Suspect Nabbed After Student Reports Burglary In Progress At College Townhouse In Area – East Dutchess Daily Voice

A suspect has been nabbed after a student reported a burglary in progress at an occupied Vassar College townhouse.

It happened just after midnight on Wednesday, Feb. 19,Town of Poughkeepsie Police said.

Officers responded and obtained a description of the suspect.

A subject matching the descriptionwas located in the area by a responding officer. The subject was detained and identified asFranz L. Brandon Jr., 30, of the City of Poughkeepsie.

He was taken into custody following an investigation.

Brandon was charged with second-degree burglary (a felony) and petit larceny (a misdemeanor).

He was released on an appearance ticket to appear in Town of Poughkeepsie Court at a later date.

Town of Poughkeepsie Police were assisted at the scene by the City of Poughkeepsie PoliceDepartment.

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Suspect Nabbed After Student Reports Burglary In Progress At College Townhouse In Area - East Dutchess Daily Voice

U.S. congratulates Ukraine on progress in fighting corruption – Ukrinform. Ukraine and world news

The United States has welcomed Ukraines progress in the fight against corruption and the implementation of institutional reforms, and also reaffirmed its commitment to a peaceful settlement to the conflict in Donbas.

U.S. Deputy Secretary of State StephenE.Biegun said this during a meeting with Ukrainian Foreign Minister Vadym Prystaiko in Washington,D.C., on February 21.

"Unwavering U.S. support remains crucial for Ukraine. New approaches not only in Kyiv - it's inspiring," Prystaiko wrote on Twitter.

According to the U.S. Department of State,Deputy Secretary Biegun and Foreign Minister Prystaiko discussed their mutual desire for a peaceful settlement to Russias aggression in Ukraine.

The Deputy Secretary congratulated the Foreign Minister on the progress his government has made to combat corruption and institute reforms. "The parties also discussed opportunities for further integrating Ukraines military, investment, and trade with the Euro-Atlantic community," the report reads.

As Ukrinform reported, Ukrainian Foreign Minister Vadym Prystaiko is on a visit to the United States. The day before, he took part ina UN General Assembly meeting on the situation in the temporarily occupied territories of Ukraine.

ish

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U.S. congratulates Ukraine on progress in fighting corruption - Ukrinform. Ukraine and world news

Klay Thompson showing real progress in ACL tear recovery – ClutchPoints

Golden State Warriors star shooting guard Klay Thompson wont play this season.

However, that doesnt mean we cant still track his ACL rehab.

According to Anthony Slater of The Athletic, Thompson is slowly but surely rounding into form:

The Warriors were always going to be cautious with Thompson since they gave him a five-year max contract this past summer worth $190 million. Klays long-term health is very important to the organization.

Thompson averaged 21.5 points, 3.8 rebounds and 2.4 assists for the Warriors in 2018-19 during the regular season. The five-time All-Star shot 46.7 percent from the field, 40.2 percent from beyond the arc and 81.6 percent from the free-throw line.

In the 2019 playoffs, Thompson put up 20.7 points, 4.1 rebounds and 2.1 assists. The Warriors lost to theToronto Raptorsin the NBA Finals in six games, with Thompson tearing his ACL in Game 6.

The Warriors will be playoff contenders again next season withStephen Curry, Klay Thompson,Draymond Green and Andrew Wiggins leading the charge. This season marks the first time in the Steve Kerr era the Dubs wont make the postseason.

Follow ClutchPoints onTwitter&Instagram, and like us onFacebook for more news on Klay Thompson and the Warriors. We can also be found on Flipboard where you can subscribe and follow us.

All of our NBA content can be found on the NBA section of the ClutchPoints home pagehere. For all of our college basketball content, clickhere.

Follow Warriors or other NBA games live by downloading the ClutchPoints Appand heading to the scores tab under the NBA section.

You can listen and subscribe to the Battle for LA podcast on Apple Podcasts,Spotify, andSoundcloud. You can also find new episodes of Battle for LA, the ClutchPoints NBA Podcast, and Establish the Pass under thePodcast tabon the ClutchPoints home page.

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Klay Thompson showing real progress in ACL tear recovery - ClutchPoints

Reorganisation and recognition: Cyprus minister reflects on two years of progress – ShipInsight

Next week (1 March) marks the second anniversary of Cyprus Deputy Ministry of Shipping and it has already established itself as a valuable though long awaited support for the islands blue economy.

For many years, the Cypriot shipping community had pushed for a dedicated ministry. The former Department of Merchant Shipping had supported the sector for 41 years as part of the Ministry of Transport, Communications and Works but the influential international shipping community regularly called for a dedicated ministry. Coupled with the growing Cypriot ship register, the sector contributes about 7% of the countrys GDP and employs about 3% of its workforce, according to the Cyprus Profile website.

In an exclusive interview with ShipInsight, Cyprus shipping deputy minister Natasa Pilides confirmed that the ministry owed its origins to that industry pressure and said that its creation also set a precedent for the islands government structure. Under the countrys constitution, there is a limit on the number of government ministries and creating the concept of deputy ministries got around that. So although her title is deputy minister, that is because she heads a deputy ministry; she is Cyprus shipping minister.

Creating a dedicated ministry for shipping was a popular political decision. It was unanimously approved in parliament, which is probably a first, she said. And where shipping laid the way, other industries are following the same path: tourism got its own deputy ministry in January 2019 and on 1 March a deputy ministry for innovation will be established.

Ms Pilides has achieved a lot in her first two years. All the work done by the Department of Merchant Shipping has transferred to the ministry, giving it a staff of 160, and she was well aware of the industrys hopes. We had to respond to all their expectations regarding a more bespoke and immediate service, she said, and listed some of the changes that have been made.

Its responsibilities are based on a national strategy on shipping which created specific goals and KPIs that underlie its action plan. Its a lot more focussed than it was before, she said. We are able to take and implement decisions fast. The services available to shipping have been reorganised and its been operating quite well since then, she said.

Now, there is a 24/7 assistance service and ships can be registered on any day. Online verification of seafarer certificates is now available and seafarers themselves can now add information to their records if they would like to share information with shipping companies that use the system. New agreements have been signed with the registers recognised organisations (ROs), they can submit electronic certificates and more ROs have been singed-up. Next on the list is an online ship registration portal that will go live before the end of this year.

Our service is much more proactive and is informed by feedback from response forms and from hundreds of meetings with all our clients over the world, Ms Pilides said. Based on those conversations, I think people are happy with what weve done so far but we need to continue to improve further.

The Cypriot tonnage tax scheme which secured EU approval in December for a second 10-year period is helping attract companies to the island, she said, and the registers fee structure is also going through an overhaul. Last year, fees for registering oceangoing vessels and their mortgages were abolished and other fees have been simplified and some have been reduced.

But other fees have not been increased to compensate, she said. The benefit to the economy of having a larger cluster with more companies and more vessels more than makes up for lost fees. And there are more cuts to come: although tax rates will not change, a discount scheme is being developed that will reward environment-friendly vessels. Some details, including defining how ships will qualify and how the discounts will respond to future technological developments, are still to be finalised but it will be presented to parliament for approval soon and will then operate for an initial period to 31 December 2029.

As well as the focus on international shipping, the deputy ministry and the blue economy also serve the local shipping community. After our interview Ms Pilides was due to visit a small shipyard in Limassol, which she said was seeing growing demand, and in March a new marina is due to open in the holiday resort of Ayia Napa.

The deputy ministry also supports initiatives to encourage Cypriots to train for work in the blue economy. One organisation that is especially involved in this work is the Cyprus Marine and Maritime Institute (CMMI), which opened in October 2019. Its aim is to be an independent, international, scientific and business centre of excellence that will encourage cooperation between the maritime industry and the international academic community.

Its CEO, Zacharias Siokouros, joined our conversation. He explained that it is co-funded by 30M from the European Unions Horizon 2020 initiative and the Cyprus Government, with an additional 10M from local industry. It is modelled on Southampton Marine and Maritime Institute in the UK, which is one of its international partners.

Mr Siokouros paid tribute to Ms Pilides for her involvement in supporting the funding proposal to the EU in November 2018. It helped a lot that we could say we now have a dedicated ministry of shipping as an indication of how important shipping for Cyprus, he said. Now that CMMI is open for business, he is recruiting staff, including scientists and other specialists.

But CMMI is already working with industry. On 9 January is signed an MOU with Columbia Shipmanagement for a project called Digital Waves, which includes research and innovation into topics such as gathering data on ships, coupled with trends in connectivity and artificial intelligence.

He also described an EU-funded three-year scheme that began in November to engage the younger generation in the blue economy. It is called Sea of Experience and CMMI is one of six organisations involved three from Cyprus and three from Greece. The older generation do not have the luxury of spending a lot of time on ships with the younger generation so we are trying to find how we can use new tools to achieve this kind of mentoring, he explained.

Along with other initiatives, such as career fairs and school visits to enthuse teenagers, he hopes to instil a renewed interest in maritime opportunities. Despite Cyprus long marine history we have turned our backs to the sea, he said. He hopes to change that perception by introducing young people to opportunities both in shipping and beyond shipping.

Another, longer-established, organisation also acknowledged the support available from the deputy ministry. Prevention at Sea was founded in Greece in 2014 and moved to Cyprus in 2015. It is a maritime technology and marine risk prevention specialist that develops tools and risk assessment techniques to prevent human-generated risks escalating.

Its latest product is the Fleet Information SHaring platform (FISH), which is an online ship data repository that has been designed to standardise and automate ship inspection data. Its founder, Petros Achtypis, took part in our interview and said the platform is due to go live in June.

Having been in business since before the deputy ministry was established, he has seen the transition at first hand. We are very happy, he said, because his systems which use blockchain technology are disruptive and the shipping industry can be conservative in adopting such technology, he said. But he praised Ms Pilides and said that having the deputy ministry on our side, we can make big steps forward and can introduce our concept to the industry.

