Next "Far Cry" video game is set in Montana – KRTV News in Great Falls, Montana – KRTV Great Falls News

GREAT FALLS -

The latest release of the popular "Far Cry" video game series will feature a Montana setting, and promoted with video shot near Poplar.

A press release from the Montana Department of Commerce says that Far Cry 5 takes place in fictional Hope County, Montana. Although usually set in exotic, foreign locations such as the Himalayas and a fictional African country, Far Cry 5 is the first entry set in America. Its scheduled to be released in February 2018.Since 2004, sales of Far Cry games have reached more than 42 million.

The press release states: Players will have a large game world to explore while fighting off a hostile occupation of the county. In between the action, players will get a taste of Montanas outdoor recreation with hunting and fishing challenges. We know from the film industry that movies can be some of the best tools available for promoting a destination, but the interactive nature of video games represents an exciting opportunity weve never quite had before, said Montana Film Commissioner Allison Whitmer. Audiences around the globe not only will see Montana, theyll experience it virtually.

The official Far Cry 5 website provides this overview: Welcome to Hope County, Montana, land of the free and the brave, but also home to a fanatical doomsday cult known as The Project at Edens Gate that is threatening the community's freedom. Stand up to the cults leader, Joseph Seed and the Heralds, and spark the fires of resistance that will liberate the besieged community. In this expansive world, your limits and creativity will be tested against the biggest and most ruthless baddest enemy Far Cry has ever seen. Itll be wild and itll get weird, but as long as you keep your wits about you, the residents of Hope County can rest assured knowing youre their beacon of hope.

A spokesperson for Ubisoft said Montana was a natural fit for the series because of its diverse landscape and the do-it-yourself attitude of its people. The developers visited several times to shoot thousands of photos and interview residents.

A location scout identified a church near Poplar where promotional video for the game was shot. The crew employed three people from Montana. Between labor and other expenditures related to the production, the shoot is estimated to have generated $20,000 for the Poplar economy.

While the Montana Department of Commerce is focused on the promotion of Montana, many gaming sites and reviews are focused on the actual premise and game-play.

An article at Kotaku notes:Its about blasting through a section of modern Montana controlled by a Bible-thumping madman who runs a heavily-armed militia. Youre up against The Father, Joseph Seed, who along with his family has spent the last dozen years sinking deep roots into the fictional Hope County while establishing a cult called The Project at Edens Gate.

Sam Machkovech, writing for ArsTechnica, said: "The 13-year-old Far Cry gaming series returns once more in February 2018, and, at least conceptually, this might be its most intense entry yet. While Far Cry games traditionally drop players into exotic, international locales with only a gun and a prayer, this year's entry, Far Cry 5, lands in the U-S-of-A. Specifically, the open, rural wilds of Montana. Your mission: invade a militarized cult's massive compound and take down its gun-toting, Jesus-invoking leader."

From Wired:When it arrives next February,Far Cry 5will unfold in a small town in Montana, where a religious cult tinged with American survivalism has emerged. (Think the Bundys, though no shortage of legalese will doubtless back away from that comparison.) Youll play a young police officer, a man or a woman, depending on your decision, and youll be tasked with (ugh) taking this slice of America back.

The Montana setting and choice of villains in the game has even sparked an online petition, which has garnered nearly 2,000 signatures.

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Next "Far Cry" video game is set in Montana - KRTV News in Great Falls, Montana - KRTV Great Falls News

Understanding contemporary white supremacy: Is the alt-right really something new? – Salon

Following the first part of this series, where the historical origins of modern white supremacy were explored in depth, and asubsequent essaythatexamined the ways white supremacy has influenced mainstream American politics, here are three of the nations foremost scholars on white supremacy, discussing similar issues at length.

Jeffrey Kaplan is associate professor of religion at the University of WisconsinOshkosh. His books include Radical Religion in America: Millenarian Movements From the Far Right to the Children of Noah; Nation and Race: The Developing Euro-American Racist Subculture (co-edited with Tore Bjrgo); and The Emergence of a Euro-American Radical Right (with Leonard Weinberg).

George J. Michael is associate professor in the criminal justice faculty at Westfield State University in Massachusetts. He is the author of Confronting Right-Wing Extremism and Terrorism in the USA; The Enemy of My Enemy: The Alarming Convergence of Militant Islam and the Extreme Right; Willis Carto and the American Far Right; and Theology of Hate: A History of the World Church of the Creator.

Michael Barkun is professor emeritus of political science in the Maxwell School of Citizenship and Public Affairs at Syracuse University. His books include A Culture of Conspiracy: Apocalyptic Visions in Contemporary America; Religion and the Racist Right:The Origins of the Christian Identity Movement; and Chasing Phantoms: Reality, Imagination, and Homeland Security Since 9/11.

1. What is the alt-right?

Is the contemporary alt-right a continuation of late 20th-century American white supremacist movements, or are there new components? Besides the new use of technology, are there ideological elements to the alt-right that we should take notice of? What happened to some of the exotic ideas floating around in the 1980s and 90s, such as occult Nazism and pagan religions? Did they become assimilated into the alt-right, or did those more esoteric veins fade out?

Jeffrey Kaplan: The so-called alt-right seemed to descend from the ether in the fading twilight of the Obama administration. The alt-right quickly seized the stage as the acceptable face of the radical right, which since the violence of the 1980s had been demonized and banished from the American public square. The process is common enough in American extremism. In 1963 the racist fringe was banished from the anti-communist fervor of the John Birch Society, just as the 19th-century Know Nothings came to be excluded from the politer society of American nativism. America, after all, is a vast smorgasbord in which individuals, religions and political movements may pick and choose among the tropes on offer.

The alt-right follows this pattern to a T. Picking and choosing from a variety of established conspiratorial, racist and outright paranoid ideas, leavened with a catchy jargon like deep state which is far more PC than ZOG or Zionist Occupation Government, which held primacy in the American radical right since the 1970s the alt-right was tailor-made for the discontented and dispossessed faithful of the far right.

Following British sociologist Colin Campbell in the 1960s, scholars have borrowed the term cultic milieu to describe the process by which oppositional individuals sample ideas, theories and wild suppositions that are the stuff of which movements are born, flourish and, most often, perish in anonymity, completely unknown to the dominant culture. This is the origin of the alt-right, and will most likely be its fate as well.

The occult and esoteric racist movements from the fringes of National Socialism to elements of explicit Satanism still exist in the wilderness of the cultic milieu, but their numbers are much diminished. The peregrinations of David Myatt are a case in point. Myatt, who drifted from Buddhist beliefs to National Socialism under the spell of Colin Jordan in Britain, went on to found the Order of Nine Angles, the most successful racist esoteric organization combining Satanism and National Socialism in the 1980s and 90s. Tiring of the scene and despairing of the quality of the recruits, he took his shahada and converted to radical Islam in the shadow of 9/11 and 7/7. In this he moved from the most distant fringes of the cultic milieu to a more potent global system of belief. Lately, however, he has taken on the cross, converting to Orthodox Christianity and embracing a message of universal love and reconciliation. Myatt is the cultic milieu personified and living proof that the esoteric white supremacist ideas of the 1980s live on, albeit on life support.

The alt-right is, however, different in significant ways from its predecessors. For one, it is not simply an American made-for-export idea, as was the racialism that American intellectuals marketed internationally in the 19th century as racist anthropology or that which the anti-communist zealots spread with much less success in the 1950s.

Rather, it mixed American nativist tropes with the growing fears of immigration and Islamization that have become acute in the European Union. More remarkable still, it fell easily under the spell of Vladimir Putins Russia, whose hybrid warfare campaign against the West and the world is simply a 21st-century update of the Soviet disinformation campaigns that were called Active Measuresin the Cold War. Putins Russia now caters to the far right globally, and as the Trump scandals now unfolding in Washington indicate, found in the alt-right perfect rubes who, for a few dollars and a grand delusion of power and global glory, would gladly ignore logic and history in pursuit of a dream of an America relatively untroubled by such putative enemies as Black Lives Matter; immigrants bent on rape, rapine and terrorism; and the dread legions of the politically correct.

George J. Michael: There is some continuity between the alt-right and extreme-right groups from the late 20th century. David Duke, for example, has long been a prominent spokesman of the white nationalist movement. In fact, he in some ways spearheaded a change in the ideological direction away from a supremacist/hate orientation to a more identitarian orientation.

The exotic ideas, including occult Nazism and pagan religions, continue to inform the movement. Mostly, their influence can be found in the forms of iconography informing white nationalist websites and assorted insignia. Norse neo-paganism is often seen as a more suitable religion for white nationalists, insofar as contemporary Christianity is seen as philo-Semitic and pro-multiculturalism.

Michael Barkun: The sudden public emergence of the alt-right during the 2016 presidential campaign raises the question of whether it is simply the continuation of a long-standing white supremacist movement or constitutes a completely new development. That is not an easy question to answer, since the alt-right is not itself a cohesive movement. Rather, it is best understood as a set of groups and individuals that share a family resemblance, knit together by an intense hostility to immigration and a fear that the white population and what the alt-right conceives as Western culture will be submerged in a non-white sea. The alt-right is dominated by white nationalists and contains anti-Semites as well as some neo-Nazis, but also others of a less reprehensible stripe.

The more interesting and disturbing issue is the alt-rights rising visibility. Whatever people mean by the alt-right, it is an element of right-wing extremism that suddenly became a factor in Donald Trumps campaign. Its highly vocal support for Trump was widely covered by the media, the attitude of the campaign toward it was analyzed, and its possible electoral effect was discussed, even though its numbers appeared minuscule and no figure of any political stature was known to be associated with it. That so seemingly marginal a group of political actors should have attracted so much attention is itself odd indeed, in hindsight, now that the campaign is over, it seems stranger still.

Yet the public emergence of the alt-right is on reflection a manifestation of a larger transformation in American culture namely, the gradual penetration of the fringe into the mainstream. This is a development that transcends politics, although it has important political implications. It began in the early 1990s and has thus been underway for about a quarter of a century. Conspicuous examples have appeared in popular culture, including Dan Browns best-selling novels with occult and conspiracist themes, as well as The X-Files television program, and it has been critically accelerated by the internet and such social media as Facebook and Twitter. Without the traditional barriers of editorial gatekeepers, fringe material could now access and command mass audiences. Just as fringe themes could penetrate popular culture, so fringe politics is no longer shut up in segregated subcultures.

We see this, too, in the avid popular consumption of conspiracy theories, and there has been no greater consumer of them than Donald Trump himself. Trump, after all, was the first high-visibility proponent of the Obama birther legend. During the campaign he gave a half-hour interview to Alex Jones, the countrys leading purveyor of conspiracy theories. Trumps constant campaign refrain of immigrant wrongdoing smacks of a plot by foreigners to destroy America.

It is scarcely surprising that against this background the alt-rights appearance acquired a certain quasi-legitimacy, despite its white supremacist credentials. It seemed to be simply a slightly more strident set of outsider anti-immigrant propagandists, in a campaign that already had an outsider candidate.

The role of the alt-right in the 2016 campaign, alongside the broader movement of fringe motifs into the mainstream, suggests a political future that once seemed inconceivable: the potential public re-emergence of a white supremacist organization, something not seen in America since the Ku Klux Klan of the 1920s. While still unlikely, the 2016 trajectory of the alt-right may prefigure more extreme open white supremacist political forays in the future.

2. The strength and leadership of the white supremacist movement

How strong is white supremacy in this country? Is it getting stronger, is it a declining movement or has it remained stable from when you first began your research? Was the 1990s Patriot movement the heyday of white supremacy? Are there things people label white supremacy that we should more properly put outside that framework? Which white supremacist group(s) do you find most intriguing today from a scholarly viewpoint?

Kaplan: White supremacy, like the poor, will be with us always. It is the nagging voice in even the most racially enlightened among us when they find themselves walking at night in Hyde Park in Chicago or contemplating a trip to Detroit. Once, it was a mainstream idea as many of the most idealistic young American men, fired by the racial threat depicted in D.W. Griffiths The Birth of a Nation, sent their money to the mail-order Klan in exchange for a newsletter, a bizarre lexicon and a copy of the Kloran. With the legislative victories of the civil rights movement and a concerted push from Hollywood, it faded from polite society and the movements that held true to the racist call were banished to the most distant fringes of the cultic milieu.

