Antebellum: It is vital the far-right not be allowed to hijack the movie to weaponize White victimization – MEAWW

Spoilers for Antebellum

On July 1, on his podcast, The Ben Shapiro Show, the right-wing political commentator launched into a tirade against Jordan Peeles critically acclaimed 2017 horror film Get Out. Shapiro said, It's unbelievable to me this movie really was not perceived as how racist it is -- the movie Get Out is really about this, right. The idea of Get Out is a Black man, who's being treated incredibly well by a White family and then, of course, it turns out to be a horror story about them attempting to capture his body and then turn him into a white person on the inside. Right? They literally want to take his body and then take their white souls and put them in his Black body to take control of his body. Right?

Shapiro added, This notion that Whiteness is the threat because Whiteness only exists in opposition to Blackness -- the only thing that brings White people together is being in opposition to Black people -- it's quite a linguistic twist. But this is the way that we are going to divide the country and make the country worse and worse. That is the direction in which we are moving.

Shapiros ideas seemingly reject the notion there isnt a pan-White identity. These ideas are spouted by many from the alt-right to fabricate victimization of whiteness and to weaponize that victimization. And in an increasingly racially-polarized America, it is ideas like these -- rather than the alleged viewpoints they criticize -- that make for a more dangerous future. Unfortunately, Peeles Get Out will not be the only film that received a so-called critique of this nature.

Antebellum, written and directed by Gerard Bush and Christopher Renz in their feature directorial debuts, will face similar comments. The psychological horror-thriller film follows Veronica Henley (Janelle Mone), a successful and prominent Black author, feminist, and activist. Henley is outspoken on topics as sensitive as patriarchy, class, and race. And because of her outspokenness, she is abducted and placed into a horrifying reality where she and other African Americans are forced to work and live as slaves on a Southern plantation on the eve of the Civil War.

The horror is surreal. Henley and other Black men and women are tortured, killed, and raped by White Confederate impersonators as if things were still in the past. Henley finally escapes from this Kafkaesque nightmare. But not before she has to pay with the lives of her friends and not before she is compelled to take up arms and slaughter her captors.

Releasing just barely more than a month before the U.S. Presidential elections, and at the center of a countrywide protest against systemic racism, White nationalism, Confederate iconography, and police brutality, Antebellum is undoubtedly going to ignite more conversations. But as can be predicted, many will attempt to hijack these conversations with rhetoric similar to what Shapiro presented. And he too will undoubtedly be one of those trying to hijack it.

Antebellum presents a hyperbolic idea of what racism feels like in the modern-day, by actually taking it back to slavery. And that is an idea that will offend many, and make many more uncomfortable enough that they would resort to offense-taking as a coping mechanism. But it is important to not let those voices drown out what the bigger picture is. It is important to remember why the movie is important and what it is trying to tell -- racism is real to Black men and women and in one way or the other, it always takes them back to where it all started for them.

Antebellum is available on-demand starting September 18. A theatrical release is still planned for international audiences.

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Antebellum: It is vital the far-right not be allowed to hijack the movie to weaponize White victimization - MEAWW

I Have No Faith In The Next President, Whomever He Will Be – The Pavlovic Today

If you took a look at U.S. social media today, you would think that voting is the most important thing anyone will do in their entire lives at this pivotal, hyper-political moment in our nations history. People are out on the street, protesting for racial justice the abolishment of policing and the criminal justice systems that fuel the preschool to prison pipeline even while military and police forces continuously use violence against them. While support for the Black Lives Matter protests continue to drop from where it was over the summer, those protests did more to change the incarceration systems in this country than years of voting and legislation ever did. At this moment, how am I a person both sides target as a voting demographic supposed to have faith in voting when I see more change happening on the streets than from the ballot box?

Despite the change occurring due to months of protests, there is only one consistent message from the pro-Biden media today, vote against Trump like your life depends on it. I open Snapchat, Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, and everywhere they ask me what is your plan to vote? Are you registered to vote? Who will you vote for? Where do you live? All to help you get registered to vote and decide how, when, and where to vote, and who to vote for.

Via Instagram

Via Snapchat

Via Facebook Via Twitter. New explore section on Twitter dedicated to U.S. election information.

Why ask me these questions? Why, now, more than ever, do you want me to vote? Why do you want young people to vote, now, more than ever? Why is it only now that social media companies are so concerned with election interference? Is it because they finally found their moral purpose, or, more likely, is it because of the man in the Oval Office? Both Facebook and Twitter both faced accusations of actively promoting or not adequately addressing misleading, damaging, or dangerous information on their platforms. However, they now promise to more completely address these concerns, angering Trump and other conservative voices. These platforms are now a part of a narrative that equates voting to an act of rebellion as if everyone who is against Trump is a part of the same group.

However, these social media sites, apps, etc. know young people can decide an election, and they know we hate Donald Trump almost universally. They simply wonder if we love Joe Biden enough or they want to convince us to. Joe Biden, the man whose presidency will work more like a bookmark than a hand turning the page to a new chapter of U.S. history.

Voting for Joe Biden for me, a white upper-class woman who experiences no infringement on her right to vote is not a rebellious act, it is a multiple-choice test. For other parts of this country, in communities of color, particularly Black and Indigenous communities, voting looks more like the recent Belarusian election than a fair and democratic process. Consider what happened to Stacey Abrams in 2018. Going even further back in recent history, Trump stole the election in 2016, and Russia helped him do it. Russian propaganda won the U.S. 2016 Presidential election, not Donald Trump he is an illegitimate president.

Two political parties, two choices, every four years, that system is breaking in front of our eyes, a system easily manipulated by Russian bots. It is simply not an equitable system anymore, it cannot speak for enough people, and it is way too vulnerable. If you want to convince me that this election is critical, that voting is essential, prove it. I am convinced it will not matter this time around.

Simply put, Joe Biden does not care about me, a progressive. We know how to drive this country forward, not him; while we have our feet on the gas he is more than happy to sit in neutral. Voting for Joe Biden, for me, is like voting for a blank vision board. At least Trump has a plan, though that plan would take the U.S. back to the 1960s. I am trying to say that my vote does not matter because I do not have a candidate to vote for. I only have one to vote against since Trumps behavior and actions throughout his life personally disgust me as a human being. However, I do not want to be a person that votes against someone and for nothing.

Theoretically, the people could vote Trump out in this election. All of his potential and devious plans for his second term as President could come to a halt though, theoretically, he could still run again. Still, what will change under Joe Biden? Joe Biden is not some change-maker that the Democratic Party tries to sell him as, any benefits that come out of his presidency will be minimal; aside from the fact that if Joe Biden is president, then Donald Trump is not President, and that is objectively a good thing.

However, to call this moment, right now, the most consequential election of our time is absurd. Bidens presidency will not stop the alt-right rise in U.S. politics, nor will it stop the momentum of progressives. His presidency will not bring about racial justice, or further progress on LGBTQ2IA+ rights. He wants to fund the police, not defund the criminal justice systems, and he does not utter a single word about trans rights.

He claims to have a climate plan, but that is more of a potential to save the U.S. economy plan than a plan he believes in. Warrens campaign estimated that an investment in green technology today could potentially help the U.S. be the leader in what could put $10,000,000,000 into the economy. That plan would mitigate national debt and put the U.S. on the right path towards a greener future, tackling two birds with one stone, proverbially. Joe Biden is not pro Green New Deal, he simply thinks it could help him improve the economy during his term. It is not an accident that he started listening to progressive voices in the climate movement right as the economic effects of COVID-19 became a painful reality.

What I would need from Joe Biden is for him to apologize, sincerely and competently, for his past remarks, votes, and actions. I would need him to truly want the system to change, to actively tell us to go to the streets and demand change. In him, I would need to see someone who knows that the power of a march, of a protest, is just as powerful as the vote, if not more so.

Change is necessary, but change will not come simply through voting, and Joe Biden is not looking towards the future people like me want. Nothing will make the next four years any different unless there is a massive systemic reform, a call to action that puts millions of bodies in Washington, D.C. The Civil Rights movements and the suffrage movements, throughout history, and around the world, prove that theory.

The fact is that the most pivotal election of my life is years away, if not decades. I am okay with that. No one can convince me this is the election that changes my life given the disconnect between politicians, and the people whose interests they should make more of an effort to align with. Is it fear? Anger? Uncertainty? Panic? that drives people to believe that this election will change things? Is it those same emotions that keep politicians so disconnected from the people they serve? I have no answers, yet, only questions.

Until I stop having questions, I will be unable to answer why this election is so momentous. Trump is friends with autocrats globally, and, as a Senator, Joe Biden also made friends with segregationists. Remember the 1994 crime bill he helped create? If you look at the effects in the modern world, the United States now has a mass incarceration crisis that disproportionately affects people of color, primarily Black and Indigenous communities. There are more people in prison in the U.S. than any other nation per capita. That is why I have no faith this election will change anything. I have no faith in the importance of this election that is solely about voting against the other side, as politics has conducted itself for decades now. So I will save my strength for the election that counts. Thanks for all your efforts, your words, your strength, but I cannot find a reason to have any right now. I will be writing on blank space towards true change, what I call a rally on white paper, if you need me.

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I Have No Faith In The Next President, Whomever He Will Be - The Pavlovic Today

Trump is normalizing the possibility of violence in the 2020 election – Business Insider – Business Insider

Hundreds of armed right-wingers, including skinheads and self-proclaimed militias, traveled to the battlefield in Gettysburg, Pennsylvania, on July 4 to confront antifa protesters burning American flags.

But when they got to the historic battlefield, there were no antifa members to be found. The gun-toting counterprotesters who descended upon Gettysburg to confront antifa, and use force if necessary, had been duped by an online hoax.

What happened on Independence Day showed how easy it is to leverage fear of antifa a loosely affiliated group of left-wing anti-fascist activists with no leader and create the potential for violence in the process.

Now, months later, President Donald Trump and his allies are tapping into the same angry, fearful sentiments ahead of Election Day and normalizing the possibility of violence surrounding the 2020 election.

In an interview with the Fox News host Jeanine Pirro on Saturday, Trump even hinted he would invoke the Insurrection Act to violently crack down on any post-election rioting and suggested to Pirro he would deploy federal forces "very quickly" if necessary. It's part of a concerted strategy from Trump to build up the narrative that the nation will break down in factional violence if he isn't reelected.

For months, Trump has been hitting his supporters with a constant barrage of unfounded racist warnings about a group he terms "ANTIFA THUGS" invading suburbs across the US if former Vice President Joe Biden wins the presidential election.

Despite Trump's efforts to paint antifa as a major threat, there's scant evidence to back that up. Antifa is not an organized group and has not been designated a terrorist organization by the federal government.

But painting antifa as a visceral threat has become a central piece of Trump's "law-and-order" messaging. Trump has attempted to turn the Black Lives Matter movement and its affiliated groups into a monolith, portraying them as anti-American anarchists determined to tear the country apart.

Various alt-right groups at the Gettysburg battlefield to defend it from a rumored confederate-flag burning on July 1, 2017. The rumor turned out to be false. Andrew Lichtenstein/ Corbis via Getty Images

Last month, a caravan of Trump supporters drove into Portland, Oregon, to confront Black Lives Matter protesters who've been engaged in perhaps the most sustained demonstrations the country has seen this year.

There were reports of caravan members firing paintballs and using pepper spray on the protesters. Aaron "Jay" Danielson, who was affiliated with the right-wing group Patriot Prayer, was ultimately shot and killed amid the clashes.

