Editorial: It’s already too easy to addict kids to vaping. SC bill would make it worse. – Charleston Post Courier

Over the weekend, a coalition of public health groups ran full-page ads in The Post and Courier and other S.C. newspapers warning against an effort in the state Senate to strip cities and counties of their right to do a job the Legislature refuses to do: regulating tobacco company efforts to addict teens.

The American Cancer Society, Campaign for Tobacco-Free Kids and American Lung and Heart associations worry that the Senate will use the confusion of the final few days of the legislative session to pass H.3681, which would prohibit local governments from regulating cigarette, vape or other tobacco flavors or ingredients, and block these governments from requiring local licenses to sell tobacco products.

On its face, the bill appears long dead. Although the House passed it in 2021 and the Senate pulled it out of committee without so much as a public hearing, its been stuck on the Senate contested calendar for more than a year. Thats normally a sure sign of a bill thats going nowhere absent a compromise that all sides buy into. Normally, but not always.

Public health officials are concerned that the bill will suddenly be resurrected and passed this week. That might sound paranoid, but its actually quite common for lawmakers to wait until the end of the session to try to sneak through legislation they know the public would oppose. Activists say theyre hearing too much buzz about H.3681 to ignore. (And yes, we realize that it's popular for special-interest groups to claim to be under attack when theyre really not in order to raise money, but the anti-tobacco advocates arent trying to raise money; theyve been at the Statehouse furiously working the Senate to prevent the legislation from being brought back to life.)

So while we hope any effort to sneak the legislation onto Gov. Henry McMasters desk will fizzle and that if it doesnt, hell veto it its worth taking the time to explain what H.3681 is all about.

Its supporters say they want to ensure that tobacco laws are uniform across the state, but in fact they have fought efforts to have a uniform statewide law that would help enforce the law that prohibits tobacco use by minors. H.3754 would treat tobacco sales more like alcohol sales, requiring businesses to get a license to sell the products and empowering the state to revoke those licenses if they dont guard against selling tobacco to minors. Thats important because, according to the American Heart Association, three-quarters of kids who try to buy tobacco products succeed.

Tobacco companies have kept the tobacco licensing bill locked in subcommittee for two years because uniform tobacco laws isnt their goal. Their goal is to ensure that nothing is done in South Carolina to reduce sales of tobacco products even products that are deliberately manipulated to entice children to use them.

South Carolina has one of the nation's highest rates of teen nicotine use, and vaping has powered an uptick in youth tobacco use nationally. The CDC says nearly all high school students who use tobacco products use flavored products, so that's why some local governments want to prohibit the sales of such products.

The vaping pre-emption bill also is the latest in a long string of bills to strip elected city and county council members of the right to govern their communities. Such bills start out with a leg up at the Statehouse regardless of the underlying topic because too many legislators believe they know more about what should happen in local communities than the people who are elected to govern those communities.

Either the assault on local governments or the assault on public health would be reason enough to let this legislation die when the Legislature adjourns Thursday. The combination of the two makes it nearly criminal that anyone would seriously consider pushing it into law.

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Editorial: It's already too easy to addict kids to vaping. SC bill would make it worse. - Charleston Post Courier

Britain May Officially License Vapes as Smoking Cessation Medical Products – Vaping Post

The British Medical Association supports these developments and has suggested that e-cigarettes are licensed as medicine.

In my review I have considered a range of critical interventions that will make the most difference. For example, Ive looked at the promotion of vaping as a less harmful alternative; a greater role for the NHS in ending smoking and the need to tackle illicit tobacco sales, said Khan in response to his appointment.

Tobacco is the single largest cause of preventable illness and death, with a quarter of deaths from all cancers estimated to be from smoking in 2019. Despite national progress such as the ban on indoor smoking implemented in 2007, smoking remains very high in certain parts of the country particularly in poorer areas.

I have been tasked by the Health and Social Care Secretary to help the government achieve its ambition to be smokefree by 2030. The evidence is clear that taking action on smoking will be critical to dramatically improving the health and wealth of the nation.

The UK has long been a leader in endorsing the use of safer alternative nicotine products for smoking cessation, and as a result the nation has the lowest smoking rates ever recorded since cigarettes arrived on the scene decades ago.

Back in 2017 the UK governments document released last Summer, Towards a Smokefree Generation, A Tobacco Control Plan for England, encouraged different localities to develop their own tobacco control strategies, with a focus on e-cigarettes and other harm reduction or smoking cessation aides

The British Medical Association supports these developments and has suggested that e-cigarettes are licensed as medicine, allowing doctors to recommend them to smokers trying to quit.

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UK: Free Vapes Given to Homeless Smokers as Part of Quit-Smoking Trial

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Britain May Officially License Vapes as Smoking Cessation Medical Products - Vaping Post

What labour and trade union agenda should the new Colombian government and Congress pursue? Here are some proposals – Equal Times

In Colombia, we have recently seen alternative forces make significant headway in the configuration of the new Congress of the Republic and, according to the most recent polls, left-wing candidate Gustavo Petro could become the new president of Colombia.

Given this favourable political outlook, it is essential that we present the proposals advocated by the National Trade Union School (ENS) and the trade union movement for consideration by the new congress and potential new government with an anti-neoliberal perspective as part of their political and legislative agendas on labour and trade unions. If we manage to turn these proposals into public policy objectives of the new government and the recently elected Congress of the Republic, we will progressively be able to make the principles of ever more decent work a reality in our country.

The starting point for making decent work a reality in Colombia would be to ensure compliance with the law and those rulings of the Constitutional Court that prohibit all forms of labour intermediation through Associated Work Cooperatives, foundations and other unauthorised organisations, and to curb abusive labour intermediation practices by temporary service companies. The state, for its part, should set an example of respect for labour standards by avoiding subcontracting and prioritising the direct employment of the staff who carry out missions in the public sector.

An issue of great concern in Colombia is the commercialisation of social security. A new system needs to be designed that is not driven by the market, and that is public, universal, solidarity-based and preventive.

What are the building blocks of this new social security and protection model? First of all, we need to remove the false social protection floor introduced by the government of President Ivn Duque, which has made working conditions ever more precarious. We also need to establish a public, universal and solidarity-based health system with a preventive rather than reactive approach. Another building block is the pension system, which should be predominantly public and based on the average premium (intergenerational solidarity) approach, to guarantee real retirement pensions. As regards occupational health and safety, the system should restore its true purpose of promoting health and preventing illness and death at work. We also recommend studying the possibility of introducing a basic income, at least on an emergency basis, to urgently address the terrible hunger crisis affecting over 21 million people in Colombia.

With regard to the right to freedom of association one of the dimensions of decent work Colombia must honour the international commitments undertaken by its governments (Obama-Santos Labour Action Plan, Roadmap with the European Union, OECD commitments), and implement the recommendations of international organisations such as the ILO, the rulings of the Supreme Court and constitutional mandates. More specifically, multilevel and sectoral collective bargaining needs to be developed, as recommended by the OECD, and so-called collective pacts prohibited in companies where trade unions are present, as recommended by the ILO.

In addition, Article 56 of the constitution needs to be regulated to define what is meant by essential public services and to prevent the few strikes that take place in the country from being declared illegal on unreasonable grounds.

The resources that the state dedicates to the supervision of employers obligations to ensure labour justice are far below the standards set by the international organisations to which Colombia belongs. The number of labour inspectors is 55 per cent lower than that indicated by the International Labour Organization and the ratio of labour judges to population is 83 per cent lower than the average for OECD countries, for example. Between 1993 and 2019, the number of labour cases increased by 177 per cent, but the number of labour judges remained unchanged. To ensure greater effectiveness of the Ministry of Labours inspection and monitoring responsibilities, the number of inspectors needs to be increased in line with international standards, and both a preventive approach and a rights protection approach should be adopted. More labour judges need to be appointed, and efficient and expeditious mechanisms for access to labour justice should be established to ensure the defence and restitution of labour rights and freedoms that are violated.

A promise left unfulfilled for more than 30 years by the Congress of the Republic is to bring the labour legislation into line with a series of principles set out in Article 53 of the political constitution. One of the priorities the new Congress should set itself is to fulfil this constitutional mandate, which also states that duly ratified international labour conventions should form part of the national legislation.

Given the lack of progress in overcoming gender discrimination in the countrys labour practices, an employment policy with a differentiated approach is needed aimed at promoting and protecting womens employment. The coronavirus pandemic had a highly negative impact on female employment. Although women have been progressing in terms of their levels of participation in education and labour, when faced with social emergencies they return to the home to take care of the family, as indicated by macro employment data. In view of this, urgent action needs to be taken to develop a national policy on the care economy, so that care work is democratised and women do not continue to be the only solution to care needs.

It is also important to include, as part of a differentiated approach, the Ministry of Labours inspection and monitoring of employment in care-related activities, as these are the activities that employ women in the main. The vast majority of domestic work positions are for example occupied by women (94 per cent), and it is a line of work that presents many challenges in terms of the protection of decent work.

Likewise, when promoting the creation of new formal jobs in the country, a differentiated approach should be included in the supply generated, since not only is there a higher level of self-employment among women, but the implications are much more complex due to the structural conditions in which women find themselves in Colombia.