This is where I found them when I began my research among their number in the late 1980s. They were a battered and demoralized lot. Identity Christians held fast to their esoteric interpretations of the Bible; National Socialists treasured their SS-inspired regalia and propitiated the shade of Adolf Hitler as if the Second World War were merely on hiatus; and Odinists drank bloats, rode motorcycles and formed prison gangs. The Patriot movement was never really among their number. Like the Birch Society of the 1960s, race for them was a distraction from the more important work of decoding the manifold conspiracies which, in the words of the iconic (and African-American!) Last Poets, Keep the people asleep and the truth from being told.

Early in the new millennium, I left the world of participant/observer research into the radical right in search of new and more potent oppositional ideas. None of the white supremacist constellation were intriguing simply because no new ideas, fresh movements or visionary leaders were on the horizon. I would argue, perhaps alone in this forum, that white supremacy as we have known it remains for the moment moribund. What we see today, the red meat of the alt-right and the popular fears that led to the election of Donald Trump, speaks to broader dreads Islamophobia, immigration and the ever-present other rather than an appeal for White Power. Racism is a powerful ingredient in the stew, but it is no more the leitmotif of what we are seeing today than is traditional America First nativism.

Michael: That is really the $64,000 question. It is very difficult to quantify the size of the white nationalist movement in America. There is no viable political party that advocates for its interest, unlike far-right parties in Europe.

The movement seemed to have gone into decline during the 2000s. The movement suffered a number of casualties as several leaders died (e.g., William L. Pierce, Sam Francis, Richard Girnt Butlerand Willis Carto) and a number of others were arrested and incarcerated (Matt Hale, Chester Doles, Kevin Alfred Strom).

The Patriot movement differed quite a bit from the white nationalist movement over ideology, to wit, on the issue of race. The Patriot movement began a steep decline not long after the 1995 Oklahoma City bombing (as measured by the number of groups compiled by the Southern Poverty Law Center). However, in recent years, the movement seems to have reinvented itself under the label of preppers and once again is gaining momentum.

The late 1990s seemed to be the heyday for the white nationalist movement in America. The movement had not suffered any major repression from the federal government since the Fort Smith sedition trial of 1988. During the 1990s, the movement took advantage of the fledging medium of the internet to get its message out to a larger audience. But after 9/11, the movement experienced quite a few prosecutions from the federal government. Moreover, after 9/11, the American public did not seem receptive to the white nationalist movements message of white racial solidarity. After 9/11, there was an upsurge of American patriotism. Conservative-leaning Americans were not amenable to white separatism; instead, a new form of patriotism gained currency that viewed the country as under attack from anti-democratic, religious extremists in the form of militant Islam. The extreme rights critique of the U.S. governments pro-Israel foreign policy seemed unpatriotic. As a result, the extreme right languished for quite some time during the 2000s.

In recent years, however, issues involving race have gained great salience, including immigration, the ideology of multiculturalism and the prominence of language policing under the rubric of political correctness. The white nationalist movement was well-prepared to provide commentary on these issues. As a result, the movement seems to be gaining relevance once again.

Are there things people label white supremacy that we should more properly put outside that framework? Yes, for example, immigration. People who do not consider themselves to be white nationalists are nevertheless concerned about immigration because of its costs to taxpayers, as well as its impact on employment prospects for native-born Americans, the cost of health care, etc. Furthermore, many ordinary people are rejecting the restrictiveness of political correctness on the discourse in America.

Barkun:The present strength of the white supremacist movement has always been notoriously difficult to measure. The movement I use the word advisedly, as a term of art has always been riven by factionalism, and no group wants to divulge membership numbers except in the most grossly inflated forms. It is fair to say that right-wing extremism probably peaked in the early 1990s, when the Christian Identity movement was still vibrant and before paramilitary organizations had attracted the full attention of the federal government after the Oklahoma City bombing in 1993.

There are clearly still militia groups active, some with apparently aggressive agendas. The Hutaree Militia in the Midwest was one such case, although despite substantial evidence of an impending attack, its principal leaders were acquitted of the most serious charges in a 2012 trial. The Aryan Strikeforce leaders in the mid-Atlantic states were recently indicted before their plans could unfold. However, there is no evidence that these or other recent paramilitary activities have been linked or coordinated.

The conceptual difficulty lies in separating out the white supremacist element from other beliefs that are often associated with it. For example, virtually everyone on the extreme right is a conspiracist, buying into ideas about what is termed the New World Order the belief that there is an overarching conspiracy seeking to establish a global dictatorship. There are numerous variations on this theme: religious and secular, anti-Semitic, anti-Catholic, anti-Masonic, anti-capitalist and so on. In some versions of the New World Order, there is also the claim that the aim of the conspirators is to enslave or destroy the white race. Some conspiracists, in other words, are racial supremacists, and some are not.

The same is true of another frequently overlapping theme, anti-immigration. As has been true during other periods when anti-immigrant sentiment has been strong the 1890s, for example, or the 1920s it can be more or less racist. Not everyone seeking to limit or even ban immigration is a white supremacist, although some are. The mere presence of opposition to immigration is not, without further inquiry, evidence of white supremacist beliefs.

In light of the increasing migration of fringe themes into the mainstream, mentioned above, the real danger is that forms of white supremacism will insinuate themselves into mainstream American culture. There have already been attempts to do this in the South in the form of the so-called neo-Confederate movement, with its disingenuous claim that it is simply celebrating history and heritage. Something similar may appear elsewhere using such labels as Western civilization, Christian civilization or even Judeo-Christian civilization. Thus white supremacy may begin using code words that seem on the surface to be innocuous or even positive but in the eyes of the knowing are read through a racist lens.

3. The leadership of the white supremacist movement

The founders of most of the leading white supremacist organizations have died in the last decade or two: William L. Pierce, Ben Klassen, Richard Girnt Butler, Willis Carto and others. Who are the new leaders we should know about? Is there a difference in leadership style between the deceased older generation and the newer generation? Is there a leadership vacuum? If leaderless resistance was the reigning philosophy in the 1990s, are we still operating under that or have we moved on to other forms of organization?

Kaplan: The leaders of the white supremacist organizations of the 1980s have passed from the scene. Their dysfunctional compounds like Aryan Nations or the Covenant, Sword and Arm of the Lord (CSA) are gone too, victims of civil suits, government suppression or simple ennui. The mail-order faiths, Klassens Creativity or Pierces Cosmotheism, are down to a small handful of true believers. Battle-scarred remnants of the time, such as National Socialist Harold Covington, struggle to adapt to new times with ideas like his idyllic Northwest migration initiative seeking a white homeland in America and really quite good apocalyptic literature in his Northwest Trilogy Hill of the Ravens (2003), A Distant Thunder (2004), A Mighty Fortress (2005) as well as The Brigade (2007).

What remains is more potent overseas than in the United States. White power music, pioneered in the late 1970s by Ian Stuart Donaldsons Skrewdriver, flourishes throughout the world, including such decidedly non-Aryan redoubts as Jakarta. The skinhead movement is perhaps stronger than ever, especially where it benefits from a measure of government support and protection in places like Russia.

Evolutionary change is most dynamic outside the confines of white supremacy. In Europe a new generation of leaders has emerged to mainstream formerly explicitly National Socialist, racist or primitively nativist political parties. Groups like the Sweden Democrats, the True Finns or the French National Front have gone from the wilderness to contenders for power, just as the alt-right has emerged in the U.S. But none are explicitly white supremacist, even as they borrow heavily from traditional white supremacist ideas.

Like the leaders of the far right, the humble leaderless resistance idea has given way to a more dynamic successor in lone-wolf attacks. Leaderless resistance as posited originally by Texas Klansman Louis Beam was an expression of helplessness and despair. It was the equivalent of tilting at windmills, which succeeded primarily in the incarceration of a generation of skinheads, would-be Phineas Priests, bikers and simple sociopaths. While William L. Pierce could lionize serial killer Joseph Paul Franklin from the safe remove of a nom de guerre in his novel Hunter, the current generation of lone wolves serve terrorist groups who are more than the state of mind organizations of the white supremacist world, enjoying considerable material and other support in the process.

It is a new day in the world of self-propelled violence. There are successes on occasion abroad. Anders Breivik certainly comes to mind. But in America?

Michael: In my estimation, the most important leader is Matthew Heimbach, the leader of the Traditionalist Youth Network. He first gained notoriety in 2012, when he founded a White Student Union at Towson University in Maryland. Although he is only in his mid-20s, he is already an accomplished orator. He is also a very effective interlocutor when he gives interviews to the media. He evinces the hallmarks of what Eric Hoffer once called the True Believer. Heimbach does not flinch from street activism, despite the strident opposition he faces from various antifa counterprotesters. Furthermore, he advances a leftish white nationalist ideology which could potentially resonate with many disaffected young people. Finally, he has established ties with like-minded activists overseas including Alexander Duginfrom Russia which gives his organization the semblance of an international movement. He reaches out to separatists from all racial and ethnic groups. At the present time, this might all seem inconsequential, but separatism seems to slowly be creeping into the national discourse, as evidenced by the push for Calexit.

Barkun: The first and even the second generation of white supremacist leadership has now virtually all died out, figures like William L. Pierce of the National Alliance and Richard Girnt Butler of the Aryan Nations. Not surprisingly, their organizations, small to begin with, collapsed shortly after their deaths. Neither they nor others in their cohort were succeeded by figures of comparable strength. Only David Duke remains, a strange relic of the past. Even in white supremacys heyday, none of its leaders could command more than small followings. Like the extreme left, those at the other end of the ideological spectrum often spent as much time fighting one another as combating their supposed enemies. Small points of ideology and tactics counted heavily in these duels. Those who had dreams of uniting racialists under a single banner quickly learned that such ambitions were destined to founder.

At the moment, three figures seem of more than passing importance, although given the movements history, they may pass quickly into obscurity: Richard B. Spencer of the National Policy Institute, prominent on the alt-right; Matthew Heimbach of the Traditionalist Youth Network; and Andrew Anglin of the online Daily Stormer website. But there is no reason to believe that they will drive the white supremacist right over the longer term.

It is easy to concentrate on organizations, websites and the people associated with them, because they are visible and easy to identify. However, the danger of violence by individuals acting alone so-called lone wolf attacks remains and, in my view, is far more serious than the threat posed by organizations. The danger is high precisely because, absent unusually good intelligence, they normally become known only after the fact, as in the infamous 2011 attacks in Norway by Anders Breivik.

In that connection, attention needs to be paid to those known as sovereign citizens, who are potential lone wolves. Sovereign citizens do not constitute a movement. Rather, they represent a stream of anti-government thought and activity, built around the belief that traditional conceptions of American citizenship, law and institutions are invalid and that, consequently, no individual has any obligation to obey the law. This idea is based on a radically variant reading of the Constitution and the common law that makes each person, in effect, a law unto him- or herself. While the sovereign citizen idea is not in itself based on white supremacy, the two overlap. Some sovereign citizens have also been white supremacists, and the very nature of sovereign citizen thought deprives civil rights protections of any legitimacy. It follows, too, that the failure of sovereign citizens to accept any legal obligations inevitably involves them in conflicts with the government and, not infrequently, in violent and sometimes deadly incidents.

Next week: How do we deal with organized white supremacy? What do we get wrong about it?

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Understanding contemporary white supremacy: Is the alt-right really something new? - Salon

SMOKERS’ CORNER: DEATH CULTS – DAWN.com

Last year on these pages I wrote about an ageing man in Karachi who had travelled to Egypt to fight against the Israeli military during the 1967 Egypt-Israel war.

After the war (which had lasted just six days and saw the Israelis wiping out the Soviet-backed Egyptian forces), the man had travelled to Jordan where he joined Yasir Arafats Palestine Liberation Organisation (PLO). He was soon sent to a village on the Lebanon-Israel border to mount guerrilla attacks against Israeli border guards.

During the planning of one such attack, the PLO squad he was part of split when there arose a possibility that the attack might cause civilian casualties. He told me that the majority of the men in his squad were against killing civilians and refused to take part in the attack which was eventually aborted. The man returned to Pakistan and set up a tea stall on Karachis I.I. Chundrigar Road.