It was evident that the presence of the Trump supporters in the city exacerbated the situation. But instead of calling for calm and condemning violence on all sides, Trump praised his supporters as "GREAT PATRIOTS," while decrying the anti-racism protesters.

More recently, the president appeared to condone extrajudicial killings of left-wing activists.

During his interview with Pirro over the weekend, Trump applauded police for fatally shooting Michael Forest Reinoehl, an antifa supporter who was suspected of killing Danielson. Police shot Reinoehl without warning or attempting to arrest him first, according to a witness, and he did not appear to be armed.

But Trump praised the actions of the officers.

"This guy was a violent criminal, and the US Marshals killed him. And I'll tell you something that's the way it has to be. There has to be retribution," Trump said to Pirro.

Trump was widely criticized in June, including by former Defense Secretary James Mattis, after law enforcement tear-gassed peaceful protesters outside the White House to clear a path for the president to take a photo at a nearby church.

Last month, Trump defended Kyle Rittenhouse, the 17-year-old accused of shooting three people at a Black Lives Matter protest last month in Kenosha, Wisconsin. Two of the people shot died, and Rittenhouse has been charged with first-degree intentional homicide.

Conservative pundits have embraced Rittenhouse, who went to Kenosha wielding a firearm as a self-styled militia member, as a paragon of self-defense. Adopting this dubious narrative, the president in late August suggested Rittenhouse would've been "killed" had he not opened fire.

"He was trying to get away from them, I guess, it looks like," Trump said of Rittenhouse. "I guess he was in very big trouble. He probably would have been killed."

Amid all this, Trump has perpetuated the unfounded assertion that mail-in voting will lead to widespread voter fraud. In Washington, Democrats have repeatedly called for expanded access to mail-in voting because of concerns over the coronavirus pandemic.

Trump, who is behind Biden in the national polls, has repeatedly suggested without evidence this would lead to a rigged election. The president is actively attempting to undermine the legitimacy of the election and setting the stage to reject the results if he ultimately loses.

"The Democrats are trying to rig this election because it's the only way they are going to win," Trump told supporters at a rally in Nevada on Saturday.

Trump leaves the stage after speaking at a campaign event at Xtreme Manufacturing on September 13 in Henderson, Nevada. Ethan Miller/Getty Images

Voter fraud in the US is extremely rare, and voting experts have maintained that mail-in voting is extremely safe and secure. Not to mention, Trump has voted by mail in recent elections and will vote as an absentee (virtually the same thing) in November.

But as Trump pushes this unsubstantiated narrative about mail-in voting, his allies are urging him to take extreme measures if things don't go the president's way on November 3.

Roger Stone, Trump's longtime friend and adviser, last week called into the conspiracy-theory site InfoWars and condoned Trump employing "martial law" to stay in office and detain prominent Democratic figures, including the Clintons, if he loses.

The paranoid rhetoric and conspiracy theories regarding the election are also coming from other members of the Trump administration.

In his speech at the Republican National Convention, Vice President Mike Pence said to voters: "You will not be safe in Joe Biden's America."

And Michael Caputo, a Department of Health and Human Services spokesperson, recently went on a 26-minute rant on Facebook in which he issued warnings of an armed insurrection by left-wing groups after the election.

"There are hit squads being trained all over this country," Caputo said in his rant, first reported by The New York Times.

"When Donald Trump refuses to stand down at the inauguration, the shooting will begin," he added. "If you carry guns, buy ammunition, ladies and gentlemen, because it's going to be hard to get."

Caputo, who also worked on Trump's 2016 campaign, on Wednesday announced he was taking 60 days of medical leave.

For months, experts have expressed serious concern that Trump's relentless disinformation campaign has fostered a tumultuous political climate that could easily spark violence on and after Election Day.

"There is already significant chatter about the possibility for a Civil War and armed civil unrest in the event Trump loses his reelection bid, but single-actor and small-cell violent acts would be more likely," J.J. MacNab, a fellow at the George Washington University's Program on Extremism, told members of the US House Homeland Security Subcommittee on Intelligence and Counterterrorism in July.

The Transition Integrity Project, a bipartisan organization founded last year, brought together a group of more than 100 experts in June to simulate what might transpire after November 3.

In a report summarizing the conclusions drawn from the exercises, the group said: "Voting fraud is virtually non-existent, but Trump lies about it to create a narrative designed to politically mobilize his base and to create the basis for contesting the results should he lose. The potential for violent conflict is high, particularly since Trump encourages his supporters to take up arms."

The report also stressed that Trump would likely put his self-preservation ahead of a peaceful transfer of power, should Biden win in November.

"A landslide for Joe Biden resulted in a relatively orderly transfer of power. Every other scenario we looked at involved street-level violence and political crisis," Rosa Brooks, a law professor at Georgetown University and cofounder of the Transition Integrity Project, said of the group's findings in The Washington Post.

The former UK ambassador in Washington Kim Darroch told The Guardian the US felt "very volatile" and that there appeared to be a "genuine risk" of post-election violence.

"All of us have watched Portland and Kenosha, and it feels like a genuine risk. That 17-year-old who shot the demonstrators and the reaction in alt-right circles is really scary," Darroch said. "Whoever wins, you just hope that people will accept the result and take it calmly, though I couldn't say I'm certain that will be the case."

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Trump is normalizing the possibility of violence in the 2020 election - Business Insider - Business Insider

The US feels very volatile: former ambassador warns of election violence – The Guardian

The former UK ambassador in Washington, Kim Darroch, has warned of a genuine risk of violence in the aftermath of a close-run US election in November.

Darroch noted that although Joe Biden is maintaining a significant lead nationwide, the margins in some battleground states are shrinking, and he suggested pollsters could be systematically undercounting Donald Trump supporters.

Im not sure the pollsters really know how to count Trump voters, Darroch said in an interview.

He pointed to the recent violence in Portland, Oregon, and Kenosha, Wisconsin, in the wake of police shooting of unarmed Black Americans, and the case of Kyle Rittenhouse, a fervent police supporter facing homicide charges after a shooting incident in Kenosha that left two people dead and a third seriously injured. Rittenhouse has since been hailed as a vigilante hero by the far right.

The crescendo of violence as the 3 November vote looms raises the stakes of a close and disputed election, Darroch said.

Its probably much closer on the ground in the battleground states than it seems from the polls, Darroch told the Guardian.

Postal voting is clearly going to play a big part in this election, and it feels to me like the Trump campaign are building this up, especially if its close, to declare it rigged or invalid, the former ambassador, now Lord Darroch of Kew, said.

If Biden wins, there is a question whether the Trump base will really support or accept that as the outcome. Equally, if it looks like postal votes have been undercounted or there is serious voter suppression you worry about the other side of the argument, he added. It feels very volatile.

Asked about the risk of violence on the streets, Darroch said: I think its there. All of us have watched Portland and Kenosha, and it feels like a genuine risk. That 17-year-old who shot the demonstrators and the reaction in alt-right circles is really scary.

Whoever wins, you just hope that people will accept the result and take it calmly, though I couldnt say Im certain that will be the case, he said.

He also pointed to the threat of a repeat of Russian interference in the 2016 election. But he is sceptical about suspicions that Vladimir Putin has a secret source of leverage on Trump.

For me, the likeliest theory is that [the Kremlin] really didnt want Hillary Clinton as president: anyone but her. They knew her well from her time as secretary of state and hadnt liked what they had seen, the former ambassador said.

In part, [they intervened] because they could. Putins formative years had been in the KGB. He knew what they could do, and believed in using their skills and capabilities. Once a KGB man, always a KGB man.

Darroch stressed the threat posed by persistent malign Russian influence in western societies.

If systematically repeated in future elections around the world, it might discredit democracy for a generation, he said.

Darroch resigned as ambassador to the US in July last year, after his reporting on the early stages of the Trump era was leaked to the press, in which he highlighted the turmoil inside the administration.

As seen from here, we really dont believe that this administration is going to become substantially more normal; less dysfunctional, less unpredictable, less faction-riven, less diplomatically clumsy and inept, he reported in the summer of 2017.

He has described his experiences and the circumstances surrounding his ouster in a memoir, Collateral Damage, published this week in the UK and next month in the US.

One of the leaked documents was a letter which had very limited circulation in Whitehall, but a year-long police investigation has not led to an arrest.

That letter should have been on very, very few files, Darroch said. How many it is for the police to say, and as far as I know they are still continuing their investigations.

Darroch said his three leading theories was that the leaker was someone outraged a British ambassador could be privately critical of a US president, or felt Darroch was not sufficiently pro-Brexit, or who was involved in an intricate plot to try to influence the choice of his successor. In the end the post did not go to a political appointee, as many had suspected, but to another career diplomat, Karen Pierce, who was at the time the UKs permanent representative at the UN.

I would just be fascinated at the motivation behind it, Darroch said. So if the person responsible was nailed and it was possible for me to talk to them, I would just want to say: Why did you do it?

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The US feels very volatile: former ambassador warns of election violence - The Guardian

Is Richard Jenkins the Most Famous Person in Rhode Island? – The New Yorker

Richard JenkinsIllustration by Joo Fazenda

Rhode Island and Delaware are the tiniest states, but theyve had big claims to fame lately. Delaware, of course, has Joe Biden, whos been campaigning from his home, in Wilmington. And Rhode Island managed to upstage all the other states during the virtual roll call at the Democratic National Convention, thanks to a mysterious man in black holding up a plate of calamari. The Calamari Ninja, as some people called himhes John Bordieri, the executive chef of Iggys Boardwalk Lobster and Clam Bar, in Warwickmay now be the most famous person living in Rhode Island. His competition, not counting natives whove moved away (Viola Davis, the Farrelly brothers) or celebrities with vacation homes there (Taylor Swift, Jay Leno), includes the character actor Richard Jenkins, who has lived in the state for the past fifty years.

I am not the most famous person in Rhode Island, by far, Jenkins said the other day, as he and his wife, Sharon, took a drive around Providence. He named the former Providence mayor Buddy Cianci and the former U.S. senator Claiborne Pell (both deceased) and the pro golfers Billy Andrade and Brad Faxon (eh). From behind the wheel, Sharon brought up the actor turned alt-right troll James Woods, who has several houses in Rhode Island. Is it me? Jenkins asked himself. Thats a depressing thought.

Jenkins, who is seventy-three, with the unassuming air of an assistant bank manager, is famous in a very Rhode Island way: hes appeared in more than eighty films, but, even with two Oscar nominations, for The Visitor and The Shape of Water, and an Emmy win, for Olive Kitteridge, he tends to slip under peoples radars. They say, What have I seen you in? You go, I have no idea what youve seen, Jenkins said. I had a woman tap me on the shoulder on an airplane and say, Have you ever been on The Bob Newhart Show? Because you look just like him. I turned around and said, Are you asking me if I am Bob Newhart, or are you saying you have to look like him to be on his show?

The couple moved to Providence in 1970, when Jenkins got an apprenticeship at the Trinity Repertory Company. Back then, he said, Providence was a burned-out mill town. He grew up in DeKalb, Illinois, the son of a dentist. Before starting his acting career, he made pizzas, detasselled corn, and drove a laundry truck for a company run by JohnC. Reillys dad. (The two actors didnt realize the connection until they played a father and son, in Step Brothers.) We figured wed be here a year, maybe two, Jenkins recalled. Instead, he became a Trinity company member. For a time, he commuted to New York for auditions. That was back when the Amtrak was about a four-and-a-half-hour train ride, if you were lucky, he said, bringing to mind Bidens Amtrak years in the Senate. I would go for an audition, and Id have two lines, like, Freeze! Its the police! And Id leave.