During FISHs initial development, experts in the deputy ministry provided advice on how the system could be developed, in particular about the data and information that should be recorded. Now, as it nears completion, he is now benefiting from some very practical support: the deputy ministrys staff are piloting the platform, along with some local shipping companies, in particular to provide feedback in relation to its use interface.

As well as its responsibilities for the ship register and its support for the local shipping industry, the deputy ministry plays an important role at IMO and Ms Pilides emphasised its success in November when it was re-elected to IMOs Council as one of its 20 Category C members. It has been a member of the Council since 1987 and this time secured 140 votes from the 165 voting countries, putting it in fourth place in the ballot.

She sees Cyprus involvement there as important. Our positive relationship with both IMO and the EU is really important and necessary for the industry, she said. Hopefully, we can continue to have those good relations and contribute in a meaningful way.

And then she was off to visit that shipyard.

Continue reading here:

Reorganisation and recognition: Cyprus minister reflects on two years of progress - ShipInsight

ASU bats break out in win; pitching rotation a work in progress – 247Sports

(Photo: Trevor Booth/Sun Devil Source, 247Sports)

TEMPE Tracy Smith flipped his hand into the air and shook his head as if the answer to the question was obvious.

Why did you start Cooper Benson tonight, someone asked.

Hes good, Smith responded quickly. Next question.

Benson, a freshman left-handed pitcher who had one game of collegiate baseball experience under his belt prior to Friday nights start against Boston College, earned the start against the Eagles. The move came one week after Justin Fall successfully started last Friday against Villanova in the team's season opener.

ASUs sixth-year head coach had little to say when asked why Fall did not start on Friday night for a second week in a row.

Hes good, too, Smith said before a long pause. (Junior right-handed pitcher) Boyd (Vander Kooi) is good. (Sophomore right-handed pitcher Tyler) Thornton is good. (Sophomore left-handed pitcher Erik) Tolman is good. I said we have five guys that we can run out there.

Smith listed the names of his starting pitchers to prove a point. The way he sees it, he has enough good starting pitchers to be successful but just no clarity as yet on exactly how they will be deployed. That is what he's trying to figure out early in the season.

Youre just trying to set your rotation, Smith said. Just kind of want to get an idea of where guys are at.

Benson did not help his cause on Friday. Six days after posting a quality start against Michigan, Benson lasted just 2+ innings against Boston College, surrendering six hits, three earned runs, five walks and a hit by pitch.

The Sun Devils won anyway, their offense breaking out of its opening week slump to pull the team to an even 3-3 record with 11 hits in a 10-4 victory at Phoenix Municipal Stadium.

But as Smith has said since the preseason, offense is the Sun Devils calling card. Its the pitching staff promising but also somewhat unproven that is the bigger unknown.

On Friday night, Smith fielded plenty of questions about Bensons bumpy outing.

Benson lacked control against the Eagles. While Smith said it was uncharacteristic of the southpaw, he believes his lack of a concrete pitching rotation allowed ASU to still get the win becauseSmith had the luxury of summoning Vander Kooi from his bullpen. Despite pitching 7.2 innings and allowing just one run versus Villanova in his first start of the year, the 6-foot-5 was needed out of the pen for the Sun Devils second series of their new campaign.

Benson is a competitive kid and hes got three pitches, Smith said. We think hes going to be successful.

The formula played out a little bit. Say a guy struggles in a start, which happened tonight and its going to happen. If you could pull another guy thats of that quality (from the bullpen) we can succeed.

Vander Kooi threw seven innings against Boston College and allowed just one run to lower his season ERA to 1.23. Despite the successful outing, Vander Kooi acknowledged it was an adjustment to pitch in a relief role.

Going from a starter to the bullpen, I didnt as much time to warm up or anything, he said. You have to adapt to that. I felt like every inning I was warming up more and more and I was able to finish strong.

Im a big routine guy. But in baseball, you still have to adapt and, you know, example tonight. You got to do what you got to do. Just get the job done no matter what.

Smith said that the ability to mix up the starters as he and first-year pitching coach Jason Kelly see fit is a luxury.

To have the option we have, to have the five guys who I legitimately feel can be weekend starters and have the ability to mix and match with those guys and the important quality in that is that all of them buy in thats a pretty good thing to have.

Smith knows that improved pitching is essential to the team achieving its goals this year and is confident that ASU's hitting will gain consistency. Friday provided a glimpse of that potential at the plate.

Guys stayed on the ball and stayed within themselves," Smith said. "We know the offense is going to come and there are still some things clearly to work on but that was good to allow our pitchers to have a little bit of breathing room.

After scoring only 12 total runs in their first five games, the Sun Devils almost matched that mark against the Eagles, production Smith credited to a solid pregame hitting session.

Our best pregame [batting practice] was today, Smith said. I just felt like the guys did a really good job of carrying it into the game.

Junior shortstop Alika Williams, junior third baseman Gage Workman and junior left fielder Trevor Hauver all hit home runs against the Eagles. Hauvers big fly led the trio in exit velocity at a scorching 109 mph off the bat.

In addition to homering for the first time this year, Hauver walked three times on Friday night and drove in three runs. He said he just needed to calm down.

Tonight was awesome, Hauver said. Thank god. The first couple of games I was pressing a little bit. I would say I was trying to do too much. Today we worked on just trying to breathe and drive everything up the middle and I stayed with the approach and finally got it. I feel a lot more comfortable.

Workman joked that Hauvers success was due to his facial hair.

It was that mustache that did it, Workman said.

Added Hauver: Oh yeah, this mustache is key. Had to grow this back.

Despite an impressive showing at the plate, Friday night was not all good news for the ASU lineup. Smith said after the game that junior catcher Sam Ferri suffered a knee injury during ASUs opening weekend and is not expected back anytime in the near future.

Without Ferri, ASU has just two catchers left on its roster, senior Nick Cheema and freshman utility player Nate Baez. The team is still considering who it will use in an emergency catching role.

"Baez has been doing a good job and every inning he's out there will build experience," Smith said. "Cheema has done a fantastic job in the last two games that he's been in and they both have to be.

"I know we're going to be good given our circumstances right now because several guys have come forward and say, 'Hey, I'll get back there if you need me.'"

Weather permitting, the Sun Devils are set to play Boston College again on Saturday night at 6:30 p.m. Staying true to his new pitching format, Smith didnt say who would take the bump.

We look at matchups and what gives us the best chance to win every single game each weekend, Smith said. Were not really in the mode yet of, This is the Friday guy. This is the Saturday guy. This is the Sunday guy.

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ASU bats break out in win; pitching rotation a work in progress - 247Sports

India rolls out the MAGA carpet for Trump – POLITICO

Namaste Trump! Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi shouted to the crowd, which repeated it back to a beaming Trump.

Standing alongside Modi, Trump on Monday inaugurated the brand-new Motera Stadium, lined with 110,000 orange, yellow and blue seats all filled. Trump is ostensibly in India to help mitigate a long-standing trade dispute while tightening U.S.-Indian relations, but Monday's mega-rally was also designed to appeal to Indian-American voters as Trump heads into his reelection campaign.

The First Lady and I have just traveled 8,000 miles around the globe to deliver a message to every citizen across this nation: America loves India America respects India and Americans will always be true and loyal friends to the Indian people, Trump said in a speech that was translated into Hindi on a large video screen in the stadium, which sits along the Sabarmati River in Modi's home state of Gujarat.

It was a political-style rally like no other. Even Trumps popular MAGA rallies couldnt compare to the size and scope of the Namaste Trump rally.

Attendees, some wearing matching shirts from schools, companies or groups and others visiting from the United States, gradually streamed into the heavily secured stadium starting at 8 a.m., hours ahead of the rallys start time. Traditional, folk and patriotic songs blasted from the loudspeakers, keeping things upbeat under the unrelenting sun. A pair of jumbo video screens showed Trumps motorcade moving through the city.

Nearly everyone was wearing white baseball caps provided by organizers that featured a Namaste Trump logo across the front and both countries' flags on the brim. Even if the crowd started streaming out before the speeches were over because of the intense heat, the stadium was consistently filled with adulation for the U.S. president.

Trump is my favorite, gushed Gautam Patel, wearing a Trump, Make India Great Again baseball cap. I like Trump. Hes straightforward, outspoken. Hes got the verbal diarrhea but thats okay. He tells how it is. I love him.

Patel, a businessman who grew up in India but now lives outside Chicago and planned his vacation to India around the rally, said he supports Trump because he helped push through the 2017 tax cuts and his opposition to illegal immigration. I elected him and I will elect him again, he said.

The event was more than twice the size of the Howdy Modi rally both leaders headlined in 2019 at a cavernous football stadium in Houston, billed as the largest event in the U.S. for a leader of a foreign nation.

My friends, my family, maybe every Patel likes Trump, quipped Suresh Patel, 67, who splits his time between Jersey City, N.J., and Anand, India. A green card holder, he isnt able to vote but his wife and three adult children are all U.S. citizens and voted for Trump.

Im feeling proud, he said in Hindi. Its the meeting of the worlds oldest democrat and the worlds biggest democracy.

Hundreds of police officers in beige uniforms and black berets surrounded the stadium. Construction materials from the newly built stadium sat in piles outside. Near the VIP entrance was a huge sign that read Welcome to India Donald and Melania Trump.

As Trumps motorcade slowly made its way to the stadium, the Indian music gave way to Trumps rally playlist, including Macho Man and Tiny Dancer.

People over here think hes very powerful, said Rashi Sharma, 20, a college student from Ahmedabad studying marketing and entrepreneurship. Ive always heard of him. Hes a strong leader. Im following him on Twitter. She said watching him live and listening to his speech is an honor for us.

At times, it felt a little like one of Trumps MAGA rallies in the U.S. Some attendees went out of their way to criticize journalists, blast the mainstream media and praise Fox News. Trump and Modi even exited the stage to The Rolling Stones You Cant Always Get What You Want, Trumps closing song at rallies since his 2016 campaign.

