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Category Archives: Freedom
‘We’re here to support freedom’: Local Trump supporters remain faithful – West Hawaii Today
Posted: January 15, 2021 at 2:37 pm
Clarification: Hillary Clinton in 2016 conceded the presidential election to Donald Trump on Election Night, Nov. 8, 2016. It was Green Party candidate Jill Stein who requested a recount in several states who later dropped the bid. Some House Democrats also objected to the results during the official Electoral College vote tally in January 2017. Then-Vice President Joe Biden did not entertain any of the objections.
It is the policy of West Hawaii Today to correct promptly any misleading or incorrect information when it is brought to the attention of the newspaper.
About 20 supporters of President Donald Trump took to the streets again Saturday following Wednesdays events at the U.S. Capitol, displaying flags and waving to passing motorists at the corner of Queen Kaahumanu Highway and Palani Road in Kailua-Kona.
Were here to support freedom, said Alohi G., one of the demonstrators at the weekly event, said about the groups message to the community. We know from information that has come out about Joe Biden, that he is compromised by the Chinese government. Were here to fight for our president. To fight for an election that was stolen.
Alohi G. pointed to graphs from when polls closed election night that showed a 100% spike to make up the 700,000 votes in Pennsylvania.
Were just here fighting for our freedom. Were here fighting for my kids freedom for when they grow up so they dont have to grow up in a socialist communist country because I dont think that benefits anybody, he said.
Though inauguration of the president-elect is set for Jan. 20, Alohi G. said Trump hasnt conceded yet, just that there was going to be a transition of power. The group denounced the violence that occurred Wednesday at the U.S. Capitol, but said they will not believe Biden is president until they witness the inauguration.
I think there is still a chance, he said. I have faith in God and I believe good triumphs over evil.
Although he said he has no idea what will come after Jan. 20, with Biden in the White House, he expects vaccine passports, lockdowns, more mask mandates and communist tactics.
You can see them already. Theres going to be more communist/socialist tactics, more free money, more businesses closing down, he said.
Another supporter pointed out that after Trumps 2017 inauguration, Hillary Clinton supporters hashtag was resist and Clinton challenged the Electoral College votes and wanted recounts.
We werent against that, he said. We are down for a fair audit of all fair votes.
He said this time around, Trumps supporters are the bad guys and that is unfair.
If were not out here showing people that support Trump that theyre not alone, hes not going to get a fair shake, he said.
Its unfair four years of these investigations never bore any fruit, said Alohi G. All we want now is a fair audit and a forensic audit, which could be done in a matter of days, but now all of a sudden we are being called anti-democracy. We are not anti-democracy, we just want a fair shake. We dont want to give Biden four years of witch hunt investigations, we just want freedom of speech and transparency and freedom in general.
The group, which has been demonstrating for weeks in support of the outgoing president, has seen a mixed reaction from the public. Some honk in support, others shout obscenities or give them the finger.
We also had some guy come here and drop pig guts and a pig head here in front of some elderly women and children, Alohi G. recalled about an incident a few weeks ago.
One demonstrator said he believes in America, we dont need to agree on everything and we dont always need to get along but we need to respect each others right to have a position.
Right now, we feel as Trumpers were not given a fair shake, he said. We love everybody. We did a toys for tots drive because no one else was doing it. We brought to the Salvation Army who was so thankful. We brought them over $5,000 worth of toys for the kids.
The group also mentioned that after the rally they were headed to Old Kona Airport Park to do a beach clean up.
We love our community. We love our country. Its all about love, said Alohi G. Theres a lot of hatred that comes off the street sometimes, and thats your right. This is still America. You take it with a grain of salt and you move along. Youre not going to get to everybody but you are going to give some people hope and thats good enough for me.
