LA Kings: Defensive injuries progress is best news for team – Rink Royalty

Ask just about anyone what the issues are with the LA Kings right now, and the first thing out of their mouth will be something regarding issues along the blue line. January 28 seemed to be a doomsday, of sorts, for this club when Andreas Athanasiou and Blake Lizotte landed on the NHLs COVID protocol list before and after the two-game series finale against the Minnesota Wild, respectively.

During the game, the LA Kings lost both Matt Roy on a boarding penalty and Sean Walker on a slapshot to the face. Todd McLellans group has yet to get in the win column in February, and while holding late leads is another topic entirely, getting the regulars back along the blue line will go a long way toward righting the ship.

And it sounds like that day is vastly approaching.

He [Roy] was wearing a non-contact jersey, but there was still some gentle battles if you want to call them that, that he got involved in body positioning and stuff like that, McLellan said after practice on Wednesday. So [I] talked to him after. He was excited and happy to be out there with his teammates. I think thats sparked a little life in us as a team right now. And we can always use that. So all indications are that hes going to keep working and get through it. The cancellation of the game against Minnesota is going to help our team get healthier. And hopefully, by next week, we have some healthy bodies to inject into the lineup.

Roy isnt a flashy player. The definition for Matt Roy is consistency. The analytics support that, as Evolving Hockey has him ranked among the best defensemen in the league in terms of Goals-Above-Replacement (GAR). Itll be interesting to see when Roy returns to the lineup if the Kings elect to pair Mikey Anderson with him again, as the duo accounted for a 50 xGF% in an eight-game sample size.

Of course, Sean Walker is the other player missing from the lineup right now, and it appears hes close to skating again, which is great news considering he needed surgery on his nose.

Hes [in] great spirits doing really well, McLellan said of Walker. Training off the ice. Theres a good chance well see him skate either on his own or with the group here in the next day or two.

The Kings looked like they were about to hit the trifecta in terms of right-shot defensemen lost to injury when Drew Doughty took a slapshot off his forearm. The former Norris Trophy winner left the ice under his power but never returned in Tuesdays game against the Sharks, and his presence was sorely missed in the closing seconds of regulation with the LA Kings clinging to a 3-2 lead.

I know for me, its a maintenance day and he [Drew] doesnt miss many games, McLellan explained. I think that Im going to have his number up on the board tomorrow and hes going to be ready to play. So Im not necessarily big relief. Its probably what I expected. And well be excited about getting them back.

Crisis averted for now, but it would appear that only Doughty will return to the lineup on Thursday in the series finale against the San Jose Sharks. The Kings have to find a way to start games faster, as they have found themselves trailing in the first period in all but two games. Im not sure if playoffs are still a realistic expectation I suppose anything is possible if the Kings get hot but youd like to see the rebuild start trending in the right direction.

Were 12 games through the 2021 regular season, and it feels like the Kings have regressed some from the end of last season. Yes, injuries and COVID has played a role. And yes, Kurtis MacDermid shouldnt be playing second-pairing minutes. But the offense, outside of the teams first line, just hasnt been consistent.

I saw some positives from Jaret Anderson-Dolan in the last three games, and moving Gabe Vilardi up to the second line center to play with Jeff Carter was a great move. Lets see if the LA Kings can come out a little better against San Jose on Thursday night, play a complete 60-minutes, and hopefully notch their first win in February.

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LA Kings: Defensive injuries progress is best news for team - Rink Royalty

Four buildings up, more to come: Bellport complex making progress on Atlantic Avenue – Long Island Advance

NORTH BELLPORT

Four buildings at The Gleneagle Green at Bellport site are already up.

ADV/Leuzzi

PostedWednesday, February 10, 2021 6:18 pm

Linda Leuzzi

Four buildings in various stages of completion are up right now in the Gleneagle Green at Bellport complex, good progress for the $30 million Atlantic Avenue construction; nine buildings in total are planned for the affordable housing project.

A bustle of activity at the site was witnessed last Friday.

I drive past once a week to see the progress and its going up pretty quickly, said Greater Bellport Coalition chair John Rogers.

Were working to get a few more local people employed. Ben Harper, the Community Based Initiative Program coordinator for the Economic Opportunity Council of Suffolk Inc., just started having weekly meetings with [developer and D & F Development Group LLC principal] Peter Fleury to help promote employment of local people during the construction.

Fleury confirmed he was meeting with Harper; there were about six on the job from Bellport.

They were referred to us by the Bellport Hagerman East Patchogue Alliance or from pastors in the area, he said. We just brought on a couple more and are always looking for a good fit. In addition to labor jobs, weve also found skilled trade, and the contrac- tors have been able to hire them whether its carpentry, electrical or other skills. Were actively looking to hire as many as we are able to have a good fit.

Fleury said the structured playground area, landscaping and sitting areas are still on the table for the 7-acre site; it would be gated. Seventy units are planned with a community center. The project is under Bellport Residences LLC; LPD Management, under D & F Development Group, will manage the property.

The coronavirus hasnt really put a dent in Fleurys schedule. Were continuing to work, and thankfully, havent had much of an issue, he said. A lot of whats involved is done outdoors.

The project broke ground last May. Fleury had initially projected a completion date of May 2022.

"Well see if we can do that earlier, he said. If we can, maybe February or March 2022. The May date is the outside one.

In the meantime, Rogers said Greater Bellport Coalitions goal is help people who want to apply for the apartments so theyre ready from a financial perspective.

According to coalition member Nancy Marr, who works on economic empowerment, Weve asked Long Island Housing Partnership to run workshops or one-on-ones for people who want to apply and want to improve their credit. We asked them to develop a program.

A lot of people are going to the Bellport Hagerman East Patchogue Alliance, asking When can we get our name on the list? So we need to formalize that," she said.

People are inquiring, said executive director of BHEP Fred Combs, who is working with Fleury. But right now, were closed for any workshops or one-on-one counseling, he said, due to COVID. Hopefully, well be doing workshops again in July. But they can call us.

BHEP can be reached at 631-286-9236.

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Four buildings up, more to come: Bellport complex making progress on Atlantic Avenue - Long Island Advance

Gov. Mike DeWine on Ohio’s COVID-19 vaccine progress: ‘We hope to be vaccinating everyone by this summer’ – WKYC.com

"We're optimistic we're going to be able to reach everybody. But we have to take this thing one step at a time."

CEDARVILLE, Ohio During a Thursday appearance on NBCs Today Show, Dr. Anthony Fauci, who serves as science adviser to President Joe Biden, provided some optimism about the COVID-19 vaccination process.

Fauci said by the time we get to April, it will be open season, namely virtually everybody and anybody in any category could start to get vaccinated. He cautioned it will take several more months to logistically deliver injections to adult Americans but predicted herd immunity could be achieved by late summer.

Ohio Gov. Mike DeWine mirrored many of those sentiments during his COVID-19 press briefing on Thursday afternoon.

"We hope to be vaccinating everyone by this summer," the governor said. "I don't know what date this thing will pop open, but I'm optimistic. Pfizer will continue to expand some, Moderna will expand some."

DeWine added that he had also spoken this week to representatives from Johnson & Johnson, who are trying to get their single-shot vaccine approved through an Emergency Use Authorization with the FDA.

"I got some pretty good news from them and feel pretty confident that that's going to get approved," DeWine said of Johnson & Johnson's vaccine. "Once it's approved, they told us they're ready to ship. We're optimistic we're going to be able to reach everybody. But we have to take this thing one step at a time."

This week, DeWine said the state is receiving 214,525 first doses of the vaccine. That number will increase to 223,025 first doses next week. In addition, doses will be coming to more than 160 Rite Aid stores in the state and expand to all 194 Kroger stores in Ohio.

Meanwhile, the Center for Disease Control and Prevention reports that more than 10.4 million Americans have already received both COVID-19 vaccinations.

The Associated Press and Erin McHugh contributed to this story

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Gov. Mike DeWine on Ohio's COVID-19 vaccine progress: 'We hope to be vaccinating everyone by this summer' - WKYC.com

Mr. Johnny will always be special to our heart – Northeast Mississippi Daily Journal

Mr. Johnny Coleman became mayor of Thaxton the same year I came to the Pontotoc Progress as a writer and photographer, 1989.

But he was instrumental in helping the town get re-incorporated in 1973 and served as an alderman until he took up his mayors stint.

I have had the privilege over these years of basking in his smile and enjoying his laughter as well as observing a few tears.

When we helped pack boxes for the National Guard that was deployed to Iraq, he faithfully came every Wednesday morning and took the boxes to the post office. During spring break, my Jon Lee was there and Mr. Johnny took Jon under his wing that day and said he could spend time with him; and that included Mr. Johnny taking him lunch at the Westtown Restaurant afterward.

