Inc., a local nonprofit that provides housing and support for men and women recovering from addiction.

The fundraiser, set for noon-4 p.m. at Harvest Valley Worship Center, will go to support the Bethesda men's house.

The cornhole tournament is made-up of two divisions for players who are competitive (enthusiasts) and those who are just getting into cornhole (dabblers). There is over $1,000 available in cash prizes for tournament winners along with other prizes for competitors. Anyone is free to join the tournament with a recommended donation of $20 per player. All registered players will get a tournament T-shirt.

Come ready to eat with food provided. Bring the kids for a day with kids games and prizes in the kids play area with free popcorn and cotton candy. There will be a dessert auction, and a silent auction to raise money for Freedom House. The silent auction has a wide variety of items to bid on from airplane rides to gym memberships. A list of auction items will be updated weekly on the tournament webpage. The auction closes at 3 p.m.

This event is being hosted by Harvest Valley Worship Center, 3 miles north of Ponderay at 86 Hidden Valley Road.

Participants can register online before Oct. 31 at hvwc.com/cornhole. You can also register auction and dessert items on that page as well.

For more information about Freedom House, Inc., go online to freedomhousehope.org. For information about the tournament, go online to hvwc.com/cornhole or call 208-263-2637

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Tinubu Tells US Court ‘Freedom Of Information Act’ Is To Expose … – SaharaReporters.com

Posted: at 10:46 pm

The United States government will give its position on Monday (today) regarding the motion filed by President Bola Tinubu to intervene in an emergency motion filed on Friday at the US District Court for the District of Columbia, seeking the release of records related to his residence in the country.

An IT consultant, Aaron Greenspan on July 21, 2022, filed a Freedom of Information request asking the countrys agencies to release Tinubus records. Greenspan filed an emergency motion on Friday, October 20, seeking the immediate release of the records.

Tinubu argued that the FOIAs (Freedom of Information Act) purpose is to provide access to government activities, not as means to obtain records of individuals compiled by the government.

The defendants in the suit are the Executive Office for US Attorneys, the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA), US Department of State, Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI), US Department of the Treasury, Internal Revenue Service and the US Drug Enforcement Administration.

Tinubu subsequently filed a motion to intervene or be an intervenor in the case.

He had filed an application before the court to stop the countrys agencies from releasing records related to his residence in the country.

The motion to intervene in the case between Aaron Greenspan (Plaintiff) and Executive Office for US Attorneys, et al. (Defendants) with Civil Action No. 23-1816 (BAH), reads, Bola A. Tinubu moves, pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 24, to intervene in this action because Plaintiff seeks production of Mr. Tinubu's confidential tax record, which the Internal Revenue Service is prohibited from disclosing by federal law, and documents from federal law enforcement agencies that fall within the Privacy Act or exceptions to FOIA and should not be disclosed.

Mr. Tinubu should be allowed to intervene because he has a direct interest in the records sought, his interests are not fully represented or protected by Defendants, and his interests will be adversely affected if he is not permitted to intervene.

Plaintiff Greenspan has indicated that he will oppose this motion. Mr. Tinubus counsel reached out to the government on October 21 seeking the government's position. The government asked for additional information and responded that it would give its position by the evening of October 23.

Because Plaintiff filed an emergency motion on October 20, Mr. Tinubu filed his motion prior to receiving the government's position.

The argument reads in part, Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 24(a) provides for intervention as of right, on timely application, by anyone who ... claims an interest relating to the property or transaction that is the subject of the action, and is so situated that disposing of the action may as a practical matter impede the movants ability to protect its interest unless the existing parties adequately represent that interest.

Intervenor must meet four requirements to intervene as of right 1) the motion for intervention must be timely; (2) intervenors must have an interest in the subject of the action; (3) their interest must be impaired or impeded as a practical matter absent intervention; and (4) the would-be intervenors interest must not be adequately represented by any other party.

It noted that the four requirements for intervention as of right are met here

It says, Wherefore, Tinubu requests that the Court grant this motion and such other and further relief as deemed appropriate under the circumstances.

The argument reads, Committee for Freedom of Press, 489 US.749, 753 (1989). M addition, the Privacy Act, 5 U.S.C.S. 552a, contains limitations on disclosure of records gathered by government officials. See, e.g., 5 US.C. 552a(b) ("No agency shall disclose any record which is contained in a system of records ... except pursuant to a written request by, or with the prior written consent of the individual to whom the record pertains, Intervenor has protectable interest in the material that is the subject matter of this action.

Intervenor also has a protectable interest and intervention is appropriate here because Defendants appear to be producing records about Intervenor, not about Defendants' activities.

As the Supreme Court explained in Reporters Committee for Freedom of Press, FOIA's purpose is to provide access to government activities, not as means to obtain records of individuals compiled by the government. 489 U.S. at 795-97 ("FOIA, central purpose is to ensure that the Government's activities be opened to the sharp eye of public scrutiny, not that information about private citizens that happens to be in the warehouse of the Government be so disclosed.").

Intervenor has a heightened interest, and the government a lesser to non-existent interest, in requests seeking information that the government may have collected about him.

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Nets’ Cam Johnson says role in Brooklyn gives him ‘more freedom’ – Nets Wire

Posted: at 10:46 pm

Brooklyn Nets forward Cam Johnson will be expected to carry a substantial responsibility when it comes to how the Nets play this season and for the near future. Johnson will be called upon to help Mikal Bridges score the basketball on offense and also be an effective defender on the defensive end as well.