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Freedom of Speech: Breaking down the First Amendment online after the Capitol riots – WSMV Nashville
Posted: at 2:37 pm
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Freedom of Speech: Breaking down the First Amendment online after the Capitol riots - WSMV Nashville
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Franklin Graham on the importance of National Religious Freedom Day – Yahoo News
Posted: at 2:37 pm
The Week
President Trump is planning to exit the White House on the morning of Jan. 20, a few hours before President-elect Joe Biden is sworn in a short distance away, CNN reports. "Eager for a final taste of the pomp of being president, Trump has asked for a major send-off," and "as one of their final acts, Trump's team is working to organize a crowd to see him off on the morning of Biden's inauguration, when he plans to depart Washington while still president" for a flight to Palm Beach, Florida, where his term will officially end at noon.There are 20,000 National Guard troops currently deployed or en route to Washington, D.C., ahead of Biden's inauguration, because the last crowd Trump drew to the White House morphed into an insurrectionist mob that stormed the Capitol.Plans are still being ironed out, CNN says, but "Trump told people he did not like the idea of departing Washington for a final time as an ex-president, flying aboard an airplane no longer known as Air Force One. He also did not particularly like the thought of requesting the use of the plane from Biden." The Bidens will wake up on Inauguration Day at nearby Blair House, CNN reports, adding that "its use was offered to them by the State Department rather than the Trumps, who refuse to make contact with the incoming president and first lady.""Trump has expressed interest to some in a military-style sendoff and a crowd of supporters," CNN says, but it's unclear "whether that occurs at the White House, Joint Base Andrews, or his final destination, Palm Beach International Airport."Outgoing U.S. presidents almost always attend the swearing-in of their successors, Defense One notes, and "in recent decades, the outgoing president and first lady walk down the back steps of the Capitol to an awaiting helicopter, which then makes the short five-minute flight over to Joint Base Andrews in nearby Maryland. Upon arriving at Andrews, the former president and first lady are usually greeted by a military honor guard, former staffers, friends, and other well wishers." Two senior Pentagon officials confirmed to Defense One on Thursday that, in a break with recent tradition, no military farewell is being planned for Trump.More stories from theweek.com Trump's vaccine delay is getting suspicious Do Democrats realize the danger they are in? 5 scathing cartoons about Trump's second impeachment
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Franklin Graham on the importance of National Religious Freedom Day - Yahoo News
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Australia’s freedom of information regime labelled ‘dysfunctional’ in scathing audit – The Guardian
Posted: at 2:37 pm
An audit of Australias dysfunctional freedom of information system has called for an independent investigation into the way the prime minister and ministers treat requests for government documents.
The Australian Conservation Foundation audited FOI outcomes for environment-related information over five years, and found the system is increasingly opaque, slow and costly.
The audits preliminary findings, previously reported by the Guardian, show that refusal rates had more than doubled from 12 to 25%, while the proportion of requests that were more than a month overdue stood at 60%.
Costs for environment-related FOIs was double the average, and lengthy review processes were being used as a key tool for denying access to information.
The full ACF report, released on Friday, described the system as dysfunctional and called for targeted investigations by the information commissioner of the negative trends in the outcome of requests for environmental information.
The watchdogs investigation should, at the very least, examine the actions of ministers and the prime ministers office, the ACF said. The information commissioner has such powers, the report noted, yet had only used them twice between 2018 and 2020.
Information critical to environmental protection and action on climate change is often released too late to be of any use, and often heavily redacted or withheld entirely, the report finds. This makes it increasingly difficult to hold governments to account for acting in the interest of people and the planet.
The ACF called for the proper resourcing of government FOI teams and the Office of the Australian Information Commissioner, including the reappointment of a dedicated commissioner for FOI.
It said the current arrangement where one commissioner is fulfilling duties previously undertaken by three was arguably unconstitutional.
The report called for broader reforms to improve the FOI system, including the government being more upfront about how and where it searched for documents.
In July last year, Guardian Australia sought access to documents that discussed changing the boundary of the Ramsar-listed Moreton Bay wetland where Walker Corporation has proposed building up to 3,600 apartments for its Toondah Harbour development.
The department blocked the application in its original form because preliminary searches had identified 4,704 documents, making the scope too large to process.
After negotiations, revised search terms retrieved about 100 documents, of which just two were ultimately deemed within the scope of the application.
Those documents were released almost in full in December. The Guardian has now submitted a fresh FOI application.
The report recommended the information commissioner develop guidance for government on how information in non-official systems, email accounts and devices should be recorded.
This is particularly important amid increasing use of WhatsApp and other mobile devices by ministers to conduct the business of state, the report said.
The ACF also called for a parliamentary inquiry into transparency laws in Australia, examining the changing nature of information, WhatsApp and phone use, the suitability of compliance options, and FOI training.
As part of its research, the ACF analysed the use of exemptions to withhold FOI documents in part or in full, finding that their use had roughly doubled from 306 in 201516 to 593 last financial year.