Another pending issue is the anti-union violence that still prevails in our country, targeting trade union activists and leaders.

Coordinated action is needed to change this reality and should aim at eradicating the anti-union culture that legitimises violence; fostering recognition that ending anti-union violence is essential to ensuring non-repetition of the conflict; ending the high levels of impunity that limit victims access to truth and justice; promoting collective and comprehensive reparation for the trade union movement and reflection on the need, legitimacy and importance of the free exercise of trade union activity as a fundamental prerequisite for strengthening democracy and building peace.

Finally, measures are required to address the issue of digital platform work, which takes place in the context of high levels of illegality, precariousness and labour flexibility. These digital and virtual forms of work present major challenges in terms of legal frameworks, as they are not regulated by labour law but by commercial law. Digital work is an unavoidable trend, but labour regulation needs to be the only regulation that applies to these new forms of work organisation. Moreover, not only should employment relations be regulated by labour law; they should also include social protection for all the workers.

A key task for the new government is to rethink the development model that has governed us for more than 30 years, with appalling results. Stable and well-paid employment is only possible if the state implements policies that promote the full development of the countrys productive forces, with emphasis on scientific and technological progress, economic diversification and social, economic and transport infrastructure.

The new development model must guarantee freedom of enterprise but with a leading role for the state in guaranteeing social security; in regulating finance, trade and markets; and in boosting the productive economy.

The state must guarantee access to sufficient credit for productive investment in agriculture, industry, responsible mining, energy, communications and transport, rather than continuing to base our economy on mining and energy extraction activities, the export of primary products and financial-speculative rationales that contribute very little to employment and account for the high levels of informal employment in street sales and the subsistence economy.

This article has been translated from Spanish.

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What labour and trade union agenda should the new Colombian government and Congress pursue? Here are some proposals - Equal Times

Freedom From Fear: Anxiety and Depression Resource Organization

Freedom From Fear is a nationalnon-profit 501 (c) (3) mental health advocacy organization that was founded in 1984 by Mary Guardino on Staten Island at 308 Seaview Avenue, Staten Island New York, 10305. Freedom From Fear's mission is to positively impact the lives of all those affected by anxiety, depression, and related disorders through advocacy, education, research, and community support. On this website you will find comprehensive mental health information and resources.

For information regarding our affiliated treatment center, Clinical Management Consultants, please click the treatment tab. The treatment center specializes in the treatment of anxiety disorders, major depression, and bipolar disorder, in children and adolescents as well. There areno treatment servicesfor substance abuse, schizophrenia or other serious mental illnesses, butwe can help an individual in finding a facility that can address these problems.

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Real People. Real Treatments. Real Success Stories.

Freedom From Fear is a national not-for-profit mental health advocacy organization. Mary Guardino founded FFF in 1984as an outgrowth of her own personal experiences having suffered from anxiety and depressive illnesses for more than 25 years.

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Freedom From Fear: Anxiety and Depression Resource Organization

FREEDOM: Is it just another ‘F’ word now? – Millard County Chronicle Progress

(Editors Note: The references to guns below is meant to illustrate a Constitutional right that could easily be stripped from citizens at the whimsy of the U.S. Supreme Court, depending upon its makeup. The hyperbole is meant to illustrate the deranged turn in our countrys politics and the threat of violence posed by it. The latest example being the likely decision to overturn Roe v. Wade and the near-certain conniption to follow.)

The Princess, er, publisher has made a decree: I shall not write an opinion piece regarding the recent leak from the Supreme Court of a draft opinion that, if made final, would overturn Roe v. Wade. Thats the landmark 1973 U.S. Supreme Court case that first gave women the right to end a pregnancy without undo government interference. Overturning that decision will secure a long-sought victory for anti-abortion crusaders. But it would also strip away from millions of women a hard-fought, Constitutionally-protected right granted 50 years ago.

So, in lieu of that controversial subject, I will instead opine to you today aboutFREEDOM.

We Americans love our freedoms.

And it is true, compared to many nations, they are vast.

And they are palpable, substantial. You can hold them in your hands and in your hearts. Guns, for example. We love our guns, quite often more than life itself!

You want to hold your FREEDOM in your hand, really feel it? Press the cold, brushed steel of that pistol you own against your bare chest. Cock it. Aim it at the face in the mirror. So many people in lands faraway have never, and likely will never, feel such raw, visceral power in the palm of their hands.

Sexy, right?

Ok then. Caress that scoped rifle you used this winter to secure meat for your family. Thank it as you gaze longingly into the glass eyes of that horned head that once sat atop that God given natural bounty whose life you gloriously stole to fill your familys bellies. Not only did that little piece of American FREEDOM provide rustic decor for your living room, it also turned the rest of that carcass into rock hard steaks stacked neatly in your Second Amendment freezer.

Your freedom felled that beast as much as your selection of ammo and patient aim. And if the government wants to strip you of that right, theyll have to rip those guns from your cold, dead hands. Am I right? FREEDOM!

We have so much freedom in America, some of us dont even know what do with all of it.

Voting, for example.

Its election season. The right to vote is a big freedom. Its the freedom to select the candidate who you think will best serve your interests or your communitys interests in Washington, D.C., or in Salt Lake City or on the school board or the county commission.

The opposite is also true.

Your vote can signal your displeasure at an elected official, that they have disappointed you or failed to live up to their promise. You have the freedom to dispatch them with your ballot like an elk unlucky enough to stumble into your gun sights.

You can now proudly don that ubiquitous I Voted! sticker right on your bare chest, prance around, gun in hand, and gloat to any who will listen about how you helped send some dirty liberal hippie right into a private-sector lobbying gig thatll pay him or her six times what they earned as an elected official. Congratulations!

Of course, some choose to exercise this freedom in a very odd way, as an almost lazy protestation to NOT vote at all. Curious choice to be sure. But hey, thats American FREEDOM for you.

Better yet, given what we know about gerrymandering and the January 6 insurrection and the proliferation of 24/7 political propagandaright and left, but mostly rightyou have the freedom to support some candidate who is literally working to make sure your vote counts less and less and maybe even disappears altogether in the not too distant future.

Dont like Democracy? Want to overturn a free and fair election? Vote for Me, Im Mike Lee!

NOW THAT IS WHAT I CALL FREEDOM!!!

This paper you hold in your hands, this very opinion, which has you probably shaking your head right about now, is also the product of freedom. Better believe it!

The blood spilled to make it all possible has long since seeped into hallowed ground. But get it, freedom allows me to tell you how I feel, what I think, pick and choose which facts to lay out to you to support my case, maybe even flat out lie to you, just for fun and profit if I so choose.

And you have the freedom to disagree, call me an idiot or a liar, find your own facts to support your own opinion, write me an angry letter, or quietly inquire about my mental health in a discreet phone call to the Princess.

Now if that aint FREEDOM, I dont know what is.

But get this, too: FREEDOMS, once granted, are extremely difficult to take away.

You want to stifle my freedom to express myself, share my opinion, tell you or some loony anti-democratic senator what I really think of them? See the part above about guns, if thats your wish.

You want to water down my vote, or worse, start seriously threatening legitimate elections with nonsense about fraud and Chinese ballots and voting machines controlled by dead Venezuelans, huh? Well, then there might be a fight brewing. No, no, there IS a fight brewing.

And how about that forbidden subject mentioned at the beginning?

For 50 years American women have had a freedom. Love it or hate it, its theirs and theirs alone. They fought for it. A lot of them arguably died for it. And if you or your government representatives, or the judges who lied about it to win their lifetime seats, want to take it away, good luck with that. Youre gonna have one helluva fight on your hands.

Because thats how FREEDOM in America works.

See the part above about guns again if youre still confused about that.

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FREEDOM: Is it just another 'F' word now? - Millard County Chronicle Progress

Albuquerque Summerfest and Freedom 4th Headliners Announced – City of Albuquerque

May 11, 2022 -The Department of Arts & Culture's Albuquerque Summerfest concert series and Freedom 4th will feature a variety of national touring groups and diverse local performers. The excitement kicks off with Heights Summerfest on Saturday, June 11 at North Domingo Baca Park with headliner Preservation Hall Jazz Band.

Other headliners include Las Cafeteras at Route 66 Summerfest on Saturday, July 23 and Yacht Rock Revue at Downtown Summerfest on Saturday, August 6. Westside Summerfest on Saturday, August 20 will be dedicated to promoting local talent and will feature Albuquerque bands on two stages. Each event will also feature local bands, local businesses with handcrafted products, food trucks, free activities for children, and libations created by breweries, wineries, and distilleries.

Shenandoah is set to headline Freedom 4th at Balloon Fiesta Park on Monday, July 4. Fueled by Marty Raybons distinctive vocals and the bands skilled musicianship, Shenandoah became well known for delivering such hits as Two Dozen Roses," Church on Cumberland Road, and Next to You, Next to Me. The band has left a potent legacy in country music with more than 300 million streams, over 8 million combined album sales, and 13 No. 1 radio singles over the course of more than three decades. Today that legacy continues as Shenandoah embarks on their 35th anniversary tour.

Freedom 4th will also feature the brightest fireworks show in the state, food, local beer, and free activities for kids.

Albuquerque Summerfest and Freedom 4th are free and open to the public. More details on each specific event can be found at http://www.cultureabq.com. Sponsors include iHeart Radio and Lucky Boyz Limousine.