From Sharons Volvo, he pointed out low-key landmarks: the Providence Art Club, the first Baptist church in America. He didnt begin his movie career until well into his thirties, with roles including Woody Allens doctor in Hannah and Her Sisters and a newspaper editor in The Witches of Eastwick.

This month, he appears in Andrew Cohns The Last Shift, as an aging fast-food worker, and in Miranda Julys Kajillionaire, as the patriarch of a family of small-time scammers. (Theyre just awful at it, he said. They cant make two nickels.) He wore a bushy beard, which hed grown for an upcoming Guillermo del Toro film, Nightmare Alley. Production shut down in mid-March, but he had two days of shooting left, so hed been stuck with the beard during the whole pandemic. I cant wait to shave it off, he said, a sentiment for which Sharon expressed approval.

In quarantine, Jenkins has been playing (socially distanced) golf and puttering at home. Its like the movie Marty: What do you feel like doing tonight? I dont know, what do you feel like doing tonight? he said. Yesterday was our fifty-first anniversary, and we drove down to Narragansett. Theres a place called Aunt Carries, but if youre from Rhode Island its Ahnt Carries. Its this great seafood restaurant

When you say seafood, it sounds fancy, Sharon said. Its chowder and clam cakes.

You can sit indoors, because all the windows are open and the sea breeze is blowing, Jenkins continued. The beard has made him all the more anonymous, even in Rhode Island; sometimes, to Sharons dismay, he cant even get them a table at a restaurant. When Tom McCarthy cast me in The Visitor, he said, I want somebody who could walk down the streets of New York and not have people stop. As soon as he said that, a guy walked by and went, Hey! Love your work! He laughed. Its pretty civilized. Im just a guy whos an actor who lives in Providence.

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Is Richard Jenkins the Most Famous Person in Rhode Island? - The New Yorker

Verizons #Next20: The growing impact and influence of Gen Z – Yahoo Lifestyle

Refinery29

A new survey that began to circulate on Wednesday, provides a grim picture of how little Americans really know about the Holocaust. The event that has been called the greatest crime of the century has apparently escaped the consciousness of a large swath of the American public specifically young Americans who fall into the Millennial and Gen Z age frames.The survey was conducted by the Conference on Jewish Material Claims Against Germany (Claims Conference) and included 1,000 Millennials and Gen Z-ers between the ages of 18 and 39 from all 50 states. It found that its not just the details that many Americans are unaware of there are plenty who think the Holocaust never happened or who have never even heard the term before.According to their findings, nearly two-thirds of respondents did not know 6 million Jews were killed during the Holocaust, nearly half cannot name a single concentration camp, and 11 percent believe Jews caused the Holocaust, while 12 percent say they havent heard (or dont think theyve heard) the word Holocaust before.The results are both shocking and saddening and they underscore why we must act now while Holocaust survivors are still with us to voice their stories, Gideon Taylor, President of the Claims Conference, said in a statement. Its concerning that a survey conducted in the U.S. suggests that nearly two-thirds of US young adults are unaware that 6 million Jews were murdered during the Holocaust, the Holocaust Memorial Day Trust said on Twitter. This is why Holocaust education and commemoration is so important today.Some states fared better than others: Wisconsin, Minnesota, Massachusetts, Maine, Kansas, Nebraska, Pennsylvania, Idaho, Iowa, and Montana had what the survey called the highest Holocaust Knowledge Scores (calculated using the percentage of respondents who had definitively heard of the event, knew 6 million Jews had died, and could name at least one concentration camp). States that had the lowest scores were Alaska, Delaware, Maryland, New York, Georgia, Hawaii, Louisiana, Florida, Mississippi, and Arkansas.The results are likely due to a combination of a lack of Holocaust education in schools and an increasing number of Holocaust denial and conspiracy theory content online from the alt-right. This reality is dangerous, contributing to the rising antisemitic attitudes the United Staes is currently seeing, as well as an inability to properly contextualize the current warning signs and parallels like the news of the forced sterilizations being performed by ICE or the fact that concentration camps on the border exist at all.Other findings included in the report detailed that almost a quarter of respondents (23%) believed the Holocaust was just a myth, with over half (56%) claiming to have seen Nazi symbols on their social media channels.The Claims Conference said that their mission in conducting this study was to provide a measure of justice for Jewish Holocaust victims, particularly as Holocaust survivors are becoming fewer, and younger generations will have less tangible references.We need to understand why we arent doing better in educating a younger generation about the Holocaust and the lessons of the past, Taylor said. This needs to serve as a wake-up call to us all, and as a road map of where government officials need to act.Like what you see? How about some more R29 goodness, right here?I'm An Orthodox Jew & This Is Why I Wear A WigA Nurse Reveals ICE Is Performing HysterectomiesWhat's Happening In The Migrant Detention Centers

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Verizons #Next20: The growing impact and influence of Gen Z - Yahoo Lifestyle

What ‘O Brother, Where Art Thou?’ Gets Right (and Wrong) About America – PopMatters

The one-eyed dude abides.

Well actually, John Goodman, playing bible salesman Big Dan Teague, doesn't so much abide, as he assails.

Breaking a massive branch right off the tree for use as club, Teague wallops two main protagonists in a scene that has become a hallmark of the Coen brothers' O Brother, Where Art Thou? The scene is film school clip-effective. Teague, only slightly taller than George Clooney's Ulysses Everett McGill, seems to tower over his victims, thanks to careful camera angles. For a moment, Teague seems to embody Polyphemus, Homer's massive mountain of a cyclops, as he robs the two men of their ill-gotten aims.

Yes, the general outline of the Greek epic is there, but there is much more. First, there is the swipe at Bible Belt morality; Teague admits early in the scene that he's only in the scripture trade for the money. Then there's the cartoon-like violenceTom and Jerry skirting the contours of the Classics Illustrated-version of the Odyssey with some allusions to Twain. Finally, there's the sly nod to the amphibian-focused sadism of the Beavis and Butthead characters as first introduced in Mike Judge's 1992 festival short, Frog Baseball.

Unlike in the epic, however, Ulysses Everett and Delmar O'Donnell (Tim Blake Nelson) don't outwit the big galoot. Teague prevails. Telling the tale of the cyclops through the lens of high and low culture, the Coens hammer home a fatalistic criticism about the ways that commerce, violence, and cosmetic Christianity prevail in American society.

John Goodman as Big Dan Teague (IMDB)

October marks the 20th anniversary of US theatrical release of the Coens' first music-focused comedy. Although initial reviews were mixed, O Brother, Where Art Thou? has weathered well, becoming, next to 1998's The Big Lebowski, perhaps the most universally loved of the Coens' films even if critics at the time, such as Roger Ebert, wondered whether the brothers left too many threads incomplete. One can hardly quibble with Ebert. A music-packed satire that stages Homer's Odyssey in the Jim Crow South, created in part to answer the philosophical ponderings of a 1940s screwball comedy? That must have been one hell of a pitch meeting.

These unfinished but occasionally brilliant threads nevertheless are what is most endearing about the film. A perfect film, no. But one that even my 11-year-old son thinks is hilarious and which raises interesting questions about what it means to be a decent human being in the age of the COVID-19 pandemic and Black Lives Matter demonstrations against police violence, yes.

My interest in the film's flaws and strengths led me to incorporate O Brother into a college topics class that I periodically teach about the culture, music, and political history of the South during the first half of the 20th century.

The decision to center the class around the film didn't come easily. The first time we watched it, I worried that the larger-than-life storytelling stylea facet early reviewers derided as fluffmight present a false view of a region already subject to too much caricature. But as the students and I dug deeper, we realized that dissecting the film led us to greater insights about the untruths surrounding some of the myths about the South as well as the legacy and the origins of actual Southern mythologies such as Stagger Lee and John Henry. We also concluded that key institutions depicted in the film such as the racist Solid South political system and the notable offspring of that system, such as Huey Long and Memphis Boss Edward "Red Snapper" Crump were indeed deserving of the caricature.

The most obvious byproduct of the film is a mini-folk revival that encourages Americans to revisit the blues and reclaim overlooked genres such as bluegrass. Listeners today may still be navigating the half-life of this resurgence in the lingering radio yawp of Caamp, the Lumineers, Mumford & Sons, and their imitators.

But beyond reviving interest in musical Americana, the film gets many things right about the American South. At first glance, the politicians in O Brother appear to be cartoonish, attention-seeking buffoons who seem to have no parallel in postwar American history. I mean, putting yourself back in the year 2000, could you imagine Bob Dole or Al Gore acting like that?

Now, in these times of the Trump administration, we understand that cartoonish buffoons not only capture attention but get elected to the highest offices in the land. From a historical standpoint, we now know that large segments of the country have been electing cads for some time, many of whom, like governors Pappy O'Daniel in Texas (memorably depicted by Charles Dunning in the film), Jimmie Davis in Louisiana, Big Jim Folsom in Alabama, and Fiddlin' Bob Taylor in Tennessee, actually performed country music to get elected.

(IMDB)

These figures, so deftly satirized in O Brother, were pioneers in combining celebrity, entertainment, and political ambitions generations before Ronald Reagan, Trump, and Arnold Schwarzenegger, as I relate in my recent book I'd Fight the World: A Political History of Old Time, Hillbilly, and Country Music. Like villain Homer Stokes (Wayne Duvall) in the film, Big Jim even hauled out a bucket and mop pledging to "clean out the capitol", some 68 years before Trump and his promises about draining the Washington, D.C. "swamp".

Then there's the Greek mythology thing. The Coens must have been divining the fustiest crannies of Southern gentility when writing thatfor upper-class white Southerners in the late 19th and early 20th century were simply gaga for the Classics. We all know of the Doric columns on Gone with the Wind's Terra, but four Southern cities and college towns were vying to be "Athens of the South" while builders were erecting Greek-influenced Plantation Revival architecture faster than Huey Long could skim the Louisiana state coffers. Nashville even erected a full-scale replica of the Parthenon, complete with an intact 40 foot tall statue of the goddess Athena!

You see, when the planters of the Old South met up with the industrialists of the New, Ancient Greece was appealing: a mythically democratic yet decidedly nonegalitarian slave-owning society. The Confederate monuments that protestors are toppling today are often drawn from the same font of Greco-Roman influences, especially in their depictions of women as goddesses and allegorical figures.

O Brother falls down a bit when it comes to actual depictions of Black people. Critics such as Matthew W. Hughey have attacked the film for offering abbreviated and uni-dimensional portraits of its few notable Black characters: bluesman Tommy Johnson and an unnamed blind seer. The Johnson character, an on-again-off-again comrade of the three white heroes played by talented musician Chris Thomas King, is a mashup of the real-life blues performers Tommy Johnson and Robert Johnson, whose supposed deal with the devil O Brother touts uncritically. The blind prophet (Lee Weaver), on the other hand, can be read as a simple spinoff of the "Magical Negro", that silver screen stereotype whose race appears to give him affinity with strange or spiritual forces.

Chris Thomas King as Tommy Johnson (IMDB)

I reached out to Grammy-winning artist Rhiannon Giddens on this question, wondering what a working musician who has done a lot to educate the public on the African American sources of country, bluegrass, and traditional music thought about the depictions in the film. Giddens said that while the music of O Brother had a "huge impact" on her, she too feels circumspect about the way Black music and culture was portrayed in the film. "Unfortunately the portrayal of black music followed the same old tropes," she says, "but they are very strong tropes that have been forced upon the American narrative and we are only just beginning to challenge and dismantle them in a significant way."