Johnson was thrust into a new role once he came to the Nets as a result of the Kevin Durant trade to the Phoenix Suns. Johnson went from a fourth or fifth scoring option throughout his career with the Suns to a second or third option with the Nets last season.

Despite the role being new and asking a lot of him, Johnson thrived as someone who needed to have a good game on offense if his team were to win that particular. He recently made an appearance on the 2nd Wind podcast and during that episode, he spoke on how his role with the Nets gives him more freedom than Phoenix did:

This opportunity in Brooklyn allows me a little more of that freedom, you know? CP (Chris Paul), Book (Devin Booker), great players, even DA (Deandre Ayton), number one pick, great player, thats a lot of options around where you have to, in a sense, sacrifice a bit of yourself to make the team a better unit. So, Ill space the floor, Ill shoot in Phoenix, you know? Ill do all that stuff, drive closeouts. But, in Brooklyn, I have a little bit more freedom with the ball and thats the way we want to play.

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Big Freedom Tiny Homes Shows What Minimal Living Is All About … – autoevolution

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When the pressure of modern day living becomes too much, we tend to dream of a simpler life, of a life where we can have more freedom to focus on relationships, experiences, and personal growth. Tiny houses on wheels have the potential to unlock that level of freedom many long for by enabling you to live anywhere and foster a deeper connection with nature.

Photo: Big Freedom Tiny Homes

Born out of a man's passion for minimalism and the freedom that comes with it, the company builds compact living spaces that encourage a more intentional and mindful way of living. Shannon Black is the founder, designer, and builder at Big Freedom Tiny Homes, and his aim with this business was to find the formula for the most livable tiny house possible. We will let you decide if he reached his goal.

Each tiny house that comes out of the company's shed is built on an Iron Eagle PAD series trailer, with the base model measuring 26 feet in length. For clients who require more living space, 28-foot and 30-foot long models are also available.

Expertly crafted with premium materials and great attention to detail, the custom tiny home you see in the picture gallery would make a great minimalist abode for a small family, comprising a comfortable living area, a functional kitchen, a bathroom, and two sleeping lofts.

Photo: Big Freedom Tiny Homes

On the inside, high-end finishes and details throughout make the house stand out of the crowd and prove tiny living is not necessarily about compromises and renouncing comfort and style. The designer makes sure his clients will feel the cozy charm of a traditional farmhouse by using hardwood flooring, quartz or granite countertops, quarry stone or tile backsplash, and more.

Moreover, modern stainless appliances, top-of-the-line on-demand propane hot water heater, all LED lighting, and modern bathroom facilities make this tiny home truly move-in ready.

The interior boasts tongue and groove pine with sealer finish throughout, and the designer chose to maximize space where it truly matters - the kitchen and the bathroom - while also ensuring the living and sleeping areas are comfortable and inviting.

Once you step inside, you get into the open-plan ground floor, with the living room on your left. It is fitted with a big L-shaped couch with built-in storage that converts into a queen bed and can comfortably sleep two adults. An outlet on the wall in the living area indicates that owners can mount a TV there for their evening entertainment.

Photo: Big Freedom Tiny Homes

With a total of 15 feet of granite countertops, there is plenty of space for meal prep, while storage is taken care of by a multitude of drawers, cabinets, and even a pantry under the stairs. Frigidaire stainless appliances ranging from an 11-cu-ft fridge/freezer to a propane stove, oven, and range hood ensure the kitchen's functionality.

The dining area overlooks a large picture window offering beautiful views and accommodates two bar stools. As in mosttiny homes, the dining nook has multiple functionality, so you can use it for all your meals and as a working space.

The surprisingly generous bathroom is lined with cedar for a warm, rustic look and is fitted with a 36" shower, a dual-flush toilet, a vanity with sink, and a medicine cabinet with mirrors. Washer/dryer hook-ups are also included, and the builder mentions that the 28-ft and 30-ft models can also be fitted with a full-size tub.

Photo: Big Freedom Tiny Homes

Big Freedom Tiny Homes' models are all based on the same well-thought-out floor plan, but the design is versatile enough to add your personal touch and make it feel your own. Alternatively, you can use it as an inspirational starting point for a completely customized home. As for pricing, the base 26-foot Big Freedom tiny home on wheels starts at $96,900, while the 30-foot model with more space in the living area and two king-size lofts starts at $107,900.

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Mahsa Amini and Woman, Life and Freedom Movement in Iran … – Euronews

Posted: at 10:46 pm

Mahsa Amini and the Woman, Life and Freedom Movement in Iran were on Thursday awarded the European Parliament's Sakharov Prize for Freedom of Thought.

"The 16 September 2022 is a date that will live in infamy and the brutal murder of 22-year-old Jina Mahsa Amini marked a turning point.It has triggered a women-led movement that is making history," European Parliament President Roberta Metsola said after announcing the winner.

"The world has heard the chants of "women, life, liberty", three words that have become a rallying cry for all those standing up for equality, for dignity and for freedom in Iran.

"So let's today's prize serve as a tribute to the brave and defiant women, men and young people of Iran who despite coming under increasing pressure are leading the push for change. The European Parliament hears you, the world sees you and we are with you," she added.

TheSakharov Prizefor Freedom of Thought,given each year since 1988 by the European Parliament, is the European Union's highest tribute to human rights defenders and comes with a50,000 endowment.