We are registered Democrats but we have changed our views lately, said Daksha Dalal, 66, a federal government retiree from Kansas City, Kan., who was spending the winter in India and attending the rally with her husband. The couple volunteered they used to watch CNN but switched to Fox News after a negative report on Modi. We thought we could never watch Fox because we are Democrats.

By the time the two leaders arrived after 2 p.m. local time, temperatures had soared and attendees were desperately fanning themselves with anything they could find. In their speeches, Trump and Modi, who both rode to office on a wave of populist rhetoric, heaped praise on one another in their speeches.

"Trump's visit is a new chapter in the relationship between the U.S. and India, a chapter that will document the progress and prosperity of Americans and Indians," Modi said in Hindi.

Trump talked about the economy his usual topic but this time he spoke about Indias economy. And he mentioned a landslide election another usual topic but this time he was describing Modis 2019 victory and ascendance from humble roots as a tea sellers son.

You are proof that Indians can accomplish at all, anything they want, he said in his 27-minute remarks in which he mispronounced several Indian names and cities but name-checked well-known cricket players and Bollywood stars.

Modi began his political career in Gujarat, where he served as chief minister. As prime minister, he has enjoyed widespread popularity at home, though his reputation has taken a hit recently over over a new citizenship law that favors all religions over Islam. The move has sparked widespread protests around the country.

In his speech, Trump notably praised all religions.

Before appearing at the rally, Trump made a stop at the Sabarmati Ashram, the humble home where Mahatma Gandhi lived for a dozen years as he helped push India to gain independence from Britain. At one point, Modi could be seen explaining to Trump how to use a charkha, a traditional spinning wheel used by Gandhi. A makeshift VIP building had been hastily constructed for Trump and Modi in recent days, and the White House had been quiet about the visit ahead of time.

Another 100,000 people, largely hand-picked, spent hours in the sun waiting to wave small U.S. and Indian flags and cheer as the presidential motorcade drove passed. Some waved or gave a thumbs up. Along the route, artists from all 28 states performed at pop-up stages.

The leaders of China, Japan and Israel have all visited Ahmedabad since Modi became prime minister. But Trump is the first U.S. president and most high-profile visitor to date even if hes staying for less than two days.

Ahmedabad, a largely industrial city that bills itself as the land of Gandhi, features large swaths of crowded, low-income neighborhoods and more than its share of litter and cows roaming the streets. It has been furiously preparing for Trumps visit for days sprucing up the city, repairing roads, erecting flags and building a wall to hide a poor area along the route of the presidential motorcade.

Hundreds of signs some in English, some in Hindi have popped up, featuring photos of Trump and Modi with phrases that read two dynamic personalities, one momentous occasion, the worlds largest democracy meets the worlds oldest democracy and a historic milestone for a historic friendship.

The signs lined the lighted bridge across the Sabarmati River, where larger-than-life photos of Trump and Modi were also erected Trump in his trademark dark suit tie, flashing a thumbs up.

Before Trump left Washington, he spoke about the crowds he expected to see in India, telling reporters that Modi promised him five to seven million people would line the streets between the airport and stadium. By Thursday, in Trumps recalling of his conversation with Modi, the number had ballooned to 10 million.

Its not unusual for the former reality TV star to be ever mindful of the optics. He often boasts about the size of his audiences and mocks his opponents, Republicans or Democrats, for what he deems lackluster support at events.

But in the days before Trumps arrival, Ahmedabad officials announced 100,000 Indians had been selected and registered to stand along the motorcade route. While it was nowhere close to the 10 million people the president had predicted, the crowds were undoubtedly enthusiastic.

Trump posted on Twitter Saturday that he was looking "so forward to being with my great friends in INDIA! while retweeting a clip from the popular movie Baahubali showing himself as the lead character and savior, riding on a chariot with the first lady.

He will leave for the capital city of New Delhi Monday night after first taking a detour for a private tour of the Taj Mahal.

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India rolls out the MAGA carpet for Trump - POLITICO

What Would Happen if Trump Refused to Leave Office? – The Atlantic

That a president would defy the results of an election has long been unthinkable; it is now, if not an actual possibility, at the very least something Trumps supporters joke about. As the former Arkansas Governor Mike Huckabee tweeted, President Trump will be eligible for a 3rd term due to the illegal attempts by Comey, Dems, and media , et al attempting to oust him as @POTUS so thats why I was named to head up the 2024 re-election. A good troll though it may have been, Huckabee is not the first person to suggest that Trump might not leave when his presidency ends.

In May, the faith leader Jerry Falwell Jr. tweeted an apparent reference to the completed investigation of Special Counsel Robert Mueller into Russian election interference. I now support reparations, he wrote. Trump should have 2 yrs added to his 1st term as pay back for time stolen by this corrupt failed coup. Trump retweeted Falwells post.

One of Trumps former confidants, Michael Cohen, has suggested that Trump wont leave. In his congressional testimony before heading to prison, Trumps former attorney said, Given my experience working for Mr. Trump, I fear that if he loses the election in 2020, there will never be a peaceful transition of power.

Trump himself has joked about staying in office beyond his term, and even for life. In December, Trump told a crowd at a Pennsylvania rally that he will leave office in five years, nine years, 13 years, 17 years, 21 years, 25 years, 29 years He added that he was joking to drive the media totally crazy. Just a few days earlier, Trump had alluded to his critics in a speech, A lot of them say, You know hes not leaving So now we have to start thinking about that because its not a bad idea. This is how propaganda works. Say something outrageous often enough and soon it no longer sounds shocking.

Refusal to leave office is rare, but not unheard of. In the past decade, presidents in democracies such as Moldova, Sri Lanka, the Democratic Republic of Congo, and Gambia have refused to leave office, sometimes leading to bloodshed. In 2016, Joseph Kabila decided not to step down after three five-year terms as the president of Congo, announcing that he would delay the election for two years so that a census could be conducted. His decision was met with mass protests in which 50 people were killed by government security forces. Still, he followed through and an election took place in 2018. He left office thereafter.

Elected officials in the U.S. have also refused to step down, albeit from lower offices than the presidency. In 1874, a Texas governor locked himself in the basement of the state capitol building after losing his reelection bid. The saga began when Republican Governor Edmund J. Davis lost the 1873 election by a resounding 2-to-1 ratio to his Democratic challenger, Richard Coke, and claimed that the election had been tainted with fraud and intimidation. A court case made its way to the states supreme court. All three justices, each of whom had been appointed by the incumbent Davis, ruled that the election was unconstitutional and invalid. Democrats called upon the public to disregard the courts decision, and proceeded with plans for Cokes inauguration. On January 15, 1874, Coke arrived at the state capitol with a sheriffs posse, and was sworn in to office while Davis barricaded himself downstairs with state troopers. The next day, Davis requested federal troops from President Ulysses S. Grant. Grant refused, and Davis finally stepped down three days later.

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What Would Happen if Trump Refused to Leave Office? - The Atlantic

AP FACT CHECK: Donald Trump and the audacity of hype – Associated Press

WASHINGTON (AP) In their boisterous presidential debate, several Democrats sold short the health care plans of rivals or glossed over aspects of their own record. In an audacious league of his own, President Donald Trump celebrated the elimination of a tax that still exists and went deep and wide in distorting what hes done in office.

A sampling from the past week:

TAXES

TRUMP: We got rid of it. No more death tax, no more inheritance tax. Colorado rally Thursday.

THE FACTS: False. The death tax is still alive.

Hes referring to the estate tax, also known as the inheritance tax. He didnt get rid of it.

The 2017 tax overhaul doubled the threshold at which the estate tax gets levied. A couple worth less than $22.4 million would avoid the tax. But the increase of the threshold isnt permanent. Its set to expire in 2026.

___

TRUMP, on the effects of the estate tax on people inheriting family farms: You know what? They go out and they would borrow a lot of money and they would lose the farms. The number is staggering. Colorado rally.

THE FACTS: Hes inflating the peril to family farms from the estate tax, which is aimed at the hugely wealthy. After his 2017 tax cuts, the Agriculture Department published estimates that 38,106 farm estates would be created in 2018. Of those, only 230 would have to file an estate tax return and only 133 would have any estate tax liability.

___

TRADE

TRUMP: If our formally targeted farmers need additional aid until such time as the trade deals with China, Mexico, Canada and others fully kick in, that aid will be provided by the federal government, paid for out of the massive tariff money coming into the USA! tweet Friday in all capital letters.

THE FACTS: Thats a flatly false account of where the money for the farm subsidies comes from. It comes from U.S. taxpayers. There is no massive tariff money coming into the country, from which the subsidies could be drawn.

Since the start of his trade war with China, Trump has been consistently deceptive about who is paying for it. Tariffs are principally paid by U.S. importers and those costs are usually passed on to consumers in the form of higher prices for goods. China and other exporters are not cutting the U.S. a check. The money to help farmers hurt by the trade war comes from the U.S. treasury at the expense of other federal programs and the debt.

The nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office says household income takes a hit from the tariffs. It estimated last year that the tariffs then in play would bring down average inflation-adjusted household income by $580 from 2018 to 2020.

___

STOP AND FRISK

DEMOCRATIC PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATE MIKE BLOOMBERG, on the stop-and-frisk policing policy when he was New York mayor: What happened, however, was it got out of control and when we discovered I discovered that we were doing many, many, too many stop and frisks, we cut 95% of them out. Democratic debate Wednesday.

THE FACTS: Hes misrepresenting how stop and frisk declined. That happened because of a court order, not because Bloomberg learned that it was being overused.

In Bloombergs first 10 years in office, the number of stop-and-frisk actions increased nearly 600% from when he took office in 2002, reaching a peak of nearly 686,000 stops in 2011. That declined to about 192,000 documented stops in 2013, his final year as mayor.

Bloomberg achieved his claim of a 95% cut by cherry-picking the quarterly high point of 203,500 stops in the first quarter of 2012 and comparing that with the 12,485 stops in the last quarter of 2013.