When we were eating supper that night, Jonathan started laughing as we recounted the day. After lunch Mr. Johnny pulled out his Red Man tobacco and offered me a pinch, he said. Over the years we have shared that memory and laughed again.

I was there when he and Martha Jo grieved the loss of their only son Jonathan, and turned to little Jarrod for consolation in that unspeakable grief.

One of the last times I saw Mr. Johnny was at the Veterans wall dedication service in Thaxton. He was over there in his van, tears running down his cheeks at all that was accomplished. There were many who went over and shook his hand and spoke kindly to this great man who had given so much to his little town.

Martha Jo could not have asked a better person than Mr. Gene Red Turner to share memories of her beloved Johnny.

I loved old Johnny, Mr. Turner said. When I heard the news I called my son Mitchell and said we had been friends for 51 years. He said that he has been friends with Johnny his whole life. Laughter rippled over the room.

Turner said when he told his daughter the news she recalled hanging out at the store with him with her friend and we gave him fits.

Turner said that Johnny loved the people of Thaxton and has served them well. And then he talked about the personable side of this gentle giant of a fella.

He loved to deer hunt, but he couldnt hit the broad side of this house. One day we were out there listening to the sweet music of the dogs and a deer jumped out and just stood there. Johnny shot it six times and didnt hit it once. The deer ran off in the woods and he shot down behind it and killed it. The room broke out in laughter. Thats the only deer that I know of that he has killed.

Turner said Johnny was a writer. He wrote the history of Thaxton and his own family history. I read the history of Thaxton. I failed college English four times, and in the mean time I learned how to check for mistakes. He didnt make a mistake. Chuckles rippled across the room.

He spoke of Mr. Johnnys kindness, compassion and willingness to help no matter what the situation.

When fire broke out, he rushed to get the truck and put it out. If you fell in your house he was there to help pick you up, and in that he set a precedent because those who followed behind are doing the same thing.

Turner said Johnny gave us many happy moments. Jarrod and Martha Jo you can only imagine how much he loved you. But right now I can see Johnny hugging on Jonathan and squeezing on him and enjoying the moment.

When Jon and I went to the interment, we spent some time across the street in front of the town hall where Mr. Johnny served so faithfully all these years.

He cast a wistful eye and said, I can remember sitting there one Christmas parade night and singing Christmas carols with him, and smiled thoughtfully.

I thought how neat it was that a man of Mr. Johnnys age had reached across the generations and touched the hearts of not only those who were around his age, but the youngsters coming up who will forever remember that jovial giant of a man that kept Thaxton running.

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Mr. Johnny will always be special to our heart - Northeast Mississippi Daily Journal

US and Japan are ‘making progress’ on military support agreement, State Department says – Stars and Stripes

TOKYO Negotiators are making headway but have yet to clinch a deal over Japanese support for approximately 54,000 American troops in the country, according to the State Department.

We continue Host Nation Support negotiations with Japan and are making progress, but there is no agreement yet, a department spokesman at the U.S. Embassy in Tokyo said Thursday in an email to Stars and Stripes. The spokesman asked not to be named because negotiations are being led by the State Department in Washington, D.C.

The allies have agreed to extend the current deal on Japanese support for U.S. troops in the country, which expires next month, according to a Kyodo news agency report earlier Thursday.

Under the agreement, Japan would pay roughly $1.91 billion toward the cost of utilities, labor and training for American military personnel during the 2021 fiscal year, around the same level as the previous year, Kyodo reported.

Cost-sharing talks will resume in April, the report said.

Japanese Foreign Minister Toshimitsu Motegi discussed host nation support with newly confirmed Secretary of State Antony Blinken by phone Jan. 27, according to a Japanese government statement that day.

The pair discussed that we would like to accelerate discussions to be able to swiftly achieve an agreement, Motegi said in the statement.

Former President Donald Trumps efforts to induce Japan to pay more for its defense werent appreciated by Japanese people, Jeff Kingston, director of Asian studies at Temple Universitys Tokyo campus, said July 19.

Trump had demanded Japan pay $8 billion a year for hosting U.S. troops in the country, former national security adviser John Bolton wrote in his memoir, The Room Where It Happened, published in June.

Reports of progress in negotiations are good news for bilateral ties, Kingston said Thursday.

Trump's plans to quadruple the amount were damaging and exorbitant and seemed to be taking advantage of [Japans] vulnerabilities, he said.

Stars and Stripes reporter Hana Kusumoto contributed to this report.

robson.seth@stripes.comTwitter: @SethRobson1

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US and Japan are 'making progress' on military support agreement, State Department says - Stars and Stripes

Long Beach exceeds 50K cases of COVID-19 as vaccinations progress – Long Beach Post

Long Beach has now given roughly 60,000 doses of the COVID-19 vaccine to residents who qualify, and officials on Thursday implored residents to sign up when its their turn and be patient with the process.

Eligible groups include seniors over 65, health care workers, nursing residents and workers, teachers, faculty, school staff and grocery workers.

The city this week is focusing on giving second doses to those who received their first dose weeks ago. Officials said everyone who received a first dose will be notified when its time for a second.

Your name or your family members name will be called as long as youre in the system, Mayor Robert Garcia said, referring to the citys VaxLB portal.

Meanwhile, the city is working to reach Spanish-speaking residents who qualify, along with members of the Cambodian and Black communities who may be leery of the vaccine or unsure how to get it.

Officials on Thursday reported another 15 people died of COVID-19 for a total of 754 since the start of the pandemic. Case rates, however, continue to plummet; the city reported another 80 confirmed cases, which pushed the total since March to 50,072.

The pandemic is not over, the mayor said Thursday at a media briefing. We still have a lot of work ahead.

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Long Beach exceeds 50K cases of COVID-19 as vaccinations progress - Long Beach Post

Red Sox Making Progress On Deal With Hirokazu Sawamura – MLB Trade Rumors

FEB. 10: The Red Sox appear on the cusp of a deal with Sawamura, writes Alex Speier of the Boston Globe. Sankei Sports reports it will be a two-year, $2.4MM deal with additional incentives available, according to Speier.

FEB. 7: The Red Sox are making progress on a deal with relieverHirokazu Sawamura, reports Chris Cotillo of MassLive.com (Twitter link). If finalized, its expected to be a major league contract, per Cotillo. Sawamura is an unrestricted free agent, so the Sox would not owe any compensation to his previous Nippon Professional Baseball team, the Chiba Lotte Marines.

The 32-year-old (33 in April) has pitched to a 2.77 ERA with decent strikeout (22.0%) and walk (7.3%) rates in nine seasons at Japans highest level. Sawamura had a difficult start to the 2020 season with the Yomiuri Giants, pitching to a 6.08 ERA while striking out eleven and issuing eight walks in 13.2 innings. After the Giants traded him to the Marines midseason, though, Sawamura turned his fortunes around. Over 21 innings for the Marines down the stretch, the right-hander worked to a 1.71 ERA with a much better 29:10 strikeout-to-walk ratio.

Last years early struggles were surely a red flag for some big league teams, but Sawamuras post-trade rebound, his track record, and MLB-caliber arsenal have all seemingly worked in his favor as hes talked with MLB teams this winter. Sawamura has a fastball that can reach 97 mph, a low-90s splitter that functions as his primary out pitch, and a slider.

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Red Sox Making Progress On Deal With Hirokazu Sawamura - MLB Trade Rumors

New data shines light on student achievement progress and gaps in California and US – EdSource

Alison Yin/EdSource

Researchers looked at combined, averaged reading and math scores from more than 57 million students.

Researchers looked at combined, averaged reading and math scores from more than 57 million students.

New education data released today by researchers at Stanford University shows a complex, nuanced and in some places, troubling picture of student achievement and racial gaps based on standardized test scores across California and the nation.

In California, average math and reading test scores rose for all student groups except Black students over the past decade, while gaps in test scores among most student groups remained steady or narrowed. The exception was the gap between Black and white students, which widened.

Approximately 55% of Californias 6.1 million public school students are Latino, 22% are white, 9.3% are Asian and 5.3% are Black. The data was compiled by Stanfords Educational Opportunity Project, headed by Sean Reardon, a professor at Stanfords Graduate School of Education. The project has updated its database with millions of new test scores, demographic information and other data from 57 million students nationwide.

The researchers combined reading and math test results on standardized tests students took in the third through eighth grade in math and English language arts. In California, as in some other states, each spring students take the Smarter Balanced assessments aligned with the Common Core standards.