My students weren't especially upset at these depictions and the way they contributed to the softly anti-racist arc of the film. They didn't expect much more from Hollywood, but they also wished there was more screen time for Black characters and more attention to the storylines connected to Black music history. Several told me they appreciated the way the film introduced them, as hip-hop fans, to music their grandparents performed or were partial too. Many were excited about the way our class challenged them to make connections between contemporary releases and older forms of the blues and gospel.

The film's depictions of women are likewise somewhat weak. Penny, played by Holly Hunter and loosely based on Homer's Penelope, makes a few appearances and exerts a smidgeon of agency over her life, but her personal choices are erratic and barely rise above the stereotype offered in the original epic.

Perhaps next to the cyclops affair, one of the more memorable scenes involves three backwoods Sirens, expertly voiced but not portrayed by Emmylou Harris, Alison Krauss, and Gillian Welch. Bathing in a river, the three Sirens lull Ulysses, Delmar, and Pete to sleep with their highly sexualized version of "Didn't Leave Nobody But the Baby". One of the students in my class noticed in her paper that the song, a slave lullaby often titled "Go to Sleep Little Baby," stemmed way back in Black southern folk culture. She was particularly struck by Bessie Jones's version and her explanation about how it reflects a precious, perhaps stolen, moment between a Black mother and child. That something so personal is used commercially to support the most sexualized scene in the movie just didn't sit so well, when the class talked about it.

Christy Taylor, Musetta Vander, Mia Tate as the Sirens [ Touchstone Pictures / Universal Pictures - All Rights Reserved / (IMDB)]

There are, of course, other threads that the film gets right. The critique of the carceral state and police brutality, though brief, is compelling. I noticed when preparing for the class that the prominently-placed Dapper Dap pomade probably draws from a real-life cosmetic, Sweet Georgia Brown pomade, marketed by the Valmor Products Co. to African Americans in the early to mid-20th century. Ulysses Everett's devotion to this product and his use of a hair net, as my students observe, gives new dimension to the accusations made by the cinematic villain Homer Stokes that the three heroes are of "miscegenated" origins.

Other subthemes age surprisingly well: the satire, for instance, aimed at the zany Oz-like Klansmen who march in strange formations and could probably O-wee-o their own with the best of today's cowardly groypers and armchair alt-right trolls. The unsettling aspect is the renewed visibility of such miscreants, whether spreading antisemitic conspiracies on social media or carrying Tiki torches, as they did in Charlottesville, Virginia, in August 2017.

(IMDB)

Political writer and podcaster Mark Hemingway similarly has pointed out that the film makes profound distinctions between thoughtful, authentic Christianity and the superficial Lotus Eater-like faith of those mesmerized by "Down to the River to Pray".

But of course, there are threads that run afoul. The size-ism of the Stokes rally seems frankly just plain embarrassing today.

Not everything holds up in this film's critique of the American South. Not everything passes the test of time. But it still touches us in deep and important ways, making us think about how myth, history, and cultural inheritances filter into the present, and about what elements of myth and history we choose to hold onto.

It's important to remember that when the Coens released O Brother on the heels of the 1999 Seattle World Trade Organization protests, they were partially trying to answer director Preston Sturges's query about the meanings of art in Sullivan's Travels (1941), the movie from which O Brother inherits its title. Sturges poses the question of whether challenging audiences to respond politically to stark realities is more effective in making the world a better place than simply making audiences laugh.

The Coens' rejoinder, it seems, is that comedy can make life more enjoyable and provoke thoughtful conversations about the associations between history and injusticejust as long as the storyline is immersed in old-timey music magic and a digitally-corrected yellow-sepia tone. Given the COVID-19 quarantine and the seemingly never-ending onslaught of bad news these days, perhaps blending a little joyful nostalgia with an appeal to thought and action is not the worst combination one can imagine.

Perhaps O Brother's appeal lies in these compelling but unfinished threads, which surprise us and make us hunger to learn more. Or perhaps we enjoy the film because we are a broken society, still waiting to be perfected and finished like the film itself. As Clooney in his role as Ulysses notes: "it's a fool that looks for logic in the chambers of the human heart."

(IMDB)

* * *

Works Cited

Alpine, Mary Kate. "The Complicated Politics of O Brother, Where Art Thou?". Medium.com. 8 November 2017.

Clayman, Andrew. "Valmor Products Co., est. 1926". Made in Chicago Museum. n.d.

Filene, Benjamin. "O Brother, What Next?: Making Sense of the Folk Fad". Southern Cultures 10, No. 2 (summer 2004).

Ebert, Roger. Review of O Brother, Where Art Thou? RogerEbert.com. 29 December 2000.

Hughey, Matthew W. "Cinethetic Racism: White Redemption and Black Stereotypes in 'Magical Negro' Films". Social Problems 56, no. 3 (August 2009).

La Chapelle, Peter. I'd Fight the World: A Political History of Old-Time, Hillbilly, and Country Music. University of Chicago Press. University of Chicago Press, 2019.

Orr, Christopher. "30 Years of Coens: O Brother, Where Art Thou?"The Atlantic. 17 September 2014.

Rooney, Kathleen. "'Why Do You Feel Comfortable': On Morgan Parker's 'Magical Negro'". LA Review of Books. 25 February 2019.

Senior, Rebecca. "The Confederate Statues That Have Been Overlooked: Anonymous Women". Washington Post, 10 July 2020.

Siegel, Janice. "The Coens' O Brother, Where Art Thou? and Homer's Odyssey". Mouseion: Journal of the Classical Association of Canada 7, no. 3 (2007)

Stone, Peter, and Ellen Harold. "Bessie Jones." Association for Cultural Equity. n.d.

Walker, Jesse. "Before Trump, There Was Pappy". Reason.com, 25 February 2016.

Winterer, Caroline. The Culture of Classicism: Ancient Greece and Rome in American Intellectual Life, 1780-1910. Johns Hopkins University Press, 2004.

Winterer, Caroline. The Mirror of Antiquity: American Women and the Classical Tradition, 17501900. Cornell University Press, 2009.

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What 'O Brother, Where Art Thou?' Gets Right (and Wrong) About America - PopMatters

Three Things Hulu’s Bay Area-Inspired ‘Woke’ Gets Right and Three Things It Doesn’t – SFist

Lets first address the off-putting elephant in the room: Woke is a terrible name for any television or internet show especially right now. Nevertheless, here we are, reviewing Hulus confusingly-received Woke, which depicts a fictionalized (and modernized) version of the life and career of beloved local cartoonist Keith Knight through the various stunts he pulled in the 90s and 00s.

The show tries to center on timely topics and narratives through all those dated anecdotes but as weve discovered, it isnt usually successful. Over the course of its first season, Woke starring New Girls Lamorne Morris as Keef, an illustrator based on Knight (who also co-created the series), Blake Anderson of Workaholics as his roommate Gunther, SNLs Sasheer Zamata as local alt-weekly reporter Ayana, and more clumsily stumbles far more than it confidently strides.

TL;DR: Woke is a mildly fun, surface-level watch that lacks the nuance it needs to fill an opening in all of our already hectic binging schedules.

Heres a rundown of three things Woke sort of gets right and three things it absolutely does not.

Of the shortlist of concrete goals Wokes first season manages to accomplish, one is its portrayal of the PTSD, crippling anxiety, and another manner of mental health woes that accompany trauma. After being accosted by an all-white police group in a very public manner while flyering Keefs uneasy subconscious starts to express itself outwardly in everyday inanimate objects trash cans, 40-ounce malt liquor bottles, and, most notably, a marker. His struggles also highlight the larger narrative of the mental health plights many actually face when becoming woke, themselves. Amid a long list of missteps, this is one of the few through-lines the streaming series manages to unquestionably land.

Aside from a lack of face coverings, its odiously clear that Woke was a pre-pandemic, pre-George Floyd dive into the murky waters of racial inequalities weve seen in 2020. The controversial topics the series addresses couldnt feel less nuanced or timely; they all seem to lack the certain urgency and rage millions of Americans now feel as Black men and women continue to die en masse. Though the plunges into Black America appear suitable, yes they seem to exist in a greater, more removed narrative than the one were currently all confronted with on a daily basis. However, should the series be renewed for a second season, it would be interesting to see how the show chooses to look more inwardly at the murders of George Floyd and Breonna Taylor at the hands of police officers, as well as the recent shooting of Jacob Blake.

Its almost hard not to cringe at Gunthers overtly West Coast liberal hipness and you cant help but feel thats exactly how Knight wants you to endure watching him go about his life. The entire eight episodes ebb and flow on a sort of newfound hipster convergence for the controversial cartoonist, too. And in that meeting, no quote lefty topic is off-limits to tackle: police brutality, white liberal racism, cancel culture, queerness and gender conformity, Black creative integrity (and appropriation), and, of course, mental health.

Watching Woke, youre enveloped in the Bay Area and SFs historically bohemian qualities and creative twangs around every plot turn. But whats sorely lacking is an honest, not-so-pretty portrayal of the many financial struggles hundreds of thousands face across the Bay Area, all of which have been exacerbated by the pandemic. (Again, the show was written and shot a while ago.) A passive watch through the series leaves you understanding that "its expensive" to live in the region, but otherwise viewers are merely presented with digestible, sliding-screen-door glimpses into the homelessness problem, rather than ever tackling it in its complexity. But I guess it's a comedy, so...

Even just two episodes in, you (as a viewer) are immediately reminded about the prankster, pot-stirring genius that is the IRL Keith Knight. The show thoroughly highlights his sharp wit and antics like, for example, posting flyers around SF for a bogus service that would allow customers to rent Black people. The show also relays the well-documented and wide-ranging reactions his flyers received, allowing for some space to have uncomfortable conversations with those you may be watching with. Moreover, when Woke manages to pepper in those kinds of moments, it provides some much-needed seasoning for an otherwise bland viewing experience.

Wokes most egregious disappointment isnt in its blind-eyeing of certain topics or its bouts of hollow humor, but rather in how the scripts are clearly manifested under the idea of white palatability. Every detail the cadences, the cinematography, the depictions of Black America of the show come across as diluted... as if Hulus executive board (which doesnt include a single Black individual) was afraid the intended final product would be too Black for a broader audience to get behind. Alas, were left with flashes of authenticity that merely get overshadowed by an umbrella of lukewarm convictions.

And that, reader, is the opposite of being "woke."

Related: Bay Area-Based 'Dilbert' Cartoonist Scott Adams Sparks Outrage For Using Gilroy Shooting To Promote His App

'Harry Potter and the Cursed Child' Is a Wild Ride and Dazzling Piece of Theater

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Three Things Hulu's Bay Area-Inspired 'Woke' Gets Right and Three Things It Doesn't - SFist

Forty thousand moments of mourning | Art | santafenewmexican.com – Santa Fe New Mexican

Technically, a spreadsheet that lists migrants and refugees who have died while trying to get into Europe isnt art. The efficiently ordered data isnt beautiful to look at or otherwise aesthetically pleasing. Its a brutal mix of briefly described violence and incomplete sentences. Names and ages, if theyre known, go in one column; countries of origin go in another. The most detailed column reveals the ways in which the migrants died.

Some drowned in the Mediterranean Sea. Some were crushed trying to get from raft to land. Some killed themselves after their applications for asylum were denied.