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Albuquerque Summerfest and Freedom 4th Headliners Announced - City of Albuquerque

Russian Dissent Then and Now: ‘For Your Freedom and Ours’ – The Moscow Times

In early April four Russian student editors of a university website called DOXA were put on trial in Moscow. The students at the Higher School of Economics had been under house arrest for a year for encouraging minors to engage in life-threatening activities expressing their views at a protest rally. All the same, the newspaper kept working. In the weeks immediately after the Russian invasion of Ukraine, the DOXA website was an important source of independent information about the war.

We have stopped taking responsibility for what is happening in our country, declared one of the DOXA editors, Volodya Metelkin, at the trial. One of his co-defendants, Alla Gutnikova, concluded her speech by describing freedom as a process through which people develop the habit of becoming resistent to enslavement.

Responsibility and freedom these words, important to these students, were also precious to the Soviet dissidents of the 1960s and 1970s. This was evident in the demonstration on Red Square in August 1968, following the Soviet invasion of Czechoslovakia. The protestors there were just eight of them included Larisa Bogoraz, an outspoken activist, Pavel Litvinov, a grandson of one of Stalins foreign ministers, and Natalya Gorbanevskaya, founder of the samizdat journal, The Chronicle of Current Events. Most of them, Bogoraz and Litvinov included, were arrested and subjected to a show trial. Gorbanevskaya was arrested at the end of 1969 and then incarcerated in a psychiatric hospital.

In her final statement at the trial, Bogoraz declared that if she had not participated in the demonstration, she would have considered herself responsible for the actions of the government just as everyone bore responsibility for the Stalin-Beria labour camps. Her decision to demonstrate, she explained, was a way of taking responsibility for what had happened, even though she knew that the protest would likely prove ineffective. I decided that it was not a matter of effectiveness in so far as I was concerned, but of my responsibility, she declared.

In his final plea, Litvinov stated that he had felt obliged to express his disagreement with the government, while noting that it was vital for the country that its citizens should be truly free. At the demonstration itself, Litvinov had unfurled a banner bearing the phrase For your freedom and ours a slogan used by Polish insurgents protesting Russian rule in the 19th century.The implication was that taking responsibility for the events in Czechoslovakia was important for the fate of the Soviet Union itself.

Of course, the demonstration did not have any immediate effect. But in a letter to Western newspapers written just after it had taken place, Gorbanevskaya indicated that the demonstrators had succeeded in a moral if not a political way: they had broken through the torrent of unbridled lies and cowardly silence to show that not all Soviet citizens agreed with the violence being perpetrated in their name.

There was often an existential element in the activity of dissidents in that they wanted to free themselves from a feeling of being gripped by fear or entangled in lies. In his memoirs, human rights activist Vladimir Bukovsky called on people to throw off the excuses with which they justified complicity in crime. A small core of freedom existed in every person, he declared; this was a consciousness of personal responsibility, which meant inner freedom. Bukovsky played a crucial role in exposing the Soviet abuse of psychiatry in the early 1970s.

Another critic of Soviet communism, Nadezhda Mandelstam from an earlier generation of thinkers also had things to say about responsibility. In her view, people came to abdicate a sense of responsibility for the country in the 1920s as the Bolshevik dictatorship established itself. Everyone of us had a share in what happened, and there is no point in trying to disclaim responsibility, she wrote in her memoirs. In her view, inner freedom and memory were needed for anyone wanting to bring positive change to the world. Even the most ordinary person had the power to influence the course of events, she thought.

The dissidents generally did not like the word dissident: its use by the Soviet regime implied that they were effectively traitors to the motherland or figures of marginal importance. Today the Russian foreign agents law is a similar attempt to imply that such people are unpatriotic.

But these dissidents of the late 1960s were raising questions of national importance. The Soviet Union was desperately in need of new ideas. The invasion of Czechoslovakia was effectively a way of avoiding the challenge posed by the Czech reformers: the task of recovering a humane vision of life in a society still suffering the effects of Leninism and Stalinism. After he retired, the long-serving Soviet ambassador to Washington, Anatoly Dobrynin, wrote that while the Czechoslovak crisis gradually lost its intensity after the invasion, the military intervention cost the U.S.S.R. dearly politically and morally.

In her speech in early April, Alla Gutnikova remarked that even before her arrest, through her studies, she had joined the school of being able to talk about truly important things. Perhaps developing this art individually and collectively is in itself an act of responsibility. It is not easy to practice and can be costly for the participants: at their trial, Gutnikova and her co-defendants were sentenced to two years of corrective labor.But the failure to develop this capability, or the loss of it, can have bitter consequences, as the war in Ukraine shows.

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Russian Dissent Then and Now: 'For Your Freedom and Ours' - The Moscow Times

The Freedom Foundation exists to tear down, not build up – Idaho EdNews

It appears that the Idaho Freedom Foundation (IFF) does not care about children. This a harsh statement, but it is undeniable.

From the mouth of the IFF Executive Director, Idaho public schools are grotesque, and public schools are the most virulent forms of socialism in our society. In fact, the IFF calls for the entire dismantling of our cherished public education system enshrined in the Idaho Constitution.

Who are these people?

It is one thing to want your children to attend private or parochial schools, but to entirely deny that opportunity to hundreds of thousands of children statewide whose parents work outside the home or simply cannot afford expensive private schools is clearly meanspirited.

The IFFs answer to their desired breakup of public schools is to send kids home and teach them online. COVID very clearly taught us that online learning comes with significant and often insurmountable hardships for parents and children. Online schooling is often too difficult for small children, and what could possibly go wrong with an unsupervised 15 year old teenager with a laptop?

The IFF shamefully wants our children to be divided into two categories; those who have opportunities for learning (wealthy and urban) and those who do not (poor and rural).

They dont care about kids who through no fault of their own come from poverty, speak a different language, or live in rural areas without the access to amenities enjoyed by the IFF preferred privileged class. The IFF worked hard to block funding for early childhood education services. Lets not forget the vast majority of Idahoans want these services for their children.

The IFF would yank all fiscal and medical support away from children with special needs or disabling conditions. They would deny these children an opportunity to learn important skills and become productive, educated members of society.

The IFF also attacks young adults who want to attend college. Year after year the IFF demands from their sycophantic legislators massive reductions in financial support to our local universities even as these institutions consistently provide excellent higher educational services for thousands of students.

The IFF is apparently against K-12 and all higher education.

But that is not all. They also scorn our teachers, support staff and administrators. They disrespect our Governor, disparage the State Board of Education, and endlessly ridicule the State Department of Education.

For years, the IFF has pushed their obsequious lawmakers to deny educators and support staff access to salaries, and desperately needed health care. This legislative session, they wanted to imprison librarians.

The IFF says that they want less government, and more parental involvement, but then stridently demand massive punitive governmental intrusion into the private lives of parents and their children, inserting themselves into the most sensitive private medical decisions best made by medical professional and families.

They say they are opposed to socialism, but then want to take your hard-earned tax dollars and frivolously redistribute your money with zero accountability to unaccredited parochial schools or private systems.

The IFF does not have a working plan for Idaho or Idahoans, they can only peddle their misguided accusations and slander. They have no solutions. They exist to tear down, never to build up.

The IFF militate against children, college students, K-16 educators, K-16 support staff, librarians and virtually everyone that does not slavishly adhere to their radical ideology. Their disdain for anyone outside their circle is alarming.

Their actions should serve as a wakeup call for us to sideline these conflict entrepreneurs and the legislators who support them for good by ignoring them and consigning their efforts to the ash heap of history.

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The Freedom Foundation exists to tear down, not build up - Idaho EdNews

Freedom Historical Society to present ‘Mount Washington Carriage Road and The Glen House’ program – Conway Daily Sun

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Freedom Historical Society to present 'Mount Washington Carriage Road and The Glen House' program - Conway Daily Sun

American Freedom Is Greater Than Slavery and Ends in Death – Tablet Magazine

There are many ways of getting freedom wrong. For ways of getting it right, my best advice is to turn to the mainline of American authors from the cusp of the Civil War through the turn of the century. For them, freedom is not the survivalists barren fortress-building, the hedonists plot to escape the world and its obligations, or the gunmans drive to violate that world. Its not the power to accumulate cash or cultural capital. So how did they define this most American of words?

Walt Whitman saw freedom as release, the oneness of death that unites us all. Here was a riposte to easy patriotism, since death precedes all politics, and lies much deeper in us. For Frederick Douglass freedom was a concrete goal, the escape from slavery. Henry James described the freedom that comes with an educated awareness. Mark Twain carved his way through a frontier freedom that was spirited and raw. Edith Wharton outlined the shallow conventional life that can prevent you from being free, turning you into one of lifes victims.

At the start Henry James hated Walt Whitman. Mr. Whitman is very fond of blowing his own trumpet, James snickered in his review of Drum-Taps, Whitmans book of Civil War poetry. Whitman, James charged, was aggressively careless, inelegant, and ignorant, and constantly preoccupied with [him]self.