While this trend is partially explained by a greater volume of requests, the ACF has warned that their disproportionate use should raise red flags.
Cabinet secrecy is one exemption that is being used at a far higher rate to deny FOI material.
The use of the cabinet deliberations exemption has more than quadrupled in five years, from five cases in 201516 to 26 last financial year.
The use of the personal privacy exemption has also increased from 66 cases in 201516 to 164 last financial year.
The report also warned of the aggressive use of exemptions to withhold entire documents, instead of simply using smaller redactions to hide small portions of information.
Guardian Australia has a number of matters currently before the Office of the Australian Information Commissioner contesting the use of exemptions including cabinet secrecy and personal privacy in environmental FOI decisions. One of the cases awaiting a decision was submitted to the OAIC for review more than a year ago.
The Department of Agriculture, Water and the Environment said it routinely reports on its performance on FOI to the public and said it treats applications in accordance with processes and timeframes under the Freedom of Information Act and other regulations and guidance.
The Department of Agriculture, Water and the Environment was formed on 1 February 2020 following machinery of government changes, a spokesman said. All requests received by the department have been processed within statutory timeframes.
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Freedom of Information is a democratic advance that must be protected Scotsman comment – The Scotsman
Posted: at 2:37 pm
NewsOpinionColumnistsScotland rejoices in what our government tells us is the most open and transparent freedom of information regime in the UK.
Thursday, 14th January 2021, 12:30 pm
So it is a little bit disappointing, after hearing such glad tidings only in November, to discover that any responses to freedom of information requests to the Scottish government have not been forthcoming within the statutory deadline of 20 days.
But, 346 times in 10-and-a-half months? Thats about one a day (if the freedom of information regime was failing to issue timely responses to requests on weekends as well as weekdays which, of course, it is not).
However, surely, we hear you cry, the Covid crisis provides a reasonable explanation. Well, yes, but then why was the deadline missed on more than 600 occasions in 2016 and 454 times in 2017? We only hope that the Covid-affected figure of 346 is actually a sign of improvement.
Tony Blair infamously regrets bringing in the Freedom of Information Act and others in positions of power may well share the sentiment, given a requirement to tell the public what is actually going on can sometimes be, lets say, inconvenient.
The Act was an improvement to the state of our democracy and should therefore be resolutely defended by the public against any efforts, overt or covert, to undermine it.
Otherwise our freedom of information regime may start to look more like a Monty Python sketch, a scene from Yes, Minister, or perhaps even something out of George Orwells 1984: War is peace. Freedom is slavery. Ignorance is strength.
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Should Jim Jordan get the Presidential Medal of Freedom? Editorial Board Roundtable – cleveland.com
Posted: at 2:37 pm
Cleveland.coms Sabrina Eaton reported Monday, confirming a Washington Post story, that President Donald Trump planned to give the Presidential Medal of Freedom to U.S. Rep. Jim Jordan, the sharp-tongued, fast-talking former wrestler from southwest Ohio who is one of Trumps most loyal political allies.
The question is, should he? And further, given Wednesdays events, will he?
By throwing into doubt Trumps continuation in office until his term ends Jan. 20, Wednesdays storming of the U.S. Capitol has also cast a shadow over Trumps sudden spurt of Medal of Freedom awards to political allies and admired golfers -- and raised questions about whether hell be in office long enough to carry out the promised award to Jordan.
The Presidential Medal of Freedom is bestowed at the discretion of the president to recognize an especially meritorious contribution to the security or national interests of the United States, world peace, cultural or other significant public or private endeavors. It has long been considered the nations highest civilian honor, but its also gone to friends, admired icons and political allies of the president.
In his final days in the Oval Office, President Barack Obama famously surprised Vice President Joe Biden, now the president-elect, with the award.
There seems little chance that Trump will do the same for Vice President Mike Pence, who defied Trump Wednesday in refusing to subvert the outcome while presiding over the Joint Session of Congress called to confirm the Electoral College vote.
Trump has been handing out Medals of Freedom rather liberally in his final days. On Thursday, just a day after a mob of Trump supporters invaded the Capitol, the president bestowed the award to three professional golfers, Annika Sorenstam, Gary Player and, posthumously, to the late Babe Didrikson Zaharias.
On Monday, he gave the award to U.S. Rep. Devin Nunes, a California Republican who, like Jordan, has assiduously assailed any suggestion that Trump engaged in wrongdoing, or, as the citation put it: helped thwart a plot to take down a sitting United States president and pursued the Russia Hoax at great personal risk. Jordan is said to be on Trumps list for similar reasons.