Every year since 1993, the European NGO network UNITED for Intercultural Action has maintained and updated what is known as the List of Deaths as a way to monitor the human cost of Europes strict immigration policies. The list is free to download at unitedagainstracism.org, and as of June 19, the PDF document contains information about the deaths of 40,555 people at European borders. Turkish artist Banu Cennetolustumbled upon the list in 2002 and decided it needed to be seen by as many people as possible. Because of her efforts and those of other like-minded artists and curators around the world, the list has been displayed, in a variety of formats, in Athens, Barcelona, Berlin, and Los Angeles, among other locales, since 2006.

SITE Santa Fe features The List of Deaths printed on 16 pages of standard 8.5 x 11-inch paper and displayed behind Plexiglass on a 20-foot-long wall.

A detail from The List of Deaths PDF, which can be downloaded and printed at unitedagainstracism.org

SITE Santa Fes assistant curator, Brandee Caoba, co-curated Displaced with Irene Hofmann, SITEs Phillips director and chief curator. Caoba points out that when the media reports on war and the accompanying immigration crises, confusing or impersonal language can render death into nothing but a numbers game. If a soldier loses their life, theyre called a troop instead of by their name, and a troop sounds like more than one person, she says. If you say that 40 people lost their lives this week crossing the Mediterranean, it doesnt have the same gravity as [knowing] where they were going, where they were coming from, and why they left.

The list offers this information in a way that feels akin to found poetry. Grim as they are, the causes of death have flow and pacing; they have repeated imagery. Body found in river. Found dead in sea. Hit by car. Hit by car. Found dead on boat. Even when the dead cannot be identified by their names, the list allows for a moment to reflect on them as individuals.

At first, Cennetoluhanded printed lists for friends and strangers. She left copies in cafs, and even put stickers referencing the list on ATMs. But she wanted a larger format, such as a billboard, to display it on. She couldnt afford it by herself. Because shes an artist, she concentrated on funding sources in that arena, even though she didnt actually consider the list to be an artwork. For five years, every potential funder shared that perspective and didnt support the project.

According to a June 2018 article in The Guardian by Charlotte Higgins, funding from an unnamed American organization allowed Cennetoluto publish sections of the list on 150 poster sites and hold associated events at the Stedelijk Museum in Amsterdam in 2007. Since then, the list has appeared in newspapers, as posters in train stations, and in other public settings. In the summer of 2018, it was posted on large hoardings (roadside boards for public advertisements) in Liverpool, as part of the citys art biennial. Vandals ripped it down twice. Higgins lamented the crime in the pages of The Guardian that August.

It is hard to imagine the failure of compassion that would impel any individual or group to do this, especially as the list is so modest: it asks nothing of passersby other than that it should be seen. But then, we are living in dangerously fraught times. The arts, in their broadest sense, can no longer be regarded as a dull backwater some distance away from the real business of politics. Culture is the new front line. Those within the alt-right are training their big guns on fresh targets: liberal Hollywood; the press; that defensively constructed catch-all, political correctness.

Caoba invites visitors to take their time with the list in a quiet setting that theyve created. She says its an opportunity to connect with a massive amount of difficult information using the old-fashioned medium of paper, rather than scrolling through it on a screen.

Reading something digitally, youre just glancing. With paper, you have to stop and turn the page.

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Forty thousand moments of mourning | Art | santafenewmexican.com - Santa Fe New Mexican

Breaking: Alyse Galvin sues Division of Elections over transparency ballot – Must Read Alaska

Candidate for U.S. Alyse Galvin has filed a lawsuit against the Division of Elections because, although she sought the nomination of the Democratic Party, she wants the Division of Elections to tell voters that she is an independent on the General Election ballots.

The Division has decided that those independents who run on the Democrat primary ballot will be labeled as yes winners of the Democrat primary.

Galvin has not been completely authentic with Alaskans. She has run against Congressman Don Young with the blessing and endorsement of the Democratic Party, and with Democrat resources, donors, and tools, such as ActBlue.

Now she is trying to run away from the party and has filed a lawsuit to force the Division of Elections to sanction her shapeshifting candidacy.

More details as they become available. Related story below.

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Privacy and Alt-Right Transhumanism in Hari Kunzru’s ‘Red Pill’ – PopMatters

Red Pill Hari Kunzru

Knopf

September 2020

"You take the blue pill, the story ends, you wake up in your bed and believe whatever you want to believe," Morpheus tells Neo in the Wachowski Bros.' 1999 film, The Matrix. "You take the red pill, you stay in Wonderland, and I show you how deep the rabbit hole goes."

It is with The Matrix that the term "red pill" entered our vocabulary and later memedom as we grew into our collective, online consciousness, but the dilemma between living in blissful ignorance and confronting the truth about reality is nothing new. Neither is the idea that our reality might be simulated, or at least manipulated. From Ren Descartes' Evil Demon to Gilbert Harman's Brain in a Vat, thought experiments have often sought to tease out whether it is possible to trust our perception of reality, to determine whether we can know with certainty that what we seem to experience with our senses is an accurate assessment of some larger truth.

It is this larger truth that the far-right, emboldened by the emergence of a reactionary political class all too willing to stoke the flames of panic and prejudice, have laid claim to in recent years, claiming also, in the process, the term "red pill" to describe their process of awakening to uncomfortable realities they accuse the left-leaning of not wanting to come face to face with. British-Indian novelist Hari Kunzru, author of five previous novels and PEN/Jean Stein Book Award finalist, addresses the intersection of such existential quandaries in his latest novel, aptly titled Red Pill.

The premise of Red Pill is simple enough; clichd, almost. The unnamed narrator, a struggling writer suffering a dry spell, embarks on a retreat to clear his mind and restore his creative faculties. Any overused tropes end here, though, as Kunzru weaves an intricate fabric from a multitude of seemingly disparate elements German romanticism, the legacy of the Third Reich, the Stasi, the European migrant crisis, the 2016 US presidential election all of which come together to create this haunted tale that merges questions of privacy, transhumanism, the political ascendency of the Right in Europe and the US, and moral responsibility, among others.

Water drop by qimono (Pixabay License / Pixabay)

Kunzru's protagonist a man of Indian heritage, married and father to a young daughter is awarded a fellowship at the Deuter Center in the Berlin suburb of Wannsee. If that latter name sounds familiar, it is because it served as the location of the eponymous 1942 Wannsee Conference, in which the implementation of the Final Solution to the Jewish Question was discussed a tragic and macabre past that weighs on the setting in much the same way the cold, stark, unforgiving weather does. Rather than use his fellowship to any industrious effect and develop his work on the concept of the self in lyric poetry, however, the narrator finds he is unable to fall in step with the center's rather aggressive communal work policy, which dictates that he must research and write in the presence of others.

In between calls with his wife back in Brooklyn and visits to the grave of Romantic poet Heinrich von Kleist, he binge-watches Blue Lives, a disturbingly violent police show that peppers its scenes of torture with obscure quotes, which the narrator believes might be intended as subtext.

Interestingly, the fictional Blue Lives airs at a time in which another nihilistic group fixated with the brutalization of the body is filming its own horrors for the world to see. Although ISIS is not explicitly mentioned by name, the footage from "jihadi propaganda" videos is referenced in one of several instances in which the narrator juxtaposes death with spectacle, the dignity (and what he assumes to be the inherent human right) of privacy with violent and humiliating invasiveness. Meanwhile, his initial topic of investigation the lyric "I" suffers from his frustrated attempts to secure for himself isolation and, if he is being honest with himself, plain old disinterest.

"Deep down I had no real desire to understand how lyric poets had historically experienced their subjectivity. I wasn't that interested," he admits. "It was a piece of wishfulness, an expression of my own desire to be raised above the pleasures and pains of my life, to be free from the reigning coercions of a toddler, the relentless financial pressure of living in New York. I wanted to remain alone with myself as inwardness. I wanted, in short, to take a break."

Photo by Advait Jayant on Unsplash

His desire for solitude and clarity is inexorably thwarted, and he happens upon surveillance footage that leads him to believe that residents at the center are being watched, even in (what ought to be) the privacy of their own rooms. It is thus that his paranoia at being spied upon and his preoccupation with the creator of Blue Lives, Anton, and the show's underlying meaning converge to form the catalyst for his own descent into madness, mirrored, no less, by the poet Kleist, who also "had a crisis, brought about by reading Kant, who taught that the human senses are unreliable, and so we are unable to apprehend the truth that lies beneath the surface of things."

He begs his cleaning lady, Monika, to tell him the truth about whether the center is spying on its residents, which leads to a rather long aside in the novel in which she recounts her terrible experiences at the hands of the Stasi, little assuaging his general sense of malaise and imminent doom.

The world events that unfold around the narrator are no more helpful at staying this spiral into psychosis. At the very outset of the novel, he acknowledges the role of chance in determining whether one is born into wealth or war, comfort or mortal struggle, also acknowledging the fragility of one's current circumstances, tenuous and unpredictable. "Our very happiness made me uneasy," he confesses. "It was a time when the media was full of images of children hurt and displaced by war. I frequently found myself hunched over my laptop, my eyes welling with tears. I was distressed by what I saw, but also haunted by a more selfish question: if the world changed, would I be able to protect my family? Could I scale the fence with my little girl on my shoulders? Would I be able to keep hold of my wife's hand as the rubber boat overturned? Our life together was fragile. One day something would break."

His position as a member of an ethnic minority in a white man's world compounds this anxiety, which he sees reflected in a refugee father and daughter duo he meets at different intervals in the novel and desperately longs to help in some way. "It's always people like us who go first," he tells his wife.

When the narrator at last meets Anton, he is finally afforded the opportunity to ask the burning questions that have been consuming his thoughts only the answers he receives are far from placating. His obsession becomes manic, and he follows the mind behind the show across countries, refusing to accept the man's destructive vision of a future in which humankind is divided into two groups: one that fuses with technology to transcend animal limitations an updated version of the Nazi take on Nietzsche's bermensch and the other that is destined to slavery in service of the first.

Image by Free-Photos from Pixabay

Kunzru accomplishes several noteworthy things with Red Pill, not the least of which is following nihilistic philosophies (even those that do not designate themselves as such but instead, claim to hold a utopian vision for the future that involves culling 'undesirable' elements) to their logical endpoint. In striving to fabricate an artificial, 'perfectionist' version of ourselves, we ironically (or predictably, for anyone who is familiar with history) expose the very worst in our nature.

Kunzru also addresses the bedrock humanity hits in stretching philosophy that questions reality to the extent it renders any cooperation based on that reality impossible to its snapping point. If we cannot agree on basic premises and inalienable rights, what then?

The mental crisis that ensues from having the foundations of one's belief system shattered is likewise accurately depicted: the world becomes unrecognizable, a simulation as it were. "The streetscape wasn't real. The sidewalk, the passers-by, the cars, the clouds in the sky, all were elements in a giant simulation. The sunlight was not sunlight but code."

The author excels in capturing the geist in alt-right circles, down to the language used. "Cultural Marxism has filled your brain with worms," Anton tells the narrator, after the latter confronts the Blue Lives creator and accuses him of being on the wrong side of history with his morbid masterplan for the future. Using a term favored by conspiracy theorists who allege that progressives are using psychological manipulation to topple the natural order of the world, Anton essentially equates the narrator's opposition to the erosion of basic human values with erosion of the values he personally believes to be enlightened. For that is what cultural Marxists do, according to the alt-right: They promote atheism, gay rights, feminism, all through the humanities faculties in universities and the media and all at the expense of the status quo.