Last year it was awarded to the "brave people" of Ukraine defending their country against Russia's relentless invasion.

Two other nominees made it on the finalist shortlist.

Women fighting for free, safe and legal abortion were nominated by the Left group which highlighted three women in particular includingJustyna Wydrzyska. The Polish activist is a member of the Abortion Dream Team, a grassroots initiative that provides direct and immediate assistance to women who need abortions. She wassentenced to eight months community service for helping a woman obtain an abortion in Poland, whose government rolled out a near-total ban on pregnancy terminations in 2021.

The two other women included wereMorena Herrera,a feminist and social activist, advocating for safe and legal abortion access in El Salvador, andColleen McNicholas,an American obstetrician-gynaecologist with a strong track record of high-quality patient care and impactful reproductive health advocacy.

The nomination of Vilma Nez de Escorcia and Monsignor Rolando Jos lvarez Lagos from Nicaragua was meanwhile backed by 43 MEPs.

Nuez is a lawyer and human rights activist who has chosen to remain in the country despite being jailed and tortured.lvarez, Bishop of Matagalpa, is a vocal critic ofPresident Daniel Ortega's Sandinista regime. Hewas sentenced to 26 years in prison earlier this year and his nationality was suspended after he was charged withtreason, undermining national integrity and spreading false news.

The prize will be given at a ceremony in the European Parliament in Strasbourg on 13 December.

The Prize is named in honour ofSoviet physicist and political dissident and Nobel Peace Prize laureate Andrei Sakharov.

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University Art Museums Become Unlikely Homes for These Portraits – The New York Times

Posted: at 10:45 pm

This article is part of the Fine Arts & Exhibits special section on the art worlds expanded view of what art is and who can make it.

Three groundbreaking Black portraiture artists have exhibitions this fall at university art museums, two of which are Ivy League schools historically white spaces with pasts that are entangled with slavery.

The shows speak to the evolution of art institutions as they confront calls to diversify, which began in the wake of the Black Lives Matter movement in 2020 when museums nationwide were charged with racism and discriminatory practices.

Lauren Haynes, director of curatorial affairs and programs at the Queens Museum in New York City, and co-curator of one of the three university exhibitions, said she hopes these are part of a sustained effort by museums of all sizes to create exhibitions and collections that reflect their communities and the larger world in which they exist.

Yale Universitys history includes the use of enslaved African labor and faculty members who led the American Eugenics movement of the 1920s and 1930s. The first nine presidents of Princeton University owned enslaved people, and a slave auction took place on campus in 1766. Duke Universitys history is entwined with slavery, post-Emancipation segregation and white supremacy. In 2018, the universitys trustees voted to change the name of a building honoring an early benefactor of the school, Julian Carr, who was a white supremacist and Ku Klux Klan member.

The exhibition at Yale University Art Gallery, Mickalene Thomas/Portrait of an Unlikely Space, which opened on Sept. 8 and runs through Jan. 7, 2024, centers on a collection of small-scale portraits miniatures, daguerreotypes, silhouettes and engravings of pre-Emancipation-era African Americans, alongside works by co-curator Mickalene Thomas and other contemporary artists. Ms. Thomas, 52, earned her M.F.A. at Yale University School of Art and lives and works in New York City.

When you think about Yale University and what it is, and that its museum is now exhibiting these images and portraits that were mostly hidden away it is an unlikely space for that, she said.

The portraits are a remarkable record of the life of everyday Black Americans living between the late 18th and mid-19th centuries, with sitters often painted wearing their finest clothes and looking straight at the viewer. Far more often, said Ms. Thomas, we are presented with images that speak to the trauma and servitude of Black Americans, rather than the quality of their lives and the excellence contained in those lives.

It was the acquisition in 2016 by the gallery of a tiny, intricately detailed portrait on ivory of Rose Prentice, a domestic worker painted in her Sunday best, that inspired the exhibition. It was also the first miniature of a Black sitter in the museums large collection of American miniatures. The portraits are arranged on walls, in cases and on top of furniture, so that the viewer feels as if theyve walked into someones home, said Ms. Thomas. The stories they tell a woman sitting at a writing desk, another holding a banjo, Rose Prentices pearl cluster earrings and printed head scarf are important, she said, when you think of Black families and how long weve been seen as invisible in mainstream American culture.

The Ten Commandments of Rene Cox, which opens at Princeton University Art Museums new gallery in downtown Princeton, N.J., on Nov. 18 and runs through Jan. 28, 2024, is a mini-retrospective. Among the issues Ms. Coxs work explores are Black womanhood and motherhood, sexism, and gender fluidity, as well as the dehumanization and commodification of the Black body.

But rather than portraying Black people as victims, her work (largely photography) celebrates their power, talent and beauty. It is also the first public showing of Ms. Coxs earliest self-portrait, done while she was an undergraduate studying photography at Syracuse University. The artist, 63, who was born in Jamaica and grew up in Scarsdale, N.Y., often photographs herself naked or in costume, playing a character, as a way of deconstructing historical stereotypes. I see myself as flipping the script, she said. I have found there is great strength in that, and in representing self-love, which is lacking within the Black community to some degree.

For Ms. Cox, that has sometimes meant rewriting history, as in her photographic montage Yo Mamas Last Supper, a recreation of Leonardo da Vincis famous painting, in which all the figures are Black men except for Jesus, who is portrayed by a nude Ms. Cox, and Judas, who is white.