The award is totally up to the president, but should Jordan get it?
Our Editorial Board Roundtable weighs in.
Ted Diadiun, columnist:
I like and respect Jim Jordan. Ohio is lucky to have him on our side. Hes a stand-up guy and a patriot who says what he thinks and lives by his word. Any award anyone sees fit to bestow on him is deserved, and is fine by me.
Thomas Suddes, editorial writer:
The medal, once awarded to peerless statesmen and artists, now sometimes goes to marquee athletes and pop-culture personalities. That said, the elegant medal and its blue ribbon will look good on Jordan, a trim 56, who still has the air of the champion college wrestler he once was.
Eric Foster, columnist:
The short answer is no. There is literally nothing Jim Jordan has done worthy of a Presidential Medal of Freedom. All he has done is continually defend and/or justify Trumps actions at every turn since 2016. You dont get the highest civilian honor for playing politics.
Victor Ruiz, editorial board member:
Jim Jordan is an accomplice to the worst president in the history of our country, and to the violent insurrection that occurred this past week. He has done a disservice to our country and his name should not be mentioned with the likes of Thurgood Marshall, Cesar Chavez, and Maya Angelou.
Lisa Garvin, editorial board member:
I can hardly think of anyone less deserving of the Medal of Freedom than Jim Jordan, one of the seditious lawmakers who blocked a peaceful transition of power. But then again, outgoing President Trump tarnished its prestigious legacy by bestowing the award upon its very antithesis, right-wing blowhard Rush Limbaugh.
Mary Cay Doherty, editorial board member:
Wednesdays storming of the Capitol, unforgivably incited by President Trump, was reprehensible and indefensible. Jim Jordans Presidential Medal of Freedom is a separate issue and well-deserved. He defended the office of the president against unmerited campaigns to subvert and unseat a duly elected president.
Elizabeth Sullivan, opinion director:
Im no fan of Jim Jordan, who used his oratorical skills to subvert the truth and serve a dangerously ego-driven man who fell into delusion and denial when he couldnt win a second term, unleashing violence aimed at the heart of our democracy. Jordan would be wise to decline the award from such a president.
Have something to say about this topic?
* Send a letter to the editor, which will be considered for print publication.
* Email general questions about our editorial board or comments on this editorial board roundtable to Elizabeth Sullivan, director of opinion, at esullivan@cleveland.com.
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Should Jim Jordan get the Presidential Medal of Freedom? Editorial Board Roundtable - cleveland.com
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NOW-NJ: New Jerseyans Need the Reproductive Freedom Act Now – InsiderNJ
Posted: at 2:37 pm
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE:January 12, 2021
New Jerseyans Need the Reproductive Freedom Act NowAdvocates across the state call on lawmakers to pass the bill expediently to ensure rights, equity, and access
Thrive NJ, a coalition of advocates across the state, calls on lawmakers to pass the Reproductive Freedom Act (S3030/A4848). An increasingly hostile Supreme Court threatens to strip not only financial and logistic access to comprehensive essential reproductive health care, including birth control and abortion, but the legal rights themselves. New Jersey must act quickly and decisively to continue its leadership as a champion of these rights and access to reproductive health care. People and communities must be empowered to make decisions about their essential health care without interference from politicians, and without economic and logistical obstacles.
It has been one year since Governor Murphy declared in his 2020 State of the State address that New Jersey must protect the fundamental and constitutional right to full reproductive freedom. At the 2021 State of the State address today, Governor Murphy once again reiterated his commitment No matter what happens in Washington, we are working to protect a womans full reproductive rights as a matter of state law. To achieve this goal, the Reproductive Freedom Act was introduced in October. Since then, the federal outlook has only gotten bleaker with the confirmation of Justice Amy Coney Barrett to the United States Supreme Court. Before the Supreme Court eviscerates Roe v. Wade, New Jersey must take the steps necessary to guarantee reproductive rights.
Additionally, the COVID-19 pandemic has spotlighted existing healthcare disparities, created and perpetuated by structural racism. Low-income communities, communities of color, and immigrant communities (many of which overlap) are disproportionately impacted. Loss of income and health insurance conspire to push time-sensitive care like abortion entirely out of reach. These obstacles and crises create an urgent need for immediate action to not only protect reproductive rights, but ensure equitable access. Forward-thinking policy like the Reproductive Freedom Act will demonstrate that New Jersey is committed to reproductive health care for all.