But James changed his mind about Whitman. Edith Wharton describes him later in life reciting Whitmans Out of the Cradle Endlessly Rocking, crooning it in a mood of subdued ecstasy till the fivefold invocation to Death tolled out like the knocks in the opening bars of the Fifth Symphony.Hard as it is to imagine Henry James on his bike careening through the English countryside (yet its truehe was a fanatical cyclist), it might be harder still to imagine him intoning the plaintive words of Whitmans he-bird yearning after its mate in Out of the Cradle:

Unembarrassed as always, Whitman poured his soul into the he-birds chant, and James, with Wharton at his side, abandoned his usual high-starched quizzical manner to join in the poets throbbing.

Whitman charms us with his huzzahs and his many oddnesses. Hankering, gross, mystical, nudeso runs the poets self-portrait in Song of Myself. How is it I extract strength from the beef I eat? he asks. Nutrition, like all else under the sun, and like Walt himself, is a mystery, worth puzzling over.

When Whitman is somber, he haunts us. He notices a child wondering what is the grass? and muses an answer that channels Isaiahs astounding metaphor, all flesh is grass: And now it seems to me the beautiful uncut hair of graves. Song of Myself turns dim and reflective as Whitman speaks lines that could have come from his reluctant inheritor T.S. Eliot:

We live in a world of the dead, Whitman is saying. Through this gesture, he skews death toward life, making it the most capacious form of our existence, the beautiful secret word that releases us. The sea, he writes in Out of the Cradle (the climactic passage that Wharton refers to), lispd to me the low and delicious word death, / And again death, death, death, death, / Hissing melodious ... Since our being is not just ego and consciousness but something that thrums beneath us as a force of union, To die is, as Whitman wrote in Song of Myself, different from what any one supposed, and luckier.

Whitman was a healer during the war, and he lovingly tended to wounded young soldiers as poignantly described by Mark Edmundson in his recent book on Whitman, Song of Ourselves. The poet was marked forever by his experience of the camps of the wounded, these butchers shambles, as he described them:

Whitman remembered too the darkest hour of the Union, the First Battle of Bull Run in 1861. Whitman was among the crowds in the streets of Washington, many despondent but others taking satisfaction in the Confederate victory. Half our lookers-on secesh of the most venomous kindthey say nothing; but the devil snickers in their faces, Whitman wrote, and he added:

Whitman saw in Lincoln the indispensable man, unswervingly dedicated to union, the foundation and tie of all, as Whitman called it. But for the ex-slave Frederick Douglass, who tried to sway Lincoln toward a more anti-slavery posture, the president was a less essential and prepossessing figure. In his address at the unveiling of the Freedmens Memorial in 1876, which depicts Lincoln freeing a slave, the lion-maned Douglass bluntly proclaimed,

Douglass in his speech then depicts Lincoln as a Moses who was slow coming down from Sinai, bound as he was by the iron laws of politics:

To Douglass, Lincoln was not a sacred symbol or a saint but a flawed if necessary leader. Instead of waiting for Lincoln to emancipate him, Douglass achieved his own freedom, not just by escaping to the North but by expunging all traces of the slave in his psyche. Each memory of slaverys scars was painful to him. In his 1845 autobiography Douglass, who was soon to become the most celebrated orator in America, recalls the singing of slaves making their way to the Great House Farm, their masters home plantation. While on their way, Douglass writes, they would make the dense old woods, for miles around, reverberate with their wild songs, revealing at once the highest joy and the deepest sadness ... These songs show the horrible character of slavery as nothing else can, Douglass sayspresumably including gory scenes at the whipping postbecause the slaves cannot completely reject the masters values. They too are proud of the Great House Farm.

If Douglass were to keep listening to the slaves music, his soul would be tarnished, his will made weak. His idea of freedom, wedded to a blunt Christian honesty, is not musical but moral. Here, Douglass turns his back on the blues, which comes out of the field songs he portrays. With hard-earned irony, the blues makes terms with misery and even finds exultation in pain. We admire Douglass heroic conceptionbut sometimes we still want to hear the blues.

William Dean Howells once asked Mark Twain, Why [do] we hate the past so? Twain responded, Its so humiliating. Twains Huckleberry Finn magically turns every humiliation into a game, from the threats Huck endures at the hands of his drunken murderous Pap to the ritual demeaning of Jim by Huck and Tom Sawyer at the books end, when they fool Jim into thinking he is not yet freehijinks that sour the conclusion for some readers.

Many of Huck Finns glories are hard-edged, like the feud between the Shepherdsons and the Grangerfords, a frightening piece of satire from Twain showcasing the brutal consequences of gentlemanly honor. And theres the cold-blooded killing of a reckless blowhard named Boggs, celebrated by townsfolk in the old-fashioned equivalent of a Twitter frenzy. Twain loves to dissect con men, like the Duke and the Dauphin, but their antics turn pathetic quickly. Stand up for the stupid and crazy, Whitman said, presaging the Beats, but in Twains work, the stupid and crazy tend to be scoundrels. The best part of Huck Finn is what everyone says it is, the scenes of Huck and Jim lying on their raft:

Its likely that soon Huck Finn, felled by the ideology of anti-freedom, which presents itself as a shield against harm, will no longer be taught in our schools. Yet it will always find readers, because of passages like the one Ive just quoted.

Henry James was Twains opposite number. Where Twain pretends to be rude and untamed, James is judicious and evasive in his manner. Both were great experimenters, forecasting the modernist adventures of the 1920s that I will talk about in my next article in this series.

James is our great novelist of renunciation, which is not usually considered an American virtue. In his most accessible masterpiece, A Portrait of a Lady, which, like Huck Finn, was first published in the 1880s, James seduces the reader into thinking that this will be a story about imagination and freedom, not renunciation, but in the end his heroine, the inimitable Isabel Archer, gives up romantic love.

All James novels feature an electric-wire sensibility. His characters are constantly alert, and at times quivering with alarm. James portrays an exhilarated awareness piqued by danger, whether the danger is the specter of social ruin, being tricked into or out of love, or being shown up in front of the internal jury that rules on the legitimacy of ones self-image. This darting psychomachia is a heightened form of life, a virtual reality. No one misses a move.

James knowing style, with its precision which may occasionally seem preening or archly tut-tutting, is easily parodied. But it allowed James to let loose his energies and be superbly creative. This style, oblique and cutting, was his invented personal signature, and astoundingly enough, it was the way James spoke, too.

The young lady of the Portrait, Isabel Archer, is drawn so that every reader will fall in love with her. She is quick, alive, and open, and above all free, with an Americans hunger for new experiences. The leisurely opening of James novel acquaints us with Isabels capacious and acute way of looking at the world. She had an immense curiosity about life and was constantly staring and wondering, James writes. Her deepest enjoyment was to feel the continuity between the movements of her own soul and the agitations of the world. Still more charmingly, Isabel, James remarks, had an unquenchable desire to think well of herself. She had a theory that it was only under this provision that life was worth living.

Isabel gives herself proper credit, the first prerequisite of freedom. But she steps into a trap. James, as usual, has something up his sleevea nightmare marriage.

The Portrait of a Lady contains a puzzle to thwart readers: Why does Isabel choose to marry the serpentlike connoisseur Gilbert Osmond, a louche American expat, instead of the most wholehearted and simpatico of her suitors, Caspar Goodwood? (A solid name, that, made for gripping firmly in hand.)

Goodwood is simply too plain, too much there, unlike the chiaroscuro Osmondhe gives Isabel nothing to figure out, no material to work on. As the critic Robert Pippin remarks, when Goodwood makes his final try for Isabel, after her marriage to Osmond has collapsed, he is the same earnest boy he always was, only more assertive. Pippin notes, There is something pathetic and paradigmatically American in Goodwoods claim: Why shouldnt we be happywhen its here before us. When its so easy?

When they embrace, Isabel senses Goodwoods hard manhood like a flash of lightning (James added this sensational phrase when he revised the novel for the New York edition of his works). Yet she rejects a relationship with him. She didnt and doesnt love Goodwood, but is merely excited by him, and excitement is not enough.

At the end of the Portrait Isabel narrows the circle of her interest, which has earlier been so ample and free-swinging. By facing her fate, instead of fleeing it with Goodwood, Isabel survives. She returns to Rome, the site of her marriage to Osmond, perhaps to confront him or to rescue Osmonds daughter Pansyonly the all-seeing author Henry James knows for sure, and hes not telling us.

James Isabel has her dark double in Edith Whartons Lily Bart from The House of Mirth. Where Isabel wants to see and experience beauty, Lily aspires to be a beautiful object, admired like a jewel in its setting. She could not figure herself as anywhere but in a drawing-room, diffusing elegance as a flower sheds perfume, Wharton writes. Yet despite the shallowness of her dream Lily does not seem at all trivial to usa miraculous achievement on Whartons part.

Lack of money haunts Lily and finally does her in, with a directness matched only in Dreiser. Her grand desperation and tragic death are set off against the fine sensitivity of Laurence Selden, the man who should have married her but who instead remains a mere observer of her career. Selden is kind to her, as is, surprisingly, the Jewish social climber Rosedale. Wharton began writing Rosedale as an antisemitic caricature, but then turned him into a mensch. But kindness is not enough. Lily is simply unequipped for life, shortsighted and full of wrong instincts. She had never learned to live with her own thoughts, Wharton notes piercingly about Lily.