In her The Discreet Charm of the Bougies series (a play on the 1972 Luis Buuel film, The Discreet Charm of the Bourgeoisie) she is the fictional, privileged Missy pearl-wearing and poodle-owning photographed in a variety of situations, including sitting on a couch while being served by her white maid. The series, Ms. Cox said in an interview with Aperture, shows Missy moving from a depressive state to one where she is able to live a life of joy, which, she explained, has also been Ms. Coxs personal experience. It has led to one of the most fundamental realizations of her life, she said, and one of her Ten Commandments. Dont wait for people to validate you validate yourself.

Lyle Ashton Harris: Our First and Last Love, a retrospective showcasing 35 years of the artists work, opened on Aug. 24 at the Nasher Museum of Art at Duke University and runs through Jan. 7, 2024. The exhibition is anchored by nine pieces that are part of Mr. Harris Shadow Works series. These are detailed assemblages constructed of personal photos, shells, beads, pottery shards, Polaroids, Post-it notes, newspaper clippings, postcards, and even cuttings of the artists hair all set within frames of stretched Ghanaian textiles. Ms. Haynes of the Queens Museum, who co-curated this exhibition, said the Shadow Works series comments on the moment we are living in, on identity, trauma, loss, relationships and the notion of legacy.

Mr. Harris, 58, who was born in the Bronx and raised in Tanzania and New York, is a meticulous archivist; his archive contains thousands of photos, lists, notes, fabric swatches and other items collected throughout his life, including more than 100 personal journals. Mr. Harris draws upon that archive for many of his works, including Obsesso II, a collage thats more than 10 feet wide, comprising hundreds of photos and ephemera from his archive.

The multiplicity of elements with which to engage resonates deeply with people; they get to time-travel, he said. Its not just hundreds of photographs of me, were looking at a club from the 90s that doesnt exist anymore or the fortune cookie that became the title of the show.

In 1993, Mr. Harris was eating Chinese food with a friend in Seattle when he opened his fortune cookie and removed the slip of paper inside. It read: Our first and last love is self-love.

Although not focused on portraiture, Silver Linings, the first national tour of works from the Spelman College Museum of Fine Arts permanent collection, features nearly 40 artists of African descent, dating from 1908 through 2017. Liz Andrews, Ph.D., the museums executive director, said although the museum was founded in 1996, the historically Black womens college has been collecting art since 1899, and this exhibition includes works of sculpture, painting, drawing and mixed media.

Silver Linings is making its first stop at the Frances Lehman Loeb Art Center at Vassar College. It opened Sept. 29 and runs through Jan. 28, 2024. Like Spelman, Vassar was founded as an all-women college but admitted its first Black student unknowingly in 1897 because she was passing as a white woman. It would be another four decades before the school truly opened its doors to Black students. Its incredibly important that a place like Vassar is recognizing Spelman as its peer, said Dr. Andrews. I think people have come to understand that historically Black colleges and universities are essential to the life and culture and the arts of this nation.

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Real-world Influences of Frank Herbert’s ‘Dune’ – Dune News Net

Posted: at 10:45 pm

Tom Huddleston is our special guest on this weeks Dune Talk, where were diving into his new book The Worlds of Dune! This gorgeous hardcover release looks at actual locations and people that inspired Frank Herbert as he researched and wrote his first Dune novel. Garin, Marcus, and Mark get into these historical revelations, including its more controversial themes. What was Herberts perspective eugenics and psychedelics? How were the Fremen informed by both Arabic and Native American cultures, and are some of those influences being downplayed today?

This podcast (53 minutes) is available here in both video and audio formats (below). Enjoy and spread the word to fellow Dune fans!

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Tom Huddlestons The Worlds of Dune: The Places and Cultures that Inspired Frank Herbert, published on September 26, 2023, explores the many real-world influences that went into creating the original Dune novel. This visually-appealing hardcover book, with a wealth of full-color photos, offers readers an enjoyable and insightful trek through history.

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Special Guest:

Do you have a question or suggestion for future episodes of Dune Talk? We want to hear from you! Tweet out to @DuneTalkShow, reply to our Instagram posts @DuneTalkShow, or simply leave your note in the comment section below.

Special thanks goes out to Ashton GIeckman for music and Sheldon Lee for voice overs.

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Everything you don’t know about neurodiversity The Mass Media – The Mass Media

Posted: at 10:45 pm

Neurodivergence, according to Forbes Health, was first defined in the 1990s by Judy Singer, a sociologist who was autistic herself. [1] She wanted a term to describe her experiences with autism: the good, the bad, and everything in between. Neurodivergent brains work differently than neurotypical brains, but these differences arent worse or bettersimply different. For example, many neurodivergent people may have fidgets or tics that dont cause them any distress, but they just arent typical or normal for their age. Neurodivergence is not a diagnosis, but a label people with learning or developmental differences can choose for themselves. Generally, conditions such as Autism Spectrum Disorder, ADHD, Down syndrome and other learning disabilities are included in the umbrella, but not everyone with these conditions self-describe themselves as neurodivergent. In the end, its a personal choice, and can be a more effective way to discuss aspects of disorders that, in reality, arent debilitating.