In the Reproductive Justice movement, we recognize that the social reality of inequity issues of economic justice, the environment, immigrants rights, disability rights, discrimination based on race and sexual orientation, and a host of other community-centered concerns cannot be separated from an individuals health care decision-making process,said Anjali Mehrotra, President, National Organization for Women of New Jersey. Progress is fragile and the events of the past week at the nations capital have further demonstrated the vulnerabilities of our institutions at the federal level. The Reproductive Freedom Act is an important step towards delivering equitable reproductive health care for all New Jerseyans.
As an organization, we have been working on behalf of women, children and families for more than 100 years,said Phoebe Pollinger, Chair of the Reproductive Rights Committee of the Essex County section of the National Council of Jewish Women (NCJW). Our efforts on behalf of social justice are well-reflected in the Reproductive Freedom Act which provides for equal access to the full array of reproductive healthcare and ensures bodily autonomy and personal decision making free from barriers, fear or interference. NCJW/Essex proudly supports the passage of the RFA.
With abortion rights at risk across the country, the legislature has the opportunity to pass a comprehensive reproductive health bill, which guarantees reproductive health services will be available and affordable to individuals that need them,said Marcia Marley of BlueWaveNJ.This access is needed now. By passing this important legislation, NJ will ensure equitable access to the full range of services that are essential for womens economic equality, well-being and health.
We at UU FaithAction NJ are proud to stand in a long line of religious individuals and groups who across generations and faiths support initiatives like the Reproductive Freedom Act,said Rev. Rob Gregson, Executive Director, Unitarian Universalist FaithAction NJ.We call for the RFA to be debated and then passed into law swiftly in New Jersey, ensuring that the fundamental right to decide for oneself and ones family the most intimate and delicate decisions about health, dignity and ones own body remain the prerogative of each New Jerseyannot shackled by a philosophy foreign to ones own conscience.
We call upon our leaders in the State Senate and Assembly to join the Governor and take a stand against these injustices by advancing the Reproductive Freedom Act. The first step is hearing the bill in committee, which they must do in a timely manner. We must ensure important reproductive health-care protections for all New Jerseyans, especially those in marginalized communities and those that have borne the brunt of the pandemic. We call on our representatives to recognize the urgency of need, and commit to enacting the Reproductive Freedom Act expediently.
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Capitol Insurrection: Views From Berlin, Where US-Donated Freedom Bell Rings – NPR
Posted: at 2:37 pm
A group of former displaced persons helps load the Freedom Bell aboard a Navy transport vessel in Brooklyn, N.Y., on Oct. 9, 1950. One of the children, Eva Zandler, 8, originally from Poland, presents a scroll to be enshrined in the Freedom Bell's tower in Berlin to Frederick Osborn, the New York City chairman of the Crusade for Freedom. Tom Fitzsimmons/AP hide caption
A group of former displaced persons helps load the Freedom Bell aboard a Navy transport vessel in Brooklyn, N.Y., on Oct. 9, 1950. One of the children, Eva Zandler, 8, originally from Poland, presents a scroll to be enshrined in the Freedom Bell's tower in Berlin to Frederick Osborn, the New York City chairman of the Crusade for Freedom.
Every day at noon, Berliners are reminded of the American ideals of freedom and democracy as the Freedom Bell rings out from a tower of the government building where U.S. President John F. Kennedy gave his famous "Ich bin ein Berliner" speech in 1963.
Modeled on Philadelphia's Liberty Bell, the 10-ton bronze bell arrived in 1950 as a gift from the National Committee for a Free Europe to the people of what was then West Berlin.
At the beginning of the Cold War, it served as a symbol of U.S. solidarity, a sentiment already shown in the years following World War II with the Berlin airlift and the United States' Marshall Plan aid funds.
Even today, many of those who remember the Second World War and those born after hold an appreciation for the legacy of America's commitment to West Berlin. So last week's violent insurrection at the U.S. Capitol in Washington, D.C., has particularly shocked those who grew up in West Berlin's American sector.
German politicians have condemned the Capitol siege and President Trump's role behind the actions, which U.S. Democratic House members charge as "incitement of insurrection." Over the weekend, Foreign Minister Heiko Maas called for a "joint Marshall Plan for democracy" and warned that "without democracy in the U.S., [there is] no democracy in Europe."