The former mayor defended the practice even after leaving office at the end of 2013 and only apologized for it a few weeks before declaring his candidacy for presidency.

___

COAL

BLOOMBERG, citing his philanthropys work with the Sierra Club: Already weve closed 304 out of the 530 coal fire plants in the United States, and weve closed 80 out of the 200 or 300 that are in Europe. Democratic debate.

THE FACTS: Hes wrongly taking credit for driving the U.S. coal industry to its knees.

The U.S. coal industrys plunge is largely due to market forces, above all drops in prices of natural gas and renewable energy that have made costlier coal-fired power plants much less competitive for electric utilities. Bloomberg has indeed contributed huge sums to efforts to close coal plants and fight climate change, but against the backdrop of an industry besieged on other fronts.

U.S. coal production peaked in 2008, but since then has fallen steadily. Thats due largely to a boom in oil and gas production from U.S. shale, begun under the Obama administration, that made natural gas far more abundant and cheaper, and falling prices for wind and solar energy, partly because of improving technology in the renewable sector.

The U.S. Energy Information Administration reaffirmed in a report in December the extent to which the market has turned away from coal.

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HEALTH CARE

TRUMP, on Sanders Medicare for All plan: Think of this: 180 million Americans are going to lose health care coverage under this plan. But if you dont mind, Im not going to criticize it tonight. Let them keep going and Ill start talking about it about two weeks out from the election. Arizona rally Wednesday.

THE FACTS: Thats a thorough misrepresentation of the Sanders plan as well as similar plans by Democrats in Congress. People wouldnt lose coverage. Under Sanders, they would be covered by a new and universal government plan that replaces private and job-based insurance. Democrats who stop short of proposing to replace private and job-based insurance would offer an option for people to take a Medicare-like plan, also toward the goal of ensuring universal coverage.

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WARREN on Klobuchars health plan: It is like a Post-it note, insert plan here. ... Amy, I looked online at your plan. Its two paragraphs. Democratic debate.

THE FACTS: Thats not true. Klobuchars health care policies run thousands of words online, addressing coverage, substance abuse and mental health, prescription drugs and the elderly. Some of her material lacks specifics found in the plans of several of her rivals. Yet aspects of her agenda are grounded in detailed legislation led or supported by the senator from Minnesota.

Its true that Klochuchars main health policy page devotes two paragraphs to summarizing her way of achieving universal coverage. But thats not the extent of her plan.

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SANDERS, to Buttigieg: Lets level, Pete. Under your plan, which is a maintenance continuation of the status quo. ... Democratic debate.

WARREN: Buttigiegs health care plan is not a plan. Its a PowerPoint.

THE FACTS: Its more than the status quo and more than a PowerPoint presentation. Buttigiegs plan would cover almost all U.S. citizens and legal residents, even if its not as far reaching as the proposals of Sanders and Warren.

An analysis of health care overhaul plans by the Urban Institute and the Commonwealth Fund found that an approach like the one advocated by Buttigieg would reduce the number of uninsured people from more than 32 million to less than 7 million. Those 7 million or so would mainly be people who are in the country illegally.

The proposal from Buttigieg features a new government-sponsored public option plan that even people with employer-sponsored coverage could join voluntarily.

Warrens put-down of Buttigiegs plan comes after she reconsidered her own approach to Medicare for All, deciding to proceed in stages. She would first expand coverage by building on existing programs and postpone the push for a system fully run by the government until the third year of her presidency.

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TRUMP: We are now offering plans that are up to 60% less expensive than they were, and it is better health care. Arizona rally.

THE FACTS: Cheaper, yes. But not cheaper and better.

The bargain health insurance plans Trump talks about are cheaper because they skimp on benefits such as maternity or prescription drug coverage and do not guarantee coverage of preexisting conditions.

The short-term plans the Trump administration is promoting as an alternative to the Affordable Care Act provide up to 12 months of coverage and can be renewed for up to 36 months.

Premiums for the plans are about one-third the cost of fuller insurance coverage. Theyre intended for people who want an individual health insurance policy but make too much money to qualify for Obamacare subsides.

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TRUMP: We are protecting people with preexisting conditions ... we are trying to get rid of Obamacare ... we are trying to get rid, so we can give you a great health-care plan and protect preexisting conditions. Arizona rally.

THE FACTS: Not really. People with preexisting medical problems have health insurance protections because of Obamas health care law. As Trump notes, he is trying to dismantle it.

One of Trumps major alternatives to Obamas law short-term health insurance doesnt have to cover preexisting conditions. Meanwhile, his administration has been pressing in court for full repeal of the Obama-era law, including provisions that protect people with preexisting conditions from health insurance discrimination.

He and congressional Republicans say they would put new protections in place, but they have not spelled them out.

With Obamas law still in place, preexisting conditions continue to be covered by regular individual health insurance plans. Insurers must take all applicants, regardless of medical history, and charge the same standard premiums to healthy people and those who had medical problems before or when they signed up.

Before the Affordable Care Act, any insurer could deny coverage or charge more to anyone with a preexisting condition who was seeking to buy an individual policy.

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PRESIDENTIAL POWERS

TRUMP, on one of the people who benefited from his round of pardons and sentence commutations: Rod Blagojevich did not sell the Senate seat. He served 8 years in prison, with many remaining. He paid a big price. Another Comey and gang deal! tweet Wednesday.

THE FACTS: Thats misleading at best. The FBI closed in on Blagojevich when he was trying to make the sale. He was convicted of trying to sell an appointment to President Barack Obamas former Senate seat as well as trying to shake down a childrens hospital. Trump commuted the sentence of the former Illinois governor on Tuesday.

James Comey, the FBI director fired by Trump, had nothing to do with the case. Comey was working in the private sector when Blagojevich was indicted, tried and convicted. As for Comeys gang, Patrick Fitzgerald, the federal prosecutor who brought the case against Blagojevich, is a Comey friend and one of his lawyers.

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TRUMP: Im actually, I guess, the chief law enforcement officer of the country. remarks Tuesday to reporters.

THE FACTS: Thats disputed.

Several veterans of Obamas administration described Trumps assertion as simply wrong on the law, while conservative legal minds say they think Trump is right.

While the president is in charge constitutionally, as a matter of good policy, presidents have kept law enforcement at arms length, said John Yoo, a University of California at Berkeley law school professor and Justice Department lawyer during President George W. Bushs Republican administration. Neutrality in law enforcement is important if the government is to have the credibility and integrity to convince judges and juries, who are the ones who ultimately render the verdict.

Trumps push for leniency for convicted confidant Roger Stone drew condemnation from more than 2,400 former Justice Department officials who served in Democratic and Republican administrations.

Martin Lederman, a Georgetown law professor and former Obama Justice Department official, said on Twitter that Congress, not the president, gives the authority to prosecute to the attorney general. Its also the attorney generals responsibility, Lederman said, to stand up to a president who charts an unlawful course, knowing that it might ... lead to removal.

Chris Lu, who managed Obamas Cabinet in his first term, said the Obama White House followed its predecessors in adhering to strict rules on who could communicate with the Justice Department and on what topics.

What Trump is suggesting is at odds with this longstanding precedent and dangerous to the principle of impartial justice, Lu said.

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Associated Press writers Ricardo Alonso-Zaldivar, Jonathan Lemire, Ellen Knickmeyer, Eric Tucker, Mark Sherman and Paul Wiseman in Washington and Amanda Seitz in Chicago contributed to this report.

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EDITORS NOTE A look at the veracity of claims by political figures.

___

Find AP Fact Checks at http://apne.ws/2kbx8bd

Follow @APFactCheck on Twitter: https://twitter.com/APFactCheck

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AP FACT CHECK: Donald Trump and the audacity of hype - Associated Press

What Is There For Republicans to Dislike About Donald Trump? – Mother Jones

Suppose youre talking to someone who says, sure, they hate Trump personally (the tweets, the rallies, etc.) but they like his policies. So theyre going to vote for Trump unless someone can convince them that his policies are bad or that Democratic policies are better. Lets think about this. What are Trumps major policies?

Its worth noting that almost all of these are just bog standard Republican policies. The two exceptions are the border wall and the tariffs. However, the wall is popular among the Republican base and the tariffs, judging from how theyve been received, were always opposed more in word than deed.

Bottom line: if youve already decided that (a) Trumps bluster isnt enough to turn you off and (b) his corruption is mostly just a bunch of bogus partisan hysterics from Democrats, what is there for an ordinary Republican voter to dislike?

Read more:

What Is There For Republicans to Dislike About Donald Trump? - Mother Jones

Imagine That Donald Trump Has Almost No Control Over Justice – The New York Times

The department can also show leniency to a presidents political friends. The Roger Stone case is an example. Indeed, the very possibility that it will do so can create a strong incentive to become the presidents political friend.

The presidents power over the Justice Department is potentially even more dangerous than that. The department helps to oversee the antitrust laws, and in allowing or forbidding mergers, it can play political favorites. Civil actions, and not merely criminal ones, can be polluted by the presidents electoral interest (or spite).

The Office of Legal Counsel, which sits within the department, is supposed to provide the president and the rest of the executive branch with objective legal advice. But at least some of the time, that offices judgment is anything but objective. To an uncomfortable degree, its assessment of what the president is entitled to do, as a matter of law, often fits with the presidents wishes.

In the post-Watergate era, a reasonable balance has been struck. As a matter of established norms, both Republican and Democratic presidents have usually given the attorney general a great deal of room to maneuver, especially when it comes to criminal prosecutions and ongoing litigation. In other words, norms have done the work of law.

Under President Trump, those norms have come under severe pressure. If they collapse, there would be incalculable damage to both liberty and self-government.

In light of that risk, Congress should seriously consider making the Justice Department an independent agency. Sure, a Republican-dominated Senate is unlikely to allow that to happen in the near future.

But wouldnt it be better? There are two objections.