James advised Wharton to do New Yorkand she did. Her unsparing account of the citys ruthless upper classes in The House of Mirth and an even more brutal novel, The Custom of the Country, shows how money, personal appearance, and sexual availability imprison young women. For Lily there is no way outbut Selden the aesthete memorializes her from the sidelines. In the end, disquietingly, Selden congratulates himself for having loved Lily, almost as if savoring the fact of her ruin.

For James Isabel, freedom meant conceiving the world so that doing what you like and doing what you ought become one and the same. Its the noblest combination imaginable, but there is something childlike about it. Lily Bart in The House of Mirth represents the crashing of such dreams into the hard reality of the American drive for success. Freedom is a way of shaping the self, which Isabel can achieve and Lily cannot.

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American Freedom Is Greater Than Slavery and Ends in Death - Tablet Magazine

The Press Freedom Index is Prepared With Bias and a Flawed Methodology – News18

Last week, newscame into the limelight that press freedom in India has decreased dramatically asIndia slid in the index of press freedom. This report was released by an organisation called Reporters Without Borders, a non-profit and non-governmental organisation without any accountability, with the World Press Freedom Index (WPFI).

This episode is not the first time and neither would it be the last time that such a report was released, and India was demoted from it. It started with a rank of 80 in the inaugural WPFI report in 2002: Indias position fell to 122 in 2010, 131 in 2012, 140 in 2019, and 142 in 2020, followed by 150 in 2022. This report aims to evaluate the level of freedom enjoyed by media in 180 countries.

During the UPA era, Indias ranking, according to this index, was falling consecutivelyand silence prevailed in most of the quarters which are vocal right now. Such reports are not even taken seriously in many countries right now.

Like all surveys, this survey also has some methodology to access the parameters, and in a nutshell, it is anything but faultless.

First, the organisation didnt mention the number of participants it surveyed before giving such a label. Although it would not be unfair to assume that the sample size would be tiny, typically consisting of an elite class ofjournalists, activists, and social scientists to decide how much freedom people enjoy. In the past, the entire WPFI 2020 report was prepared by questioning just 150 correspondents and 18 NGOs, with each one answering all 83 questions related to each country. The results prepared from this method will not surprise anyone about how much connection theywould have with reality.

Second, the questionnaire contains many questions that cant be directly associated with the fact that the government is suppressing the freedom of the press. For example, one question is, Is the news media able to achieve financial stability?" Now, the answer to this question can be anything but the reasons are multiple. It can also bethat the finance department of the media is facing some issues, or the media has taken a debt in expansion which cant be repaid because of the margins shrinking.

Another question is, Are journalists threatened or influenced by corruption?" The answer would be tricky in this case. It can also happen that the journalists are affected by corruption by big corporate to publish against the government. Or replace the big corporate with some non-accountable organisation or individual. The question can still be answered without the government being held responsible.

Also, there are questions like, Are journalists frequently convicted because of their work, whether for press offenses or for common law crimes?", Are laws against terrorism, separatism and/or extremism used against journalists?" and so on. This places journalists as the unquestionable people, particularly given that they can also be prone to be criminals but receive much more media coverage when taking action, increasing theavailability bias and triggering the elites to think theyre in danger.

Third, the bias of any organisation can be known from the issues on which it takes the stand. In February 2022, Rana Ayyub, whose book was dubbed as fiction by the apex court, was being investigated for purportedly committing financial fraud beneath afundraiser and the RWB wanted the investigations to be stopped. It was not the first time that the RWB showed this bias, though.

It is not the case with only this organisation that such blatantly shabby observations are published and taken seriously. A few years back, Thomson Reuters Foundation released a ranking of countries based on womens safety in which India was declared as the most dangerous country for women. The irony in the report was that Afghanistan and Somalia were safer than India when it came to womens safety! As usual, it was prepared by asking opinions from a small lot of feminists, humanists, activists (add some fancy ists here) across the globe.

Coming back to the point, there may be political or economic attempts of intimidation that one cant ignore while analysing the whole picture and giving a conclusion, but the surveys using such an outdated methodology and blatant bias will not help the cause either.

Harshil Mehta is an analyst who writes on international relations, diplomacy and national issues. The views expressed in this article are those of the author and do not represent the stand of this publication.

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The Press Freedom Index is Prepared With Bias and a Flawed Methodology - News18

Guest column: GOP is out to limit voting and reproductive freedom – The Bulletin

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United States of AmericaUS Virgin IslandsUnited States Minor Outlying IslandsCanadaMexico, United Mexican StatesBahamas, Commonwealth of theCuba, Republic ofDominican RepublicHaiti, Republic ofJamaicaAfghanistanAlbania, People's Socialist Republic ofAlgeria, People's Democratic Republic ofAmerican SamoaAndorra, Principality ofAngola, Republic ofAnguillaAntarctica (the territory South of 60 deg S)Antigua and BarbudaArgentina, Argentine RepublicArmeniaArubaAustralia, Commonwealth ofAustria, Republic ofAzerbaijan, Republic ofBahrain, Kingdom ofBangladesh, People's Republic ofBarbadosBelarusBelgium, Kingdom ofBelizeBenin, People's Republic ofBermudaBhutan, Kingdom ofBolivia, Republic ofBosnia and HerzegovinaBotswana, Republic ofBouvet Island (Bouvetoya)Brazil, Federative Republic ofBritish Indian Ocean Territory (Chagos Archipelago)British Virgin IslandsBrunei DarussalamBulgaria, People's Republic ofBurkina FasoBurundi, Republic ofCambodia, Kingdom ofCameroon, United Republic ofCape Verde, Republic ofCayman IslandsCentral African RepublicChad, Republic ofChile, Republic ofChina, People's Republic ofChristmas IslandCocos (Keeling) IslandsColombia, Republic ofComoros, Union of theCongo, Democratic Republic ofCongo, People's Republic ofCook IslandsCosta Rica, Republic ofCote D'Ivoire, Ivory Coast, Republic of theCyprus, Republic ofCzech RepublicDenmark, Kingdom ofDjibouti, Republic ofDominica, Commonwealth ofEcuador, Republic ofEgypt, Arab Republic ofEl Salvador, Republic ofEquatorial Guinea, Republic ofEritreaEstoniaEthiopiaFaeroe IslandsFalkland Islands (Malvinas)Fiji, Republic of the Fiji IslandsFinland, Republic ofFrance, French RepublicFrench GuianaFrench PolynesiaFrench Southern TerritoriesGabon, Gabonese RepublicGambia, Republic of theGeorgiaGermanyGhana, Republic ofGibraltarGreece, Hellenic RepublicGreenlandGrenadaGuadaloupeGuamGuatemala, Republic ofGuinea, RevolutionaryPeople's Rep'c ofGuinea-Bissau, Republic ofGuyana, Republic ofHeard and McDonald IslandsHoly See (Vatican City State)Honduras, Republic ofHong Kong, Special Administrative Region of ChinaHrvatska (Croatia)Hungary, Hungarian People's RepublicIceland, Republic ofIndia, Republic ofIndonesia, Republic ofIran, Islamic Republic ofIraq, Republic ofIrelandIsrael, State ofItaly, Italian RepublicJapanJordan, Hashemite Kingdom ofKazakhstan, Republic ofKenya, Republic ofKiribati, Republic ofKorea, Democratic People's Republic ofKorea, Republic ofKuwait, State ofKyrgyz RepublicLao People's Democratic RepublicLatviaLebanon, Lebanese RepublicLesotho, Kingdom ofLiberia, Republic ofLibyan Arab JamahiriyaLiechtenstein, Principality ofLithuaniaLuxembourg, Grand Duchy ofMacao, Special Administrative Region of ChinaMacedonia, the former Yugoslav Republic ofMadagascar, Republic ofMalawi, Republic ofMalaysiaMaldives, Republic ofMali, Republic ofMalta, Republic ofMarshall IslandsMartiniqueMauritania, Islamic Republic ofMauritiusMayotteMicronesia, Federated States ofMoldova, Republic ofMonaco, Principality ofMongolia, Mongolian People's RepublicMontserratMorocco, Kingdom ofMozambique, People's Republic ofMyanmarNamibiaNauru, Republic ofNepal, Kingdom ofNetherlands AntillesNetherlands, Kingdom of theNew CaledoniaNew ZealandNicaragua, Republic ofNiger, Republic of theNigeria, Federal Republic ofNiue, Republic ofNorfolk IslandNorthern Mariana IslandsNorway, Kingdom ofOman, Sultanate ofPakistan, Islamic Republic ofPalauPalestinian Territory, OccupiedPanama, Republic ofPapua New GuineaParaguay, Republic ofPeru, Republic ofPhilippines, Republic of thePitcairn IslandPoland, Polish People's RepublicPortugal, Portuguese RepublicPuerto RicoQatar, State ofReunionRomania, Socialist Republic ofRussian FederationRwanda, Rwandese RepublicSamoa, Independent State ofSan Marino, Republic ofSao Tome and Principe, Democratic Republic ofSaudi Arabia, Kingdom ofSenegal, Republic ofSerbia and MontenegroSeychelles, Republic ofSierra Leone, Republic ofSingapore, Republic ofSlovakia (Slovak Republic)SloveniaSolomon IslandsSomalia, Somali RepublicSouth Africa, Republic ofSouth Georgia and the South Sandwich IslandsSpain, Spanish StateSri Lanka, Democratic Socialist Republic ofSt. HelenaSt. Kitts and NevisSt. LuciaSt. Pierre and MiquelonSt. Vincent and the GrenadinesSudan, Democratic Republic of theSuriname, Republic ofSvalbard & Jan Mayen IslandsSwaziland, Kingdom ofSweden, Kingdom ofSwitzerland, Swiss ConfederationSyrian Arab RepublicTaiwan, Province of ChinaTajikistanTanzania, United Republic ofThailand, Kingdom ofTimor-Leste, Democratic Republic ofTogo, Togolese RepublicTokelau (Tokelau Islands)Tonga, Kingdom ofTrinidad and Tobago, Republic ofTunisia, Republic ofTurkey, Republic ofTurkmenistanTurks and Caicos IslandsTuvaluUganda, Republic ofUkraineUnited Arab EmiratesUnited Kingdom of Great Britain & N. IrelandUruguay, Eastern Republic ofUzbekistanVanuatuVenezuela, Bolivarian Republic ofViet Nam, Socialist Republic ofWallis and Futuna IslandsWestern SaharaYemenZambia, Republic ofZimbabwe