Jrgen Siegismund, a 63-year-old retiree, agrees with Maas, although he's not so sure about naming it after George Marshall's European recovery plan. He says he was appalled by the events in Washington last week. "Trump has created a huge chasm in American society, and it is a threat to U.S. democracy," he says.
Native Berliners Jrgen Siegismund and Martina Pachaly on John-F.-Kennedy-Platz (John F. Kennedy Square) outside Rathaus Schneberg, the building where U.S. President John F. Kennedy delivered his "Ich bin ein Berliner" speech in 1963 and where, in 1950, U.S. Gen. Lucius Clay oversaw the installation of the Freedom Bell. Esme Nicholson/NPR hide caption
Native Berliners Jrgen Siegismund and Martina Pachaly on John-F.-Kennedy-Platz (John F. Kennedy Square) outside Rathaus Schneberg, the building where U.S. President John F. Kennedy delivered his "Ich bin ein Berliner" speech in 1963 and where, in 1950, U.S. Gen. Lucius Clay oversaw the installation of the Freedom Bell.
Siegismund is waiting for a friend on the steps of Berlin's Rathaus Schneberg borough hall, home of the Freedom Bell, in a public square called John-F.-Kennedy-Platz. As the bell tolls, he thinks about its meaning and how he felt growing up in West Berlin's American sector. "The commitment of the Americans to West Berlin was always very clear and strong, and their notion of liberty is something that shaped me from an early age," he says.
Siegismund's friend arrives ready for their Sunday stroll in the nearby park. Martina Pachaly, 59, works in the energy sector and describes herself as an "Urberliner" not only was she born in the city, but her parents were too. Her mother was 11 years old during the Berlin airlift and remembers waiting for the U.S. "Candy Bomber" to drop sweets to the starving kids below.
Pachaly says the news footage from the Capitol siege looked like scenes from a civil war and not like the democracy she has always understood the U.S. to be. "I also grew up in West Berlin's American sector, and it was a very positive experience. You always had a good feeling with the Americans," Pachaly says.
Pointing to Kennedy-Platz, Pachaly says it will always symbolize freedom for her. Her mother was at the square when Kennedy spoke, and Pachaly came here shortly after the Berlin Wall fell in 1989, when politicians gathered to give speeches about freedom and democracy.
Clara Rienits, a high school politics teacher in Berlin. Esme Nicholson/NPR hide caption
Clara Rienits, a high school politics teacher in Berlin.
Clara Rienits, a 44-year-old high school teacher, was also born in West Berlin. Her father held a seat in the Schneberg hall when it housed West Berlin's government. Rienits teaches politics and has been discussing the events of last week with her students via Zoom. She says that Germans know better than most what the demise of democracy means.
"I always tell my students that we have to learn how to live and participate in a democracy again and again," Rienits says. "Everyone must be given the right, the space and the time to participate. If democracy becomes so gridlocked within its own structures that you can only play along but not take part, then you must question the strength of that democracy."
Rienits says she learned about political participation initially from her parents, who were part of the 1968 West Berlin student protest movement. They denounced the U.S. war in Vietnam and stood up to their own parents' generation, asking what they did during World War II, heralding Germany's long-term reckoning with its Nazi past.
Rienits says this reckoning with the past instructs how she views the present, adding that Germans have as much reason as the United States to be concerned about the rise in far-right extremism.
Walking his dog nearby, 55-year-old Pejram Tahmasbi agrees that political participation is essential, adding that it doesn't now fall upon President-elect Joe Biden alone to fix the reasons behind the deep divisions within society. "Americans need to be politically more active," says Tahmasbi, a small-business owner. "They need to open up and switch on their minds."
Pejram Tahmasbi, a small-business owner in Berlin. Esme Nicholson/NPR hide caption
Pejram Tahmasbi, a small-business owner in Berlin.
Tahmasbi was born in Iran and came to then-West Berlin as a teenager in 1985, after claiming asylum near Nuremberg in what was then West Germany. He used to play basketball with U.S. military officers' children, who used to sneak him into the canteen at the nearby barracks where their parents were stationed. The memory of the welcome he received as a refugee from the military kids has remained with him.
He was enamored by the ideals of American freedom at the time, he says. But in light of the mess he believes the U.S. has created in the Middle East, he adds, he has become more cynical of such ideals.