Nowadays, self-diagnosis is far more common than it was fifty or even twenty years ago. Thats because, up until relatively recently, neurodivergent people were the subject of discrimination, eugenics and worse. The inventor of the Aspergers syndrome diagnosis, a now outdated term to describe autistic people with lower support needs, was a Nazi who took part in genocidal killings of autistic children deemed too low-functioning to be cured, according to Time magazine. [2] This mindset persists, with efforts from some in the medical field to fix neurodivergent people or to find causes for neurodivergence and prevent it.

This fraught history is what pushed autism advocates toward the neurodivergence label: We are not broken, only different. Unfortunately, strict diagnosis and categorization is almost universally required for accommodations. Even UMass Boston, which prides itself on being accepting and open, requires a diagnosis alongside plenty of other menial paperwork to receive simple accommodations. According to the Ross Center website, Eligibility is based on information gathered during [an] initial meeting, past educational experiences and accommodations, and disability documentation. The documentation must be current, provide a clear diagnosis by the appropriate medical professional, and specify the functional limitations in an academic setting related to the disability. [3] For students who have trouble with, for example, sitting down and paying attention to paperwork for prolonged periods of time, this is hellish. Even the language on the Ross Center website is clinical and densenot accessible to anyone with dyslexia or trouble reading.

Psychologists or therapists who are registered to diagnose learning disabilities are hard to come by. Not only are they expensive, but their schedules and locations can be just as restrictive. For many neurodivergent people, self-diagnosis is their only option. Despite how commonplace knowledge of neurodiversity is now compared to the 20th century, misinformation still abounds.

Diagnostic criteria, the basis upon which a neurodivergent persons access to accommodations and care, are inherently biased against neurodivergent people. Texts like the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, colloquially known as the DSM, instruct mental health professionals on how to diagnose a wide variety of conditions. These manuals are always written from the perspective of the therapist, however, and never from the perspective of the person living with the condition. Diagnostic criteria focus on how an autistic person inconveniences someone else by being too loud, or how someone with ADHD keeps interrupting them, and never on how neurodivergent people experience these conditions personally.

Discussions of neurodivergence often overlook that, while being neurodivergent does not make a person worse or inherently broken, these conditions are disabilities. Regardless of whether its due to the circumstances surrounding the neurodivergent person or whether its an innate part of the disorder, neurodivergence makes it harder to function in a world designed for neurotypicals. With the rise of pop psychology on platforms such as TikTok, this aspect often gets overlooked. Having ADHD is not cute and trendyits debilitating.

For neurodivergent people with or without diagnoses, the psychiatric field is oppressive. Oftentimes, we have to play games with healthcare professionals to convince them that we are worthy of accommodations or medication; on the other hand, many have medication and therapy forced on them in order to fix them. The less palatable symptoms of ASD and Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder such as anger issues, vocal tics and yelling, and even conditions that are often comorbid with neurodivergence like Obsessive Compulsive Disorder, depression and schizophreniaall these conditions dont receive the treatment from healthcare professionals that they should. Mentally ill and neurodivergent people can be detained against their will, have their rights stripped from them, and forced to be under the care of someone who might not have their best interest in mind, whether that be a state-appointed guardian or a nurse. Like it or not, many of these people will turn to self-medication, only to be unjustly punished by this exact system for being drug addicts.

Being neurodivergent doesnt make people unable to communicate for themselves, even if theyre nonverbal or need a caretaker. For decades, neurodivergent people have been trying to advocate for themselves beyond peoples fascination with pop psychology. The solution is simple: We need more neurodivergent people in psychiatry, writing about and advocating for neurodiversity. In short, we need more Judy Singers.

SOURCES:

[1] Gregory, E. (2023, Sept. 18). What Does It Mean To Be Neurodivergent?. Forbes. https://www.forbes.com/health/mind/what-is-neurodivergent/%C2%A0

[2] Sheffer, E. (2018, April 26). Aspergers Syndrome, the Nazi Regime and the Dangerous Power of Labeling People. Time.https://time.com/5255779/asperger-syndrome-nazi-germany-history/

[3] UMass Boston. Eligibility for Services and Documentation Guidelines. Ross Center for Disability Services. https://www.umb.edu/academics/seas/disability-services/documentation/

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Decadence, Sickness, and Death: Mourning and the Israel-Hamas … – Religion Dispatches

Posted: at 10:45 pm

Irving (Yitz) Greenberg once said about talking or writing about the Holocaust, Dont say anything that you wouldnt say in front of burning children. Its an ominous comment, emotionally charged, and deeply felt. But as Michael Wyschogrod once said to me, referring to this comment, Yitz then wrote hundreds of pages about the Holocaust. Yitz did so, I assume, because he couldnt stay silent, even as he advocated silence. I say this not to compare the Holocaust in any way to the atrocity of October 7th, for which there is no comparison, but only to express the anguish and pain of what one cannot do, and at the same time, in that same moment, what one cannot not do. I now understand Yitzs choice.

Words of comfort (nechama) are permitted, even welcomed. But any attempt at reflection or analysis; any attempt to insert contextanything suggesting that, as horrible as October 7th was, it didnt begin on October 7th; that, like every human atrocity, it too has a historyis met with raging accusations of justification. But of course, October 7th is not the beginning, nor the end, but as with most things, somewhere in the horrifying middle. Maybe the accusation of justification is inevitable and thus any writing that moves outside pure comfort can only be written against the forceful tide of condemnation.