Disturbed, confused and angry youth are easy recruits for militant groups promising them an identity in return for total obedience to a charismatic leader

The reason I have briefly repeated this story here is to contextualise the mutation of the idea of modern Muslim militancy and/or how drastically it has changed in the last four decades or so.

Professor of Political Science at Indiana University, James Lutz, in his 2005 book Terrorism: Origins & Evolution, wrote that most European left-wing and Palestinian guerrilla groups, between the 1960s and late 1970s, largely avoided inflicting civilian casualties because they wanted the media and the people to sympathise with them.

This is not to suggest that civilian deaths were always entirely avoided; it is however true that many militant groups often suffered splits within their ranks on this issue. The most well-known split in this context (and regarding Muslim militancy) was the one between Yasir Arafat and Abu Nidal in the PLO in 1974. Arafat had decided to abandon armed militancy and chart a more political course. Nidal on the other hand not only wanted to continue pursuing militancy but wanted to intensify it even further. He formed the violent Abu Nidal Organisation (ANO) which, by the 1980s, had become a notorious mercenary outfit for various radical Arab regimes in Libya, Iraq and Syria.

Even the anti-Soviet mujahideen in Afghanistan the forerunners of devastating Islamist outfits such as Al-Qaeda were conscious of receiving good press and public sympathy by avoiding civilian casualties. In spite of being heavily indoctrinated by CIA and Saudi-funded clerics in Afghanistan and Pakistan to embrace death as a religious duty, the mujahideen did not use suicide bombings, not even against Soviet forces.

The first-ever suicide bombing involving Muslim militants took place in Beirut in 1983 when a member of the Hezbollah drove a truck laden with explosives into a compound full of US military personnel. Yet, it was not until the 1990s, when so-called Islamic militants, many of who had never used violence against civilians during the Afghan insurgency, began to attack soft civilian targets in various Muslim-majority countries.

In his excellent 2004 BBC documentary, Power of Nightmares, film-maker Adam Curtis noted that those who fought in Afghanistan were made to believe (by their facilitators in the US and Saudi Arabia) that it was their religious war which downed a superpower in Kabul many such fighters returned to their home countries and tried to overthrow the existing governments there.

Since this time they were trying to uproot Muslim regimes (and not atheist communists), Curtis suggests that they believed that they could trigger uprisings among the people against corrupt Muslim regimes by creating revolutionary chaos in the society. Thus, car bombs began to explode in public places and, as Curtis then notes, once these failed to generate the desired uprisings, suicide bombings became common when the militants became desperate.

It is also vital to note that suicide bombings, despite the fact that suicide is explicitly forbidden in Islam because it challenges Gods authority over life and death, was hardly ever condemned even by the supposedly apolitical and non-militant religious figures. This was especially true between the 1990s and the mid-2000s and largely because most Muslims were still stuck in the quagmire of the glorified narratives of divinely-charged bravado diffused by Muslim and US propagandists during the anti-Soviet insurgency.

For example, in Pakistan, suicide bombings were not condemnedtill 2014. Even as 50,000 people lost their lives to terror attacks between 2004 and 2014, many non-militant religious figures, reactionary media personalities and so-called experts were continuing to see sheer nihilist violence (in the name of faith) as reactions to state oppression, poverty, corruption, drone attacks, anything other than total nihilist madness.

Nihilism. Thats exactly what it really is. Famous French academic, author and a long-time expert on Islamic militancy, Oliver Roy, recently wrote in The Guardian [April 13, 2017], thatthe nihilist dimension is central to understanding the unprecedented brutality of outfits such as the Taliban, Al-Qaeda, and especially the militant Islamic state (IS) group. To them violence is not a means. It is an end in itself. Such nihilism that wants to wipe out existing social, cultural and political modes and structures of civilisation through apocalyptic violence has been used before in varied forms and in the name of varied ideologies. Nazis in Germany did it in the name of Aryan supremacy; Mao Tse Tung in China did it in the name of permanent (communist) revolution; and theKhmer Rougedid it in Cambodia, by wiping out thousands of Cambodians and announcing communisms Year Zero.

But since Islamic nihilists are still in the shape of insurgents (and not part of any state), Roy sees them more as large apocalyptic death cults who this time just happen to be using Islam as a war cry, mainly because this gives them immediate media coverage.

Roy writes that just as disturbed teens and confused angry youth become easy recruits for cults promising them an identity (in return for total obedience to a charismatic leader), contemporary nihilists and death cults posing as Islamic outfits attract exactly the same kind of following.

Whats more, after painstakingly going through the profiles of known young men and women who decided to join such cults and willed themselves to carry out the murder of civilians and of themselves, Roy found that only a tiny number of them were ever actually involved in any political movements before their entry into the outfit. Roy noted that most were born again Muslims who had suddenly become very vocal about their beliefs and then were rapidly drawn in by the many recruitment tactics of nihilist cults operating as Islamic outfits around the world.

Most telling is the fact that religious figures in Muslim countries had continued to see the nihilists as a radical expression and extension of the glories of the Afghan insurgencyonly to now realise that to the nihilists they too are as much infidels as the Soviets were, or the Westerners are.

Published in Dawn, EOS, June 11th, 2017

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SMOKERS' CORNER: DEATH CULTS - DAWN.com

Jim Dey: Another fatal shooting raises the same question why? – Champaign/Urbana News-Gazette

Those nave, self-destructive young people who associate the long-running gang war in Champaign-Urbana with a romantic notion of living life on the edge should have been at the Salem Baptist Church about 90 minutes before Friday's funeral for Darien J. Carter.

The church was empty, save for a white casket bearing a floral display and holding the body of a young black man 24-year-old Mr. Carter.

Nihilism never looked so quiet, peaceful and pathetic.

Meanwhile, across town, another young black man was being arraigned on murder charges in connection with the fatal shooting of Mr. Carter.

Marquise T. Burnett, a 21-year-old Champaign man, was arrested Wednesday for shooting Mr. Carter on the previous Friday (June 2). Mr. Carter was riding a bicycle about 6:15 p.m. in the 500 block of East Eureka Street in Urbana when he was shot multiple times.

To sum it up one dead, one behind bars, more of both in the rearview mirror and surely more on the way.

It's impossible to describe the appeal those kind of numbers represent to the outlaws who generate them. They reflect a lack of respect for almost everything life and its fulsome possibilities most people hold dear.

Mr. Carter is the latest casualty of that mindless mind-set, his death drawing a church full of friends and family members who mourned his death and repeatedly asked how and why it could happen.

One of Mr. Carter's cousins said this was no ordinary funeral because "Busta didn't die at all."

"They killed my cousin in cold blood," he said, referencing Mr. Carter's nickname Busta DaHustla.

The cousin suggested retaliation against those he perceived responsible for Mr. Carter's death because "Busta didn't mess with nobody."

That suggestion drew a strong response from the Rev. Devita Benard, one of several ministers who presided at the emotional event.

"The Bible says, 'Vengeance is mine, I will repay,'" the Rev. Benard said. "Forgiving has to be the rule for this situation."

Friday's service was a combination of traditional mourning, a revival service emphasizing the love of God and pep rally urging members of the black community to protect its young people from the temptations that lead to deaths like that of Mr. Carter.

"We've got to stand up and take our children back," said the Rev. JoAnne Goodloe, a Chicago minster who is Mr. Carter's grandmother.

That will remain a significant challenge because the names of all the individuals involved in this latest incident are familiar to local police.

Burnett, the alleged shooter in this case, was a target in a 2015 drive-by shooting. Three local men were driving in the 600 block of West Beardsley Avenue in Champaign when they slowed down to fire at a group that included Burnett. He was struck in the leg.

The gunman, Kyjuan Dorsey, also accidently shot one of his companions, 18-year-old Jeremy O'Neal, in the head. Dorsey is now serving a 55-year sentence for killing O'Neal and 25 more for shooting Burnett. Now it's Burnett who is looking at a lengthy prison term if he is convicted.

At the time he was shot, Mr. Carter was awaiting a sentencing hearing on a charge of unlawful use of weapons by a felon.

Those sinister activities are a far cry from the descriptions of Mr. Carter included in Friday's service.

His grandmother described a smiling, happy youth who sent her holiday cards and frequently visited.

Goodloe reminded the audience that God gives life but that "it wasn't God who took my grandson."

"For those who did this to my grandson. ... I pray to God for forgiving hearts," she said, reminding that forgiving wrongdoers is "not about them."

"It's about you," she said.

One of Mr. Carter's uncles also spoke, discussing the challenges young black men face growing up in fractured families without positive role models. He said that he wished he could have offered better guidance to his nephew.

"I feel like I failed him," the uncle said. "It just breaks my heart to see him like this."

Judging by the tears, many members of the audience were in pain.

Goodloe acknowledged the hurt, noting that she has been the victim of a crime herself and that she also lost other family members to violence.

"So this, too, shall pass. It will take awhile, but this, too, shall pass," she said.

Jim Dey, a member of The News-Gazette staff, can be reached by email at jdey@news-gazette.com or by phone at 217-351-5369.

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Jim Dey: Another fatal shooting raises the same question why? - Champaign/Urbana News-Gazette

Sydney Festival Film Review: Axoltl Overkill (Germany, 2017) burns up Berlin with heavily stylised hedonism – the AU review (blog)

Adapting her own novel for the big screen, German author-director Helen Hegemann makes a polished feature debut with Axolotl Overkill. Pulse firmly on the rapid strobe-lit streets of Berlin, the film is very much a muse on teenage excess and independence, as self-destructive as in can be, with an assured sense of style and impressive visuals to compensate for a lack of originality. Though there isnt quite as much narrative heft behind it, often falling into repetition and not knowing how to fully capitalise on crucial moments, Hegemann is admirable as she follows sixteen year old Mifti (Jasna Fritzi Bauer) through unstable sexual relationships, a more-is-more approach to drugs, and a desperate desire for rebellion.

Bauers self-medicating protagonist is not in a healthy place at any point in the film, reeling from her mothers death and her detachment from a rich father who doesnt seem all that present. Though Mifti is under the care of her older half-sister Anika (Laura Tonke), in her mind she is not tethered to anything, floating on a precarious cloud of self-indulgence and immediate gratification. Rather than focus on how aimless Mifti has become, Hegemann wastes no time spinning the teen into a cycle of drugs, sex and partying, all anchored with unromantic and blunt language, juxtaposed against the dazzling surrounds of Berlin which are heightened by the directors consistent dream-like and kinetic tone.

Tales of youth spiralling out of control is as much about the company one keeps as well, and theres no shortage of a poisonous echo chamber with Miftis primary dynamics bouncing off damaged, drug-addicted actor Ophelia (Mavie Hrbiger) and love interest Alice (Arly Jover), an older woman with whom the teen begins an affair between nameless men and hazy drug-addled raves. Its these relationships which give the actors considerable material to digest, highlighting a strong cast that proves invaluable in deepening the otherwise shallow core around which the film revolves.

Though electric scenes of instant gratification are the life-blood of Overkill, the film overdoses on its own candy-coated ambition, most definitely falling head-first into the style-over-substance pile when Hegemann cant quite contain her own creation. Instead of focusing on any sort of momentum, the exciting morphs into the mundane until it becomes clear that no amount of visual finesse as much as it is genuinely exciting to watch can take Miftis arc where it needs to go in order for Axolotl Overkill to be set apart from the dozens of similar films before it.

If nothing else, this is a showcase for Hegemanns irrepressible style sitting in colourful opposition to more grounded and patient illustrations of youth-in-revolt such as Larry Clark cult-classic Kids. A sense of hopelessness and the trappings of pleasure is shared by both films, but in this case Overkill is unable to stick the landing after flying so high with tunnel vision and dilated pupils.

Review Score: THREE STARS (OUT OF FIVE) Running Time: 94 minutes

Axoltl Overkill is currently screening as part of Sydney Film Festival. More information and tickets can be found HERE

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Sydney Festival Film Review: Axoltl Overkill (Germany, 2017) burns up Berlin with heavily stylised hedonism - the AU review (blog)

‘I trafficked women at a famous Hong Kong nightclub’ – South China Morning Post

Mary Zardilla looked like she had it all. It was 1986, the heyday of Hong Kong hedonism and she had spent the past decade climbing the greasy pole of the entertainment business to its gaudy, gold-plated zenith the self-appointed greatest night club of them all, Club Bboss.