Still, watching recent events unfold in the U.S. has been painful, Tahmasbi says. He argues that "a nasty mix of narcissism and racism is leading to fascism and endangers the future of America."
Seventy-one-year-old retired architect Richard Hhner, also walking his dog in the park, believes Trump incited the insurrection in Washington, which he says is "unacceptable."
He points out that in August, far-right protesters also attempted to storm Germany's parliament in Berlin, the Bundestag. "I simply don't understand what's going on in the heads of these people. Germany should have learned its lesson by now," he says.
He worries about knock-on effects that the U.S. events could have on Europe, a concern that former U.S. Ambassador to Germany John Kornblum says is not uncommon. "Europeans, especially Germans, draw much of their economic and cultural energy from the United States," he says.
Like many German politicians looking forward to the Biden administration, Kornblum sees reason for hope and believes trans-Atlantic ties remain strong, despite damage caused by Trump. "U.S.-European relations are actually quite good," says Kornblum, who served as ambassador in Berlin from 1997 to 2001. "The coronavirus has of course thrown everything off course, but cooperation between German and American societies, even after Trump, has hardly been better."
On the other side of the park next to the Schneberg hall, the neon letters "RIAS" light up a large, curved 1930s building. The initials stand for Radio in the American Sector, a German-language station under U.S. control that officially aired in West Germany but also reached East Germany, despite the latter's attempts to jam the frequency. RIAS' jingle went "Eine freie Stimme in der freien Welt" "A free voice in the free world." And every Sunday, the station would broadcast the two-minute peal of the Freedom Bell.
RIAS went off the air in 1993 as the Cold War ended. The German public broadcaster that moved into its studios, Deutschlandradio, has continued the tradition, issuing a weekly reminder of a hard-fought freedom across Germany.
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Pakistan Players Should Be Given Space And Freedom: Mohammad Amir – SportzWiki
Posted: at 2:37 pm
Mohammad Amir, former Pakistan pacer who recently retired from international cricket due to his differences with the national team Pakistans management, on Thursday called for an end to the scary dressing room culture in Pakistan cricket.
On 26 July 2019, Mohammad Amir announced his retirement from Test cricket in order to focus on limited-overs cricket. On 17 December 2020, he announced his retirement from international cricket.
Mohammad Amir had retired last month after alleging that he has been mentally tortured by the management of the national team, comprising chief coach Misbah-ul-Haq and bowling coach Waqar Younis.
Give players some space and freedom. Put an end to this scary environment in the dressing room, these very players will win you matches, he told the media.
The left-handed pacer insisted that he was dropped from the side for personal issues and not because of his performance in preceding series.
The issue is not about performance I know I can make a strong comeback but it is about this mental torture they put you through, he said.
The 28-year-old said the coaches should tell him why he was dropped the next day after taking 21 wickets in the Bangladesh Premier League.
If this is not a personal issue then what is it, he asked. He also dismissed remarks by Misbah about his speed going down.
My speed went down because I was not fully fit and fatigued. When I went to the Lanka Premier League I was fresh and I bowled at 145KPH, he said.
Mohammad Amir also said he couldnt play with coaches with different mindsets.
One coach says speed does not matter what is important is taking 20 wickets (Waqar made the remarks on Thursday when asked about the lack of speed of the bowlers in New Zealand) and the other coach says speed is important in international cricket (Misbah said this at his interaction). Who should we believe? First think what you want to say than try to teach Mohammad Amir.
He was reacting to recent comments from the duo after returning from New Zealand. Both the coaches in their interactions with the media spoke at length about the statements made by the pacer about them and his accusation that he had decided against playing international cricket because of the mental torture caused by them.
Waqar Younis said he was hurt by Mohammad Amirs statement besides commenting he is in Pakistans plans in future and can be back in the team on basis of good performance.
It is unfortunate that he gave such a statement and the way he made the exit from (international) cricket. He is a wonderful cricketer and I always advocated his case before Najam Sethi (previous PCB chairman). I also talked to (national team) players when he staged a comeback in 2016 to welcome him back (after the 2010 spot-fixing scandal), Waqar said in Lahore.
Waqar Younis also said that he felt sad after reading the pacers statements about him and insisted that the left-arm pacer was dropped for the New Zealand tour because of poor form and fitness.
He is in our plans and if he starts performing again he can be back in the team.