I will not justify a massacre, in any form. But I will not justify viewing a massacre as if it happened in a vacuum, either. I am no martyr, nor do I aspire to be one. I am a Jew, a Jew in pain and mourning with my people and for my people, but I cannot step away, I cannot be silent, and I cannot offer only comfort, even as the riptide of collective emotion compels me to do so. Or perhaps, I choose not to.

October 7th was an atrocity of unspeakable magnitude and brutality for which there is no justification. But it was even more than that, if something can even be more than that. It jolted two peoples, Israelis and Palestinians, already both in states of internal crisis, into a new state of crisis. Atrocities of this magnitude, and the retribution that has and will follow, are not limited to the human pain they produce, but can also break a societyboth the perpetrators and the victimsinto pieces.

Hamas and its supporters think the attack was justified. I think they are wrong. Many in Israel and its supporters think that the attack was sui generis and thus any response, however brutal, however bloody and rooted in vengeance, is not only justified, but necessary. I think they are wrong. But I prefer to focus on the brokenness of both sides; not only broken by one another, but broken to themselves.

Its well-known within the Jewish tradition that one should not rebuke the Jewish people at a time when they are in danger. Rather, say the sources, the only thing one can do is pray for their safety and protect ones life and property. I agree. But today, praying for the Jewish people also requires praying for innocent Palestinian people. Not only because its the right thing to do, but also because, in the intricate web that is the state of Israel, or Palestine, the well-being of one is dependent on the well-being of the other.

I stand in solidarity with my people. But I do not condemn the Palestinian people. I only ask that we view this tragedy as an event that has broken both sides, all sides, in unprecedented waysnot because the act has any equivalence, but because the long-standing deteriorated relationship that precedes it has left both sides weakened, vulnerable, and susceptible to a tragedy that has no justification. But that, of course, doesnt mean that it has no explanation.

Responsibility isnt guiltbut neither is it innocence

The great poet and politician Aim Csaire begins his short but powerful work Discourse on Colonialism with the following lines:

A civilization that proves incapable of solving the problems it creates is a decadent civilization.

A civilization that chooses to close its eyes to its most crucial problems is a sick civilization.

A civilization that plays fast and loose with its principles is a dying civilization.

Decadent, sick, and dying. We are witnessing all three in real time. It is not a comparison to say, nor a moral equivalence to suggest (nor is it blasphemous to imply), that in different ways, very different ways, this is true of both sides of the conflict.

The head of the IDF stated that Gaza will never be the same. What they did not state, but which is equally true, is that Israel will never be the same. I do not argue that both are in crisis in order to draw equivalence where there is none, but to try to interrogate some of the contours of both sides under the rubric of Csaires framing of civilization.

The horrific brutality and unjustifiable butchery of Hamason any termsis unquestionable and irrefutable. I have no idea how one can dehumanize the other to the extent that they can slaughter them in their homes. Yes, we human beings have done this before, many times, but it is still unfathomable.

Having said that, nothing exists in a vacuum, all human endeavors have context, and to deny that is itself an act of dehumanization. The problem here is that there is almost no space between explanation and justificationon either side. One is thus being forced to choose sides and express empathy only for one. Any gesture of empathy for innocents on the other side quickly evokes the accusation of moral equivalency at the very leastself-hatred and treason at most.

So it must be said, decades of humiliation, domination, and the deaths of many men, women and children, must be part of the equation of mourning. Because innocents die at the hands of terrorists does not by extension mean that we are all innocent. As Abraham Joshua Heschel said regarding Vietnam, in a free society, some are guilty but all are responsible. Responsibility isnt guilt. But neither is it innocence.

In the aftermath of the events of October 7, both Israeli and Palestinian societies were thrown into a new state of crisis. Israel was already in a state of internal crisis around questions of democracy, as the unprecedented protests have shown. And Palestinians were also in a state of crisis over their unwillingness, or inability, to recognize that armed resistance will not achieve the goals they justifiably seek: the right of national determination. But on October 7 things were put into an entirely different register. Hamas brutal attack demonstrated that, although the organization may have formally amended its call for Israels destruction, it continues to assert that Israel has no right to exist in this region. And in doing so, it sows the seeds of its own destruction.

On the other side, on October 7 the last vestige of Israels myth of invincibility was shattered as a result of its failed intelligence and tragically slow response, resulting in many more deaths than there otherwise might have been. And many Israelis felt that they were no longer safe within the borders of their own countryprecisely what Zionism sought to address. No doubt Israel will continue to respond with terrifying force. But that force will not reinstate Israels invincibility. That, Im afraid, has been lost. Theres no moral equivalency here: Hamas attacked Israel. But the result of that attack changed both.A civilization that proves incapable of solving the problems it creates is a decadent civilization.

We can see this in the Hamas incursion. There was no human mechanism to contain the violence that exploded there. It was human beings at their most carnal selves. How does someone dehumanize the other enough to slaughter them with no guilt? Perhaps its only possible if one is in a state where all external constraints vanish. When life becomes a video game. And while the barbarism we witnessed is unimaginable, the killing of civilians by Israels stealth weapons is still barbaric and dehumanizing, just as the lesser of two evils is still evil. Yes, Hamass hatred existed before, no doubt, and I dont mean to take away agency (and therefore responsibility) from the actors. But still. There was something unleashed in those who acted as they did, something collapsed in the very core of humanity, and some dangerous part of the human condition emerged unchecked by anything that could restrain it.