The first involves accountability. Theres a reasonable argument that the priorities of the department, which oversees so many important questions of law and policy, should reflect the views of the American people and so the president, whom they elected.

Excerpt from:

Imagine That Donald Trump Has Almost No Control Over Justice - The New York Times

Donald Trump has poisoned American culture but the toxin was here all along – Salon

Here is a good, truth-in-advertising political slogan: "How much money will it bring in?" That is also the question that Alexis de Tocqueville argued Americans use to ascertain the "value of everything in this world."

The almighty profit motive reins so steadfastly supreme in the world's wealthiest nation that children suffer brain damage from drinking water contaminated with high levels of lead, prison has become the leading institution for the mentally ill, and hundreds of thousands of Americans declare bankruptcy every year because they can't afford to pay theirmedical bills. Caring for the sick and nurturing children cannot compete with the twin gods of enrichment and consumption in what historian Walter McDougall called "a nation of hustlers." In the words of President Calvin Coolidge, "The business of America is business."

Even if life, libertyand the pursuit of hucksterism always formed the core of American culture, there has also existed an alternative America. It is the America we can discern in the speeches of Martin Luther King, the songs of Woody Guthrie and the social movements that have pressured the government to move toward the actualization of "liberty and justice for all."

For almost all of American history, even the most cutthroat politicians acted as participants in a national masquerade, disguising their corporate servility with a cloak of sentimental rhetoric. Ronald Reagan likened America to a "shining city on a hill." George W. Bush promised to "restore integrity" to the country after Bill Clinton's sex scandal, and John McCain insisted that "character counts," even in the gladiatorial arena of political trickery, slanderand brinkmanship.

It is only Donald Trump who has instructed Americans that civic virtue, concern for the public interestand personal ethics are, at best, delusions of the weak. One of Trump's more frightening political triumphs is thatfirst as a candidate and then with the authority and influence of thepresidency, he has exposed the idea of "American values" as a thin, easily penetrable veneer. What lies beneath that is exactly what Trump represents and advances with his every utterance and executive order fidelity to the ancient maxim, "might makes right."

When Trump boasted that he forcefully gropes unsuspecting women by the genitals, he was not only displaying his misogyny, but also delineating an entire worldview. "When you're a star" meaning when you have wealth and power "you can do whatever you want." The pesky voice of conscience should forever remain on mute when there's money to make, deals to cut, and women to grab.

In only five years, Trump has enabled Republicans in Congress, in the mediaand in attendance at his pro wrestling-meets-Mussolini ralliesto overcomewhat the late David Foster Wallace called, "the shame hobble." They not only accept Trump's behavior,no matter how vulgar or mean-spirited, theyact as if morality does not even exist.

John McCain, according to Fox News commentators and right wing bloviators, did not really oppose Donald Trump, or have concerns about the elimination of protections for people suffering from pre-existing conditions in the Republican repeal of the Affordable Care Act. Rather, he was "weak" and riddled with envy over not having become president himself.

Similarly, Sen. Mitt Romney's invocation of his religious faith, his beliefs about the U.S.Constitutionand his concern for the legacy he is leaving his children when explaining his vote to remove Trump from office was "phony." It was nothing more than cover for his own weakness and jealousy.

In order to support Trump, it is as if one has to assume that everyone is as petty, selfishand egocentric as Trump. The right wing exposes its own cynical views when conservativesdelight in accusing progressives of "virtue-signaling." When the popular social media term originated, it referred to the real and irritating practice some people have of presenting themselves as saintly in their adherence to popular moral values. It no longer has any meaning, because the righthas now bastardized it, applying it to anyone who expresses even the slightest concern for the downtrodden. The sad, Trump-like notion is that no activist, journalistor celebrity actually cares about families separated at the southern border, poor people who suffer for lack of social services, or endangered species. No one, in fact, cares about anything. They're all"virtue-signaling" to court favor with followers and customers.

Trump has taken advantage of his bully pulpit, along with his immense skills as a showman, to persuade many Americans that they should no longer even pretend to believe in values higher than profit maximization, victory against one's adversariesand the enhancement of one's social status. This is one reason many of his supporters are so rabid. He gives them comfort in the exercise of their base instincts, and offers them a reason to reject anything that might challenge them to improve.

The contenders for the Democratic nomination to the presidency disagree on the minutiae of health care policy, how bestto combat climate changeand how to manage the ongoing conflict between capital and social welfare in a large, industrial market economy. But despite thesepolicy differences none of which will matter if Republicans hold control of the Senate they do all agree, at least in articulation, on the urgency of reviving the alternative America.

Joe Biden promises to "restore the soul of America," juxtaposing his potential presidency with footage of the Charlottesville hate crimeand Trump's defense of its neo-Nazi participants. Pete Buttigieg refers to more than his relative youth when he boasts that he represents a "new generation of American leadership," and routinely recites words like "unity," "compassion" and "dignity."

Bernie Sanders, the current frontrunner, signals the alternative America most succinctly with his official campaign slogan, "Not Me. Us."

The problem is that America is a society constructed around the notion of an all-pervading self-interest, making the Democratic campaign, regardless of the candidate, more challenging than most observers would assume.

Cable news pundits, most especially the few sane Republicans who oppose Trump, often talk about how the president's policies and beliefs are "un-American." There is a major contradiction withinthat conclusion: Donald Trump is president of the United States of America. He also has ahigherapproval rating among Republicans than either of theBushes or RonaldReagan enjoyed at this stage of their respective presidencies. Before entering politics, Trump was an American icon a fixture of tabloid television who, despite his repeated business failures, was seen as a marketing genius a perception he would milk as host of the NBC program, "The Apprentice."

Democrats too often act as if it is a foregone conclusion that decency and civic-mindedness will prevail over Trump's malignant narcissism, and the antisocial ethos of power worship it represents.

The most crucial question of the 2020 race is whether or not virtue has any role left in political debate. Former New York mayor Mike Bloomberg seems to thinkit does not, and is counting on voters to overlook his record of racist policies and sexual harassment in the elevation of their own "might makes right" mentality. In this case, the might is a multibillion-dollar fortune, of whichBloomberg is willing to spend achunkblitzing the American public with undeniably effective television advertisements.

For Trump's part, he will use his power to subvert the rule of law, undermine American agencies and institutions of government, and enact his "how much money will it bring in" agenda by cutting environmental protections, health and safety standards for workers and consumers, and funding for anything that implies a common good,from libraries to student loan forgiveness programs.

Those among uswho still pledge some allegiance to the alternative America can watch in horror as we inch closer to the realization that Donald Trump, the personification of kitsch, ignoranceand barbarism, is not un-American at all. He is as American as fireworks on the Fourth of July.

Read more from the original source:

Donald Trump has poisoned American culture but the toxin was here all along - Salon

A look at the Coloradans supporting Donald Trump and why they adore the president – The Colorado Sun

COLORADO SPRINGS President Donald Trump and his reelection campaign see Colorado as a top 2020 target, dismissing polls suggesting he has a big hill to climb if he wants to reverse his 2016 fortunes in the state.

Trump lost Colorado to Democrat Hillary Clinton four years ago by 5 percentage points.

We think Colorado will go red, Kayleigh McEnany, national press secretary for the Trump campaign, said Thursday as the president held a rally in Colorado Springs. We dont believe the president is under water.

To win in Colorado, however, the Trump campaign will need all the support it can get.

The Colorado Sun spoke with Republican voters at Thursdays rally, which drew thousands to the Broadmoor World Arena in Colorado Springs, to learn about why they support the president. Heres what they said:

MORE: Cory Gardner goes all-in with Donald Trump, says the results for Colorado are simply astounding

Morgan didnt support Trump in 2016. He didnt even vote that year.

I didnt know about Trump and how I felt about him then, he said. Hes definitely grown on me.

Among the things he likes about the president? His aggressive stance toward China on trade.

Morgan showed up at the Broadmoor World Arena at 3:30 a.m. on Wednesday, more than 12 hours ahead of Trumps speech, because he was so eager to see the president. He and his friend Paul Overstreet ran into Brad Parscale, Trumps campaign manager, in the stadium as they were buying some food.

They posed for a photo with Parscale, who paid for their meal.

Lewis, who was at his first Trump rally, said he supported the president when he first ran in 2016. He thinks Trump is doing a fantastic job.

We want to show him good energy, Lewis said.

Whats his favorite thing about Trump? Its hard to say, Lewis said.

Hes done everything he said he was going to do. He takes on the deep state and keeps on fighting. Its very exciting. You can name off about 10 of them. Its not a single issue. How he does everything, he said.

Paulson wasnt going to let a broken foot stop her from attending her first Trump rally. She and her husband rented a wheelchair so that they could see the president on Thursday.

Ive always wanted to go, she said of Trumps rallies.

Paulson supported Trump in 2016 bid and plans to back him this year as well. She said initially liked him because of his business background, but her support has broadened.

I think hes done so much for the country, she said. One of the things Im surprised about is hes done more for Christians than anyone has done in a long, long time. Its really been impressive to me.

The Parks are from California and flew in for the rally. They are independents, or not affiliated with the Democratic or Republican party.

Their daughter, a U.S. Air Force Academy graduate, serves in the military.

His biggest accomplishment is continuing to produce what a good president does, despite all of the (for the) lack of a better word horse manure thats been shoveled his way, George Park said.

Geralyn Park says she appreciates Trumps commitment to the military.

Nobody wants war. Nobody wants killing, she said. But you have to be strong. And I think he understands that, thats why I like him.

Want exclusive political news and insights first? Subscribe to The Unaffiliated, the political newsletter from The Colorado Sun. Join now or upgrade your membership.

Cogburn said he likes Trump because the president does what he says hes going to do.

Unlike the last eight years, Cogburn said. Thats what were witnessing right now.

His biggest takeaway from the rally Thursday night was the enthusiasm. Cogburn said he doesnt think the GOP has seen so much excitement in years, if ever.

Cogburn was at the rally with his girlfriend, Darcy Alexander, 48, a schoolteacher and registered Democrat. She said Trump was highly entertaining and keeps your attention.