But because statesuse different tests with different scales and set their proficiency thresholds at different levels, researchers used scores on theNational Assessment of Educational Progress, which a sample of students take in every state, in order to essentially put student scores on the same scale, allowing comparisons to be made among districts and states.

Combined with previously collected data, the project now has more than 10 years worth of information showing long-term trends among student groups, schools, districts, counties and states.

Reardon emphasized the importance of examining trends in individual districts. There is an enormous amount of variation among districts in the rate at which test scores are changing, even though there is very little change nationally over the 10-year period, he said. Scores are increasing the most in districts with, among other factors, students from high-level or increasingly high-level socioeconomic backgrounds, increasing charter school enrollments, increasing per-pupil expenditures and a high or increasing proportion of experienced teachers.

A similar picture applies to academic achievement gaps, referring to the difference in test scores among different student groups. The gap has narrowed most in districts with some of the same factors associated with increasing test scores, including less socioeconomic inequality among students, more spending per pupil by the district and fewer disparities in access to experienced teachers.

To provide a more detailed picture of student achievement, researchers broke the data into three categories: test scores; learning rates, which show students improvement from year to year; and long-term trends. Information is available about achievement by racial and ethnic groups and gender, as well as those who qualify for free or reduced-price meals, and those who do not.

The data, developed through complicated statistical techniques, is presented through a color-coded, interactive map as well as charts that can be customized based on various categories. Its main purpose is to provide information on how every school district in the nation is doing.

The kind of data that education systems usually use is so fragmented and compartmentalized and siloed its hard to know how similar or different one place is from other places, Reardon said. We hope that this provides a context for those similarities and differences.

Reardon described the information on every district in the U.S. as a data backbone that can help parents, policymakers, school board members, researchers and others gain a more complete picture of the education landscape.

Compared to other states, California ranks around the middle in most categories. Its ahead of most other states in improvements in test scores among white and Latino students, but is lagging in thescores of Black students.

Referring to Latino students, he said, certainly its positive theyre making as much progress over time. But he pointed out that while the academic achievement gap between Latino and white students isnt getting any bigger, the gap is not getting smaller either.

Los Angeles Unified showed a steady increase in Latino students test scores over the past decade, mirroring improvements among white and Asian students. Black students test scoreslagged, however. Similarly, San Francisco Unified saw gainsin test scoresamong white, Asian and Latino students, but a decline among Black students.

The researchers looked at the 41 largest school districts in the U.S., and the Black-white academic achievement gap. In 14 districts the gap was narrowing. Thats not the case in the three California districts on the list of largest districts. The researchers project that at current rates (as measured through 2018) the Black-white academic achievement gap in San Diego Unified would double by 2026. In Long Beach Unified it would double by 2031, and in Los Angeles Unified it would take much longer, until 2094.

Although statewide, low-income students did not perform as well as their higher-income peers, there were some exceptions. In some districts, such as General Shafter Elementary in Bakersfield and Chualar Union School District in the Salinas Valley, low-income students actually a showed greater rate of improvement than their higher-income classmates.

One story is how scores are increasing for all students except Black students, but the other story is how much variation there is across districts, Reardon said. Some districts have shown improvements, and we can learn something from those places.

Later this spring, researchers plan to add to the database with test scores from 2018-19, and with test scores from Native American students.

Louis Freedberg contributed to this report.

To get more reports like this one, click here to sign upfor EdSources no-cost daily email on latest developments in education.

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New data shines light on student achievement progress and gaps in California and US - EdSource

The winter COVID surge has reversed progress on economic inequality – Axios

Inequality in the U.S. continues to grow as the economy undergoes a compositional change in the labor market.

Driving the news: While higher wage earners have largely recouped their losses from the coronavirus pandemic's shutdowns earlier this year, those at the bottom of the income spectrum remain out of work at high levels and are losing more ground.

Why it matters: Wealth and income inequality, which have been shown to cause major political and economic disruptions for countries, had been at a record high in the U.S. before the pandemic.

What happened: The winter surge of COVID-19 stopped and then reversed the progress in returning to work that had been made by the lowest-income workers, the New York Fed points out in a research paper released Tuesday.

Why it happened: "Due to a combination of government restrictions and behavioral changes people made to avoid exposure to the virus, the largest losses during the pandemic accrued to the leisure and hospitality industrymost notably, restaurants, bars, and hotelsas well as retail, both of which tend to employ large numbers of lower-paid workers," researchers wrote.

The big picture: According to data from the Social Security Administration, 45% of all U.S. workers in 2019 were included in the category of the lowest-income workers, earning less than $30,000 a year.

Between the lines: The pandemic caused "outsized job losses for women, minorities, and younger workers as the pandemic took hold," research shows, and the response of policymakers only exacerbated the divide.

Watch this space: A similar phenomenon is happening for businesses.

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The winter COVID surge has reversed progress on economic inequality - Axios

Setbacks And Progress Of 2 Minnesota Boys Dealing With Rare COVID-Related Syndrome, MIS-C – CBS Minnesota

MINNEAPOLIS (WCCO) Two Minnesota boys are being monitored closely months after their diagnosis with a rare complication from COVID-19.

Since the pandemics onset, 66 kids in the state have been treated for Multisystem Inflammatory Syndrome.

WCCO shares the setbacks and progress, as two families face a medical mystery.

We first met the Asches in November, a week into their 13-year-olds hospital stay.

Its not like they get out of the hospital and theyre better or get right back to life as normal for sure, Dana Asche said Monday.

Hudsons kidneys and liver were failing and his heart had to be shocked back into rhythm twice.

Three months later, he tires easily and still cant play the sports he once loved.

I have to pace myself more than anybody else. You have to be aware of what youre doing at all times, Hudson Asche said.

Hudsons battle with MIS-C began after a COVID exposure in October. Like many kids, he never developed any symptoms. Doctors believe MIS-C can set in weeks after an asymptotic case.

I just didnt think of it being as bad as it got when I got it. I didnt think something that bad could ever happen, Hudson Asche said.

RELATED: It Was Just So Blurry: Glencoe Boy, 9, Recovers From COVID-Associated Inflammatory Syndrome

A flare-up of MIS-C sent Jaxson Hoffman back to Childrens Minnesota for a second time. Doctors determined the 9-year-old needed to be on steroids longer after he again had a high fever and bloodshot eyes.

Once things start to get bad they really get bad quickly, Megan Hoffman said.

Jaxson also struggles with his stamina. Cardiologists believe it could be a year before hes back to sports or PE at school.

Many MIS-C families have connected through social media as they navigate a path forward.

Its scary but our stories are so similar, Megan Hoffman said.

They hope other parents will watch for signs in their own kids and take precautions.

You never think its going to be your child or your family, Megan Hoffman added.

I look at him and think we almost lost him. If we can do any little thing so somebody else doesnt have to go through that its just so important, Dana Asche said.

While no deaths from MIS-C have been reported in Minnesota, the Centers for Disease Control says 30 kids across the country have died from the complication.

Signs to watch for include a fever that wont go away, trouble breathing, stomach issues, bloodshot eyes, red and cracked lips, a swollen tongue or hands and feet.

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Setbacks And Progress Of 2 Minnesota Boys Dealing With Rare COVID-Related Syndrome, MIS-C - CBS Minnesota

Here’s What’s Wrong With Ayn Rand’s Philosophy – The …

Many articles have been written about whats wrong with Ayn Rands philosophy. But, to my knowledge, none of them presents her ideas accurately. So I thought it would be helpful to write one that does.

Heres whats wrong with Rands ideas:

Rand held that existence exists, that reality is real, that there is a world out there, and that we are conscious of it. She held that everything in existence is something specific; everything has a nature; a thing is what it is. (A snake is a snake. A woman is a woman. A pillar of salt is a pillar of salt.) She held that a thing can act only in accordance with its nature. (A snake can slither; it cannot speak. A woman can speak; she cant become a pillar of salt.) And Rand held that there is only one reality: the one we perceive, the one we experience, the one in which we live.1

Where to start with all of the problems in just that one paragraph?

To begin with, the idea that existence exists excludes the idea that existence doesnt exist. It denies the subjectivist, pragmatist, postmodernist view that reality is an illusion, a mental construct, a social convention. Obviously, people who insist that reality is not real are not going to buy in to a philosophy that says it is real.

So thats one huge problem with Rands philosophy.