Noteworthy is the Nazi preoccupation with the thinkers of the Frankfurt School, most of whom were Jewish. Another gem of an exchange between narrator and Anton: "Why are you promoting a future in which some people are treated like raw material? That's a disgusting vision," the narrator says, to which Anton responds, laughing: "I'm sorry it gives you sad feels."

Perhaps the most remarkable features of this novel are its relevance to current events and the questions it raises with regard to the ethical frameworks we take for granted and within which we operate. If "privacy is the exclusive property of the gods," as the narrator posits, is the impending class struggle between spies and those who are spied upon? Where will our steady handover of privacy in exchange for security lead to down the road?

If, again, privacy is the demarcating factor between the ruling and subordinate classes, what does it say about refugees on dinghies in the Mediterranean, whose lives and bodies are battlegrounds for political figures to build their platforms on? Is little Alan Kurdi, lying face down on a beach in Turkey, the ultimate spectacle, the ultimate "mockery of human dignity" that is simultaneously relished as a symbol, as the sacrificial animal on which humanity's sins may be pinned, and disdained for its inconvenience?

In the novel, as in reality, the very real flesh-and-blood human lives of refugee father and daughter occupy a space in the background as the theoretical tug of war between Anton and the narrator occupies the foreground, and the parallels between a past that is never too far behind and a present that threatens to rouse those ugly ghosts are all too evident.

Wanderer Above the Sea of Fog [By Caspar David Friedrich - The photographic reproduction was done by Cybershot800i. (Diff). Public Domain / Wikipedia]

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Privacy and Alt-Right Transhumanism in Hari Kunzru's 'Red Pill' - PopMatters

The RNC is turning into one long right-wing Youtube video – Business Insider – Business Insider

Watching the Republican National Convention has felt like falling into an algorithmically-driven rabbit hole of right-wing YouTube.

Instead of relying on former presidents or party nominees to give impassioned speeches on conservative values and policies, the RNC has been dominated by Trump-supporting culture warriors whose rhetoric sounds eerily similar to online discourse pushed by right-of-center (some decidedly far-right) social media stars.

The four-day political pageant even kicked off Monday night with a speech by a prominent conservative YouTuber, Charlie Kirk.

The 26-year-old Turning Point USA co-founder with close ties to the Trump White House called the president the "bodyguard of Western civilization." Whatever Kirk meant by "Western civilization" isn't exactly clear, but the term is an obsession of right-wing YouTubers like Dennis Prager, "Intellectual Dark Web" celebrities like Jordan Peterson, and the recently banned by YouTube alt-right philosopher Stefan Molyneux.

When Georgia State Rep. Vernon Jones spoke at the RNC of the Democrats' keeping Black people on their "mental plantation," I felt like I was listening to Candace Owens, the YouTube star and Trump favorite who started "Blexit" to convince Black people to abandon the Democratic Party.

Patrica and Mark McCloskey best known for drawing their guns on Black Lives Matter protesters outside their St. Louis home called congressional candidate and protest organizer Cori Bush a "Marxist liberal activist" during their RNC speech. Granted, Bush is a Democratic Socialist, but the McCloskey's deliberate and repeated invocation of Marx made me think of "cultural Marxism" an obsession of conspiracy theorists like former InfoWars editor-at-large Paul Joseph Watson.

Right-wing YouTubers like Ben Shapiro are positively obsessed with opposing left-wingers' goal of "equality of outcome" rather than "equality of opportunity." The latter phrase made it into both Jon Voight's RNC intro narration and Tiffany Trump's Tuesday night speech.

There's nothing particularly novel about hearing these things at an overtly partisan and propagandistic event. Conservatives don't like socialism, they like their "culture," and they can't understand why more Black people won't vote for them.

What's striking is how these phrases, which are repeated like mantras on right-wing YouTube, have made it to the big kids' table at the RNC.

One reason for YouTube rhetoric reaching prime-time could be that under Trump, the GOP's long flirtation with anti-intellectualism went into high gear. Thoughtful, principled Republicans were purged as "Never Trump cuck-RINOs." All that remains are Trump sycophants and a leader who openly flirts with dangerous online conspiracy theories like QAnon.

Filling the void are the conservative YouTubers, whose audiences are legion, and who are directed deeper into extreme content both by the site's algorithm and by the communities formed around these channels.

Hearing these phrases and bugaboos sprinkled throughout RNC speeches feels in some sense like a callback to their original sources. And they may be deliberate or inadvertent signals to young conservatives.

The message: We know who the conservative thought leaders are in the Trump era, and we watch their videos, too.

This is an opinion column. The thoughts expressed are those of the author(s).

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The RNC is turning into one long right-wing Youtube video - Business Insider - Business Insider

Kelly Marie Tran will take over the lead role in Disney’s upcoming Raya and the Last Dragon – SYFY WIRE

Raya and the Last Dragon, Disney's upcoming animated film first announced last August, has gone through some behind-the-scenes shake-ups after being delayed alongside PIxar'sSoul. Now the Southeast Asia-inspired movie (focused on the cultures ofVietnam, Thailand, Cambodia, Malaysia, and the Philippines) has new directors, a new co-writer, and one exciting new lead Kelly Marie Tran to help usher in this story of one girl and her quest to find the last of a legendary species.

According to EW, there's a lot of newness coming from the film, which looks toreplaceCassie Steele withStar Wars actress Tran in the title role. The other part of the title (that whole "last dragon" thing) will still be tackled byAwkwafina, who'll be playing Sisu. She'll be in human form at first, needing Raya to help her return to full-on fire-breathing reptile of legend. Together, the pair will need to stop baddie Druun. There's also a secret third female lead that the filmmakers aren't divulging. And speaking of filmmakers, there's a lot of them.

Helming this feat will be directorsDon Hall (Moana) andCarlos Lpez Estrada (Blindspotting), co-directorsPaul Briggs and John Ripa (Frozen), and writersQui Nguyen andAdele Lim. It takes a village - and hopefully one that respects dragons rather than fears them. The film is underway with everyone working from home, but they're mostly still excited about landing Tran as the new lead.

I'm never going to forget it, Lpez Estrada said of her audition. I think [Don and I] rode in the car together, and we were quiet, looking at each other and nodding our heads just being like, Yep, yep, yep. Kelly's perfect.'"

We had this little dramatic moment; it was written as a few lines. And I remember her going, Hey, I have some ideas because this is normally how I would say this or I have some questions. Do you mind if I tried it a little bit differently? Lpez Estrada explained. She went for it, improvised for a minute, and had us all in tears. We changed the scene and reblocked the animation so that it would follow what Kelly did that day because she just clicked on something that was so much bigger than anything we had imagined.

Hall's take? "She is Raya just her buoyancy and her positivity, but yet there's a strength as well to Kelly and the character." And yes, she's a Disney princess (daughters of chiefs count, right?). She is someone who is technically a princess but I think that what's really cool about this project, about this character, specifically is that everyone's trying to flip the narrative on what it means to be a princess, Tran said. Raya is totally a warrior. When she was a kid, she was excited to get her sword. And she grows up to be a really badass, gritty warrior and can really take care of herself.

Take a look at Raya and her ride, Tuk Tuk, below in the first image from the film:

Raya and the Last Dragonheads to theaters onMarch 12, 2021.

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Kelly Marie Tran will take over the lead role in Disney's upcoming Raya and the Last Dragon - SYFY WIRE

Then and now – Counterpoint – ABC News

75 years after the bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki what is the nuclear future of the world? Henry Sokolski says that ' the answer is unclear. Military advances in precision guidance and targeting are making city busting (the massive murder of innocents) far less attractive or necessary. Yet for relatively small, weak states that lack such non-nuclear options, acquiring and using the bomb may remain attractive no matter what advanced states might do'. He explains who has weapons, who wants them and why and suggests how we can move forward so that 'indiscriminate attacks like Hiroshima' can become 'an ever more distant memory'.

Then (at 15 mins) do the woke left and the alt-right have more in common than they might think? Zaid Jilani believes so. He argues that it is the 'same puritanical spirit that prevailed during the heyday of the Moral Majority, except that its been marshalled in service of a different faith'. He tells us about a new study that examines the 'link between political attitudes and the so-called three Dark Triad personality traits: Machiavellianism, narcissism, and psychopathy'. The conclusions so far? 'Notwithstanding their diametrically opposed political postures, both hard Left and hard Right seem disproportionately populated by individuals who are impelled to control others behaviour, and draw attention to themselves'.

Also (at 25 mins) Amanda gets on her soapbox to rant about positive thought.

Then (at 27 mins) who should you believe? An expert or someone on twitter? The person who says they have all of the answers or the person who doesn't have the answer right now? Dr Andrew Little argues that 'the rise of social media means that experts willing to share their hard-won knowledge have never been more accessible to the public. So, one might think that communication between experts and decision-makers should be as good as, or better than, ever. But this is not the case'. So how do we block out the noise and how can we 'change the way that we relate to experts, not just listening to the loudest and most confident voices, but to those with a track record of only claiming as far as the evidence will take them, and a willingness to say I dont know'.

Finally (at 40 mins) how can we hear what's happening deep in a forest or in the middle of a wasteland? Adam Welz explains that 'a recent, steep drop in the price of recording equipment and the rapidly expanding capabilities of user-friendly artificial intelligence algorithms are heralding an era of big natural audio data. One key use of biological acoustic monitoring is tracking what is known as defaunation, the hard-to-detect decline of animals like birds and monkeys from habitat that appears intact for example, animals shot and trapped by poachers in an intact forest'. He tells us how it works and where it is and how it is' rapidly expanding scientists ability to understand ecosystems by listening to them'.

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Then and now - Counterpoint - ABC News

Opinion: Danger of confusing people with ideas – The Appalachian Online

Twitter user @sadkimberly tweeted Aug. 20:

an ISU professor put on there [SIC] syllabus If you are racist or homophobic on purpose i will dismiss you from class and republicans are literally calling for her to be fired. and youre going to tell me that republicans arent shit human beings. okay.

The takeaway from this tweet is that Republicans are bad people. This sentiment is echoed on both sides of the political spectrum, with Republican pundits such as Jesse Watters saying Democrats have aligned themselves with looters, arsonists, and homicidal maniacs. While democratically leaning news sites such as Slate have accused republicans of being thugs and Nazis. This rhetoric from major news organizations has a massive effect on the average persons view of their political opposites and is a cause for the hatred that many Americans have for their fellow citizens.

The idea is not that Republican or Democratic ideals are bad. No, the people who harbor these ideals are. A poll done by Axios in 2018 found that 23% of Republicans would describe Democrats as evil, and 21% of Democrats feel the same about Republicans. Some recognize the danger and self-defeating nature of this attitude, but not the many proponents of it. If those looking for support on the other side of the aisle wish to find it, then this attitude must change.

Social media platforms are inherently provocative. They reward and actively encourage controversy. Making people angry gets likes, retweets and Monday night cable TV views. Controversy is an unfortunate reality of selling news.

However, if this attitude is allowed to become the standard by which we treat each other the attitude that the other sides people are the problem and not their views it removes all opportunities for discourse. If someone writes off their political adversary as a bad person, someone who is so corrupted by their political ideals that changing their mind is out of the question, what can they do? They cannot sit down and discuss their differences because it would inevitably devolve into violence.++

Some would blame President Donald Trump for this polarization. While he shares some blame, this issue is too complicated to fault one person. This division does not go away with Trump. It is an American problem and Trump is a side effect, not the cause. If we continue to correlate the character of people with their political disposition, we will find ourselves at a place of no return. There, the only answer to our problem is violence against our fellow citizens, as has already been the case in some Black Lives Matter demonstrations, such as the ones in Seattle, as well as alt-right protests like in Charlottesville, Virginia.