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Guest column: GOP is out to limit voting and reproductive freedom - The Bulletin

Afghanistan dispatch: ‘The Taliban are the enemies of women’s freedom’ – JURIST

Law students and lawyers in Afghanistan are filing reports with JURIST on the situation there after the Taliban takeover. Here, a female Afghan law student shares her views on a strict new Taliban decree issued Saturday requiring Afghan women to wear full hijabs under threat of sanction against themselves or their male guardians. For privacy and security reasons, we are withholding our correspondents name. The text has only been lightly edited to respect the authors voice.

In the very first days after the fall of Afghanistan to the Taliban, they were saying that they had changed and they respected human rights and womens rights, but these days we are witnessing that words are not enough, and there is no change in this illiterate, cruel, bigoted and rough group.

The right to decide how to dress is the most important, fundamental and primary right of a woman. How can womens rights be respected while a large number of men decide on the way of dressing of women without considering their wants and opinions?

What kind of respect is it that I, as a woman, cant decide on my very own and personal part of my life, which is dressing?

There is no respect for womens rights in Afghanistan. Imposing black Hijab and veils by the Taliban is a clear violation of womens rights. The Taliban are the enemies of womens freedom, and they are always trying to suppress and imprison women and remove them from public life.

The Taliban make new restrictions on women and impose it through their families, because no father, brother or husband wants to be imprisoned and tortured by the Taliban.

The Taliban have taken awayfrom women the right to live freely with dignity, and this pressure is increasing day by day

BUT

Actually, who can suppress this generation? Who can silence this generation of strong Afghan women?

The answer is: NO ONE

We are fighting for a free Afghanistan where women can live freely with dignity.

We are breathing in the middle of a fire of bigotry, violence and restrictions against women, and still we are alive.

Yes, we are here. You (Taliban) cant ignore us.

You cant remove us.

You cant kill us.

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Afghanistan dispatch: 'The Taliban are the enemies of women's freedom' - JURIST

Media polarisation risks press freedom and peace in conflict-hit Mali and Ethiopia – The Guardian

The media watchdog Reporters Without Borders (RSF) released the 20th edition of its World Press Freedom Index last week, in which it underscored a twofold increase in polarisation amplified by information chaos.

Media polarisation is emerging as one overarching hurdle inhibiting progress in conflict-marred regions of Africa, where it is also fast becoming an open threat to peace and security.

Few countries illustrate this gloomy trend better than Mali in the Sahel, and Ethiopia at the Horn of Africa.

In Mali, political uncertainty and tensions between the countrys government and former colonial power, France, have increased since a military coup led by Colonel Assimi Goita in August 2020 overthrew elected President Ibrahim Keta, who was supported by France.

Last week, the military government accused the two French broadcasters RFI and France24 of airing disinformation about reports of human rights violations by the Malian army around the town of Diabaly.

The Malian government accused France of spying after the French military released a video of what it said were mercenaries from the Kremlin-linked security firm Wagner burying bodies at a mass grave on 20 April.

NGOs including Human Rights Watch have accused the Malian junta of targeting innocent civilians with over 100 people said to have been killed since December. Mali said the reports that its army had carried out abuses contained false allegations aimed at destabilising the government.

Malis High Communication Authority has decided to ban RFI and France 24 from the Malian airwaves. UN rights office spokesperson Ravina Shamdasani warned that the current climate in Mali is one with a pervasive chilling effect on journalists.

As the space for free expression is severely curtailed in Mali, social media platforms are playing an increasingly important role. In a region already blighted by military coups in Guinea and Burkina Faso, the current social and political tensions in the west African nation are sustained by disinformation and inflammatory content, which have proven difficult to stamp out.

Mali is now placed 111 out of the 180 countries monitored in the latest World Press Freedom index, a 12-place drop from 2021.

In the eastern part of the continent, Ethiopian federal troops deployed by the prime minister, Abiy Ahmed, have been fighting the Tigray Peoples Liberation Front (TPLF) since November 2020.

Journalists and human rights groups have reported serious abuses in the country, mostly mass killings and violent atrocities. Victims blame federal Ethiopian soldiers, the Amhara regional militias and Eritrean forces.

The UN high commissioner for human rights, Michelle Bachelet, has said that serious violations of international law may have been committed by Ethiopia, Eritrea and the TPLF.

Ethiopia is ranked 114 in the latest press-freedom rankings, 13 places down from last year. Ahmed made a promising start when he took power in April 2018, but the Nobel peace prize-winners war in Tigray has meant a rapid reversal of positive developments, including in the area of press freedom.

This years index show that new freedoms are severely threatened. The Committee to Protect Journalists has reported on how erosion of media rights has seriously increased during the conflict. Several journalists and media workers accused of helping foreign media have been arrested.

Furthermore, Ethiopian news media have become dangerously divided along ethnic lines. Facebook and Twitter have come under fire over their roles in the conflict. Critics argue they are not doing enough to prevent the spread of hate speech and incitements to violence on their platforms. Facebook whistleblower Frances Haugen has also stated that in places like Ethiopia social media is fanning ethnic violence, a claim the firms reject.

The RSF uses five indicators to compile the index: political context, legal framework, economic context, sociocultural context and security. Whereas the most worrying part for Mali is the political context, Ethiopia scores extremely low on the security indicator.

The Nobel committees decision to award the 2021 peace prize to journalists Maria Ressa from the Philippines and Dmitrij Muratov from Russia stressed the importance of quality journalism as a prerequisite for democracy and peace. Both countries continue to plunge on the RSF list.

After its invasion of Ukraine, and the ongoing information war, Russia is now ranked 155th, with the situation for press freedom described as very bad. Today, parts of the Nobel peace prize committees rationale can be read almost as a prelude to what was to come: A free, independent and fact-based journalism protects against abuse of power, lies and war propaganda.

Dr Kristin Skare Orgeret is a professor in journalism and media studies at Oslo Metropolitan University, with a particular focus on media in conflict

Dr Bruce Mutsvairo is associate professor at Utrecht University and is investigating the impact of disinformation in exacerbating political conflict in Mali and Ethiopia

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Media polarisation risks press freedom and peace in conflict-hit Mali and Ethiopia - The Guardian

Daly and Wallace lawsuit flagged for press freedom concerns – The Irish Times

A defamation lawsuit against broadcaster RT by MEPs Mick Wallace and Clare Daly has been flagged on the Council of Europe platform as a potential threat to press freedom.

Media freedom NGOs Index on Censorship and International Press Institute issued an alert on the councils safety of journalists platform about the case, filing it under the category of harassment and intimidation of journalists, which includes the use of defamation cases.

The alert notes that the two MEPs filed separate defamation proceedings against RT on April 11th, and that the two are represented by the law firm Dore & Company Solicitors.

It is the second alert ever filed concerning Ireland on the platform since it was established seven years ago, adding to the flagging of a lawsuit against the Dublin Inquirer newspaper in 2020.

We are extremely alarmed at the legal actions that have been filed against RT by MEPs Clare Daly and Mick Wallace, especially as we believe that they are characteristic of strategic lawsuits against public participation also known as SLAPPs, Jessica N Mhainn, a policy and campaigns manager with Index on Censorship, said in a statement.

We identify SLAPPs through some key hallmarks, but fundamentally they involve powerful or wealthy people making legal threats or taking legal actions against public watchdogs such as media outlets in response to public-interest speech.

Mr Wallace and Ms Daly did not immediately respond to a request for comment but, in a statement, Robert Dore of Dore & Company Solicitors said: If individuals who make the case that they have been defamed by the national broadcaster institute proceedings to vindicate their good names and reputations, as is their lawful entitlement, I do not see how this can be considered as harassment and intimidation of journalists, or how any NGO can characterise their cases as strategic lawsuits.

One must balance press freedom against the rights of individuals to their good names and reputations.

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Daly and Wallace lawsuit flagged for press freedom concerns - The Irish Times

The Navy just launched a brand new ship it doesnt even want – Task & Purpose

The USS Beloit, one of the Navys newest ships, has launched after sliding into the waters of Lake Michigan on May 7.