Now consider her view that only one reality exists. This excludes the notion that a second reality exists; it excludes the idea of a supernatural realm, the realm of God. Likewise, her view that everything has a specific nature, that a thing is what it is, excludes the possibility that some things are not what they are. For instance, it excludes the possibility that a dead person can be alive (life after death), the possibility that wine can be blood or that bread can be flesh (transubstantiation), and the possibility that the Earth came into existence hundreds of thousands of years after the first Homo sapiens roamed it. Similarly, the idea that things can act only in accordance with their nature excludes the possibility of miraclesso: no Immaculate Conception, no virgin birth (of Jesus), no living inside a whale for three days, no walking on water, no faith healing, and so on.

Needless to say, people who insist on the existence of God, life after death, creationism, and miracles will not buy in to a philosophy that leaves no room for such things.

The problems with Rands philosophy are mounting rapidlyand weve just begun.

Another major problem is Rands view that man acquires knowledge by means of reason, the faculty that identifies and integrates the material provided by his senses. According to Rand, insofar as a person observes reality via his senses; integrates his observations into concepts, generalizations, and principles; checks his thinking for contradictions; and checks his conclusions for consistency with his ever-expanding network of observation-based integrationshe can acquire knowledge. Indeed, according to Rand human beings have acquired massive amounts of knowledge, which is why science has advanced so far and man has accomplished so much.2

Well, that view will not go over well with skeptics, pragmatists, and postmodernists who argue that man cannot acquire knowledgeat least not knowledge of reality. Because mans sensory apparatuses process all incoming data before it reaches consciousness, these skeptics argue, man is conscious not of an external reality or a world out there, but rather of internal modifications or distortions.

No human being has ever experienced an objective world, or even a world at all, writes Sam Harris. The sights and sounds and pulsings that you experience are consequences of processed datadata that has been structured, edited, or amplified by the nervous system. Thus, The world that you see and hear is nothing more than a modification of your consciousness.3

This fashionable view is rooted in the ideas of Immanuel Kant, who wrote: What objects may be in themselves, and apart from all this receptivity of our sensibility [i.e., perception], remains completely unknown to us. Once we understand this, Kant says, we realise that not only are the drops of rain mere appearances, but that even their round shape, nay even the space in which they fall, are nothing in themselves, but merely modifications within consciousness. In principle, Kant says, the actual objectthe object as it really isremains unknown to us.4

Indeed, says Kant, it is an error even to regard external objects as things-in-themselves, which exist independently of us and of our sensibility, and which are therefore outside us. The truth, he says, is that external objects are mere appearances or species of [internal] representations, and the things we perceive are something only through these representations. Apart from them they are nothing.5

When philosophers or intellectuals claim that we cannot know reality because our sensory apparatuses distort the data before it reaches consciousness, they may sound profound or impressive (at least to each other). But, then, along comes Ayn Rand, who points out that such claims amount to the view that man is blind, because he has eyesdeaf, because he has earsdeluded, because he has a mindand the things he perceives do not exist, because he perceives them.6

As you might imagine, such straightforward clarifications, which abound in Rands works, can make skeptics feel as ignorant as they claim to be. So thats another problem with Rands philosophy.

Further, Rand holds that reason is mans only means of gaining knowledge.7 This excludes the possibility that revelation, faith, feelings, or extrasensory perception (ESP) is a means of knowledge. On her view, to embrace ideas not supported by evidence is to err. Thus Rand sees all forms of mysticismall claims to a non-sensory, non-rational means of knowledgeas baseless, arbitrary, illegitimate.

That, of course, will not fly with religionists, subjectivists, psychics, or others who claim to acquire knowledge through non-sensory, non-rational means.

And then there are the myriad problems posed by Rands conception of free will.

Rand holds that people do indeed possess free willand that it resides in a fundamental choice: to think or not to think, to focus ones mind or not to do so, to go by facts or to go by feelings.8 The problems with this idea manifest on several levels.

For starters, if people have free will, then not only are their choices their responsibility, so too are the consequences of their choices. If a person characteristically chooses to think, and if his thinking guides him to build a business and make a lot of money, then the business and the money are his achievements. Likewise, if a person characteristically chooses not to think, and if his non-thinking renders him poor and miserable, then his poverty and misery are his fault.

Well, egalitarians, socialists, communists, and the like are not going to accept that for a minute. People who want to organize society in a way that ignores or denies personal responsibility will not accept a philosophy that upholds the very principle that gives rise to and necessitates personal responsibility.

Nor will Rands conception of free will jibe with Jews, Christians, or Muslims who take their religion seriously. If people truly choose to think or not to think, then the notion of an omnipotent, omniscient God goes out the window. Think about it: If people are free to think or not to think, then whatever powers an alleged God is said to possess, he cant know in advance which alternative people are going to choose. If God existed and knew in advance how people were going to choose, then their choices would be preordainedthus they wouldnt be genuine choices. Likewise, if people are free to think or not to think, then God cant make them choose to think. Nor can he make them choose not to think. You see the problem.

In short, Rands view of free will leaves no room for the existence of an all-knowing, all-powerful God. This will not sit well with anyone who insists that such a God exists.

And thats still just the tip of Rands free-will iceberg. Her view of volition leads to a whole host of additional problems. Consider a few more.

If people choose to think or not to think, then they choose all of their actions that are governed by that fundamental choice as well. For instance, on Rands view, a person can choose to be honest or dishonest. He can refuse to pretend that facts are other than they areor he can choose to engage in such pretense.9 Importantly, Rands views on honesty and dishonesty are not merely about telling the truth versus lying. Rand holds that if a person knows something to be true but pretends that he doesnt know it, then even if he doesnt lie about iteven if he maintains the pretense only in his own mindhe is being dishonest. For instance, on Rands view, if a person knows that a friend has acted unjustly but pretends that he doesnt know it, hes being dishonest. And if a person knows that he owes someone an apology but doesnt extend it, hes being dishonest. In such cases, although the person has not lied, he nevertheless is pretending that facts are other than they are.

Well, people who choose occasionally to pretend that they dont know what they do knowand who want to continue in this fashionwill not embrace a philosophy that says they are able to stop deluding themselves and morally corrupt if they dont. (Of course, they might pretend to embrace it, but thats another matter.)

Likewise, on Rands view, a person can choose to think for himself, or he can turn to others and expect them to think for him. In other words, he can engage in independent thinking or in what Rand termed second-handedness.10 (An example of independent thinking would be someone reading a philosophers works and deciding for himself whether they make sense. An example of second-handedness would be someone turning to others to see what they say he should think about the philosophers ideas.) Rands insistence that people should face reality and think for themselves as a matter of unwavering principle is a problembecause many people are afraid to think for themselves. Many people prefer to avoid that effort, to shirk that responsibility, and to passively accept the ideas of their group, their leader, their tribe. Such people will not embrace a philosophy that upholds independent thinking as a fundamental virtue.

This brings us to the mother lode of problems with Ayn Rands philosophyand to the point of the whole thing.

Rands aforementioned principles calling for people to uphold reason, to be honest, and to think for themselves are part and parcel of the moral code she called rational egoism or rational self-interest. This moral code holds that the objective standard of moral value is mans lifeby which Rand means the requirements of human life given the kind of being that humans are. On her view, because humans are rational beingsbeings whose basic means of survival is the use of reasonthat which sustains and furthers the life of a rational being is good (or moral), and that which harms or destroys the life of a rational being is bad (or evil).11

Further, because Rand sees human beings as individualseach with his own body, his own mind, his own lifeshe holds that each individuals own life is properly his own ultimate value. She holds that each individual should choose and pursue his own life-serving values, and that he should never surrender a greater value for the sake of a lesser valuehe should never commit a sacrifice. As she puts it:

Manevery manis an end in himself, not the means to the ends of others. He must exist for his own sake, neither sacrificing himself to others nor sacrificing others to himself. The pursuit of his own rational self-interest and of his own happiness is the highest moral purpose of his life.12

Well, such a moral code clearly will not fly with people who want to maintain the traditional notion that people have a moral duty to sacrifice themselves or their values for the sake of others (i.e., altruism). Nor will it fly with people who feel that they have a moral right to sacrifice other people as they see fit (predation).

Not only does Rand regard both self-sacrifice and the sacrifice of others as immoral; she also regards the use of any form or degree of initiatory physical force against human beings as properly illegal. In her words, the essential characteristics of a civilized society are that men deal with one another, not as victims and executioners, nor as masters and slaves, but as traders, by free, voluntary exchange to mutual benefit; and that no man may obtain any values from others by resorting to physical force, and no man may initiate the use of physical force against others.13

Needless to say, Rands staunch advocacy of voluntary exchange to mutual benefit and her moral opposition to the use of force as a means of obtaining values from people will not fly with people or governments that want to use force to obtain values from people. Criminals who want to steal peoples belongings, commit fraud, rape people, or violate rights in other ways will not embrace a moral code that forbids them to do so. Likewise, governments that want to force people to serve the common good or the community or the master race or some other master will not recognize or uphold a morality that forbids them to initiate physical force against people. And pull-peddling businessmen who want government to forcibly control, regulate, or cripple their competitors will not recognize or uphold a moral code that forbids such coercion either.