These situations represent the extreme, not the norm. But, if the rhetoric of hating the people and not their ideas continues, then they may become the norm. The issue we have is with each other. So how do we fix it? A simple start would be to stop condemning the other sides supporters on social media and condemn their ideals instead. You can change a persons opinions. But if we trap ourselves in the notion that the oppositions people living, breathing, loving, human beings are the problem, then there is no longer room for conversation.

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Opinion: Danger of confusing people with ideas - The Appalachian Online

The growing illiberalism of liberalism | Commentaries – St. Louis Jewish Light

In my earlier life I was a liberal, drawn by liberalisms traditional focus on individual liberty, open-mindedness and other such values. However, as I explained in my 2002 Class Warfare book: All the while as I was aging, I was becoming more and more alienated from the left. It is not that I have abandoned liberalism. Rather, liberalism has abandoned me.

That was 2002. The illiberalism of liberalism has only exacerbated since, todays liberalism being unrecognizable from its roots.

A common narrative the liberal media promote these days is that President Donald Trump is an authoritarian, if not outright fascist. We hear speculation that he may refuse to leave the White House if defeated in November, that he has sent jackbooted armed troops into cities such as Portland, Oregon to impose law and order, that he is using executive orders to bypass Congress and that he exhibits other manifestations of dictatorship.

I am not a fan of Trump. However, I would argue that such characterizations of Trump are wildly exaggerated and, in any case, are surely no worse than the kind of illiberalism that the Democratic Party and its brand of liberalism now represent.

I am not just talking about Democratic proposals by Bernie Sanders, Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez and other high-profile party figures to triple the size of the federal budget, even though the growth of Big Government itself is a recipe for more, not less, regulation and coercion over how we live our lives.

No, I am more concerned about the threat to our most precious liberties, particularly free speech, posed by the Left not only through government restrictions (should the Democrats take control of both the executive and legislative branches) but also through the larger cultural institutions it already controls (academia, Hollywood, media and big tech).

There is no question that liberals now dominate the latter sectors of American society, from Ivy League professoriates to entertainment industry celebrities to most newsrooms to the corporate boards of Apple, Google, Twitter and Microsoft. And there is no question as well that these elites who shape our national conversations about race and all other matters have had a negative effect on free expression and tolerance for viewpoint diversity, manifested by their language policing related to political correctness, speech codes, safe spaces, microaggressions, trigger warnings and, most recently, the cancel culture.

Although right-wingers at times can be a source of curbs on free speech, the restrictions today are coming mostly from the left.

A new CATO Institute survey finds that self-censorship is on the rise in the United States as nearly two-thirds 63% of Americans say the political climate these days prevents them from saying things they believe because others might find them offensive.

Interestingly, only the far left feels comfortable expressing their views in the current environment. The CATO study says that strong liberals stand out as the only political group who feel they can express themselves. A majority of centrist liberals (52%), moderates (64%) and especially conservatives (77%) feel they have to self-censor. In other words, it is not some alt-right fringe group that is being silenced, but a majority of the country.

Even thoughtful liberals such as Steven Pinker of Harvard have conceded there is a problem. He said at a talk he gave in St. Louis that academias obsession with diversity goes only so far, as universities typically want students and faculty who look different but think alike, that is, subscribe to liberal orthodoxy.

Pinker was among more than 150 prominent intellectuals (including J.K. Rowling, Gloria Steinem and Gerald Early) who signed A Letter on Justice and Open Debate that appeared in Harpers Magazine on July 7, protesting that a well-intentioned call for racial and social justice has intensified a new set of moral attitudes that tend to weaken our norms of open debate and toleration of differences in favor of ideological conformity. The free exchange of information and ideas, the lifeblood of a liberal society, is daily becoming more constricted.

Among the signees of the letter was Bari Weiss, then an opinion writer for The New York Times, who subsequently resigned her position in protest of what she called the new McCarthyism at the paper that marginalizes anyone who dares to take a centrist or conservative viewpoint for example, the backlash she experienced from co-workers in writing pro-Israel articles.

In her letter of resignation, Weiss blasted the Times for no longer honoring founder Adolph Ochs famous 1896 statement: to [provide] a forum for the consideration of all questions of public importance, and to that end to invite intelligent discussion from all shades of opinion.

Weisss colleague at the Times, Bret Stephens, echoed her concerns in his June 12 op-ed, in which he lamented how the predominantly left-leaning newsroom was successful in forcing the resignation of the opinion editor who had published a piece by U.S. Sen. Tom Cotton, calling for federal troops to be used in cities experiencing violent protests.

Stephens wrote: Tom Cotton speaks for a large part of this country. Will we not listen? There is a ferocious intellectual intolerance sweeping the country and much of the journalistic establishment with it. Contrary opinions arent just wrong but unworthy of discussion.

An average person must be wary today of uttering even the most seemingly innocuous phrase, such as all lives matter, lest he be called a racist or worse. Examples abound of restrictions on speech that can only be called insane. To cite just a few:

Janet Napolitano, Secretary of Homeland Security in former President Barack Obamas administration, who just stepped down as president of the University of California, instructed faculty to avoid making certain statements she considered to be microaggressions, which included, I believe the most qualified person should get the job.

I attended a workshop at University of Missouri-St. Louis in which an education professor said one should never ask, Where are you from? when attempting to engage a stranger in conversation.

A UCLA professor named William Peris was condemned by college administrators for reading to his class the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr.s Letter From a Birmingham Jail during a lecture on racism because it included the n-word.

Such speech is considered unacceptable today. Yet one can say far more questionable, even outlandish, things if it has the imprimatur of the left.

There is no better example than the National Museum of African American History and Culture recently featuring on its website a Whiteness chart claiming that such values as hard work is the key to success, self-reliance, be polite, emphasis on scientific method, objective, rational linear thinking and the nuclear family: father, mother, 2.3 children is the ideal social unit exemplify white culture and supremacy and thus are racist.

As part of cancel culture, the left has been emboldened not only to take down (legally or illegally) statues of Columbus and others considered expressions of an evil past, but to eliminate even more recent institutions that were established precisely to promote a more just society. There is perhaps no more outlandish idea than that floated by New York Times classical music critic Anthony Tommasini (July 16), who argued for an end to behind the curtain blind auditions in hiring symphony musicians, because they have failed to produce enough diversity never mind one cannot imagine a fairer selection process.

Are we allowed to say Tommasinis argument is absurd? One can only hope liberalism recovers its senses.

J. Martin Rochester, Curators Distinguished Teaching Professor of Political Science Emeritus at the University of Missouri-St. Louis, is the author of 10 books on international and American politics.

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The growing illiberalism of liberalism | Commentaries - St. Louis Jewish Light

Contributing writer discusses parallels between rise of Lebanon’s Hezbollah and Boogaloo movement in US – The College Reporter

By Max Sano || Contributing Writer

The revolution will live in Lebanon

As a Lebanese-American, I noticed that the unrest and instability in Lebanon over the last year has reached a peak that has not been seen since the end of the civil war in 1989. Leading Shiate political parties Amal and Hezbollah have blamed the protests on foreign intervention rather than addressing the divisions themselves. This misinformation campaign has led party followers to attack and suppress the protests.

Last fall, all seventeen factions of society came together to protest long-standing government inaction, corrupt institutions, and limited public services such as food, water, electricity, and internet access. What started with opposition to a tax on Whats App messages burgeoned into a popular grassroots movement throughout the nation as it rallied for a new political system.

In a similar way, American citizens are uniting under the Black Lives Matter movement as the national consciousness focuses on police brutality, community investment, police divestment, and racial discrimination. What began as a public outcry against the grotesque murders of Breonna Taylor, Ahmoud Arbery, and George Floyd erupted into mass demonstrations demanding institutional reform to remedy the systemic and historic injustices.

Both Americans and Lebanese are at a crossroads in establishing their national identity. Will we continue to remain stagnant with our prejudices, or can we learn to take a step back and avoid this unnecessary and endless cycle of violence?

My father has always known Lebanon to be in a constant upheaval and violence. He was born in Beirut in 1970, several years before the conflict with Iran along the southern border erupted into a full-scale civil war. Hezbollah, originally a Shiate spiritual movement among the working class, turned into a paramilitary organization that enforced Lebanese sovereignty against Israeli forces and posed domestic threats.

(My grandfather had gambled with moving to Lebanon from Syria just a few years beforehand. He was born in Damascus and grew up to be a banker and an economic advisor to the United Arab Republic a political experiment uniting Syria, Egypt and Gaza under a centralized socialist republic model from 1958 to 1961.)

I cannot help but worry that the past decades of chaos in Lebanon could be the United States future as Americans lose faith in our institutions: infrastructure, law enforcement, media, health care, mass transit, public education, and Congress. Rather than discussing the merits of reopening schedules and balancing economic and moral responsibilities, American citizens and policymakers squabble over whether or not the crisis itself exists.

Even more troubling is the rise of right-wing, anti-government militias like the Boogaloo movement that attack law enforcement and incite violence during peaceful BLM protests in order to take advantage of the chaos and serve the white supremacist agenda. Meanwhile, the problems do not go away and people continue to die.

The same phenomenon has occurred in Lebanon, yet to a more eerie end, through the rise and consolidation of Hezbollah. Many Lebanese view Hezbollah, which expanded to have a political wing after the civil war, as crucial to national security. Fast forward to today, Hezbollahs paramilitary presence overpowers that of the Lebanese army and they have representation in the cabinet and parliament. The Hariri government could not act in the peoples best interest because many of the leading cabinet members were implicated in the civil war, and Hezbollahs policy reigns supreme due to political and logistical support from Syria and Iran.

Why is this happening? Richard Spencer, founder of the alternative right movement in the United States, proves this point: I dont think the country will come together and I dont want it to. Maybe we cant be a nation anymore. I believe that the American alt-right and Hezbollah use increasingly violent and drastic methods to maintain their power, because they understand the power of plurality and multiculturalism. They fear the progressive trends of the younger generation, and so they capitalize on the existing divisions even if they are increasingly obsolete, as is the case for Lebanon.

Even though the Boogaloo movement may not lead to the hostile takeover of the American government and political process, their innate violence is something that concerns me, as did a small militia in southern Lebanon that developed into an international paramilitary and political organization. By reestablishing faith in institutions, we can prevent this. Misinformation campaigns become impossible when an engaged citizenry can see through the noise.

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Contributing writer discusses parallels between rise of Lebanon's Hezbollah and Boogaloo movement in US - The College Reporter

Why This Pro-Life Conservative Is Voting for Biden – The Bulwark

Since I announced publicly that I will be voting for Joe Biden in November, Ive received a few communications from puzzled readers. How can you, a supposedly pro-life woman, support someone who believes in killing babies? Others say, What do you not like about Trumps record? The tax cuts? The record jobs numbers? The conservative judges? One reader summed things up with I used to like you.

I understand. I feel the same way about many people myself.

I will try to respond for the sake of those who, like me, find themselves alienated from the Republican Party despite some policy agreements with the Trump administration.

Lets start with abortion. I have been pro-life my entire adult life. I havent changed. I continue to find the practice abhorrent, and will persist in trying to persuade others. But Ive noticed a tendency among pro-life conservatives to forgive absolutely everything else if a politician expresses the right views on abortion. This is a mirror image of the left, as we saw when Bill Clinton was accused of sexual misconduct. Many liberals were willing to overlook his gross behavior toward women in the name of preserving abortion rights. Call it abortion washing. Both sides do it.