Asked about the remarks by the two coaches, Amir said: I am glad he (Waqar) felt sad and bad because at least he will now realize how much someones statement can hurt you like I felt when he made statements about my decision to retire from Test cricket. I didnt say anything wrong and I only spoke the truth, nothing else.
Mohammad Amir said he faced mental torture after reading statements from Misbah ul Haq and Waqar Younis where they blamed him and said he let down the team for the defeat in Australia.
They also said that I didnt want to play Test cricket and his decision has nothing to do with managing workload. I was hurt by such comments and they caused me mental anguish, he said.
Mohammad Amir said he was now being given advice that he should play domestic cricket to get back his form and a place in the Pakistan team in future.
I think a player knows what is best for him and where he should play domestic cricket or league cricket, he said.
The pacer, who was banned for match-fixing for five years for bowling two deliberate no balls, said no one needed to tutor him on having patience.
Knows one knows about patience better than me. Because for five years I was not permitted to touch the cricket ball. I waited for five years to resume playing cricket and when I didnt lose courage and patience then do you think I will do now just because I am not performing well, Amir said.
Mohammad Amir said there were numerous legends in Pakistan cricket in the likes of Shahid Afridi who had made several comebacks into the team after announcing retirements.
Be it Younis Khan, Muhammad Yousuf or Shahid Afridi they all made several comebacks so I am not worried I know if one performs he will be able to make a comeback.
Mohammad Amir played 36 Tests, 61 ODIs and 50 T20Is before announcing retirement.
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Heather Knight excited by freedom on offer after New Zealand quarantine – BT Sport
Posted: at 2:37 pm
Heather Knight intends to take a two-week quarantine period in New Zealand in her stride, comforted by the knowledge she can return to some semblance of normality during England Womens upcoming tour.
England were supposed to defend their 50-over World Cup crown in New Zealand next month but the tournaments postponement has paved the way for three one-day internationals and as many Twenty20s against the Kiwis instead.
They depart on January 24 and must complete a fortnight in quarantine upon arrival but, with life largely back to normal in a country that has contained coronavirus, if they are given the all-clear then Knight and her team-mates can enjoy some of the freedoms that are not possible in many other places.
The England captain recognises the fortunate position she finds herself in, not least because her male counterparts have spent much of the last few months in various bio-secure bubbles to fulfil their international commitments.
Knight knows herself how taxing the experience can be, having been holed up in a hotel across the road from Derbys County Ground as her side played five T20s against the West Indies, the only series they played last summer.
Weve experienced bubble life as cricketers and its manageable but its not particularly fun, Knight said.
Its obviously what we need to do at the moment but just a carrot of being able to live normally and enjoy the amazing things that come with touring is something were massively excited to do.
Weve got that two-week quarantine but knowing at the end of that, we can play cricket and live as normal human beings is going to make it a lot easier.
England named a 16-strong squad, with left-armer Tash Farrant recalled in the absence of injured seamers Anya Shrubsole and Katie George, while highly-rated teenage fast bowler Issy Wong will train alongside the group to aid her development.
The travelling party will be allowed to train from the eighth day they arrive in the country, if no one tests positive, and after a couple of warm-up games next month they will play the first ODI in Christchurch on February 23.
It will be Englands first 50-over game in more than a year, having focused on the sprint format in the early part of 2020 in the run-up to the T20 World Cup in February and March before their summer was blighted by Covid-19.
Its funny because I was actually on ESPN the other day looking at some ODI statsits got everyone down as retired because they havent played an ODI match for a year, Knight joked.
I think its a really important tour in the context of womens cricket internationally, being able to get the game on and so much hard work has gone into it.
Weve got a really good core of players, particularly in that ODI team, that are going to be the core of the team (at next years rearranged World Cup) so its just going to be tinkering that and working out what our best XI is.
Farrant, who has featured in one ODI and 14 T20Is, lost her central contract in 2019 but was one of 41 females handed a full-time domestic deal last month in a landmark move to professionalise the womens game in this country.
The fact that Tash has worked so hard and those domestic contracts are in place has meant shes been training when she potentially wouldnt have done in previous years so Im delighted to have Tash back in the side, Knight added.
Shes there as cover and shes got a chance in the nets to push for selection and show off her skills.
Its good to have her back around the group. I feel like shes matured a lot in the last couple of years being away from the side. Shes really developed as a cricketer but also as an individual.
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