This problemRands moral opposition to the use of physical force against human beingslies at the very base of her political theory, where it serves as a bridge between her moral code and her political views. This is where Rands theory of rights comes into the picture. As she put it:

Rights are a moral conceptthe concept that provides a logical transition from the principles guiding an individuals actions to the principles guiding his relationship with othersthe concept that preserves and protects individual morality in a social contextthe link between the moral code of a man and the legal code of a society, between ethics and politics. Individual rights are the means of subordinating society to moral law.14

Rand sees individual rights as the governing principle of a civilized society because she sees rights as deriving from mans nature and as requirements of his life in a social context. She elaborates:

A right is a moral principle defining and sanctioning a mans freedom of action in a social context. There is only one fundamental right (all the others are its consequences or corollaries): a mans right to his own life. Life is a process of self-sustaining and self-generated action; the right to life means the right to engage in self-sustaining and self-generated actionwhich means: the freedom to take all the actions required by the nature of a rational being for the support, the furtherance, the fulfillment and the enjoyment of his own life. (Such is the meaning of the right to life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness.)15

According to Rand, the only proper purpose of government is to protect individual rights by banning physical force from social relationshipsand by using force only in retaliation and only against those who initiate its use.16

Clearly, no one who wants government to do more than that will embrace Rands philosophy. No one who wants government to forcibly redistribute wealth, or to forbid certain kinds of speech, or to forbid certain kinds of consensual adult sex, or to restrict freedom in any other way will embrace a philosophy that demands principled recognition and absolute protection of individual rights.

A final problem worth mentioning about Rand and her philosophy is that she wrote in plain, intelligible English and defined her terms clearly as a matter of course, so that anyone who wants to understand her ideas can do so with relative ease. Toward this end, in addition to presenting her ideas in various nonfiction works, she dramatized them in spellbinding fictionsuch as her novels The Fountainhead and Atlas Shruggedthus enabling people to see her ideas in practice. Well, this will not go over well with modern philosophers or academics who insist that philosophy must be written in academese, technical jargon, or impenetrable fog. Nor will it pass muster with anyone who feels that dramatizing or concretizing ideas in fiction somehow disqualifies them.

We could go on. Rands philosophy involves many additional problems. But the foregoing is a concise indication of the trouble it causes.

So, next time the subject of whats wrong with Ayn Rands ideas comes up, be sure to share this brief sketch of the kinds of problems involved. Its better for people to learn whats wrong with Rands actual ideas than to waste time contemplating takedowns of straw men.

Craig is cofounder and editor of The Objective Standard, cofounder and director of education at Objective Standard Institute, and executive director of Prometheus Foundation. He is the author of Loving Life: The Morality of Self-Interest and the Facts that Support It; Rational Egoism: The Morality for Human Flourishing; and the forthcoming Moral Truths Your Parents, Preachers, and Teachers Dont Want You to Know. He is currently working on his fourth book, Thinking in Principles.

1 See Ayn Rand, This is John Galt Speaking, in Ayn Rand, For the New Intellectual (New York: Signet, 1961), esp. 12452.

2 See For the New Intellectual; Ayn Rand, This is John Galt Speaking, in For the New Intellectual; and Rand, Introduction to Objectivist Epistemology, 2nd ed., edited by Harry Binswanger and Leonard Peikoff (New York: Penguin, 1990).

3 Sam Harris, The End of Faith: Religion, Terror, and the Future of Reason (New York: W. W. Norton, 2004), 41.

4 Immanuel Kant, Critique of Pure Reason, translated by Norman Kemp Smith (New York: St. Martins, 1965), 8285.

5 Kant, Critique of Pure Reason, 346.

6 Rand, For the New Intellectual, 32.

7 Ayn Rand, What Is Capitalism? in Capitalism: The Unknown Ideal (New York: Signet, 1967), 16.

8 See Rand, This is John Galt Speaking, 12027.

9 See Rand, This is John Galt Speaking, 129; Leonard Peikoff, Objectivism: The Philosophy of Ayn Rand (New York: Meridian, 1993), 267.

10 See Rand, The Nature of the Second-Hander, in For the New Intellectual, 6871; see also Ayn Rand, Journals of Ayn Rand, edited by David Harriman (New York: Dutton, 1997), esp. 9091, 293294, 416.

11 See Ayn Rand, The Objectivist Ethics, in The Virtue of Selfishness (New York: Signet, 1964), esp. 2128.

12 Ayn Rand, Introducing Objectivism, in The Voice of Reason (New York: Meridian, 1989), 4.

13 Rand, Introducing Objectivism, 4.

14 Ayn Rand, Mans Rights, in Virtue of Selfishness, 10810.

15 Rand, Mans Rights, 110.

16 Ayn Rand, What Is Capitalism?, in Capitalism: The Unknown Ideal (New York: Signet, 1967), 19.

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Paul and Romney embarrass themselves by lashing out at trans athletes – Outsports

After one of President Bidens recent executive orders provided encouraging news for trans athletes, backlash was sadly inevitable. After all, hes a new president and as weve discussed numerous times, transgender athletes have become a lightning rod in Americas endless and tiresome culture wars.

So its not surprising that during the confirmation hearing for prospective Secretary of Education Dr. Miguel Cardona, a few ambitious politicians would take the opportunity to announce that their number one academic priority was to throw a marginalized group under the bus.

Enter U.S. Sen. Rand Paul of Kentucky.

The first words out of his mouth tipped off everyone where he was going and it wasnt anywhere pleasant...

The Office of Civil Rights sent a letter to Connecticut saying that boys cant compete with girls in sports or shouldnt be forced to allow boys to compete in girls sports [sic]. If youre confirmed, will you enforce that Office of Civil Rights opinion?

To review, a duly elected U.S. Senator couldnt make it through one sentence (and thats being very generous with the term) without misgendering an entire community twice. It is a credit to Cardonas sense of restraint that he responded with an answer other than Grownups are talking. Why dont you go color?

Instead, Cardona asserted that his job as Secretary of Education would be to make sure were following civil rights of all students. He later expounded, I think its critically important that education systems and educators respect the rights of all students, including students who are transgender, and that they are afforded the opportunities that every other student has to participate in extracurricular activities.

That sound you just heard was one of Betsy DeVoss yachts exploding.

At that point, Paul began playing the greatest hits of Martina and the TERFs, spouting out talking points like destroy girls athletics, they dont get college scholarships, and hulking six-foot-four guys wrestling against girls. The proceedings transformed into less of a Senate hearing and more of a jukebox of bullshit.

Listening to his line of questioning, it was worth remembering that Paul considers himself a Libertarian. And if theres one singular piece of philosophy at the core of Ayn Rands canon, its that whenever people are left to freely pursue excellence in their chosen field, the government should step in to stop them as forcefully as possible. While calling John Galt a woman.

If trans athletes are such a threat to the core of Pauls world, maybe he can form his own barnstorming team called The Parasites.

That wasnt all. Later in the hearing, Sen. Mitt Romney of Utah took the floor. In the past year, Romney has marched with Black Lives Matter demonstrators and was part of the Group of Ten Republicans who met with President Biden to give the appearance of being willing to negotiate with Democrats.

But when it came to trans athletes, Romney was almost enthusiastic in his support for Pauls demagoguery:

I want to associate myself with a number of the things that were said by Senator Paul. Thats not something I say very frequently! But he made a very, very good point. Ive got pictures of my eight granddaughters... they shouldnt be competing with people who are physiologically in an entirely different category. And I think boys should be competing with boys and girls should be competing with [girls] on the athletic field.

Epic sigh.

I understand that confirmation hearings are all about trying to generate soundbites, especially when the nominee already has the votes clinched. Furthermore, I also know there are many out LGBTQ Republicans and conservatives who align with Paul and Romney on many issues.

But this is a story of two extremely powerful leaders cynically singling out members of our community to score cheap points. They also serve to turn people who havent researched this issue against a group that is already marginalized, othered and attacked way too frequently as it is.

This sorry episode isnt about politics or ideological disagreements. These are two of the most powerful men in the country going all-in on punching down. Its one bit of political theater that should have closed during previews.