Its no accident that this happened in the midst of probably the largest internal crisis in Israels history. Something in the elections and resulting protest movement opened a fissure in Israeli culture and society that previously existed largely underground. In some way, I think the entire Zionist project was on trial. Jewish and democratic, labels only attached to Israel in the 1980s, were always fragile and precarious. What is Jewish? And democratic for everyone, equallyreally? And so it went. But the dam mostly held. Until earlier this year when a newly energized far-right government decided to fortify its power by weakening its great liberal challenge, the Supreme Court. And the country exploded.

The breach of the populations trust in its government, the settler narrative becoming the narrative of the country, and many Israelis simply getting sick and tired of the occupation (to say nothing of the secular/religious divide), put Israel in a place where various sets of interlocking problems threatened to paralyze the country, all the while believing Hamas was not an imminent threat. And then the problem that Israel didnt even think was such a problem suddenly burst into the world and stuck a dagger in its heart.A civilization that proves incapable of solving the problems it creates is a decadent civilization.

Theres often talk of Hamas as being in a death spiral. I dont think thats true. I think Hamas has a different definition of what it is to win and to lose. In a 2012 documentary called The Gatekeepers, former head of Shin Bet Ami Ayalon tells a great story about talking with a Palestinian acquaintance at a meeting in London in 2002, right in the middle of the Second Intifada:

At some point, I was making myself a cup of coffee and I was approached by a Palestinian acquaintance named wad Satay, a Doctor of Psychiatry. He said, Ami, we finally defeated you.

I said to him, Are you mad? What do you mean, defeated us? Hundreds of youare getting killed. At this rate thousands of you will get killed. Youre about to lose whatever tiny bit of a state you have and youll lose your dream of statehood. What kind of victory is that?

He said to me, Ami, I dont understand you. You still dontunderstand us. For us, victory is seeing you suffer. Thats all we want. The more we suffer, the more youll suffer.

Ayalon understood something about the Palestinian resistance that he hadnt before. Israel is entering a stage where its remaining founders are few. A second and third generation Israeli society is living in a first world country. It has accomplished an enormous amount in a short time. But the Arab Question or the Palestinian Problem as it used to be called, remains. And given Israels political inclinations, its becoming less relevant because the Right has essentially crushed Palestinian aspirations, or pushed them to a breaking point. It wrongly thinks the Palestinians will be wrestled into submission. That they will give up. But zero-sum games are rarely successful as long as people remain alive (which may be why many observers, Israeli scholars among them, believe the government is threatening genocide).

Yad Vashem with an air force

And thats not all. Theres something that continues to haunt Israels collective psyche, so to speak; its unwillingness to abandon the position of victimhood, despite its tremendous power and years of sovereignty. This is certainly understandable in this moment of crisis. I ask, however, echoing Hannah Arendts skepticism over the potential for a state founded in the shadow of the Holocaust, whether its constructive toward a productive Jewish future. This comes to the fore most alarmingly in the use of Holocaust analogies. The swiftness with which the Holocaust was invoked to describe the atrocities was both shocking and totally predictable. It was also wrong.

Nazi Germany was a country with an army, a police, and an economy. Hamas is a violent terrorist organization born in occupation with no formal military and relatively few resources. Israel is a first-world country with a high-powered military and nuclear weapons. Even if they were brutally victimized, Israelis in Tel Aviv are not the Jews in the Warsaw Ghetto and theyre not living in concentration camps. Holocaust parallels only illustrate the extent to which Zionism is in a deep crisis of identity.

Thomas Friedman famously claimed Israel had become, or is susceptible to become, Yad Vashem with an air force. He was criticized, and the remark was overly provocative, but when one hears Israels president and prime minister openly make Holocaust comparisons, they simply affirm Friedmans remark. The problem with the comparison is that it flattens everything down to survivalism; and when you have a gun to your head you have no moral obligations. None.

So when Israels defense minister declared I have released all the restraints [on soldiers entering Gaza], I wondered what that could mean. Executions? Liquidation of civilian homes? No one yet knows the full extent. But we will. Thats what survivalism produces. So both sides claim theyre fighting for survival; not victory, not deterrence, not even security, but survival.A civilization that chooses to close its eyes to its most crucial problems is a sick civilization.

Shooting and crying

But what about dying? Arent all civilizations slowly dying? Perhaps, but playing fast and loose with ones principles just expedites the process. And dont all societies play fast and loose with their principles? Indeed, it was the Golda Meir character in Munich who said, Every civilization finds it necessary to negotiate compromises with its own values.

Hasan al-Banah founded the Muslim brotherhood in the 1920s as a protest against British colonialism with the saying Islam is the answer. But what happened to Hamas early commitment to fight corruption, to provide social services to its people, like soup kitchens, medical care, etc.? It was founded to undermine the corrupt PLO, which it very likely has done, but its commitment to commit acts of terror threaten its people, undermined its social vision. In that sense, it seems to have largely abandoned its people who are now refugees from their homes in an open-air prison. Doubly displaced. but it seems to me something inside Hamas has died because its lost contact with many of its principles and substituted unadulterated hatred in its place. Destroying Israel, itself an impossible task, became more important than feeding its people, which is a more realizable goal, or even seeking a viable path to liberation.