She also thinks hes been great for the economy.

Isabel Hicks and Sam Seymour are journalism students at Colorado College.

This reporting is made possible by our members. You can directly support independent watchdog journalism in Colorado for as little as $5 a month. Start here: coloradosun.com/join

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A look at the Coloradans supporting Donald Trump and why they adore the president - The Colorado Sun

‘Namaste Trump’: US president delights India with praise and tough talk on terror and trade – Sky News

Donald Trump has delighted his hosts on his visit to India by praising the country and promising to boost trade and curb terrorism.

Addressing a crowd of more than 100,000, the biggest political rally of his career, in Ahmedabad, the US president reaffirmed his commitment to India and lavished compliments on his host, Indian prime minister Narendra Modi.

Mr Trump's speech at the rally, named 'Namaste Trump' (Welcome Trump), largely consisted of a rundown of their greatest hits, as he listed Mr Modi's economic achievements and called him a "very tough" negotiator.

He was full of praise for India's spirit of innovation and entrepreneurship and won applause when he promised to help curb terrorism on the Pakistan border.

Basking in the adoration of the huge crowd at a new cricket stadium in the city, Mr Trump said: "America loves India, America respects India and America will always be faithful and loyal friends to the Indian people."

The two men are friends and Mr Trump had clearly prepared, throwing in plenty of Indian references, although his pronunciation left a little to be desired.

He called the Indian cricket great Sachin Tendulkar "soo-chin" and told the crowd Mr Modi started life as a tea-seller, or "chee-wallah", when the word is chai-wallah.

Mr Modi was similarly complimentary and said India and the US have a "far greater and closer relationship than ever before".

Hundreds of thousands of people, many wearing 'Namaste Trump' hats, lined the streets of the city to catch a glimpse of Mr Trump's motorcade as it left the airport.

The president is very popular in India, but sometimes faces demonstrations when he travels abroad, so the positive optics of being greeted like a returning hero overseas in an election year will not have been lost on him.

Earlier, Mr Modi greeted his guest with his trademark warm hug ahead of a visit aimed at cementing ties between the long-time political allies that have been damaged by arguments over trade.

At issue is Washington's demand for greater access to India's poultry and dairy markets and a loosening of India's pharmaceutical price controls.

Mr Modi's government, in turn, wants to restore the trade concessions that Mr Trump withdrew last year and greater access to US markets for its pharmaceutical and farm products.

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The conflict led to retaliatory tariffs being placed on each other's goods and officials from both countries have said talks are unlikely to make progress until after November's US presidential election.

His first stop was the former home of Mahatma Gandhi, where Mr Trump and his host placed garlands on a picture of the architect of Indian independence.

Before Air Force One landed, Mr Trump tweeted in Hindi: "We are ready to come to India, we are on our way, we will be meeting everyone in a few hours", while Mr Modi responded: "The guest is God".

From Ahmedabad, the US president heads to Agra for a sunset visit to the Taj Mahal, before a summit with Indian officials and business leaders in Delhi.

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'Namaste Trump': US president delights India with praise and tough talk on terror and trade - Sky News

Here are 5 reasons you have Donald Trump to thank if you get the coronavirus – Raw Story

The notorious coronavirus, or covid-19, is edging closer to a global pandemic, according to the Washington Post.

There are outbreaks. There are epidemics. And there arepandemics, where epidemics become rampant in multiple countries and continents simultaneously. The novelcoronavirusthat causes the disease named covid-19 is on the verge of reaching that third, globe-shaking stage.

President Donald Trump is only making it worse for Americans as the deadly diseases increase across the world. Even his campaign recognizes hes bungling the response, and theyre now recognizing that if Trump doesnt start serving as a real president, lives will be lost.

Here are the five reasons that things are going to get far worse than they needed to, all thanks to Trumps foolish decisions.

1. Bringing infected people into the U.S. against the Center for Disease Controls objections.

This week, the world learned that the Trump administration forced a plane full of healthy people to sit with 14 infected people with the coronavirus, and didnt even tell them.

It was like the worst nightmare, said one senior U.S. official who was involved with the decision. Quite frankly, the alternative could have been pulling grandma out in the pouring rain, and that would have been bad, too.

Its unknown why the U.S. didnt arrange for a private plane to transport the Americans. They have many available, including through the State Department. They could be decontaminated after the fact. The Trump administration didnt use any of the alternatives that would have made Americans safer.

2. Trump refuses to listen to science over his buddy, Xi Jinping.

Reporter Helen Branswell wrote for STAT that U.S. health officials have been signaling for weeks that a pandemic was approaching.

While stressing that the virus presents only a low risk to Americans right now, the director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, Dr. Anthony Fauci, acknowledged Tuesday that that might not remain the case for long, she wrote.

But the Washington Post revealed Trumps own advisers were concerned that hes putting too much faith in Chinese President Xi Jinping, who has diminished the seriousness of the virus.

Trump has repeatedly told advisers that pushing for a harder line against China could backfire because Xi controls the government totally and will not work with the United States if it says anything negative about the country, said one of these senior administration officials, who like others spoke on the condition of anonymity to describe the private talks, reported the Post.

3. Trump lies about the facts of the coronavirus.

President Donald Trump told the world that by April, the coronavirus would be gone. Its unknown who told him that or where he got the information, but its absolutely false.

Now, the virus that were talking about having to do you know, a lot of people think that goes away in April with the heat as the heat comes in. Typically, that will go away in April. Were in great shape, though. We have 12 cases 11 cases, and many of them are in good shape now, Trump said Feb. 10.

It makes no sense because, in the southern hemisphere, it is already summer while the northern hemisphere is dealing with a mild winter. Australia is in its summer, for example, and there are more cases than in the United States, where its winter.

The CDC director, Dr. Robert Redfield, disagreed with the presidents assessment, saying we dont know a lot about this virus. This virus is probably with us beyond this season, beyond this year, and I think eventually the virus will find a foothold, and we will get community-based transmission.

4. Trump and the GOP seriously cut public health funding.

One of the greatest allies in a disease outbreak can be public health funding. However, the budget passed in 2018 killed over $1 billion from the Prevention and Public Health Fund (PPHF).

When the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act was signed into law on December 22, 2018, it cut $750 million from the PPHF, diverting the money to cover costs of CHIP, the Childrens Health Insurance Program, The Scientist reported. CDC relies on PPHF for 12 percent of its budget, with much of that money going toward state and community programs.

The PPHF acts as the core of public health programs in the U.S., according to former director Tom Frieden. When Obamacare was passed in 2010, it financed the PPHF, but Republicans have worked to undermine the law.

It was established in 2010 and financed by the Affordable Care Act (ACA), The goal was to improve health outcomes and enhance the quality of care. The first initial investment form Obamacare was $500 million, and it grew to over $2 billion by 2015. It was supposed to be protected from Republicans eager to cut funding to anything affiliated with the Democrats healthcare law.

During the 2017-2018 government shutdown, sequestration took $69 million from the fund, PPHF was left with $931 million annually to support public health, wellness, and prevention activities, in the entire country.

In the same fiscal year, the CDC received more than $891 million from PPHF to support vaccine coverage, respond to outbreaks of foodborne infections and waterborne diseases, develop programs to counter the leading causes of death and disability, such as cancer, heart disease, stroke, and diabetes, and eliminate childhood lead poisoning, among other initiatives, the report said.

5. Trump slashed resources form the Center for Disease Control.

While the reduction in funding to the PPHF has been drastic, it doesnt mean the CDC has gone without its own budget cuts.

The Trump administration in 2018 further diverted millions of dollars from the National Institutes of Health (NIH), the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), said the Scientist.

CDCs mission is to keep Americans safe, said Frieden. But without funding, the CDC wont be able to protect us.

As the president presents his new budget for 2020, the cuts to public health and the CDC are even more drastic. Thankfully, that budget isnt likely to pass either chamber of congress.

Ultimately, as the coronavirus begins to take over the world, its not surprising that Trumps campaign is worried that the presidents bumbling response could cost him votes in November.

Trumps budget to the World Health Organization that hes proposed would leave everyone at risk. While he complains that other countries arent paying their fair share into NATO, when it comes to the WHO, Trump wants to gut the U.S. contribution. Diseases arent like wars; they dont stay contained in borders; everyone is at risk. Trumps budget proves that the president doesnt understand this important fact.

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Here are 5 reasons you have Donald Trump to thank if you get the coronavirus - Raw Story

Donald Trump Jr granted permit to hunt Alaska grizzly bear – The Guardian

Donald Trump Jr has been granted the right to hunt a grizzly bear in north-western Alaska near the Bering Sea town of Nome, a state official says.

The son of US president Donald Trump was one of three people who applied for 27 spots for non-resident hunters targeting grizzlies in a designated region of north-western Alaskas Seward Peninsula, said Eddie Grasser, the wildlife conservation director for the Alaska Department of Fish and Game.

The state conducts periodic drawings for permits to hunt bears, caribou, moose and other animals in various regions. Winners are chosen by a lottery, and there are typically many more applications than hunting tags awarded.

We get thousands of applications, Grasser said on Friday. Whether anyone won came down to pure chance, luck of the draw.

But in the case of the bear-hunt permit the presidents son won, there was little competition. Twenty-four tags for hunting bears in that region went unclaimed, Grasser said.

Winners of the states latest hunting-permit drawings were announced on Friday.

To follow through with the Nome-area bear hunt, Trump had to pay a $1,000 non-resident tag fee and buy a $160 non-resident hunting license, Grasser said.

The presidents eldest son is an avid hunter and has made several trips to hunt in Alaska and Canada. He is scheduled to go to Alaska later this year to hunt deer and ducks.

The Safari Club this month raffled off a $150,000 seven-day dream hunt expedition with Trump Jr. The raffle winner got the right to accompany the presidents son on a yacht traveling in November along coastal areas of the Tongass National Forest.