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Paul and Romney embarrass themselves by lashing out at trans athletes - Outsports

Get creative to help artists through pandemic – The Guardian

The Irish pilot of a universal basic income for artists (Editorial, 7 February) is partially the equivalent of Frances support for performing artists. There, dancers, musicians, designers and technicians who are working on a production receive unemployment support. This was introduced in 1936 as the rgime salari intermittent employeurs multiples (system for intermittently salaried workers with multiple employers) to support technicians in the film industry. This created the right to publicly funded unemployment benefits for each day that they were not in work. Recipients have to have done a minimum of 507 hours of paid work during a one-year period.

I understand that this applies more broadly across the arts in France, and a similar system exists in Belgium. In December 2020, the UK trade union Equity called on the government to introduce a basic income guarantee for creative workers in the performing arts. This would provide them with financial stability during the pandemic and ensure that they are free to take work when it arises without fear of losing other forms of support. We should not ignore one of the UKs most successful assets in the way the government seems to be doing.David CockayneLymm, Cheshire

Heres my big idea for an arts policy that your excellent editorial called for: use a windfall tax on pandemic-fuelled profits made by online gambling and video-streaming services to support a new deal of the soul. This would pay organisations to commission art for, with and by children and young people that deserves a wider audience. Ensure that freelancers are paid to be at the heart of this, and go beyond schools to find those young people most at risk of continued social isolation and dislocation.Joe HallgartenLondon

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MOTA to host From The Bahamas With Love virtual romance expo – EyeWitness News

NASSAU, BAHAMAS The Bahamas, one of the worlds leading destinations for weddings and honeymoons, is gearing up to host two virtual events From The Bahamas With Love to showcase the vast offerings for romantic escapes throughout the destination.

The expo will bring together industry leaders, partners, hotels, venues and services for a truly unique and educational experience for trade and consumer participants.

The virtual events will kick off on Wednesday, March 3, 2021, from 1pm to 4pm EST, with an afternoon planned specifically for trade professionals, including travel agents and event planners.

The second day of events will be Wednesday, March 10, 2021, from 4pm to 7pm EST, and is open to consumers, including soon-to-be engaged or recently engaged couples, future brides and grooms, bachelorette party planners, honeymoon do-over seekers and more.

The pandemic has caused many couples to postpone or reimagine their romantic getaways over the last year, and the destination wants to ensure future planning is made as seamless as possible in 2021. From The Bahamas With Love will feature a diverse series of panel discussions with experts from across all romance industry sectors, along with opportunities to network directly with partners. Those attending will enjoy a literal taste of The Bahamas from home via the activities and experiences.

Director General of the Bahamas Ministry of Tourism and Aviation (MOTA) Joy Jibrilu said: With intimate, secluded cays, unmatched turquoise waters and pink and white-sand beaches, its easy to understand why The Bahamas is considered one of the worlds most romantic destinations.

With so many offerings available, we are thrilled to connect consumers to experts across a number of industries through our virtual romance expo experience to ensure the ease of planning a romantic Bahamian getaway, especially after so many plans were upended this last year.

Whether couples are planning a wedding, anniversary, honeymoon or simply a romantic escape, the virtual expo offers invaluable access to experts and resources to take all of the stress away from planning and allow more time to find out why Its Better in The Bahamas.

March 3 activities will feature engaging panels and breakout sessions, sales workshops and virtual networking booths. Speakers and moderators will include MOTA Deputy Director General Ellison Tommy Thompson, three promotion boards, Certified Speaking Professional and leading Wedding Business Consultant Alan Berg, Co-founder of Destination Wedding and Honeymoon Specialist Association Lisa Sheldon, President of the Association of Bridal Consultants David Woods and Co-founder of the Wedding Planners Institute of Canada Danielle Andrews.

On March 10, participants will be treated to the magazine launch of From The Bahamas with Love. The keynote speaker on that day will be Editor-in-chief of Destination I Do magazine Jennifer Stein, and other speakers or moderators will include Weddingbells Magazine Editor Alison McGill, Co-founder of The Wedding Planners Institute of Canada Tracey Manailescu and Publisher of Caribbean Bride Magazine David Cox, with a number of boutique hotels also set to present.

There will be prizes and giveaways on both days, as well as bridal fashion shows and a Taste of The Bahamas culinary experience. But only on March 10 will lucky couples have a chance to win one of 16 romantic experiences, including an all-expenses-paid romantic getaway to The Bahamas and a destination wedding or vow renewal.

Presenting or moderating on both days will be MOTA Executive Director Bridgette King, Director of Weddings and Special Occasions at Atlantis Paradise Island Jena Conway, Director of Sales and Marketing for USA and Canada (Viva Wyndham) Gilda Noboa, Director of Events Desiree Moxey, President of the Bahamas Bridal Association Cindy Coakley-Knowles, Director of Wildflowers Natalie Appleyard, Marva Munroe of Chic Bahamas Weddings, photographer Lyndah Wells and Kenton Burrows of Expressions Entertainment.

To register for the expo, trade professionals can visit the website https://www.bahamas.com/from-the-bahamas-with-love-trade and consumers can visit the website https://www.bahamas.com/from-the-bahamas-with-love-consumer.

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Three rescued from island in Bahamas – Yahoo News

The Telegraph

A detained Saudi womens rights activist had electrodes fixed to her head during phone calls with her family to prevent her speaking of the torture she suffered in prison, her sister said on Thursday after her release. Loujain al-Hathoul was released to her familys home in Riyadh on Wednesday after 1,001 days in prison on charges related to her activism. Under her probation she is unable to travel, use social media or speak to the media. Her sisters, who live abroad, announced Thursday that Ms al-Hathoul will seek legal redress in Saudi Arabia for torture she said she suffered in detention. She was tortured and she cannot forget this, her sister Lina said, during an online press conference. The family have previously claimed Ms al-Hathoul was tortured which Saudi authorities deny but gave new details Thursday, including that the threat of electrocution stopped her speaking out. If I complained about anything they were ready to electrocute me, Lina said her sister told the family on Wednesday of her early months in detention. It was months later that we found out about the torture when Ms al-Hathoul was moved to another prison, Lina said. Ms al-Hathoul has identified one of her torturers as Saud Al Qahtani, a top adviser to the Saudi crown prince until he was sanctioned by the US over his role in the murder of journalist Jamal Khashoggi. Hes the only person that we know the name of who was present at the torture sessions, Lina said. Mr Qahtani is notorious in Saudi Arabia, sometimes called the lord of the flies for his army of Twitter trolls used for attacking dissidents. Loujain recognised him, hes a public figure, said her older sister Alia. Ms al-Hathoul now hopes to use the Saudi justice system to prove she was tortured and seek justice. The torturers must be sentenced, Lina said. In December, Ms al-Hathoul was sentenced to nearly six years imprisonment over her activism, which included demanding the right for women to drive and calling for the abolition of Saudi Arabias male guardianship system. The decades old driving ban was lifted weeks after her arrest, with Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman eager to claim the credit for the reform. The 35-year-old prince muscled his way to become next in line to the throne in 2015, partly by projecting an image as a dynamic young reformer who could modernise the conservative kingdom. But the sisters believe that any reforms under Mohammed bin Salman are illusory. MBS is far from being a reformer, hes an oppressor, said Lina, referring to him by his initials. Womens empowerment is a lie in Saudi Arabia, there are no real reforms, she said. Lina said she was choosing her words carefully to avoid further negative repercussions for her family still in Saudi Arabia: Theres really an atmosphere of fear under MBS. The family believe Ms al-Hathouls early release was timed by the Saudi government to impress new US President Joe Biden, who has promised closer scrutiny of his close allys human rights record. Saudi Arabias situation is tightly connected with whats going on in the US, Alia said. The Biden administration made clear that they care about human rights.

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Diamond Aircraft expands exclusive dealer arrangement with Premier Aircraft to the Bahamas – CAPA – Centre for Aviation

CAPA publishes more than 400 global News Briefs every weekday, covering all aspects of the aviation and travel industry. Its the most comprehensive source of market intelligence in the world, with around 50 per cent of content translated from non-English sources. The breadth of our coverage means you wont need any other news sources to monitor competitors and stay informed about the latest developments in the wider aviation sector.

Our daily News Briefs are only available to CAPA Members. Membership provides access to more than 400 News Briefs every weekday, with quick links to our Analysis Reports, Research Publications, Data Centre and more.

Its easy to keep your News Briefs relevant by customising your email alerts based on topic, region, sector, frequency and more. Once youve saved your settings, you can stay up-to-date wherever you are, by quickly scanning our News Briefs online or via the CAPA mobile app.

Membership also provides full access to our Analysis Reports, in-depth Research Publications and comprehensive Data Centre. Premium CAPA Members can also access add-ons such as our exclusive Fleet Database, Airline Cask Data tools and more, to enjoy the full capabilities of our global platform.