Like many others, Mary had risked much to be here, lured by the promise of rubbing shoulders with the movers and shakers of the day. The clubs clientele was a veritable whos who of 1980s Hong Kong. Celebrities, politicians, famous businessmen... all were common sights at this Tsim Sha Tsui landmark, a 70,000 sq ft nightclub-cum-amusement park for men that boasted bright lights, lavish floor shows and more than 1,000 perfectly coiffed hostesses.

As one of the citys last Japanese super clubs, Club Bboss formerly Club Volvo was about nothing if not conspicuous consumption. The rich and famous would arrive at the curbside in their Rolls-Royces, only to be ferried to their booths in gold-plated golf carts designed to look like the vehicles they had just left.

And once inside they might meet one of those many perfectly coiffed hostesses but not before first encountering someone like Mary.

Mary was one of the clubs foremost mamasans. Her job was to match up the clubs male clientele with one of the 100 or so escorts under her control and it was a job Mary, who learned Japanese for the role, was particularly good at, having acquired an uncanny knack for reading mens minds when it came to their tastes in women.

So good, in fact, that the club gave her two armed bodyguards as round-the-clock protection when she joined from a rival establishment a skilled mamasan like Mary could bring in a lot of money for a club, many of which were run by triad gangs, and employers did not take kindly to being abandoned.

Some mamasans got beaten and hospitalised to warn you against leaving [for another club], recalls Mary, now 63, petite with a pretty, wrinkle-free face that makes her look decades younger than she is. [When I left my former job], I said, please dont hurt me. I served my contract. I have to support my poor family in the Philippines.

I WAS A TRAFFICKER OF WOMEN

Luckily for her, Mary was allowed to leave for Club Bboss, where she worked alongside mamasans from Australia, Japan, China and Korea, managing girls who, like her, had begun working there voluntarily, out of financial need driven by their impoverished family backgrounds.

We were trapped with no other options, says Mary, who herself began working at 16 to support her parents and siblings.

As a pimp, Mary mentored her girls in everything from etiquette to styling. Every night she introduced them to johns who were charged fees by 15 minute increments. Johns were charged by the club anywhere from HK$1,900 to HK$3,500 or more per encounter, depending on how wealthy they appeared.

Technically, Marys work and that of her girls was entirely legal, but Mary herself is in little doubt as to what her role constituted. I sold girls. As a mamasan, I trafficked girls, Mary now says, bluntly.

To get around the laws on prostitution, their salaries were paid by nightclub accountants and they were taxed as hostesses something that is considered legal work.

To keep their mamasan happy, the girls would give Mary money or gifts as a favour. The girls needed to do this to get an edge on their competition for the highest paying, most attractive johns. Mamasans were in charge of their own schedules and were the most powerful in the food chain. Mary had only one boss the owner.

The link between human trafficking and the escort business is not always clear. At high-end places like Club Bboss, for example, working women arrived on their own accord from places such as Japan, America, Britain, Latin America, the Philippines and mainland China. And, of course, there were local Hongkongers, too. Many of the women from overseas had entered Hong Kong on tourist visas before applying, voluntarily, for work at one of the 10 or so top clubs. Mary says all the women were hoping a man would sweep them off their feet like Richard Gere in the film Pretty Woman.

The girls can make more money in clubs than brothels. Brothels are faster turnover, but they are more controlled. Nightclubs give more freedom and pay more, she says.

At the lower-end establishments, however, its less clear how much choice the women had. Mary knew many clubs that recruited women from overseas, paying for their plane tickets and all expenses, but did not allow them to leave the premises after they arrived.

In some of the worst cases, women were clearly trafficked. One of Marys girls at Club Bboss, Isabelle, had been trafficked from Manila by a triad gang who had deceived her about the type of work she would be doing in Hong Kong. When she arrived, the gang forced her into prostitution in a private home. Isabelle was forced to sleep with up to 30 men a night, with the triads charging HK$50 per john. A man guarded her at all times to prevent her from escaping. Isabelles bodyguard later bought her from her owner after the pair formed a bond and they ended up getting married. Yet, even liberated, with limited options for income, Isabelle found herself back in a similar line of work as one of Marys hostesses, albeit with more freedom and pay.

And even for those women who had entered the field voluntarily, by the time they realised Richard Gere would not be coming to save them, it was too late. Some girls wanted to find a better job. But unfortunately they hadnt finished school or didnt have skills, Mary explains. Freelancers can leave anytime they want but dont have other options and they end up trapped.

THE DESCENT

The descent into pimping women happened slowly for Mary. At 16, she had dropped out of school and started working in a factory to support her parents and seven siblings. Her father died three years later leaving her mother, a laundry woman, devastated. Mary stepped up as the eldest daughter to support the family. Mary left the factory job to join a cultural dance troupe and the troupe took her to Hong Kong in 1972. During the troupes tour, Philippine President Ferdinand Marcos declared martial law back in the Philippines, prompting Mary and other dancers to search for more permanent work in the city.

That year, she met a Filipino man working in entertainment and married him a few years later. He cheated on her frequently. Pained, she focused on making money to send back to her family. I longed for love. I didnt have love, I became a slave to money, she recalls.

She applied for a receptionist role at a club in Tsim Sha Tsui not realising it was a hostess job. I was innocent and so deceived. Many are deceived into working as prostitutes. But she refused to sleep with the johns and was instead groomed as a mamasan.

Unacquainted with this underworld, she had no idea what mamasans did nor what big money they made. She learned on the go. I was entertaining customers like a public relations person. I studied Japanese and became good. I would ask them what kind of girls they preferred. I soon learned Japanese businessmen like young girls.

The money hardened her. Her starting salary was HK$20,000 a month plus commissions and she got HK$15,000 as a one-off payment for signing her contract. But she found out that other mamasans were being paid HK$30,000 a month and HK$20,000 for signing a contract, so she asked for a raise. The raises were never enough so she began climbing the ranks of the leading clubs before finally rising to the top Club Bboss, where she was paid HK$500,000 annually and HK$80,000 for signing her contract.

She was not the only one lured by the promise of riches. We charged HK$1,000 for sex in the 1980s, she says. Back then [many of the Hong Kong Chinese] girls were married. They, too, were lured by the money.

Clients gave her girls jewellery, money to buy land, houses and apartments back in their home countries. At times, Mary was given blank cheques by the clients. She had several wealthy boyfriends on the side. Some of the girls became savvy at buying and selling real estate and left the club with small fortunes. They were regularly paid to attend parties with high-profile Hong Kong businessmen. They were high-end call girls, dressed so elegantly, says Mary.

Yet even then, at the zenith of her profession, surrounded by the rich and famous and able, seemingly, to pluck money from thin air, Mary knew that deep inside she and her girls were suffering and lost. Amid the stream of glamorous clients, Rolls-Royces and golden golf carts, the women battled drug addictions, alcoholism and ever-creeping levels of self-loathing and emptiness.

While working in the club, we didnt have a life. Its so temporal nice restaurants, fancy clothes, all temporary happiness. Any prostitute who says theyre happy, theyre in denial. The girls would go back and cry even if they had made US$10,000 that night with a man from the Middle East. Youre forced to make love with a man you dont like. Your soul and emotions have to be numb. Only drugs numb.

Then there was the sexual abuse and exploitation, which was widespread. One time, a client strangled one of her girls.

TROUBLE WITH THE LAW

The escort business operates in a shady area, where the line between what is legal and what is not is not always clear. Mary says clubs would often be tipped off about police raids before they happened corruption is everywhere. The mamasans and women feared the police. Mary feels that had more police been trained to identify women in the red light district who felt they had been coerced into prostitution, some lives could have been saved. The police must have a deeper understanding that these women are trapped and that in their heart of hearts, these women hate their work. No one wants to be a prostitute.

A Hong Kong police spokesperson said they had found prostitutes from the Chinese mainland, Southeast Asia, Europe and South America who had been trafficked to Hong Kong on tourist visas. However, these women, according to the police, are usually reluctant to speak out.

Last year, police arrested 266 people on suspicion of keeping a vice establishment. In Hong Kong, prostitution itself is legal, but organised prostitution is not.

While some clubs and operators from Tsim Sha Tsui have migrated to the Wan Chai bar street, the days of the luxurious nightclub scene are over Club Bboss itself shut in 2012.

Yet even now, campaigners estimate there are anywhere between 20,000 to 100,000 children, women, and men working in prostitution in Hong Kong. According to Zi Teng, a support group, around 1 in 50 are under 18.

According to one NGO worker, some smaller nightclubs in Kowloon have forced underage Chinese girls usually from broken families into prostitution through debt bondage. The girls are lured by mamasans who ask if they want easy cash or pocket money. The girls soon get into debt, finding they owe their mamasans HK$10,000 to HK$20,000 for living expenses or to finance their cocaine or ketamine drug habits.

Despite such problems there is no government funding to support NGOs to provide direct intervention, according to the NGO worker.

Sandy Wong, chairperson of the Anti-Human Trafficking Committee of the Hong Kong Federation of Women Lawyers, says more needs to be done to stop the demand for prostitution. In Sweden, targeting the sex buyers helps reduce prostitution and sex trafficking significantly and it is a model increasingly adopted by other countries. It is a model we should adopt in Hong Kong.

TRANSFORMATION

Every night, Mary and her girls drank to ease the pain. Their daily routine before their work would involve lunch then a beauty parlour session. In 1991, a friend who owned a beauty clinic in Cebu visited Mary to ask for her help setting up another business in Hong Kong.

Mary admitted she was a mamasan, but rather than judge her, the friend, a Christian, told Mary that Jesus came to save the sinners, tax collectors and prostitutes.

The friend offered to study the Bible with Mary. All of a sudden something pinched my heart, recalls Mary. But I was a millionaire. I was afraid to say no. I was afraid of getting cursed by God and that Id lose my money.

As she prayed, she felt cleansed for the first time. But she continued to struggle with guilt and shame.

What sealed her conversion was seeing her young nephew, who had been dying from cancer, healed after another friend, Rita, prayed for him.

This convinced Mary there must be a higher power and she invited Rita to Hong Kong to speak with her girls, hoping for more miracles.

For the next month and a half, they conducted Bible studies every day. Around 10 girls experienced a new hope and the power of God and the girls were healed of their emotional pain, anger, depression, drug addictions and alcoholism.

All of a sudden their countenance changed, their attitudes and characters changed. They had so much hunger to learn about the Christian faith.

Mary began to use the karaoke bar she owned as a meeting place for the women to learn about their new faith during the day. At night it continued to function as a bar for prostitution.

One by one the girls quit their work, as did Mary after 17 years in the business, she paid her boss HK$200,000 so she could leave. I knew it was time to quit because of my conviction. I felt so bad and couldnt walk into the club. I didnt care if I didnt have money or a job.

The next year, she sold her bar and moved back to the Philippines.

PEACE OF MIND

Back in the Philippines, Mary worked at restoring her marriage, which is now strong. Over the years, she has mentored many women and recounts her past in public speeches. Recently, her testimony at a Hong Kong church moved a congregation of domestic helpers to tears. Now Mary wants to tell as many mamasans and bar girls as she can that there is hope. I want to tell them theyre not stuck, she says, tearing up. She is still in touch with six of her girls who left the world of prostitution. They are now working as dishwashers, or cleaners. One is a restaurant floor manager.

We may not have luxury but we have peace and joy. Theres no oppression, she says. Our identity is restored: money cant buy that.

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'I trafficked women at a famous Hong Kong nightclub' - South China Morning Post

Bill Leonard: Don’t shoot the teacher – Winston-Salem Journal

In 1838 Ralph Waldo Emerson, part Plato, part Ichabod Crane, attacked the corpse cold rationalism of conservative and liberal alike in his classic Harvard Divinity School address, declaring, as any good Transcendentalist would, that: Truly speaking, it is not instruction, but provocation, that I can receive from another soul. What he announces, I must find true in me, or reject; and on his word, or as his second, be he who he may, I can accept nothing.

For Emerson, truth was discovered from deep within.

Not instruction, but provocation, lies at the heart of genuine education. From Socrates holding forth in the Athens marketplace to todays power-point-assisted-seminars, the classroom remains sacred space where opinions collide, interpretations vary, and learning prevails. When such intellectual provocation prevails, there is nothing like it.