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Donald Trump Jr granted permit to hunt Alaska grizzly bear - The Guardian

Donald Trump is ending endless war | TheHill – The Hill

President TrumpDonald John TrumpSchiff blasts Trump for making 'false claims' about Russia intel: 'You've betrayed America. Again.' Poll: Sanders leads 2020 Democratic field with 28 percent, followed by Warren and Biden More than 6 in 10 expect Trump to be reelected: poll MORE promised to end the reckless foreign intervention of the United States over the past two decades, and he is keeping that promise. Reports indicate that he is closer than ever to fulfilling this by bringing a satisfactory end to the longest war in American history. After years of negotiations, the Taliban appears on the verge of signing an accord that would pave the way for a reduction of hostilities, a settlement on the future of Afghanistan, and a withdrawal of American troops.

If and when the deal is signed, about 5,000 troops will leave Afghanistan. If conditions continue to improve after that, the remaining 8,000 soldiers could eventually be brought home as well, ending an military presence of 18 years that has long since fallen off the radar of most Americans who do not have friends or loved ones in danger. As I wrote a decade ago in Operation Dark Heart, a negotiated settlement would be a necessary solution to end the Afghanistan conflict. Trump has taken the path to victory and is bringing an effective conclusion to the war.

After our country was attacked on 9/11, the United States had to retaliate against the monsters who killed more than 3,000 innocent civilians. Our superb military proved its valor and worth, enduring deployment after deployment and years of bloody conflict around the world to deliver that righteous retribution. Osama Bin Laden and his successor as the most prominent leader of Islamist terror, Abu Bakr Baghdadi, are both dead, brought to justice by the powerful might of American arms.

Nevertheless, on the campaign trail, Trump struck a chord with Americans by promising to avoid endless wars, which is exactly what our involvement in Afghanistan had become over the years. By the 2016 election, however, Americans finally came to recognize an ugly truth that the global war on terror had long since transformed into an open commitment of American troops to hostile war zones with no obvious conditions for victory.

Nowhere has this been more clear than in Afghanistan. Our presence there is now officially older than some of the American soldiers fighting there. Our troops were originally tasked with rooting out those people responsible for 9/11 and establishing a legitimate government in Kabul, but today their mission and the definition of victory are unclear.

For far too many years, Americans have fought and died to create the conditions for peace to flourish and for the democratic government in Kabul to establish its own legitimate authority. Just last week, two more American families joined the roughly 2,400 others who have received the tragic news that their loved one will never leave Afghanistan.

But the war in Afghanistan is no longer crucial to the core of our national security, leaving our troops with no obvious mission. Our Afghan partners need our support, but the exact conditions that would constitute a victory are unclear. Even if we had clear victory conditions, we do not even have accurate metrics to judge whether we have achieved them.

Given these realities, Trump and his advisers have now charted the best possible path forward. We have to set a clear and easily verified condition of a reduction in violence and aggression from the Taliban. American troops and negotiators meeting with Taliban and Afghan government representatives in Qatar appear to be on the cusp of achieving that.

Trump gave a lot of American families a great deal of renewed hope when he promised to stop the endless wars that have taken so many American lives over the past two decades. By fulfilling that promise, he is finally turning that hope into gratitude and relief across the country.

Tony Shaffer is a retired senior intelligence operations officer who served with the United States Army. He is now the president of the London Center for Policy Research and an adviser to the 2020 campaign of Donald Trump.

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Will Donald Trump Serve Wendy’s, McDonald’s, and Burger King to the Super Bowl Winners, the Kansas City Chiefs? – Showbiz Cheat Sheet

Love it or hate it, fast food is an American tradition and custom. When Clemson won the national championship in football, thats exactly what they were served at the White House and it has some football fans wondering will President Donald Trump serve Wendys, McDonalds, and Burger King to the Super Bowl winners, the Kansas City Chiefs?

Heres what we know about this football team and their impending trip to the White House.

It was a meal of champions, to say to least. When the Clemson football team arrived at the White House to celebrate their 2018 victory, they were greeted by piles of Wendys, McDonalds, and Burger King. White House press secretary, Sarah Sanders, said Trump was personally paying for the event to be catered.

I think we are going to serve McDonalds, Wendys and Burger Kings with some pizza. I really mean it, Trump had said earlier in the day. It will be interesting. I would think thats their favorite food. So well see what happens.

This wasnt entirely a choice made by President Trump. The team visited the White House during the partial government shutdown, meaning that most of the staff that handed catering were on furlough.

We have Big Macs, we have Quarter Pounders with cheese. We have everything that I like, that you like, Trump continued, according to an article from The Washington Post. And I know no matter what we did, theres nothing you could have thats better than that, right?

As the winners of the most recent Super Bowl Championship, some football fans are wondering whether or not the Kansas City Chiefs got the invitation to the White House. Despite a tweet with an error from President Trump, the team has been invited and is expected to give a reply within the coming weeks.

By the way, your Super Bowl champions are coming, I think next week, Trump said, according to Chiefs Wire. Soon. Very soon. And every one of them wants to be here. And the coach loves us. The coach is great. Andy Reid.

Andy Reid responded to the invitation at the postgame press conference, saying, I mean, Ill be there. Ill be there. If theyre inviting us, Ill be there. Its quite an honor, I think.

President Donald Trump served fast food as a result of the partial government shutdown. Its pretty safe to say he wouldnt repeat this with the Kansas City Chiefs if they were to make an appearance.

However, President Trump has since canceled some teams visit to the White House, in lieu of controversy and comments from players. That includes the 2018 Super Bowl winners, the Philadelphia Eagles. The 2017 NBA championship winners, the Golden State Warriors, declined their invitation from the President.

The Kansas City Chiefs have yet to make an official statement regarding if, or when, they will visit the White House.

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Ex-Fox News Reporter Nails What Donald Trump Is Really Doing To The Swamp – HuffPost

Donald Trumps recent clemency blitzcame under fire Wednesday from former Fox News reporterCarl Cameron, who said it proved the president wasnt fulfilling his promise to drain the swamp of corruption in Washington.

Cameron, in an interview with CNNs Brianna Keilar, noted how hollow Trumps 2016 campaign vow now sounded, following his pardons and sentence commutations this week for individuals who have done damage to the American public.

So, theyre swamp monsters, right? asked Keilar, of some of the people that Trump granted clemency to, including former New York Police Commissioner Bernard Kerik and former Illinois Gov. Rod Blagojevich.

Yeah, replied Cameron Hes not draining it, hes deepening it.

Elsewhere in the segment, Cameron analyzed the link between those who had been pardoned and how their appeals to Trump were previously reported by Fox News, the widely watched conservative network he left in 2017.

It could be a two-way street, he explained. These may be people that Trump had seen on the list and decided he wanted them publicized on Fox News, and it may have been people who went to Fox News in order to use the venue in order to get to the president.

As you saw, the president himself said, I saw it on the news, I saw it on television, and it was, of course, a Fox News interview that that happened, Cameron added.

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Chris Pratt Shares the ‘Crazy’ Story of a Couple Found Completely Preserved in Ice – Pajiba

While Chris Pratt will always be the least best Chris in Hollywood, he did recently have quite the story to tell. While in Iceland shooting his latest film, The Tomorrow War, Pratt heard the story of a long-dead couple who were found completely preserved in ice. How fascinating, but also kind of creepy.

We shot on a glacier that has never before been shot on, he said during his appearance on The Ellen DeGeneres Show. Heres the full story, as Pratt tells it:

The story is admittedly tragic and heartbreaking, but also strangely cool. Sci-fi/fantasy films have often toyed with the idea of cryonics, the act of freezing someone at extremely low temperatures in hopes to preserve their remains and resurrect them. And yes, this story does indeed sound like the plot of Pratts movie Passengers, which also starred Jennifer Lawrence. It wasnt exactly well-received, though, but alas.

Pratt is currently on a press tour to promote Disney and Pixars animated film, Onward, which Ive heard good things about, though its arguably no Coco. As for The Tomorrow War, the film, which is set in the future and involves the military fighting an alien invasion, wont arrive in theaters until December 25, 2020. Hopefully, Pratt wont have anymore frozen people stories to tell in the meantime.

Watch Pratt tell the whole story to Ellen DeGeneres below!

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A Play About Slavery in a New York Prison – The Intercept

A group of families and New York state officials gathered on a workday morning last month for a theatrical performance of a historical drama about slavery and human freedom. But it was an unusual setting for a play, especially for one pondering the question of liberation, because the stage was deep inside a maximum-security prison, and the actors were a group of incarcerated men, many of whom still face decades behind bars.

At the end of the play, the two-dozen cast members lined up at the front of the stage as one actor after the other removed their costumes: a simple, white T-shirt with the word slave or the characters slave name written across the chest. Below the stage, in the first row, a group of suited senior corrections officials looked on uncomfortably.

Then the audience, officials included, broke into a standing ovation. The cast, someone announced, would be allowed offstage for a few minutes to greet their families, and for a brief, chaotic moment, the actors rushed into the auditorium to tearfully hug their mothers, wives, and children as a group of guards stood close by watching. Then the men grouped back on stage to be counted, searched, and escorted back to their cells.

The performance was the second and last staging of a play Father Comes Home From the Wars by Suzan-Lori Parks by a group of men incarcerated at the Green Haven prison in Stormville, New York. The production was the culmination of a monthslong program with Rehabilitation Through the Arts, or RTA, an initiative that for more than two decades has offered arts programs to hundreds of people incarcerated in prisons across the state. A day earlier, the cast had performed before an enthusiastic audience of 350 fellow incarcerated men. Now, for the first time ever, officials at Green Haven had opened the prisons gates to families and outside visitors.

For the duration of the two-hour play, a tragic if at times absurdist drama set in a slave cabin and on a Civil War battlefield, cast and audience seemed to forget they were deep inside several perimeters of walls and heavily secured gates. I felt like I was at home, watching a TV show, the sister of one of the actors told me.