According to a Lockheed Martin press release, the company is confident that the sailors of Littoral Combat Ship (LCS) 29, the future USS Beloit, will play a critical role in supporting maritime security and deterrence. The LCS Freedom-variant, operationally deployed today, is an unmatched and highly adaptable warship, designed to outpace the growing threat of our adversaries and fulfill the dynamic missions of the U.S. Navy.

The Beloit is the latest Freedom-variant Littoral Combat Ship to take to the seas, although just how long the vessel will be cruising remains in question.While the Navy has planned for 35 Independence and Freedom-variant Littoral Combat Ships, a Government Accountability Office report published in February found that the LCS still has not demonstrated the operational capabilities it needs to perform its mission.

And even as this Littoral Combat Ship is commissioning, the class overall seems to be on its way out. The ship that gave the class its name, the USS Freedom, was decommissioned last year after only 13 years of service. The Navys latest budget proposal includes decommissioning nine of the so-called little crappy ships, even though theyre among the newest ships in the fleet.

For years, the fleet of ships has been plagued by problems with the vessels combat system elements and a distinct lack of redundancies for vital systems, leaving the Littoral Combat Ship unable to survive in high intensity conflict, according to a 2018 review from the Pentagons Operational Test & Evaluation office.

Problems with its propulsion system have also hampered the Freedom-variant. Designed to give the ship a top speed of over 40 knots, the combining gear on these ships has been beset with multiple issues.

It isnt much better for the second class of Littoral Combat Ships, the Independence-variant. According to documents acquired by the Navy Times, these ships are suffering from structural defects that have led to hull cracks on several vessels, limiting the speed and sea states in which some ships can operate.

Whether any ships will be decommissioned remains to be seen, as the Pentagons budget request has not yet been approved and Congress has previously resisted attempts to decommission these ships. Last year, Congress blocked the decommissioning of the Freedom-variant Littoral Combat Ships USS Fort Worth, Detroit, and Little Rock, which were commissioned in 2012, 2016, and 2017 respectively.

Of course, the Littoral Combat Ship hasnt been a complete failure. In 2021, six of the ships were deployed. And while they still have relatively limited capabilities operationally, they are still entering service and one LCS even deployed to European waters for the first time. That same ship making the inaugural voyage, though, is one that is part of the proposed decommissioning program for these troubled vessels.

So even with the Navy seemingly ready to move on from the Littoral Combat Ship era, for however long the USS Beloit takes to the seas we wish the crew good luck.

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Yoon stresses freedom, growth as he begins 5-year term – The Korea Herald

The inauguration ceremony was held at the National Assembly at 11 a.m. and had around 41,000 people in attendance, including former presidents and the family members of deceased former leaders, parliamentary and government officials, diplomatic envoys and the invited public.

It is our generations calling to build a nation that espouses liberal democracy and ensures a thriving market economy, a nation that fulfills its responsibility as a trusted member of the international community, and a nation that truly belongs to the people, Yoon said.

The new president said many countries, including South Korea, are faced with multiple crises, including fast-evolving trade regimes, armed conflicts and wars, record-low growth, rising unemployment, polarization, internal strife. He believes freedom is the most important core value to overcome the challenges.

Freedom is a universal value, he said. Every citizen and every member of society must be able to enjoy freedom. If ones freedom is infringed upon or left uncorrected, this is an assault on everyones freedom.

By the presidential offices count, he used the word freedom 35 times in his inaugural address, the most of any word mentioned, followed by citizens and the public 15 times, each.

Individual countries must do so, but global citizens must also come together in solidarity to address these injustices if and when they arise, he said.

Hunger, poverty, abuse of power and armed conflict strips away our individual freedom and robs us of our inalienable right to the pursuit of happiness, Yoon said. We, as global citizens who enjoy real freedom, must never turn a blind eye when freedom is attacked.

Yoon believes division and social conflict plaguing Korean society and threatening freedom and liberal democratic order can be overcome with rapid and sustainable growth.

Rapid growth will open up new opportunities, he said. It will improve social mobility, thereby helping us rid of the fundamental obstacles that are aggravating social divide and conflicts.

The president said it was critical that the nation achieved rapid growth and that it would only be possible through science, technology and innovation.

Science, technology and innovation -- they will protect our democracy, expand freedom and our inalienable rights to let our people enjoy a sustainable life of dignity.

He also called for the denuclearization of North Korea for peace on the Korean peninsula.

While North Koreas nuclear weapon programs are a threat not only to South Koreas security and that of Northeast Asia, the door to dialogue will remain open to peacefully resolve this threat, the president said.

If North Korea genuinely embarks on a process to complete denuclearization, we are prepared to work with the international community to present an audacious plan that will vastly strengthen North Koreas economy and improve the quality of life for its people.

Yoon believes North Koreas denuclearization will greatly contribute to bringing lasting peace and prosperity to the Korean Peninsula and beyond.

I solemnly pledge today that I will do my utmost to elevate Korea into a country that truly belongs to the people, he said. A country based on the pillars of freedom, human rights, fairness and solidarity; a country that is respected by others around the world. Let us embark on this journey together.

The new president began his presidential term midnight Monday by receiving a report from the Joint Chiefs of Staff in the situation room of the National Crisis Management Center located in the basement of the presidential office in Yongsan, central Seoul.

By Shin Ji-hye (shinjh@heraldcorp.com)

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Yoon stresses freedom, growth as he begins 5-year term - The Korea Herald

Opinion: More freedom or more death: A pandemic quandary we have yet to solve – The Globe and Mail

How much freedom should we be willing to give up in order to prevent many people from dying?

Its been more than two years since that ceased to be an airy debate-club hypothetical, and turned into a central policy question of the pandemic age. There is still no widely agreed-upon, unambiguous answer and in many places, there remains a lethal fear of confronting it.

In recent days, however, weve witnessed two milestones in the history of this question, each leading to very different insights.

The first was in New Zealand where, for the first time in two years, people from abroad are now allowed to visit. That follows the February announcement that citizens could return to their country without a two-week military-guarded hotel quarantine (though proof of vaccination is still required, sensibly). It was an easy decision to make, because 95 per cent of New Zealands vaccine-eligible population are now fully vaccinated, thus making the disease more of an inconvenience than a death threat for most.

The informed consensus is that these infringements on freedom of travel were entirely worth it, because they prevented an estimated 10,000 COVID-19 deaths from taking place in a country of five million, and because they gave New Zealanders freedoms, during that deadly year before vaccination, that most of the rest of the world could only dream of.

New Zealand managed to keep itself all but coronavirus-free during that crucial year, and thus has recorded the lowest death rate among countries with accurate measurements. That allowed daily life to continue more or less as normal during most periods (much as Atlantic Canadians experienced during its travel-bubble months), along with unprecedented economic growth while the rest of the world slumped.

The second milestone was in Shanghai, where about half of the citys 25 million people were recently allowed to go outside for the first time in weeks, and about four million were allowed to leave their neighbourhoods, in a slight easing of the draconian COVID zero policies enforced in response to a modest Omicron-variant outbreak.

Most of the pandemics so-called lockdowns, such as those experienced in Northern Italy or New York City in 2020 when their hospitals were overwhelmed, were mere stay-at-home requests. Shanghai authorities, who faced no such catastrophe, have literally locked citizens into their apartment buildings, sometimes even constructing fences around complexes.

Unlike in New Zealand, this was not a sacrifice of some external freedoms in exchange for greater internal freedoms than one might otherwise experience during a plague. It was a total loss of the most rudimentary freedoms, in exchange for nothing.

And unlike in New Zealand, it was not a modest loss of freedoms in order to prevent a large loss of life. Although Chinas two available vaccines have been found considerably less effective in reducing serious illness and death than the mRNA vaccines used elsewhere, there is no indication that Chinas Omicron outbreak would have been particularly deadly without the restrictions (even after the lockdowns eased, numbers of deaths and hospitalizations there have been negligible at best).

In fact, to judge by the numerous reports coming from Shanghai of malnourishment-related deaths, abandonment of vulnerable people, and neglect of elders during these weeks, it seems that the lockdown has killed more people than it might have saved from the disease.

When the pandemic was at its most terrifying peak in 2020, many commentators suggested that the worlds democracies were at a disadvantage, because only dictatorships such as China could quickly and easily respond to medical data and impose the strict controls necessary to keep the disease from killing millions.

After more than six million unnecessary deaths around the world, the flaw in that logic is more visible. Perhaps authoritarian countries can crack down on their citizens more easily, or at least in more painful ways but its turned out that theyre not adept at tying policies to data. Single-party states such as China, and authoritarian-leaning democracies such as India, have used the pandemic as cover to brutalize and sometimes starve the most vulnerable.

The next time a worldwide disease strikes, we may not wish to be the United States, which suffered a staggering number of unnecessary deaths (a death rate more than three times higher than Canadas, and 23 times higher than New Zealands) in the name of symbolic freedom from basic hygiene principles. Indeed, the U.S. still has a vaccination rate that is far too low to prevent deadly outbreaks. Nor would we want to be Shanghai a place with neither freedom nor safety. But we may at least have a better idea where the ideal balance lies, having tested both extremes. And that place looks a lot like the South Pacific.