Unless of course students and/or faculty are packing a piece, utilizing campus carry laws that usher guns into class, concealed in pockets, purses, or backpacks. When guns show up in school, provocation gains a whole new meaning. Learning is dangerous and transformative; it should never be life-threatening. After 42 years as professor, campus carry scares the Holy Socrates out of me.

When this century began, there were no laws permitting firearms on campus. As of 2017, eleven states offer such legal possibilities, including: Arkansas, Colorado, Georgia, Idaho, Kansas, Mississippi, Oregon, Texas, Utah, Ohio, and Wisconsin. Tennessee lets faculty, but not students, arm themselves. (Hopefully, faculty meetings are firearm free!)

Sixteen states ban concealed weapons on campus: California, Florida, Illinois, Louisiana, Massachusetts, Michigan, Missouri, Nebraska, Nevada, New Jersey, New Mexico, New York, North Carolina, North Dakota, South Carolina and Wyoming. (NC legislators are moving toward admitting 18 year-olds to concealed carry.) Twenty-two states leave the decision of on-campus weapons to the discretion of specific institutions.

Campus carry options were significantly impacted by the 2007 Virginia Tech Massacre when a student gunned down 32 students and wounded 17 in a horrendous killing spree. Many insisted that the gunman might have been stopped had students/faculty been armed. The shooting prompted schools to tighten lockdown policies, increase campus police, and expand use of electronic alert warnings.

American colleges/universities have long reflected the social realities of their national, regional cultures. Alcohol excesses and burgeoning opioid epidemics continue to wreak havoc, often with violent implications. Sexual abuses take heavy tolls on secular and church-related schools alike. Hostile ideologies and politics often foster physical danger at institutions left and right of center. Will concealed weapons save us or merely deepen the danger to life and limb? Is our society itself so ideologically segregated, and intellectual provocation so hazardous, that firearms are a necessary defense?

Advocates insist that the society is so violence-laden that citizens must arm themselves in every setting. Some suggest that increasing sexual violence is sufficient reason for females to take up arms. Others demand that Second Amendment rights be applied in every segment of society, colleges included. I fret over implied threats and symbolic implications. Should our syllabuses declare: Dont shoot! Youre all getting As?

What if campus carry is simply the most dangerous of an unceasing set of classroom distractions, including tweets, texts, Google, Wikipedia, and Face Book, diversions that thwart instruction and provocation, disengaging students from ideas that might form or re-form them? Whatever else the vulnerability of learning means perhaps it is this: try as we might to protect ourselves externally and internally, we can never insulate ourselves enough to escape the insolent idea, the banal diatribe, the suicidal bomber, or the AK47 sociopath.

For years, Ive thought (but never said aloud) that teaching means getting intellectually naked for the sake of ideas, and hoping that students gasp at the concepts, not the professors own conceptual weaknesses. Firearms that protect may become weapons that sidetrack from what learning must beour shared vulnerability to ideas and each other.

In Telling the Truth, the Gospel as Tragedy, Comedy, & Fairy Tale, Frederick Buechner tells about a high-school class that had gone better than usual the day they studied King Lear. Buechner concludes: The word out of the play strips them for a moment naked and strips their teacher with them and to that extent Shakespeare turns preacher because stripping us naked is part of what preaching is all about, the tragic part. In my academic and ministerial experience, provocation and spirituality are intricately related.

So dont come to my classes or lectures armed for anything but learning. Leave your guns outside, please. Go ahead, make my day.

Bill Leonard is Dunn professor of Baptist studies and church history at Wake Forest University. Portions of this column were previously published by Baptist News Global.

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Bill Leonard: Don't shoot the teacher - Winston-Salem Journal

Return to pragmatism – Republica

It is hard to believe Upendra Yadav once went to ex-Bihar Chief Minister Lalu Prasad Yadav, bowl in hand, exhorting him to support the blockade.

The Federal Socialist Forum Nepal (FSFN) President Upendra Yadav left me in disbelief last week. He was frank and forthcoming. I had reached his Tinkune office half an hour later than the appointed timeof course due to frustrating trafficbut he did not seem to mind. This was unexpected. Even more unexpected was what he said.

Yadav said his decision to partake in all elections was a compromise for the people and the country, because national interest should be at the core of every political movement and that he was participating in local polls (both phases) so as to be a part of constitution implementation process. Protecting national interest, promoting feeling of nationalism and national unity is his key goal, he said. Focus of a political party should be on economic development as much as on political and civil rights. He cited examples from Liberia, Somalia and Kenya to explain how countries that focused only on identity and rights issues without taking care of economic agenda have fallen into ruins.

On the economy, he sounded like Ram Sharan Mahat, on ethnic identity issue he was a conciliator rather than a hardliner, and on nation, nationality and nationalism he echoed CPN-UML Chairman KP Oli. In many places I felt he was speaking my mind (see his interview: RJPN is a stranded ship that has lost its compass, Republica, June 8). This was not the Upendra Yadav I and my colleague Biswas Baral had met in September, 2016.

Back then Yadav responded to our queries with reservation and with a tinge of anger. He was dead against compromise of any kind and said there is a strong voice in Madhes for armed struggle and that the continued confrontation between Madhes and Kathmandu could lead the country to an unthinkable disaster. He was angry that local level units have not been put under provincial jurisdictions. He dismissed local election as a strategy of sasak barga (ruling class) to sabotage federal course. Unless the constitution is amended, there cannot be any election in Nepal, he warned. He sounded like he was wishing for the constitution that was already on a path to failure to fail absolutely. Yadav, we concluded, was not keen on constitution implementation.

That was ten months ago.

Upendra Yadav has come a long way since 2006. The 2006 Madhes Movement gave him a savior-like status in Tarai-Madhes. As someone who made to Singha Durbar only once (as a foreign minister in Pushpa Kamal Dahal government in 2009), Yadav, unlike many other Madhesi leaders, does not have baggage of corruption and abuse of power. But during 2015/16 blockade and Madhes protest, he demonstrated typical characteristics of racism and bigotry. He was one of those who delivered hate speech to incite local Tharus to retaliate against Pahades in Kalali. The National Human Rights Commission concluded in March 2017 that provocative speeches by leaders (one of them Yadav) had triggered Kailai carnage.

That is not the Upendra Yadav we have today. It is hard to believe he once went to ex-Bihar Chief Minister Lalu Prasad Yadav, almost bowl in hand, exhorting him to support border blockade. Its hard to believe he once advocated and held the country hostage demanding complete separation of plains from hills in federal demarcation. Predictably, his colleagues in Rastriya Janata Party Nepal and Madhesi intellectuals have derided him as a revisionist and compromiser. They have accused him of submitting Madhes agenda to the racist state. He might have to bear with such vitriol for some time to come.

We dont know what actually triggered the change of heart in Yadav or how long he will stick to his nation first stand. In Nepal, politicians change color like chameleons. We dont know what led Yadav, who once presented himself as the symbol of divisive politics, to now prioritize hill-plain unity, development and prosperity.

Perhaps because those who are said to be providing funds to his party saw no future in investing in his cause, perhaps Yadav realized he was in the wrong direction, perhaps he thinks he will be able to make an impact in Nepali politics only when he can rise above regional politics, or perhaps he realized the actors and intelligentsia he had relied on in the past were bent on pushing the country to endless chaoswe wont know unless he comes clean on this himself. Whatever the reason, his U-turn at this point means a lot in national politics and for this he should be thanked.

For one, with FSFN on election board, he has left almost no option for RJPN leaders but to join the second phase. If they stay out, they might lose their political space to FSFN, Nepali Congress or even CPN-UML. The restlessness in RJPN rank and file is also apparent. While leaders are threatening obstruction, boycott and protests in Kathmandu, cadres on the ground are secretly campaigning.

RJPN has a difficult choice: come join election and be part of constitution implementation or collude with secessionists to fuel violence so that innocent people get killed, which in turn can be used as an excuse to defer election or can be sold for electoral gains or to justify their possible tilt towards secessionists. Lets believe RJPN leaders wont opt for this destabilizing and dangerous option.

RJPN leaders, like Upendra Yadav, will also have to come to a kind of compromise, sooner or later.

Broadly, Yadavs conciliatory gesture reflects whats fundamentally wrong with the way politicians in Nepal do politics.

Yadav and his colleagues in RJPN today had started 2015 Madhes Movement on the foundation of hate and propaganda. They promised to hive off entire Madhes from hills to create provinces, and projected hill dwellers, rather than those few at the helm, as enemies of Madhes. They interpreted remarks of few hill leaders in Kathmandu as collective voice of hill community towards Madhes. So their demands veered from one extreme to another. They later presented a 26-point demand as their bottom line, and next they came up with 11-point demand.

Today they have made declaration of martyrdom for those killed in police clash, compensation for the victims, and withdrawal of cases against their cadres minimum conditions for creating an environment for them to join the election. When you begin with wrong premises, you do not reach the right goal. When you start out with agendas founded on emotions rather than reasons, agendas which broader section of the society thinks are wrong, compromise is where every such movement ends.

Madhesi leaders have rightly said current amendment bill is flexible compared to what they had been demanding in 2015. For the foreseeable future nothing more may be done on citizenship (rather than tweaking provisions here and there) or letting Federal Commission to settle the federal boundaries.

Already they have interpreted it as a sign of the oppressive and affluent Khas Arya not conceding to genuine demands of oppressed Madhesis. But come to think of it: when certain Madhesi agendas cant even be met by a government amicable to Madhesi interests , and a compromise solution is opposed across party lines, rather than blaming those critical of those demands as enemies of Madhes, it would also be wise to review viability of those demands.

However high you climb the ladder of radicalism and emotionality, in politics, sooner or later you will have to come to real ground. Every radical and aggressive posture is finally tested on platform of rationalism and pragmatism. Anarchism has the power to wreck damage, sometimes irreversible, but it does not last.

Upendra Yadav seems to have taken this message to his heart. RJPN leaders should follow suit. Have faith in your followers and they will vote for you.

Twitter: @mahabirpaudyal

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Return to pragmatism - Republica

Lionel Rolfe’s Letter to the World – HuffPost

Nevsky Cathedral in Sofia, capital of Bulgaria. Photo by Lionel Rolfe

I am a retired journalist in Los Angeles and book author who wants the world to respond to America under the would-be dictatorship of Donald Trump, a man who is out to destroy this country and the worldall for the sake of Trumps power and money.

It is important to explain that the sudden appearance of fascism presented by Trump was not unexpected. Sinclair Lewis wrote a novel during the Great Depression about a fascist government in the 20s called It Can Happen Here. America has always had to deal with a nativist kind of fascism. Its always been a powerful minority and remains so under Trump in this day and age.

Trump is obviously in bed with the Russian Mafia, and Vladimir Putin who heads up the enterprise is an obvious villain.

But a few things must be said.

In 2002, the Guardian ran a piece by Duncan Campbell about me and Aldous and Laura Huxley. The author of Brave New World and Ape & Essence ended his career with Island, Campbell said, published just before Huxley died in November 1963 on the same day President Kennedy was assassinated.

Now Huxleys days in California are recalled in a new book, Campbell said. The book is Literary LA, by Lionel Rolfe, son of the pianist Yalta Menuhin and nephew of Yehudi, Campbell wrote. An LA-based journalist and writer, Rolfe has compiled an entertaining collection on writers including Jack London, Theodore Dreiser, Malcolm Lowry, Charles Bukowski and Huxley. Rolfe, author of Fat Man On The Left, raconteur and journalist, met Huxley shortly before the writers death and recalls that he had said that he stayed in LA because of inertia and apathy. Rolfe wrote, too, about Huxleys second marriage to Laura Archera, an Italian violinist, film editor and therapist, and how his life with her saw him veer in more and more mystical directions.'

There is a perplex here in Huxleys story. He became more of a mystic because of his depression over the atomic bomb which he wrote about in Ape & Essence. The scion from a great scientific family was also torn over the threats to his humanism. His embrace of mysticism did not deny his essential humanism.

But Trump is something else again. Hes out to destroy humanism. He is a fascist.

My mother was also a mystic, loving religious impulses of all kinds, but she wanted to teach me Russian in the McCarthy period in America.