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Diamond Aircraft expands exclusive dealer arrangement with Premier Aircraft to the Bahamas - CAPA - Centre for Aviation

BNT: BPC oil exploration failure should be turning point to embrace sustainability and renewable energy – EyeWitness News

NASSAU, BAHAMAS The Bahamas National Trust (BNT) said Bahamas Petroleum Companys (BPC) unfruitful oil exploration exercise should serve as a turning point for this nation to focus on working towards a future that embraces sustainability and renewable energy.

The BNT said in a statement that it is reassured to hear that no commercial volumes of oil have been discovered during this exercise, and that the company will cease its activities in this area.

The BNT is pleased to hear no incidents occurred in the drilling process and hopes the abandonment procedure goes well, without incident, the BNT stated.

The BNT believes this should be a turning point for The Bahamas, where we unite and focus on working together for a future that embraces sustainability and clean, renewable energy.

BNT Executive Director Eric Carey said:This was a risky endeavor, and the results of this operation have proved that there werent economically viable quantities of oil in that location.

What we do know is that we do not need extensive research to verify that our marine environment and its associated resources contribute some $8 billion annually to our economy.

According to the BNT, with the prime minister and other government officials having stated that they do not support oil exploration in The Bahamas, the results of BPCs oil exploration now afford the country the opportunity to review and extinguish any existing or expired seabed leases for the purpose of oil exploration.

The BNT is now encouraging every local NGO and Bahamian citizen who has made their voices heard on this matter to remain vigilant.

Even though BPC has shared that this well will be abandoned, they have also indicated that this does not signal the end of their activity in The Bahamas, the BNT said.

The BNT strongly supports the inspiring advocacy from local organizations and individuals who have made their voices heard on this matter and all other environmental matters that affect our future. The BNT especially commends the work of coalition Our Islands, Our Future, who have tirelessly worked to bring people together and take action on this matter.

We must continue pressing onward, marching together to a common loftier goal a goal that moves us toward a sustainable future in the face of a changing climate.

Earlier this week, BPC announced that it had not found commercial quantities of oil and had abandoned its exploratory drilling after its well came up largely dry. The companys stock took a nearly 70 percent hit as a result of the long-awaited announcement.

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BNT: BPC oil exploration failure should be turning point to embrace sustainability and renewable energy - EyeWitness News

New Greene County judge: Kids the real victims in drug-related crimes – Springfield News Sun

Were going to treat everyone that comes before the court fairly and honestly, Tonichio said. I want people to say, even if the court decision doesnt go their way, that they felt heard throughout the process. Thats the true foundation of a court system, is when everybody on a case, on whatever side they are in a lawsuit or a criminal complaint, if they feel that the process was fair, that their voice was heard... to me, thats huge.

Tornichio said while he was juvenile judge, the court was in early discussions with Clark State about a job readiness program. He hopes when the pandemic is over that work continues.

While on the bench in juvenile court, Tornichio saw who he calls the true victims of the opioid epidemic kids.

If you would have asked me before I took juvenile bench, are drugs a victimless crime? I would have said yes, Tornichio said. But after seeing the rampages of the opioid epidemic in our children services, neglect, dependency cases, those are the real victims. So that stands out.

Tornichio said this past week when sentencing a teenager, the juvenile congratulated him on his new role. Tornichio told that teenager that the best thing he can do is to run into him out in the community and not see his name on the docket in adult court.

My goal is to encourage them that they can put the past behind them. They can start a new chapter in the book of life, Tornichio said. I say this to probably about every kid on the delinquency docket: when they succeed, our county succeeds.

Judge Buckwalter asked Tornichio to take over the Veterans Treatment Court started by Judge Wolaver.

Im excited. I look forward to working with the veterans support and treatment team and our veterans to help them get their lives back on track, Tornichio said.

Tornichio said he also plans to continue the work Wolaver did to bring more technology to the courthouse. Tornichio said after the pandemic is over, he images tools like Zoom could be continued to be used.

Tornichio, who lives in Beavercreek, previously served for 16 years as a Greene County assistant prosecutor and served the county for three years as a law clerk. Before his county-level service, Tornichio was a prosecuting attorney for the village of Waynesville, acting law director for the city of Xenia and a private practicing attorney.

He earned his law degree from the University of Toledo College of Law and his undergraduate degree from Wright State University.

Tornichio said his wife of nearly five years, Heather, helps keep him grounded when he gets a big head or black robe fever. The two have a daughter.

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Jason Williams has vowed never to use the habitual offender statute. What does that mean for criminal justice in New Orleans? – The Lens

Harry Connick became Orleans Parish District Attorney in 1974 promising to reduce crime in the city, and while an article in the New Orleans States-Item assessing his first eight months in office said it was too early to tell if Connick was effective, his strategy was clear.

Whether he is right, whether his office can really bring about a reduction in the citys crime rate, it is still too early to say, the article read. But if you ask him whether he believes it can, he stares at you incredulously and replies, Youre darned right I do. And if you persist and ask how, Harry Connick turns, and with no small amount of glee, shouts, Multiple billing!

Multiple billing, the term sometimes used for when the states habitual offender statute is utilized, has allowed prosecutors in Orleans Parish and throughout the state to seek higher penalties than the standard sentencing guidelines allow for a specific crime if a person has been convicted of previous felonies.

The evidence that Connick was serious about the strategy is clear from glancing at old newspaper articles. In 1975, one man was sentenced to life in prison for stealing a TV. That same year, another got 30 years for receiving a stolen camera, and shoplifting meant a man faced 20 years to life in a 1976 case. During the decades that Connick held office, the capacity of the New Orleans jail increased tenfold from around 850 beds to 8,500. Both the state of Louisiana and the country as a whole saw a dramatic increase in their prison populations. And today, 30 percent of people in prison who were sentenced under the habitual offender statute were convicted in New Orleans.

It is Connicks legacy along with that of recently retired DA Leon Cannizzaro that newly-sworn-in DA Jason Williams has said he wants to reverse. His pledge to end the aggressive tactics of his predecessors includes a blanket prohibition of using or threatening the multiple bill in cases his office is prosecuting.

The abolition of the multiple bill in New Orleans was something reform advocates such as the ACLU of Louisiana, the Peoples DA Coalition, and others pushed throughout the 2020 DA campaign.

The statute itself encapsulates many of the broader trends in criminal justice that many scholars say led to the rise of mass incarceration. It grants increased power to prosecutors restricting judicial discretion and mandates harsher sentences. It also allows prosecutors to decide when they will and will not use it, opening the door for abuse and discrimination, according to Danny Engelberg, chief of trials for the Orleans Public Defenders. He said that the habitual offender statute and other similar three strikes laws were among the leading factors of why we have such a high incarceration rate in this country.

We absolutely want to use the discretion differently than how its been applied in the past, Williams said in a recent interview with The Lens. And whether its with the habitual offender law, whether it is parole, we are in no way abicating in any way any of the power, authority, and discretion of the office. But were trying to be more selective in terms of how it is applied, and when its not applied. With public safety being the measure, not revenge or anger.

While there are few people in the criminal justice system in New Orleans today who are as openly gleeful about the utilization of the habitual offender bill as Connick was in 74, it still has its defenders. The law is sometimes described as a tool that prosecutors can use to ensure dangerous defendants do not get let back out onto the street by unscrupulous judges.

Former prosecutor and Criminal District Court Judge Keva Landrum, who ran against WIlliams for DA, often said during her campaign the law was meant to be utilized as a shield against the most dangerous criminals, but instead was often used by prosecutors as a sword. At the start of the campaign, Landrum vowed to limit using the law for its original purpose, and only use it in rare circumstances. But by the end, she had shifted her position, and committed to never using or threatening the multiple bill at all.

Rafael Goyeneche, president of the Metropolitan Crime Commission and a former prosecutor, said that Williams should look at each case individually, and that by taking the habitual offender statute off the table he may be limiting his ability to do his job.

I dont think we ever talk in absolutes, he said. The habitual offender statute is not inherently evil. If there are problems with it, its with the application.

He also said that now that Williams is in office, he may find the promise difficult to keep.

There will be circumstances where I believe that he will revisit that policy, Goyeneche said. Not because of a philosophical reason, but because the individual facts of that case.

But so far, according to defense attorneys with the Orleans Public Defenders office, Williams office has maintained its commitment. Given that jury trials are suspended at Criminal District Court due to the COVID-19 pandemic, however, the full impacts are still unclear.