Scenes from Father Comes Home From the Wars at Green Haven prison in Stormville, N.Y.

Photos: Miranda Barnes for The Intercept

There were reminders, of course: The radios of a handful of guards standing along the auditoriums walls crackled in the background as the play unfolded on stage. And Anthony Annucci, the acting commissioner of the New York State Department of Corrections and Community Supervision, introduced the performance by joking to the audience to silence their cellphones a reminder that visitors had left all belongings behind and gone through a meticulous security screening before being allowed into the auditorium. The play started late because some family members had been held up at security. Other obstacles to doing theater in prison were playfully incorporated into the performance itself: Instead of a prop gun, an actor brandished a cardboard cutout spelling out the word gun. And because gray and navywere not only the colors of the Confederate and Union armies, but also those of New York corrections staff uniforms, actors playing soldiers on both sides of the conflict instead wore tan jackets, with Confederate Gray Army Coat and Union Blue Army Coat written on them.

But if staging a theatrical production in a maximum-security prison poses countless logistical challenges, doing so with a cutting play about slavery set in the midst of the Civil War, butdeeply echoing the present reality of mass incarceration, pushes boundaries in untested ways. We ask for a lot of out-of-the-box thinking for a production inside a maximum-security prison, Katherine Vockins, RTAs founder and executive director, told the audience before the play.

I cannot underscore how difficult it is to do a show like this in this kind of environment, echoed Paul Fitzgerald, the plays director. [This play] brings up a lot of issues about the American story.

Prison officials had reviewed and approved the script before production started; some of the plays most controversial scenes had been cut preemptively by RTA staff because of fears they might have riled up the population in a certain way, said Quanel Miller, one of the actors. Were limited here.

You kind of have to imagine what might be inflammatory or complicated in a way thats just too much to take on and anticipate, and make those cuts accordingly, Fitzgerald told me. You just try to feel how uncomfortable can this get, how much can you push the envelope to create meaningful art, to create dialogue, to bring up issues without going too far given the environment.

Despite the cuts, the performance was provocative and often uncomfortable. And while every line had been cleared ahead of time, there is a difference between reading stage directions in a script and watching two-dozen men, many imprisoned for decades, remove their slave uniforms and stomp on a stage declaring themselves free.

Father Comes Home From the Wars is a difficult play under any circumstances. The drama traces the story of Hero, an enslaved man whose master promises him freedom in exchange for his service in the Civil War on the wrong side of the war, as Heros close friend Homer reminds him early on. The play opens with Hero debating his choice, and Homer arguing that it is in fact no choice at all, that both options are two sides of the same coin and the coin aint even in your pocket.

Youre waiting for him to give you freedom, Homer tells Hero, when you should take it.

Homer himself tried that by running away. When he was caught, the master forced Hero at gunpoint to cut off his friends foot as punishment. But as the play progresses, the audience learns that Hero had actually snitched on Homer to the master, in exchange for yet another promise of freedom that was never fulfilled.

Take your freedom is a line that resonates with me, Lenox Ramsay, who played Homer, told me when I visited the cast during rehearsals. Ramsay, who is 30 years old and 11 years into a 17-year sentence, moved from prison to prison as he struggled to come to terms with his sentence, until four years ago when he landed at Green Havenandstarted taking college classes and discovered a passion for acting through RTA. Things changed for me here, he told me. You have to make your freedom, you cant let the time build up on you. We have this saying in prison, Do the time, dont let the time do you.

The play, which the cast members themselves selected, resonated with a lot of us, Ramsay added. In many ways, the parallels were obvious, and every line seemed to carry a double meaning when spoken in the prison context. When Im on that stage, Im not acting. I really want to get away from there because I really want to get away from here, said Melvin Davis, a 29-year-old who plays a runaway slave and is serving a 20-year sentence. When youre incarcerated, its like youre back on the plantation.

But the parallels are far more complex, and if the connection between slavery and incarceration was never explicit in the performance, it was nonetheless an unspoken theme throughout.

Mass incarceration started soon after slavery ended, with vagrancy laws, said Malcolm Baptiste, adding that he kept in his cell a copy of Michelle Alexanders groundbreaking book The New Jim Crow, which traces a direct line from slaveryto the contemporary prison system. In the 80s and 90s, when I was a child, people in our community spoke about how mass incarceration was all part of the plan of those that control society.

There is also a parallel between slavery and prison labor, Baptiste added. We dont get a fair wage, he said. No sick days, no vacation days.

At age 42, and 24 years into a 50-to-life prison sentence, Baptiste works 30 hours a week as an assistant teacher and clerk at the prison. He makes 25 cents an hour or $7.50 per week. At the prisons commissary, he said, a box of Tide laundry detergent costs $5.50, almost a weeks pay. Email messages to family cost 33 cents per message and additional 33 cents for each attachment. Its capitalism, he added. Colonizers went to Africa, captured people, brought them to America and other countries, and sold them. Today we have police targeting communities that are underserved, that are undereducated, underfunded, where there are no jobs.

Other prisoners saw a connection between the plays only white character a Confederate colonel and the mostly white guards at the prison. One of the plays most excruciating scenes, the reenactment of a slave auction, was painfully reminiscent of the searches that incarcerated men regularly face. This is a complicated play, it brings back feelings, said Lamel Fabers, who played a runaway slave. You cant think just because Im in prison, Im an animal.

They still oppress us, said Ernest Iverson, the plays narrator.

When I asked him whether he thought prison staff watching the play may see a similar connection, he replied, Theyre not stupid. Theyll see the connection.

If any of the corrections officials felt called out by the performance, it didnt show. Everyone I have spoken to thought it was a very good performance, said Marlyn Kopp, the deputy superintendent for programs at Green Haven. It was a hard topic, and they handled it fantastically, honestly.

There are very talented people here, theres no doubt about it, a guard assigned to monitor one of the rehearsals told me. It was amazing. I asked him if the play resonated in a particular way, given the prison context. They have a connection to it, he replied, referring to the cast. Did guards feel a similar connection? I dont look at things this way, he replied. Then, speaking of his job, Nobody aspires to do this.

But not all the guards were interested in the talent of the performers. One told me that he thought it was preposterous that inmates would be offered this kind of opportunity. We dont like them very much, theyre friends with the guys that assault my friends, the guard said of the volunteers coming in to teach arts workshops. In a way, theyre the enemy.

Ive heard negative feedback like, Why would anyone offer these people anything and why arent you out working with the families of the victims? said Margaret Ables, who produced the play and has worked with RTA for five years. I understand that criticism, but the positive outcomes that weve seen from our membership just really convince me that this program is doing the right thing.

Kopp, the deputy superintendent, said negative views among the prison staff were rare. Am I going to have one or two staff members not feel the same as the rest, as you have heard? The majority are the opposite, she said. I dont have a lot of backlash. If the majority felt that way, I wouldnt be able to get this kind of production off the ground.

In fact, the production was a massive effort, logistically, for the cast and prison staff alike. Rehearsals had to be scheduled around periodic counts for which the cast had to be back in their cells. Because of restrictions on the movement of those incarcerated, someone was always missing. Every prop and costume had to be preapproved, inspected, and accounted for at all times. And when outside volunteers could not be at the prison, a committee of incarcerated men ran their own rehearsals.

On the day of the performance, guards escorted families deep into the bowel of the prison, as someone put it, beyond the visitation room relatives normally see, down seemingly endless, cold corridors along the prisons yards, and past metal doors leading to housing blocks where three rows of cells sit one on top of the other. It was the closest look at life inside that most outsiders had ever had.

I got a little feel of what its like, and honestly, that part was horrible for me, said Gina Davis, Melvin Daviss younger sister, after the performance. Its horrible; I dont want him to be there.

I just want all of these men to come home, she added. Hopefully this time that they spent in there, they learned their lesson, and hopefully they come home and be better people, because honestly everyone deserves a second chance and people shouldnt spend their entire lives behind bars. No one really deserves to be in there.

The performance, rehearsals, and weekly classes RTA runs inside the prison offer a rare moment of escape for the programs participants. Volunteers and staff with the program run dance, writing, visual arts, public speaking, and improvisation workshops, among other offerings. And while Green Haven also offers more traditional educational and vocational programming, RTA allows for the inmates to grow in a totally different way than a sit-down type of program, said Kopp, the deputy superintendent.

Most importantly, the program offers participants an opportunity to build deep relationships that the daily reality of life in prison often precludes. Being in prison teaches you to close yourself off from trusting people, said Melvin Davis. Theater demands the opposite. For the six months leading up to the performance, Davis rehearsed the part of Penny, the only female character in the play, as a professional actress was only allowed to join the crew for the last two weeks of rehearsals. That was a real challenge for me, playing a female in a maximum-security prison, said Davis, noting that he couldnt have done it without the support of the rest of the cast. Youre not in prison when youre with RTA; its like family.

Kevin Cocozello, the only white actor in the cast, had an equally challenging role: that of the ruthless, manic master and Confederate colonel. The character was so racist and violent that the actor originally assigned to play the part refused to do it. Its a really tough and ugly role for anybody, because the words and the actions of that character are so upsetting, said Ables, the producer. But even more so in an incarcerated space, where theyre very resonant.

Cocozello said the roles complexity should be every actors dream. But as an incarcerated man, 10 years into a 23-year sentence, he identified more with Hero. Like him, I feel like theres a part of my soul that is cut in two.

After the play, cast members were allowed off stage to briefly greet relatives and friends.

Photo: Miranda Barnes for The Intercept

That was a sentiment many expressed and they credited the exposure to theater for helping them come to terms with it.

RTA helped me bring down the mask I had put up in prison, said Hector Rodriguez, who has spent 25 of his 45 years in prison and is a veteran of the program. In prison, you have to be this stoic character so you can survive. This helped me find myself. I still wear a mask, but now I know its not me, and sometimes theres no need to wear it.

Portraits by Miranda Barnes for The Intercept

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A Play About Slavery in a New York Prison - The Intercept