That was in the 1950s in Los Angeles and McCarthyism was strong during my years in elementary school. This, like today, was a period of fascism in American history and I resisted my mothers impulses to culturally identify with Russia simply because I was scared. Republicans always made me feel as if I lived in a land of thugs.

My mother was named after Yaltah in the Crimea, where her mother lived. She loved Russian culture and history, and thought all children should learn it. My mother was named after Yaltah in the Crimea, where her mother lived. My mother obviously believed in humanism and education.

In the collapse of the Soviet Union, it was suggested that portions of Greater Russia should go their own way. It was like European countries telling America that Texas would have a right to become its own country. As much as Id like Texas to go away politically, that move would piss me offespecially if dictated by other countries.

As horrible as Putin and Trump are, it should also be said that Ukraine was always part of Russia. Russias great hero was Alexander Nevsky, the prince of Kiev in the 12th century. I understood the fusillade of events when I photographed Alexander Nevsky Cathedral in Sofia, the capital of Bulgaria.

The most terrifying moment in this historical drama is whatever it was that drove Trump to fascism. His early love of Mussolini doesnt explain the whole thing. Trump is Americas rabid religious drive seeking to destroy the world that does not live up to its image. Trump may or may not believe that but he is no great intellectual so it probably doesnt matter. But to the rest of us, in America and elsewhere, it is sad throwing away everything good thats been produced in this country, from science to writing to music.

If you deny the existence of truth like the religious monsters now unfurling themselves on the world, understand that knowledge is realvery real. Even for Huxley.

Can Trump defeat historys march toward a better world. America has contributed mightily to the progressive forces behind the American story which have contributed to the narrative of the rest of the worldwith bad and good things. We are human, of course. To be human, you have to struggle. You especially have to struggle in the face of adversity like that of Trump. It is our only hopehere and in other places in the world.

Lionel Rolfes books are available from Amazon.com.

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Lionel Rolfe's Letter to the World - HuffPost

Egyptian rappers fight against censorship – Deutsche Welle

"Egypt Rap School for Biggenas" is plastered across the wall of a tiny recording studio in Alexandria, Egypt. Above it, hang three portraits: Notorious BIG, Bob Marley and Tupac Shakur. Like millions of fans, Temraz - his stage name - grew up listening to these icons.

Now, the 29-year-old Arabic rapper is part of Revolution Records, an underground label that he helped establish in Alexandria 11 years ago.

"We decided to name the label Revolution Records because we thought rap was still a very weird [genre] to Egyptian ears," Temraz said, before rolling a cigarette. "We also named it 'revolution' because rap music is about rebelling. To us, [rap] is about rebelling against everything."

Read:Egypt's women find their voice against sexual harassment

There are 14 members in Revolution Records, which is one of many hip-hop movements in Egypt. Cairo, the capital, has a bustling scene. But Alexandria is considered the pioneer of rap music in the country.

Before the Arab Spring, rappers from Alexandria released tracks that mocked social norms and crony political elites. The lack of mainstream attention even enabled some artists to push the boundaries of censorship. And while their music was gaining traction, it wasn't popular enough to invite a crackdown from the state.

But in today's Egypt, where thousands of youth are in jail for criticizing the regime, rapping about politics is riskier than ever.

Rapping to ridicule

Shakur (photo, above) is the stage name of a 31-year-old artist who is part of a group called DaCliQue 203. He said that most rappers have been reluctant to ridicule Egypt's President Abdel Fattah el-Sissi. His group, however, is one of few exceptions.

In February 2014, DaCliQue 203 released "Ana Malak," which means"I'm the King." The track was a remix of a song that Shakur originally recorded in 2005. The new version was made to mock el-Sissi who was by then fixed in power.

Notorious BIG, Bob Marley and Tupac Shakur bedeck the wall at Revolution Records' studio

"The lyrics go like this," said Shakur, as he proceeded to recite his impersonation of el-Sissi. "I'm not on the right and I'm not on the left. I'm not an Islamist nor an anarchist. I just follow the money so show me the money."

The song was daring. And yet, Shakur wouldn't record another track for three more years. He said he couldn't bring himself to make another one. Not after his younger brother, a former supporter of the outlawed Muslim Brotherhood, passed away suddenly in his home before "Ana Malak" was released.

Read:Marteria - a German rapper in Africa

"We always fought about my love for hip-hop," said Shakur. "[My brother] thought I was wasting my time. He thought I should be writing articles about politics instead. But at the same time, he remained curious. He always wanted to know about the lyrics I was writing."

Other rappers became increasingly political while Shakur took a break from hip-hop. In April 2016, Revolution Records released "Masahsh Keda" - "That's Not Right" - on YouTube. The group appropriated the phrase from el-Sissi, who often says it condescendingly when addressing his citizens. The group made a music video for the song and included English subtitles.

"We sampled el-Sissi's voice and incorporated it in our music," Temraz told DW. "The track did well when we first uploaded it. I think it received more than 200,000 likes."

Despite the success, Temraz feared that the song might bring reprisal. After the track was released, members of Revolution Records were invited to Denmark to perform in a concert. Temraz was anxious when he arrived at the Cairo airport. He thought he would be arrested. Lucky for him, nothing happened.

Weeks later, the group was informed that "Masahsh Keda" had crossed a line. Their friend, who worked in the presidential palace, warned them that the government wouldn't tolerate another track like that again.

"We had to stop," Temraz said. "I gave up trying to change this country for the better."

Moving away, coming back

Not everyone lost hope. Some rappers tried to broach sensitive topics without explicitly blaming the state. Y-Crew, which is one of Egypt's first hip-hop groups, released a track titled "Blinded" nine months ago. The song was about the abuse and violence that street children face in Egypt.

"Mainstream music in Egypt is just about love. It doesn't talk about real problems," said Omar Bofolot, one of the original members of Y-Crew. "We want to talk about real stuff. But we don't want to preach to people about what they should do."

The group has recently moved to Dubai to work on their latest album. They told DW that they are also losing hope that their music can make a positive impact in Egypt.

"We been rapping about social and political issues since we started," said Shahin, the second member of Y-Crew. "Nothing is changing [in Egypt], and we're getting sick of it. Our next album is just going to promote peace, love and unity."

Shakur, however, won't stop rapping about the issues that matter to him. In January, he released his comeback track. And now, he's writing lyrics about the refugee crisis in Egypt and Europe.

Thousands of refugees and Egyptians have died trying to cross the Mediterranean from Alexandria. Shakur knows their stories firsthand. He's been a migration advocate for years and has even collaborated with some refugee rappers in Egypt.

The oppressive political climate doesn't scare him. Even if Egyptian rap becomes more commercial, he vows to never censor himself.

"I have to keep it real," he told DW. "The price might be bigger. But Egyptians are paying a heavy price anyways."

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Egyptian rappers fight against censorship - Deutsche Welle

Want to solve this ‘free speech’ debate on college campuses? Look to the handbook. – USA TODAY College

Police detain hundreds of demonstrators on suspicion of disorderly conduct during a protest on June 4, 2017, in Portland, Oregon. A protest dubbed Trump Free Speech by organizers was met by a large contingent of counter-demonstrators who viewed the protest as a promotion of racism. (Photo: Scott Olson, Getty Images)

When I asked students to explore the rules governing speech in the student manual, I realized campuses actually have no free speech, just more or lessregulatedspeech.

For two consecutive semesters, my students wrote letters to the colleges dean and its attorney. The administrators then discussed them with the students directly. Before long, two instances transformed the conversations from hypothetical, to practical.

In the first instance, a group of students spoke out against racist comments on the social media site Yik Yak. They countered with Black Yak, paper-covered bulletin boards on which students voiced their responses to the objectionable posts. The colleges president endorsed Black Yak as a college protest that reveals discomfiting realities while promoting free speech, dialogue and community. Other students, however, called for censorship of Yik Yak and punishment of the racist posts anonymous authors.

Secondly, some students alleged that a fraternity brothers Halloween costume was racist, as he put his blonde hair in corn rows and wore an orange jump suit typically worn by prison inmates. Student leaders organized a forum for students on both sides of the costume question to address hate speech, cultural appropriation and racism on campus.

Some of my seminar students argued the best response to the Yik Yak comments and to the seemingly inappropriate Halloween costumes was dialogue and education, not campus adjudication. Others argued that free speech concerns overlooked ways the marketplace of ideas was already unequal, such as hostile comments that reinforced marginalization by silencing some students.

My students decided to dispose of platitudes about free speech and scrutinize the schools policy about speech. Disciplinary hearings are confidential, therefore so are the rulings, but the students learned details of the colleges speech code that intrigued them. They wanted to know how the college enforces these codes.

Students learned that unlike state-run institutions, private colleges are not required to adhere to the First Amendment and can regulate speech on campus in a variety of ways. Nonetheless, the colleges student code espouses free expression in the form of careful and reasoned criticism of data and opinion offered in any course, which drew student criticism because it was muted. Why was the endorsement of free speech conditional?

Speech codes in the college life manual require students to understand federal civil rights laws, mainly Title IX, which emphasizes violence domestic violence, dating violence, and stalking but also covers speech. Harassment, the manual stipulates, includes advertisements or postings of offensive, indecent or abusive material of a sexual nature.

My students read the 1999 decision in Davis v. Monroe County Board of Education, and knew the Supreme Courts standards for defining a hostile environment:plaintiff must show harassment that is so severe, pervasive and objectively offensive, and that so undermines and detracts from the victims educational experience, that the victims are effectively denied equal access to an institutions resources and opportunities. Our schools speech codes do not mention severe, pervasive or objectively offensive.

My students found the college life manual does not refer to racial harassment or Title VI, prohibiting discrimination based on race, color and national origin at institutions receiving federal assistance. One student argued for a revised manual to include a similar approach to racial harassment as it does to sexual harassment.

The manuals vague language forbids conduct unbecoming of a Franklin and Marshall student. This phrase bothered students. They didnt know what it meant. The manual defines conduct unbecoming as conduct that threatens, instills fear, or infringes upon the rights, dignity and integrity of any person. Students rightly noted threaten and instills fear were struck down as too broad in a 1989 court decision regarding hate speech regulation at public universities Doe v. University of Michigan.

Our college manual gives administrators the flexibility to punish hate speech as conduct unbecoming, but racial harassment is absent from the student code. The dean defended conduct unbecoming, telling students the term is defined and interpreted by the campus community. However, the studentsassessed how regulation of speech actually worked on campus andwanted to see changes made to revise the speech codes and have students serve on the student misconduct panel.

As questions of free speech continue to arise on college campuses around the country, its time to move beyond rallying slogans and choosing sides. The campus speech controversies are more complicated than being for or against free speech. Students, faculty and administrators need to know the rules governing campus speech on their campus, including where the policies get it right and where they go wrong, and where they are outdated compared to recent judicial standards. This kind of engagement leads to meaningful change in how speech is regulated on campus.

M. Alison Kibler, professor of American Studies and Womens, Gender & Sexuality Studies, is chair of American Studies at Franklin & Marshall College. Her most recent book, Censoring Racial Ridicule: Irish, Jewish and African American Struggles Over Race and Representation, 1890-1930, examines race-based censorship.

M. Alison Kibler is a member of the USA TODAY College contributor network.

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Want to solve this 'free speech' debate on college campuses? Look to the handbook. - USA TODAY College

Harvard’s revocation of admission offers is no attack on free speech … – Washington Post

REPORTS THAT Harvard College rescinded admission offers to students who had posted extremely offensive memes in a private Facebook chat come at a time of heated debate about free speech on campus. So it probably should have been expected that the schools decision would become ensnared in that discussion. It would be a mistake, though, to conflate the recent events at Harvard with any kind of attack on free speech.

What happened at Harvard is simply this: Misguided young people with an outsize sense of entitlement have been required to suffer the consequences about which they had received sufficient warning for ugly and inappropriate behavior. Harvard was right to insist that those who are granted the privilege of attending the private institution adhere to its standards.

At least 10 high school seniors, prospective members of Harvards Class of 2021, had their offers of admission revoked in April after administrators learned they had traded offensive messages and racist images. Screenshots of the chat obtained by the Harvard Crimson, which first reported the events, show images that mock sexual assault, the Holocaust and the deaths of children, including calling the imagined hanging of a Mexican child piata time. There has been no comment from Harvard, which, according to a spokeswoman, doesnt publicly discuss the admission status of individual applicants.