Williams predecessor, Leon Cannizzaro, for many years shared Connicks affection for using the multiple billto a much greater extent than most of his counterparts throughout the state. Reporting by the podcast Reveal, from the Center for Investigative Reporting, found that between January of 2009 and 2017, Cannizzaro utilized the law over 2,600 times. The DAs office in East Baton Rouge Parish used it just 66 times during the same period.

Cannizzaros utilization of the multiple bill decreased significantly during his later years in office, however, and the state legislature adjusted the law in 2017, reducing mandatory minimum sentences for some offenses and shortening the cleansing period the amount of time after a conviction during which it can be applied to a persons priors under the statute for non-violent crimes.

But according to Engelberg, in New Orleans, the threat of Cannizzaros prosecutors using the habitual offender statute continued to loom over all criminal proceedings at Tulane and Broad, leaving open the possibility for harsh sentences and coercing defendants to plead guilty sometimes to crimes they didnt commit rather than risk going to trial and being multiple-billed.

In the prior administration, that was always there, he said. I dont remember a situation in which someone exercised their right to trial the district attorney ever said, We will not multiple-bill you.

Goyeneche said that some of the rhetoric around the habitual offender statute has been misleading because it fails to consider the facts of a persons criminal history, or the possibility that someone pleaded guilty to a lesser offense than what they were really charged with.

If youre in the penitentiary for anything other than a crime of violence, its because you have extensive criminal history, Goyeneche said. And usually, you cant just look at the offense that someone pled guilty to, you have to look at what they were charged with. That was part of the plea bargaining process.

But Emily Maw, the former director of the Innocence Project New Orleans, whom Williams has hired to head up a newly created Civil Rights Division, said in a recent interview that the law has compounded already existing racial disparities in the criminal legal system.

The thing that you need to understand about habitual offenders, and one of the reasons that we can identify that as an area that we must tackle if we are going to tackle the racial disparities in the criminal legal system, and mass incarceration, and unequal opportunities, is that so many of the enhancing crimes the crimes of a first offense, second offense are crimes that everyone is committing, but only Black people are policed for, Maw said.

Maw pointed to possession of drugs as an example of a crime that Black people are disproportionately charged with, despite the fact that drug use among white and Black people is roughly equal. (A 2013 report from the ACLU found that on average, a Black person is 3.73 times more likely to be arrested for marijuana possession than a white person, even though Blacks and whites use marijuana at similar rates.)

So it is basically an extra punishment for being Black and committing a crime, she said.

Nearly 80 percent of people in Louisiana prisons serving habitual offender sentences are Black, compared to around 66 percent of the prison population as a whole.

Last week, the DAs office reached an agreement with defense attorneys to vacate one mans habitual offender sentence, who was given life without parole after prosecutors in Connicks office utilized the multiple-bill after a 1998 conviction. The agreement allowed him to be freed from the Louisiana State Penitentiary at Angola after 24 years. Maw said that the Civil Rights Division will be doing a broader review of cases that were multiple-billed, and hopes that the case last week is just the first of many similar agreements to come.

So far, Engelberg said, having the habitual offender law off the table has allowed for some cases to be resolved more quickly because without the threat of the multiple-bill prosecutors are offering more inviting plea deals.

Youre seeing cases resolved much better because sentences are just, frankly, more addressed to a persons individual specific need, he said.

But he said he suspects that taking the habitual offender table may end up leading to more trials in the future which he sees as a good thing.

He also said he was hopeful that one of the collateral effects of taking the new policy would be to expose cases that are built on weak evidence, or even police misconduct. Even in cases where prosecutors were aware that their case was weak, he said, they could use the threat of harsh sentences to force a plea deal and make sure that questionable searches or other misconduct was not presented to the judge or jury.

One of the things you will see very differently well see more light of day on how police stop and search people, and more light of day on whether that evidence is strong enough in these, quote unquote, victimless crimes which are really about having something youre not new supposed to have.

Goyeneche said he was concerned that without the ability to seek harsher sentences or leverage plea deals, people who could continue to cycle through the system.

So you know, the responsibility of the district attorney is to the people of Louisiana and you dont give the same deals to someone when they are a fourth offender that you would offer to the first, he said, and reiterated that Williams was unnecessarily limiting his ability to prosecute cases by taking the multiple-bill off the table.

Williams said that while he agreed that in some instances the broad discretion of a prosecutor was useful such as declining to prosecute low-level marijuana charges, or focusing resources on violent offenses the benefits of that discretion do not extend to the use of the multiple bill.

If the goal is justice, and the goal is resolving the case in a way that makes the community safe, if a person is using vast discretion to deliver on those things, thats a wonderful thing, Williams said. When someone is using their discretion to harm a certain segment of the community, thats terrible.

See the rest here:

Jason Williams has vowed never to use the habitual offender statute. What does that mean for criminal justice in New Orleans? - The Lens

The trader who was made the fall guy for the wrongdoings of an entire era – Telegraph.co.uk

Tom Hayes is the sort of genius who was idiotic enough to be the ringleader of a huge fraud conspiracy with almost no other convicted members. Mr Hayes was the UBS trader convicted and sent to jail for 11 years for manipulating Libor, a widely used interest rate, and this week he was released after serving half his sentence. The three other people found guilty (out of 13 charged) were freed years ago.

Most people wont feel sorry for Mr Hayes but I do. Yes, he deserved some jail time, but a sentence longer than many given out for violent crimes was ridiculous. His was a victimless crime that was widely known in his industry, albeit massively expanded by his own inventiveness.

Essentially, he set up a trading portfolio to benefit from tiny swings in Libor, an estimated cost of borrowing, and then co-ordinated a gang to manipulate the rate by miniscule amounts within a band that was officially considered credible. No onecan definitively claim to have been cheated by it.

Anyway, this rather otherworldly finance whizz, who has mild Aspergers, inadvertently made it easy for prosecutors by at first co-operating and delivering incriminating monologues in police interviews, before suddenly switching strategy and deciding to fight his case. It was obviously a lost cause by that point.

Whats really interesting about Mr Hayes is the way in which he was made the fall guy for the whole 2008 era by a bunch of desperate prosecutors and banks. His crimes had nothing to do with excessive borrowing, bank bailouts or the stability of the financial system. Yet he became the poster boy for all of it because he was the only really rich trader who made it easy for prosecutors to lay a hand on him.

The best book on the scandal, The Spider Network by David Enrich, even lays out how Mr Hayess employer UBS was allowed to cherry-pick the evidence handed over to prosecutors from a vast cache of internal files, the rest of which it argued was protected by Swiss banking secrecy law.

Mr Hayes, naturally, was simply a bad apple, whose activities his bosss bosss boss knew nothing about. Never mind, though. Prosecutors had their scalp, so what did they care? The public, they judged, would be too stupid to notice thedifference.

Its hard to regret the fall of Aung San Suu Kyi, the erstwhile leader of Myanmar deposed by the army this week, whose political career highlights include denying her countrys genocide against the Rohingya ethnic group. Its also hard to welcome the restoration of rule by military junta in place of a quasi-democratic system, however flawed it was, especially given that it heralds a geopolitical shift in favour of the Chinese Communist Party.

The days when Britain wielded much influence over that part of the world are anyway long gone except perhaps in the legacy of leisure facilities. Visiting Myanmar about a decade ago, shortly before its opening up (which it hadnt announced at the time), I found myself observing the fattened officers of the junta up close and personal in the botanical gardens of a hill town called Pyin Oo Lwin. The town had a blissfully cool climate and was used under British rule as a summer retreat, after which the junta took it over, opened up a military school and used the town in much the same way.

On a Sunday afternoon in the gardens, which had the same layout and style of a British park, it was a strange scene. Contented-looking officers floated around on golf buggies, while young cadets prowled the garden paths with awkward, skimpily clad girls in tow, ostensibly all enjoying the wails of an emo punk group installed in the very British-looking bandstand set over a lake full of fat, orange carp. Outside the gate, locals had lined up a queue of dilapidated, Cinderella-style carriages affixed to dull-eyed, emaciated ponies, hawking rides to the army lads and their belles.

More broadly, the gardens tourist attractions had clearly been vastly expanded in anticipation of crowds that were mysteriously absent (most likely, I now know, ready for big tour groups ahead of the planned opening-up). There was a butterfly museum boasting thousands upon thousands of splendid creatures pinned, unlabelled, to the walls; an orchid house bursting with exotic species; a newly built fairy-tale tower; picnic tables; woodland walks; bamboo groves; water buffalo enclosures; and on and on. But apart from the strutting officers, all of it was empty.

Perhaps, in retrospect, they liked it that way. Why let your country develop, when you can cream off and keep the best of its vast natural wealth for yourself?

Continued here:

The trader who was made the fall guy for the wrongdoings of an entire era - Telegraph.co.uk