Like many (maybe all) countries, Israel is accountable for being fast and loose with its principles too. A society founded on the principles of solidarity and cooperation, a social safety net, and the aspiration to be the most moral army in the world. Remember the old IDF adage shooting and crying, (yorim u bokim) to illustrate the necessity of war and the moral conscience that remains. A democracy, albeit flawed, but one that included a meaningful movement with a sincere belief that coexistence was possible.

Peace Now, founded in 1978 to promote a genuine and just peace between Israel and Palestine, was a real, forceful movement in the 1980s, with some political power. No more. In fact, its todays protest movement, a mostly centrist movement, thats taught us that Israel has transformed into a more ethnocentric, illiberal, even autocratic, right-wing society. Many are against this, but the mere fact that they are means that its real. As Alon Pinkus wrote in his open letter to American rabbis before Yom Yippur, The Israel you thought you knew is a relic of the past.A civilization that plays fast and loose with its principles is a dying civilization.

One can say this about many, maybe even all, countriesthough each in a different way. But viewing how it becomes manifest in a particular situation, in context, in situ, can be helpful. I ask those who are in any way justifying Hamas actions: setting aside the legality or morality of Israels methods, what country would not be shocked and traumatized, and react with force, by such barbarism perpetrated against its citizens? And I ask those who refuse to see any culpability by Israel: Gaza is also a society in trauma, where almost every single family has had a family member killed or imprisoned by Israela territory under a 16-year siege. Decades of humiliation, domination, and inequality. Not to justify, but to recognize.

Israel is mourning the deaths of its loved ones, innocent civilians brutally murdered thinking they were safe in their homes in their own state. Palestinian civilians are also mourning their loved ones, victims of retribution, trapped in a world from which they cannot easily escape. No moral equivalency here: people need to mourn their dead.

And what about those of us who, like it or not, have to find a way to live on this planet together? If we cant we will all die, our last words being only the other side is to blame.

Link:

Decadence, Sickness, and Death: Mourning and the Israel-Hamas ... - Religion Dispatches

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Gcaleka voted in as new public protector – Mail and Guardian

Posted: at 10:44 pm

As expected, acting public protector Kholeka Gcaleka was voted in as the new head of the chapter 9 institution by the National Assembly on Thursday. As expected too, proceedings were fractious as opposition parties argued that she was an unsuitable candidate who would rob the institution of public respect.

The African National Congress prevailed with 244 votes in the debate, where the minimum was 240 votes, or a 60 percent margin. It did so because of the support of the Inkatha Freedom Party.

The tumult began with the speech of Democratic Alliance MP Glynnis Breytenbach, who told the chamber that Gcaleka did not meet the constitutional requirement of fitness for the office.

Breytenbach was ordered out of the chamber by Speaker Nosiviwe Mapisa-Nqakula who held that she fell foul of rule 88, which forbids members from reflecting on the competence of someone holding public office.

Breytenbach obliged, but DA chief whip Siviwe Gwarube said the ruling was plainly wrong as the house could not meaningfully reflect on Gcalekas fitness if the rule were enforced in this manner, while MPs were obliged to do precisely that.

In protest at the ruling, she then led a walkout of the official opposition.

In the Speakers incorrect interpretation and application of Rule 88, she suppressed dissenting voices from the opposition and unjustly removed the Honourable Breytenbach from the House (relying on the incorrect rule) preventing her from fulfilling her constitutional obligation to interrogate the candidate up for election, Gwarube said.

As a candidate and not a sitting office bearer of the Office of the Public Protector, Adv. Gcaleka is not protected by Rule 88 for the purposes of todays debate, and the Speakers incorrect application of the rule marred this crucial vote and collapsed the sitting.

More protest followed from the Economic Freedom Fighters, whose newest MP Mzwanele Manyi, accused Gcaleka of whitewashing transgressions by President Cyril Ramaphosa in her report on the Phala Phala controversy.

This is not an honest person, said Manyi, who is also the spokesperson for former president Jacob Zumas eponymous foundation.

Gcaleka inherited the investigation into a complaint lodged by the African Transformation Movement when her predecessor Busisiwe Mkhwebane was suspended by Ramaphosa pending the outcome of an impeachment process.

The ATM, to which Manyi has been closely affiliated, has asked the Pretoria high court to set aside her report on the Phala Phala saga for irrationality, arguing that she failed to interview key witnesses and to obtain the presidents tax records when these came within reach.

From the other end of the political spectrum, the African Christian Democratic Party too raised strong objections to Gcalekas appointment. It too argued that she was not fit and proper, and said it deeply regretted supporting the ANCs nomination of Mkhwebane.

The ANC had called a three-line whip to make sure it got Gcalekas appointment across the line, though privately long-standing members of the party voiced reservations.

A member of the opposition remarked though that the reservations many parties held about her appointment possibly also pointed to salutary survivalism on the part of the new public protector.

She came through state capture. She is clearly wise to factionalism within the ANC and a survivor, the source said, adding that pragmatism may not be a bad attribute for the incumbent.

The DAs objection to Gcaleka related to her role in the National Prosecuting Authority and her support of former national director of public prosecutions Menzi Simelane, as well as her role as advisor to disgraced former home affairs, public enterprises and finance minister, Malusi Gigaba.

Gcaleka becomes the countrys fifth and, at just over 40, the youngest ever public protector. Her youth seemed a political selling point for some ANC MPs, who said it would be a nod to the need for fresh, young leadership in the country.

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Gcaleka voted in as new public protector - Mail and Guardian

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