Critics of the decision were quick to accuse the school of censoring speech it doesnt like and they gleefully seized upon Harvard President Drew Fausts commencement address last month that was devoted to free speech and the dangers of censorship. But when students receive an offer of admission from Harvard, they are clearly told and must acknowledge that it is conditional and can be withdrawn for, among other things, behavior that brings into question their honesty, maturity or moral character. The information was repeated on the Harvard College Class of 2021 Facebook group. The offending students opted to splinter off into a secret group, showing they knew they were being offensive. Someone (good for them) tipped college authorities to the odious posts.

The students still have the right to post whatever garbage they like, but it is also Harvards right indeed, its obligation to its mission of developing leaders to exercise judgment in deciding who will be admitted to its educational community. Harvard gave these young people a needed lesson in civility, honor and personal responsibility. Lets hope they put it to good use and that others are paying attention.

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Harvard's revocation of admission offers is no attack on free speech ... - Washington Post

Sparring over testimony leads to free speech debate – Capital Gazette – CapitalGazette.com

Anne Arundel residents who attend County Council meetings are barred from carrying balloons, signs and banners in the legislative chambers. They're restricted to two minutes of testimony on a particular topic. And they can be removed from public meetings for disorderly behavior.

But when it comes to the content of their speech, how much can the government limit?

The question came to a head at last week's council meeting, when several citizens who had come to testify on an anti-racism resolution were told they could not talk about Councilman Michael Peroutka's former membership in a pro-secession group.

The decision, by Council Chairman John Grasso, R-Glen Burnie, sparked an immediate uproar. More than once, the chambers erupted into a shouting match between Grasso and citizens who disagreed with his ruling.

Grasso justified his stance by pointing to the council's rules of procedure, which include a section, 4-106, that prohibits "personal, defamatory or profane remarks" during meetings.

"We are here to talk about resolutions that Councilman (Pete) Smith put in and attacking other councilmen is not going to be permitted," he said. "If you want to talk about councilmen, you can do it on your own time, but not here."

Audience members countered that the comments were truthful and relevant to the broader conversation condemning racism.

Peroutka, R-Millersville, was criticized during the 2014 election cycle for his involvement with the League of the South, which has been labeled a hate group by the Southern Poverty Law Center.

During the campaign, a 2012 video surfaced that showed him asking the crowd at a League of the South event to stand for the national anthem. He then played "Dixie," a song celebrating the South that became the anthem of the Confederacy during the Civil War. Peroutka later said the clip had been taken out of context.

In October 2014, Peroutka announced he had left the league because he disagreed with statements members made in opposition to interracial marriage. At the time, he said he had no problem with the group and still supported its stances on self-government and preserving Southern heritage.

Along with the rest of the council, he voted in favor of last week's anti-racism resolution.

Yasemin Jamison, who first broached the topic of Peroutka's League of the South links, said her intention was to ask the councilman "to publicly say the League of the South is a racist organization and apologize for his membership."

"He could have said, 'No, I refuse to do that.' That's his prerogative, that's his right," said Jamison, who is a constituent of Peroutka's and a founder of the progressive group Anne Arundel County Indivisible. "I did not defame anybody; I did not say anything negative about my Councilman Peroutka. This is my testimony and it is a fact that he was a member of the League of the South."

William Rowel, who also attended the meeting, defended Jamison when Grasso told her she couldn't talk about the League of the South.

In Anne Arundel County, he said in an interview a few days after the meeting, "you have policymakers with informed constituents."

"If anything, you would champion that; you would say, this is great, people know what's going on in their communities, in their county and they want access to it," Rowel said. "The fact that they would discourage that, that they would shame people for doing it it's wrong. There's really no other way of looking at it."

Jamison said she is considering taking legal action against the council for restricting her speech.

Grasso said he stands by his decision to bar the topic.

"They were leading into a personal attack and the speaker will not address personal attacks towards the body; that's the bottom line," he said. "It wasn't on the subject matter."

Grasso said he shut down League of the South remarks in an attempt to keep order and decorum in his chambers.

"That meeting had clear rules in my eyes," he said. "What my opinion is and what others think might be different, but I was voted the chairman ... I'm in charge of keeping the meeting moving. It's my opinion that counts, and if they don't agree, they can run for office."

Limitations

The law does allow for some restrictions to be placed on speech in government settings, though they must be narrowly tailored. County Council meetings fall under the category of a "designated public forum," created by the government to allow citizens to express themselves to public officials.

The council has for years limited individual testimony to two minutes. In 2013, council members amended their rules of procedure to ban visual displays in the chambers, to prohibit "personal, defamatory or profane remarks" or "loud, threatening and abusive language" and to require speakers to give their name, address and any organizational affiliations before testifying. Grasso voted against the changes at the time.

The rules give the council chair permission to remove anyone who violates them and to clear the entire chambers in order to restore order.

Residents have challenged those limitations in the past. A Glen Burnie woman was removed from a council meeting in 2012 after she went over the time limit for testimony.

Many of the limitations are practical, said Councilman Jerry Walker, R-Crofton, who was council chair when the rules were updated in 2013.

"We banned posters because they would block people's line of sight," he said. As for testimony, he added, "it's supposed to be on the resolution."

As tensions rose during last week's meeting, Councilman Chris Trumbauer, D-Annapolis, asked Grasso to read the rules in an effort to calm the room.

Trumbauer said he believes the rules are "somewhat open to interpretation."

"Free speech means you can say whatever you want and not be penalized for that," he said, but "we have rules because we have to conduct business."

In designated public forums, "the government has the right to restrict what is being said, based on the purpose of the forum," said Eric Easton, a professor at the University of Baltimore School of Law.

But officials have to be careful not to bar certain topics based on politics, he said: "What they can't do is limit the conversation to believers of one side only in a controversy. Any restrictions on public speech have to be viewpoint-neutral."

It's common for legislative bodies to make rules against personal attacks, Easton added, but "the problem comes in: is this nothing but a personal attack or is it germane to the subject?"

In the case of discussion surrounding the anti-racism resolution, if the public's comments "were on that subject, they at least have an arguable case that maybe their rights were being restricted," he said.

In the view of Mark Graber, a professor at the University of Maryland Francis King Carey School of Law, Grasso's decision to bar testimony on Peroutka's past was "a very, very clear violation of the First Amendment."

Graber held a First Amendment workshop for Anne Arundel County Indivisible members and others before the start of last week's council meeting.

He said an example of a personal comment would be calling a councilman "ugly."

In contrast, Graber said, testifiers "spoke on relevant topics."

And, several pointed out at the meeting and afterward, remarks about Peroutka's past League of the South membership cannot be defamatory if they are truthful.

It is particularly difficult for public officials to argue they have been defamed. In the landmark 1964 New York Times v. Sullivan case, the Supreme Court ruled that an official has to prove a person acted with "actual malice," meaning they knew a statement was false or they acted with reckless disregard of the truth when they uttered the alleged slander.

"This was a comment of, 'You belong to the following groups,'" Graber said. "You're a public official; the groups you belong to are a matter of public interest."

The county's Office of Law did not return a request for comment.

Without a ruling from a judge, there's not much citizens can do to challenge Grasso's interpretation, Easton said.

"The one interesting thing about the First Amendment is you're never sure until a court rules on the exact facts that you have," he said.

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Sparring over testimony leads to free speech debate - Capital Gazette - CapitalGazette.com

Free Speech and Intellectual Witch-hunts: How Dogma Degrades Democracy – Conatus News

Theres a disagreement in the planning group, about inviting you, an organiser told me hesitantly during a phone call this spring to finalise the details of my speaking slot in a diversity-and-inclusion event, an event one would imagine would prioritise free speech and diversity of thought. I sighed and prepared to respond, knowing the objection to my participation likely had to do either with my post 9/11 writings, critical of the U.S. empire, or my more recent essays challenging the ideology of the transgender movement from a radical feminist position.

This time the problem was 9/11. One of the sponsoring groups preferred to pull out rather than be associated with an event that included me, a reaction that was common in the years following the terrorist attacks. The debate over transgenderism is a more recent source of contention and a current constraint on free speech. Earlier this spring, a talk I was scheduled to give was cancelled when someone objected and another talk was interrupted by protesters who hoped to shout me off the lectern.

These incidents are only a minor annoyance in my life, hardly worth attention except for what they reveal about the cultures difficulty engaging in coherent and constructive arguments about issues that generate strong emotions. The health of a democracy depends on free speech and on peoples ability to argue, to propose public policies and articulate reasons why others should adopt those policies. Democracy atrophies when substantive arguments are sidelined by dogma, when claims are asserted with self-righteous certainty but not defended with reason and logic. Theres nothing wrong with people being emotional about politics so long as it doesnt shut down dialogue.

After several months of furore over high-profile conservative speakers who hadbeen thwarted in some way on college campuses (Milo Yiannopoulos, Charles Murray, and Ann Coulter all made news this way), its illuminating to reflect on the far less dramatic challenges to my writing, which have come from both the right and the left. My focus is not on concerns about free speech my constitutionally protected freedom has never been significantly impeded but rather on the danger of a political culture in which critical self-reflection and thoughtful debate become more difficult, perhaps impossible in some times and places.

One of those times and places was post 9/11United States. Like many in the anti-empire movement a grassroots global justice movement challenging U.S. military and economic policy and demanding that policymakers take seriously our shared moral principles and international law I argued that a mad rush to war would be counterproductive. When an op-ed making such an argumentthat the United States consider a more rational course of action, and that we reflect on a history of U.S. crimes in the developing worldwas published in a Texas newspaper a few days after the attack, I was the target of an ad hoc campaign (thankfully, unsuccessful) to get me fired from my teaching job at the University of Texas at Austin.

A decade later, a series of online essays about the transgender movement (available here, here, here, and here) led to another similarcampaign to exclude me from left/liberal spaces because I argued that the intellectual claims of the trans movement appear to be incoherent and the political program that flows from it undermines feminism. Like many in the radical feminist movement who take such a position, I didnt contest the experiences that transgender people describe but offered an alternative analysis that I believe provides a more compelling account of sex/gender politics.

These two cases are dramatically different in many ways, of course, but some similar features deserve attention. Challenging the foundational mythology of the United Statesthe claim that we have always been the moral exemplar of the world and today are the only force that can ensure a safe and stable world systemprovokes a predictable reaction from most of the right and centre in U.S. politics, which has made acceptance of those myths a litmus test for being a good American. When one invokes history to challenge the myths, conservatives rarely attempt to engage in real debate, preferring to dismiss critics as the blame America first gang and label any debate over policy as a failure to support the troops.

Challenging the biological claims and underlying ideology of the transgender movement that reproduction-based sex categories are somehow an invention and that cultural gender norms can be challenged separate from a feminist critique of patriarchy provokes a predictable reaction from most of the liberal and left end of the political spectrum, which has made acceptance of those claims a litmus test for being progressive. When one invokes basic biology and a radical feminist critique of the transgender movements individualist gender politics, left/liberals rarely attempt to engage, preferring to dismiss critics as TERFs (trans-exclusionary radical feminists) and label any disagreement about policy as bigotry.

Because I work for a public university, I believe it is part of my job to take my research and teaching into public. Because Im a tenured professor, I can exercise my right to free speech and engage in public debates without much fear of losing my job. In public writing and speaking, I dont shy away from provocative statements when I believe they are justified by the evidence and are important to democratic dialogue I always strive to support the claims I make with evidence and logic.

I dont mind being criticised and I invite challenges to my ideas. Whats disturbing in both cases, however, is that I was routinely denounced as being morally and/or intellectually inadequate, but rarely did those denunciations include a response to what I actually was writing.

For months after 9/11, any critique of U.S. foreign policy was rejected out of hand, taken by many as evidence that critics were colluding with terrorists. It wasnt until the failure of the invasions of Afghanistan and Iraq wasundeniably evident that such critiques were taken seriously, and even then the debate focused mainly on failed tactics rather than the fundamental question of why the United States pursues global power through imperial strategies.