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Opinion: More freedom or more death: A pandemic quandary we have yet to solve - The Globe and Mail

Claire Stanford’s debut novel takes on our obsession with happiness J. – The Jewish News of Northern California

Evelyn Kominsky Kumamoto, the protagonist of Berkeley-raised author Claire Stanfords debut novel, works at the San Francisco headquarters of the third-most-popular internet company. She is helping to develop an app called JOYFULL that aims to revolutionize happiness by reminding users to drink water, exercise and show gratitude. It is a project she feels increasingly conflicted about, especially after the app assigns her a happiness rating of 7.1 out of 10.

Youd think that people want to be told that theyre happy, but really, I think what people want even more is to feel understood, she says during a meeting with her boss. Her future at the company, at this point, is up in the air.

Meanwhile, she is trying to navigate complicated relationships with her longtime boyfriend, Jamie, and her fathers new fiance, Kumiko, who invites her to attend a Japanese church with the couple, even though Evelyn is Jewish. Same Old Testament, Kumiko says. Then Evelyn becomes pregnant unexpectedly.

During a recent interview on Zoom, Stanford told J. that Evelyn is grappling with a lot of questions that I was also grappling with around what she wants to do for work, around marriage, around motherhood and especially around a lot of pressures that she is feeling from society as a woman in her early 30s.

Happy for You, which came out last month, is a resonant meditation on what it means to be happy in an increasingly tech-saturated world, according to Publishers Weekly. Stanford, 37, will participate in an in-person panel discussion about literature and technology at the Bay Area Book Festival on May 8, as well as a virtual Jewish Book Council event with novelist Gary Shteyngart on May 12.

As a child, Stanford attended Hebrew school at Congregation Beth El in Berkeley and celebrated her bat mitzvah there in 1998. (She is not related to Leland Stanford, the founder of the university, but she is related to the prolific, nonagenarian San Francisco writer Herbert Gold.) She recalled how each Hanukkah, her non-Jewish, Japanese mother, Michiyo Kawachi, made latkes and Japanese-style tempura dishes. Maybe everyone thinks their mom makes the best latkes, but I think she definitely makes the best latkes, she said.

Despite sometimes feeling like she didnt fit in as a mixed race child in Jewish settings, Stanford said she recognizes today that theres so much joy to having two heritages to draw on.

In Happy for You, Evelyns Jewish mother encourages her to embrace the heritage she felt was mine, by blood and by right, no matter that all the faces that looked back at us in the synagogue were white and my face was something else, not white, but not not-white, either. As for Evelyns Japanese father, he chooses not to convert to Judaism after being rebuffed by a rabbi holding to the custom of denying a potential convert three times though, after much practice, he does recite a Hebrew prayer at Evelyns bat mitzvah.

Stanford said the fathers decision not to convert was important to her because the book is about getting out of more simplified and straightforward narratives. Evelyn does not need two Jewish parents in order to feel that she is 100 percent Jewish, she said. (Stanfords mother also chose not to convert, though not because she was turned away by a rabbi.)

After earning a B.A. in English from Yale and working entry-level jobs in publishing in New York City, Stanford decided to pursue an M.F.A. at the University of Minnesota. The novel she worked on during that program is sitting in a drawer, she said. She is now in the final year of a Ph.D. program in English at UCLA, with aspirations of teaching literature, creative writing, or a combination of the two. Her dissertation, titled Future Asians: Orientalism and Post-Humanism in 21st Century U.S. Science Fiction, examines works by Asian American writers Charles Yu, Franny Choi and Sun Yung Shin. (Post-humanism refers to clones, A.I., cyborgs, stuff like that, she said.)

Liana Liu, an MFA classmate of Stanfords and the author of two novels for young adults, said she was not surprised that Stanford had decided to pursue a career in academia.

Shes such an intelligent person, and her love of books is so broad, Liu told J. She was always seeking out more theory-based classes than some of the other people in our program, which I was always impressed by.

That intellectual curiosity is on display in Happy for You, with characters referencing the work of a number of philosophers, including Aristotle, Nietzsche, Montaigne and UC Berkeley professor Judith Butler.

An early reader of the novel, Liu said it speaks to the experience of being a sensitive person in a society that really isnt set up for human emotions in a lot of ways. It feels like that breath where you take a moment to notice the world around you and to see it clearly.

Stanford said she hopes the novel gets readers thinking about how to live life on your own terms, outside of the algorithm, outside of late capitalism, outside of gender norms all these kinds of pressures that Evelyn is facing.

One person who succeeded in doing just that, to hear Stanford tell it, was her paternal grandmother, Florence Stanford, of Shaker Heights, Ohio. She was a huge world traveler well into her 80s, Stanford said, and she often traveled alone and made friends wherever she went. While talking about her grandmother, Stanford showed off a big turquoise ring she inherited from her. She has been wearing her grandmothers jewelry more often while promoting her novel, she said.

So what makes the author of Happy for You happy?

Thats a hard question, she replied. I think I have a happy life, especially with my book coming out. But I would say happiness is not a number one goal for me, either.

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Claire Stanford's debut novel takes on our obsession with happiness J. - The Jewish News of Northern California

Washington Post mocked for op-ed calling to rename George Washington University: ‘Maybe rename the paper?’ – Fox News

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The Washington Post raised eyebrows for publishing an op-ed calling for renaming a university that shares the same namesake as the paper.

The author, identified as a senior at George Washington University, penned a piece on Monday arguing the school's actions last year renaming the student center that once honored segregationist Cloyd Heck Marvin don't go far enough, writing it "falls short in addressing the main issues of systemic racism and inequality still present on campus."

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"Racism has always been a problem at GW. At the universitys founding in 1821, enrollment was restricted to White men. In 1954, then-university president Marvin employed numerous efforts to preserve segregation, arguing for a homogenous group of White students," the student wrote. "In 1987, Black students organized to demand more visibility in a predominantly Black city where Black students were outnumbered by huge majorities. Today, with Black enrollment at about 10 percent, Black students on campus continue to struggle for community. Despite alleged efforts by administration to enhance diversity, the admissions office continues to fail to ensure a student body with adequate minority representation."

The campus of George Washington University is seen as classes were canceled due to the coronavirus pandemic, in Washington, DC, May 7, 2020. (Photo by SAUL LOEB / AFP) (Photo by SAUL LOEB/AFP via Getty Images)

The GW student called out the university's low Black professorship and the lack of Black culture and African language courses offered, telling readers, "These problems are rooted in systemic racism, institutional inequality and white supremacy" and demanded four items to address the university's problems: "Decolonized university curriculum, increased Black enrollment, the renaming of the university and the selection of an African American President."

WASHINGTON POST GIVES MAYORKAS THREE PINOCCHIOS FOR CLAIMING ILLEGAL MIGRANTS ARE PROMPTLY REMOVED

"An African American at the helm would reflect a new chapter in university politics. Such a decision would demonstrate the universitys commitment to strength through diversity and serve as a reflection of the universitys pledge to racial justice," he wrote, noting GW University has never had a Black president in its 200-year history.

In addition to renaming the university, the student insisted its main campus, Mount Vernon Campus, needs to be stripped of its name since it's named after Washington's former slave plantation and that the Winston Churchill Library "must go" as well as the school's moniker, mascot and "Hail Thee George Washington" motto.

WASHINGTON, DC - SEPTEMBER 5: George Washington University students pass through campus on Thursday, September 5, 2019. (Photo by Toni L. Sandys/The Washington Post via Getty Images)

"The hypocrisy of GW in not addressing these issues is an example of how Black voices and Black grievances go ignored and highlights the importance of strong Black leadership," he wrote.

The senior suggested abolitionists Frederick Douglass and Sojourner Truth as well as Malcolm X as potential candidates after which to rename the university.

WAPO'S TAYLOR LORENZ SAYS IT'S PATENTLY FALSE THAT HER LIBS OF TIKTOK STORY LINKED TO PERSONAL INFO

"The work of this university to uplift the ideals of universal humanism and break its ties with white supremacy and systemic racism must be done with effort, dedication and painstaking excellence," he wrote.

He concluded, "Its time to fully dissociate with problematic patterns of indifference to racial injustice. An African American president faithful to the vision of the many Black forefathers and forewomen who fought and died for the great ideas of universal freedom, would be a step toward a new university chapter. A new name would cement the universitys dedication to racial justice and affirm its commitment to change. Its time to take action."

Students walk past a statue of George Washington on campus at George Washington University in Washington, D.C., U.S., on Thursday, Sept. 9, 2021. Photographer: Stefani Reynolds/Bloomberg via Getty Images

Critics ridiculed The Washington Post for publishing an op-ed that essentially implicates the paper.

"I'd say we reached peak stupid, but we all know there is no peak," podcast host Avi Woolf reacted.

"How did this column make it into the hometown paper??" National Journal columnist Josh Kraushaar wondered.

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"In better times, this kind of adolescent silliness was confined to campus, rather than being in the @WashingtonPost. Of course, in those times, the author would also have grown out of it. Now, the commanding heights share his views," Substack writer Kyle Orton tweeted.

"Maybe rename the paper before running this?" National Review senior writer Dan McLaughlin suggested.

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Washington Post mocked for op-ed calling to rename George Washington University: 'Maybe rename the paper?' - Fox News