Radical feminist critiques of transgender ideology continue to attract denunciations, especially after the Obama administration issued rules about transgender students rights, which seemed to settle what the liberal position should be. Conservative/religious objections to that policy have been widely debated and covered by journalists, but the more substantial analyses of radical feminists are largely ignored in the mainstream and vilified in left/liberal circles.

All of this is troubling, but even more disturbing for me has not been what wassaid in public but what people toldme privately. After 9/11, a number of faculty colleagues took me aside and told me that they thought the UT presidents denunciation of me was inappropriate, but only a couple of them spoke out publicly. The faculty council and the faculty committee charged with defending academic free speech were silent on the university presidents clumsy ad hominem attack on a professor.

Similarly, after a local radical bookstore issued a statement declaring me unfit for future association with the store, many left/feminist friends and allies told me privately that they disagreed with that decision, but, to the best of my knowledge, none of those people publicly challenged the stores statement. Rather than risk similar denunciation, people found it easier to say nothing.

Reasonable people can disagree respectfully about many things, including the appropriate analysis of U.S. foreign policy in the Middle East and how best to understand the claims of transgender people. But in a democracy, weighty public policy decisions such as going to war or endorsing the treating of trans-identified children with puberty blockers- should emerge from the widest possible conversation in which people provide reasons for their policy preferences and respond substantively to good-faith challenges.

If that process is derailed, whether by forces from the right or the left, the deterioration of responsible intellectual practice will only serve to undermine democracy. What good is the right to free speech if our current political and academic climate makes it impossible or dangerous to exercise it?

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Free Speech and Intellectual Witch-hunts: How Dogma Degrades Democracy - Conatus News

Don’t be selective with freedom of speech – Springfield News-Leader

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Daniel Finney, Springfield 7:16 p.m. CT June 10, 2017

Last week I was watching Kathy Griffin BOO-HOOing that the Trump family was trying to ruin her career. Someone in her "group" even said it's censorship. Seriously?

Just a few short years agoa rodeo clown, here in Missouri, wore a Halloween mask (that you could buy in a store) of President Obama as part of his routine in the rodeo. His career as a rodeo clown was ruined. He was labeled a racist and was called who knows what, received death threats, etc.

It's weird to me how a liberal mind can rationalize that wearing a Halloween mask is racist, but holding up the likeness of a sitting President's bloody severed head is freedom of speech!

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Don't be selective with freedom of speech - Springfield News-Leader

Freedom of speech is for white people | The University Star – Texas State University – The University Star

In the past few years it has become a growing trend for individuals who feel the need to adamantly defend their constitutional right to free speech to usually be vehemently racist or otherwise problematic white people.

Whether it is Kim Davis, the county clerk who infamously defied the ruling of U.S. Supreme Court and refused to grant same-sex couples in Kentucky their marriage licenses, or Richard Spencer, a bold-faced white supremacist who advocates for peaceful ethnic cleansing, the first amendment has become a key rallying point for a growing conservative movement against a culture of Political correctness.

This particular view in a battle of principles is usually attributed to an honest and holistic respect for the American constitution as it is written. However, if this is the case, why do we rarely see these proud defendants of free speech when it comes to the frequent silencing of activists and people of color who choose to stand their ground?

A video from Texas State went viral this past semester after a student flew into a fit of rage toward a religious group that had fabricated images to persuade people to be pro-life concerning abortions. In the video, the student sets aside a balloon and bouquet of flowers to proceed through an audibly emotional tirade, kicking and punching various signs displaying graphic abortion imagery as an older gentleman attempts to calm him down.

Even many who supported his stance against anti-abortion rhetoric were eager to point out how his actions were ignorant, immature and a general disgrace to Texas States falsely proclaimed Free Speech Zone. Texas State is a public university and there is no specifically designated free speech zone, but the point to which students are willing to defend fabricated information that is obscene, hateful and potentially damaging to the mental health of many of their peers indicates a larger issue that perhaps is not tied to the sanctity of an organizations right to display poster boards.

Considering all of these are factors thatshouldfall under thelimits to free speechas defined by the Supreme Court casesGertz v. Robert Welch Inc.andMiller v. California, it becomes clear that students objections to this display of political rage are less rooted in concern for the preservation of constitutional rights, but rather fit a familiar rhetoric that desperately wishes only for peaceful, unobtrusive protests that allow the normalization of violent systems of oppression.

Whether you agree with this students actions or not, it is a silly notion to insist that he instead try talking to the organizers of the anti-choice display as if they themselves travel from university to university with the intention of having meaningful discourse and understanding. They purposefully produce hateful imagery and count on our loose understanding of constitutional free speech and need for normalcy as a buffer to spread their falsified information to vulnerable audiences. The more we find the courage to break out of these imagined rules on how to respectfully engage with perpetrators that are rarely held to the same standard respect, the more we can utilize the full range of options at hand when it comes to the dismantling of hateful institutions.

-Tafari Robertson is a public relations senior

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Freedom of speech is for white people | The University Star - Texas State University - The University Star

San Antonio Mayor Who Blamed Generational Poverty on Atheism Loses Runoff Election – Patheos (blog)

Ivy Taylor, the mayor of San Antonio who blamed generational poverty on broken people who didnt believe in God, no longer has a job. City Council member Ron Nirenberg defeated her 55%-45% in a runoff election yesterday.

While theres no proof Taylors anti-atheist comments led to her downfall, they did go viral online, and its worth reminding people of just how awful they were.

They took place during a mayoral forum in April in which candidates talked about the impact of and challenges for non-profit groups in the community. At one point, Taylor was asked about the deepest systemic causes of generational poverty. Theres no simple answer to that, of course, but Taylors response didnt even come close.

To me, its broken people. People not being in a relationship with their Creator, and therefore, not being in good relationship with their families and their communities, and not being productive members of society. I think thats the ultimate answer. Thats not something that I work on from my position as Mayor of the community

It was bizarre, offensive, and not based on any facts whatsoever. It was irrelevant that she was directing her response to an openly Christian questioner. Poverty isnt caused by atheism, and atheism doesnt mean you dont have a good relationship with your family and community. (And you better believe we contribute to society.)

Taylor later said that clip was a dishonest, politically motivated misrepresentation of her record, intentionally edited to mislead viewers.

That was a lie. You can see the full exchange at the 1:07:39 mark in this video. Her comments arent any better in context.

She was condemned by several national atheist groups, many of which offered to set up a meeting with their members so Taylor could see for herself what they offered the city of San Antonio.

She never took them up on it.

And now she wont have to.

When speaking to her supporters last night, Taylor once again brought up her faith.

Taylor seemed to concede during her speech, saying, A majority of the votes have come in. It doesnt look like its going the way that we anticipated this evening. But you know what? I am so grateful to God I am at peace. I am so thankful to God for each and every person in this room, for your support, for your prayers, for being here.

And were thankful to no-God that shes no longer in office.

Even though he just got elected, I hope Ron Nirenberg does what Taylor never did and offers to meet with atheists as a gesture of solidarity. He doesnt have to agree with us on theology, but theres no reason to shut us out. It would be a welcome overture.

In case youre wondering, the city council is a non-partisan group and Nirenberg does not declare affiliation with any political party.

(Thanks to @SarahHancock23 for the link. Portions of this article were published earlier)

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San Antonio Mayor Who Blamed Generational Poverty on Atheism Loses Runoff Election - Patheos (blog)

New book published by Balboa Press presents the Miross system, a measure for conscious evolution, self … – Benzinga

Rossco announces publication of New-Dimensional Thought Technology'

KOBE, Japan (PRWEB) June 09, 2017

In his new book, "New-Dimensional Thought Technology: The Dawning of a New Civilization" (published by Balboa Press), Rossco presents his self-development program Miross to help readers to achieve inner peace and create a society of "absolute peace."

"Civilization seems to be reaching a deadlock and it appears to be on the point of dissolution," Rossco says. "Humanity stands at a crossroads and the time has come for us to truly awaken and realize that we cannot end human sufferings or bring about true peace with existing or conventional approaches, no matter how much we try."

Rossco says that by following the system he offers in "New-Dimensional Thought Technology," one can evolve one's consciousness and transform one's life. Unlike traditional solutions to problems in such areas as finances, work, relationships or health which Rossco says have proven "superficial and ineffective" his book "provides real answers addressing the roots of problems" and "demystifies the traps that humans have fallen into," allowing readers to escape these traps and achieve "absolute peace."

An excerpt from "New-Dimensional Thought Technology": A radical turnaround awaits humanity. It begins by grasping the greatest deception the world has played on us: the trap of reversal. The world we see before us is all reversed. Thus not a single thing we have seen is true. If our lives have not gone well, that is only natural. But we needn't remain stuck in the world of reversal. Once we recognize this, we can escape it.

"New-Dimensional Thought Technology" By Rossco Hardcover | 5.5 x 8.5 in | 110 pages | ISBN 9781504365635 Available at Amazon and Barnes & Noble

About the Author Rossco is the founder and president of Miross Institute and the creator of Miross, a New Thought system developed through 30 years of research. Together with his wife, Midori, he is dedicated to introducing Miross to the world as "the ultimate measure of conscious evolution with the capacity to eliminate all problems and create a society of absolute peace." He and his wife live in Kobe, Japan.

Balboa Press, a division of Hay House, Inc. a leading provider in publishing products that specialize in self-help and the mind, body, and spirit genres. Through an alliance with indie book publishing leader Author Solutions, LLC, authors benefit from the leadership of Hay House Publishing and the speed-to-market advantages of the self-publishing model. For more information, visit balboapress.com. To start publishing your book with Balboa Press, call 877-407-4847 today. For the latest, follow @balboapress on Twitter.

For the original version on PRWeb visit: http://www.prweb.com/releases/Rossco/MM/prweb14391110.htm

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New book published by Balboa Press presents the Miross system, a measure for conscious evolution, self ... - Benzinga

Hubble views luminous galaxies through gravitational lens – Cosmos

These six Hubble Space Telescope images reveal a jumble of misshapen-looking galaxies punctuated by exotic patterns such as arcs, streaks, and smeared rings. These unusual features are the stretched shapes of the universe's brightest infrared galaxies that are boosted by natural cosmic magnifying lenses. Some of the oddball shapes also may have been produced by spectacular collisions between distant, massive galaxies. The faraway galaxies are as much as 10,000 times more luminous than our Milky Way. The galaxies existed between 8 billion and 11.5 billion years ago.

NASA, ESA, and J. Lowenthal (Smith College)

Just like water distorting the view of objects beneath its surface, gravitational fields have warped images of some of the universes brightest infrared galaxies that were recently captured by NASAs Hubble Space Telescope.

This process, known as gravitational lensing, occurs when the intense gravity of a massive galaxy or cluster of galaxies magnifies the light of fainter, more distant background sources.

While the phenomenon had been seen before, it is shown off to rare effect in the new Hubble Telescope snapshots.

The images are also particularly important because they show relatively tiny details of ultra-luminous starburst galaxies that would be unimaginable without the magnification provided by gravity.

These galaxies are as much as 10,000 times more luminous than the Milky Way and are ablaze with star formation, churning out more than 10,000 new stars in a year.

The reason for this frenzied star production is unknown, however, and these galaxies have traditionally been very difficult to study in visible light because of the dust that they create which cloaks them from view.

Thanks to the magnification provided by gravity in the new images of these galaxies, scientists now have a novel opportunity to examine their inner workings more closely and develop a better understanding of how galaxy and star formation occurs.

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Hubble views luminous galaxies through gravitational lens - Cosmos

Trump said NATO isn’t spending enough to support the alliance – New York Post

President Trump shocked NATO leaders at a private dinner in Brussels with strong-arm tactics and off-script gripes that they arent spending enough to support the alliance.

Behind closed doors at the May 25 meal, Trump told the heads of state that their agreement to eventually spend 2 percent of GDP on defense is not enough, sources who had been briefed on the meeting told Foreign Policy magazine.

Trump insisted they should aim for 3 percent.

The president also pushed the European allies to cough up back pay after years of under-spending pressuring them with the prospect of US defense cuts if they refused to fall in line.

It was a train wreck. It was awful, said a former US government official.

Trump pressed his point with sweet talk Friday by heaping praise on Romanian President Klaus Iohannis for the nations decision to surpass the 2-percent target for military spending.

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Trump said NATO isn't spending enough to support the alliance - New York Post