Abortion washing shuts down moral reflection. Rather than do the work of analyzing how one good thing weighs in the balance against other considerations, abortion washing permits the brain to snap shut, the conscience to put its feet up.

My views on abortion cant be severed from the rest of my worldview. I oppose abortion because its morally wrong. I understand that women are sometimes plunged into terrible life crises by unplanned pregnancies, which is why I do what I can to provide help for them. Crisis pregnancies can present agonizing choices, but I dont think killing is an acceptable solution because life is sacred.

That doesnt settle the matter of how to place abortion within the matrix of factors that go into voting. There are prudential considerations. While I would prefer to vote for someone who upholds the right to life, Ive never believed that electing presidents who agree with me will lead to dramatic changes in abortion law, nor is the law itself the only way to discourage abortion. The number of abortions has been declining steadily since 1981. It dropped during Republican presidencies and during Democratic presidencies, and now stands below the rate in 1973, when Roe v. Wade was decided and when abortion was illegal in 44 states.

The Supreme Court, despite Republican appointments, has side-stepped many opportunities to reverse Roe. As David French noted, Justices Sandra Day OConnor, Anthony Kennedy, and David Souter were harsh critics of the decision, but chose, on the bench, to vote for continuity. So if the logic is to support presidents based on the kind of Supreme Court nominees they will choose, the chances that any particular appointment will have the effect of changing the law seem remote.

It has always been my hope to change peoples hearts, so that this cruel practicelike slavery, torture, and mutilationcan be put (mostly) behind us.

Being pro-life is part of an overall approach to ethical questions. Its wrong to take innocent life. But other things are immoral too. Its also wrong to swindle people, to degrade and demonize, to incite violence, to bully, and while were at it, to steal, to bear false witness, to commit adultery, and to covet. I dont think Trump has committed murder, and he seems to have honored his parents (though perhaps in the wrong way). But as for the other eight of the 10 commandments, Donald Trump has flagrantly, even proudly violated them all, and encouraged his followers to regard his absence of conscience as strength.

Donald Trump is a daily, even hourly, assault on the very idea of morality, even as he obliterates truth. His influence is like sulphuric acid on our civic bonds. His cruelty is contagious. Remember how he mocked a handicapped reporter in 2016? His defenders either denied the obvious facts, or insisted that, while Trump himself might be politically incorrect, his supporters wouldnt be influenced by that aspect of his character.

Alas, they are. Consider the incredibly moving moment during the Democratic National Convention when youngBraydon Harrington, who struggles with stuttering, introduced Joe Biden. That night, anAtlanticeditor with the same affliction tweeted This is what stutterers face every day. Im in awe of Braydons courage and resolve. But Austin Ruse, author ofThe Catholic Case for Trump,tweeted his doubts that Biden ever stuttered, and replied to another comment with,W-w-w-w-w-w-what?

Casual cruelty has become the fashion for many Republicans. Trump acolytes have adopted the mob-boss style that Trump brought to the Oval Office. When former Trump lawyer/fixer Michael Cohen was preparing to testify before the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee, Rep. Matt Gaetz, tweeted, Hey @MichaelCohen212 Do your wife & father-in-law know about your girlfriends? Maybe tonight would be a good time for that chat. I wonder if shell remain faithful when youre in prison. Shes about to learn a lot. (Gaetz was rebuked by the House Ethics Committee for this last week.)

Even U.S. senators and cabinet secretaries have aped Trumps bullying tactics. During Trumps impeachment trial, Senator Rand Paul (R., KY) repeatedly badgered Chief Justice John Roberts to reveal the name of the whistleblowerin violation of the spirit of whistleblower protection statutes, and despite knowing that it might endanger that persons safety. When Roberts declined, Paul revealed the name himself on the Senate floor. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo permitted his aggression free reign when NPRs Mary Louise Kelly asked a question he didnt like, screaming profanity at her. Sen. Martha McSally, perhaps sensing that the new Republican chic is rudeness, wheeled on a CNN reporter and called him a liberal hack before you could say Trumpian. And Ted Cruz, self-styled constitutional conservative, has made a show of joining the social media group Parler, which hosts alt-right and other unsavory characters, the better to own Twitter.

It isnt just a matter of style. At Donald Trumps order, thousands of children, including hundreds under the age of four, were forcibly separated from their parents at the border. Pro-lifers are tender-hearted about the most vulnerable members of society. So images like this must stir something. Separating children from their parents is a barbaric act. In the crush of outrages over the past three and a half years, it has gotten swallowed up, but the horror of what was done in our name should never be forgotten.

All of this is familiar to Trump supporters, along with the fine people in Charlottesville, the mocking of reporters for wearing face masks, the Joe-Scarborough-is-a murderer intimations, the Lafayette Park tear gas, denying the legitimacy of elections, the bleach enemas, and on and on. They accept it. Some Trump supporters genuinely hate Trumps imbecilic tweets and disordered personality. But they will vote for him because they believe that the left is far worse.

Gaetz, characteristically subtle, claimed at the RNC that Biden and Democrats will disarm you, empty the prisons, lock you in your home, and invite MS-13 to live next door. And the defunded police arent on their way.

Writing in Commentary, Abe Greenwald proclaims that the violence following George Floyds death is the start of a revolution. Echoing the alarm of the Flight 93 election argument from 2016, he writes, The battle for the survival of the United States of America is upon us. Speaker after speaker at the Republican National Convention has sounded the same theme. The left is on the march. Violent mobs are coming for your suburban home. If you dont vote for Trump, Antifa will control your town council, AOC will confiscate your guns, and Al Sharpton will dismantle the police.

Funny, but I could have sworn that the Democratic Party nominated Joe Biden last week, not Alexandria Ocasio Cortez or Bernie Sanders.

Look, there are extremists on the left, and the Democratic Party has a weakness for not wishing to call them out. Democrats do the truth and themselves no favors by attempting to gloss over the looting, arson, and vandalism that have persisted in Portland, Chicago, and other cities throughout the summer. And they insult the millions of peaceful protesters who expressed the conscience of the nation by failing to distinguish them from criminals who used the opportunity to pillage and destroy.

Some of the extremists are not on the streets, but on the editorial boards of leading newspapers, on university faculties, and in other positions of cultural influence.

But its dishonest, and frankly, a bit hysterical to attempt to hang every sin of the left around Joe Bidens neck. Hes no radical, and the party that nominated him showed that its centrist core was stronger than its extremist wing.

Biden denounced violence in cities, saying:

The vast majority of the protests have been peaceful. Anyone who burns or pillages should be arrested. They are a problem for society and they make a mockery of what the march is all about. They should be tried, arrested and put in jail.

As for calls to defund the police, Biden kept his balance.

Absolutely not. I do not support [defunding the police] and I never have. What I support is strong and serious reform of police departments which most serious police officers in the country support. And we should have transparency in what in fact occurs within police departments as it relates to accusations of brutality or violating peoples rights.

In the wake of renewed violence following yet another horrific police shooting, this time in Kenosha, Wisconsin, Biden repeated this message, expressing deep sympathy for Jacob Blake and his family, outrage at what happened, and also condemnation of violence, saying burning down communities is not protest, its needless violence . . . Thats wrong. Biden struck exactly the right tone.

The argument that the left is worse doesnt persuade me. Strange as it is to write those words after 30 plus years as a conservative columnist, I have to say that when you compare the state of the two major parties today, the Republicans are more frightening.

It is the Republican party that has officially become a personality cult, declaring that it will not adopt a platform but will simply follow whatever Trump dictates. It is the Republican party that pretends that COVID-19 will magically disappear. It is the Republican party that has elevated a series of criminals and grifters including Paul Manafort, Rick Gates, Roy Moore, Steve Bannon, Wayne LaPierre, Rudy Giuliani, Jerry Falwell, Jr., and Roger Stone. It is the Republican party that shamefully declined to uphold the Constitution when Trump diverted funds to his border wall. It is the Republican party that has become truth-optional. And it is the Republican party that now opens its arms to adherents of a deranged but nonetheless dangerous new cult called QAnon, which a (defeated) Republican called mental gonorrhea, and which in December, 2016, inspired a man to open fire in a pizza parlor in Washington, D.C., as part of a self investigation. The FBI has designated QAnon a domestic terror threat, yet minority leader Kevin McCarthy has committed to providing committee assignments to Marjorie Taylor Greene, should she be elected in November

There is putrefaction where the Republican partys essence should be, and appointing pro-life judges cannot mask the stench. So this conservative is voting for the Democrats. Will the GOP reform? I hope so. But my priority isnt trying to heal the Republican party. Its trying to heal the country.

Update, August 27, 2020, 10:29 a.m.: Austin Ruse claims that his tweet was not meant to mock Braydon Harrington, but was meant to express doubts that Joe Biden ever stuttered.

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Why This Pro-Life Conservative Is Voting for Biden - The Bulwark

Good Afternoon, News: Cops Turn Blind Eye to Violent Right Wingers, Falwell (and KellyAnne) Resign, and a Black Wisconsin Man Shot in the Back by…

Proud Boys battle with Portland protesters on Saturday, August 22. Justin Katigbak

Here's your daily roundup of all the latest local and national news. (Like our coverage? Please consider making a recurring contribution to the Mercury to keep it comin'!)

ICYMI, on Saturday a bunch of alt-right yahoos from Patriot Prayer and the Proud Boys battled counter-protesters as Portland Police made disturbing (and obviously butt-hurt) excuses for refusing to get involved. But don't fret, cop supporters! They showed up in droves to violently put down an anti-police brutality protest on Sunday night. (It's almost as if they're begging to be defunded!) Hot shot contributor Suzette Smith has the details.

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Four Portland protesters have filed a federal lawsuit against Acting DHS Director Chad "CHAD!" Wolf and 200 officers for injuries sustained from the feds' copious use of tear gas and impact munitions on peaceful demonstrators.

The Indian Creek fire in Oregon has burned close to 50,000 acres so far, and is currently only 20 percent contained.

Related: Oregon prisoners are being paid under $10 to fight the many blazes across the state, and our Blair Stenvick has more.

The Oregon Health Authority today reported 220 new positive cases of coronavirus in the state, and three additional deaths. Disturbingly, the OHA also reported on Saturday that a 34-year-old Multnomah County woman had died of the virus even though she had no underlying health conditions. WASH YA DAMN HANDS, WEAR YA DAMN MASK, KEEP YA DAMN DISTANCE.

According to a report from the AP, the governors of several states (including Oregon and Washington) were influenced by business interestssome of whom were very self-servingwhen coming up with state mandates that are being used to combat COVID-19.

IN NATIONAL NEWS:

Wisconsin's governor has called out the National Guard to respond to absolutely righteous protests following the despicable police shooting of Jacob Blake, a Black man who was shot seven times in the back in plain view of his three children.

President Trump accepted his corrupt party's nomination to run against Joe Biden in November today, while also making sure to note that if he loses, it'll probably be because the election was "rigged." (He didn't mention that if he wins it will definitely be because the election was rigged.)

The Republican National Convention (AKA the GOP Garbage Parade) starts tonight in case you're a fan of watching a rapidly moving slurry of lies, corruption, racism, selfishness, and gross ineptitude.

New York's attorney general is asking a court to force Trump's business associatesincluding son Eric Trumpto testify and turn over documents in her case to prove that the president has a long history of committing business-related fraud.

Evangelical Christian and Trump supporter Jerry Falwell Jr. has resigned his post as the head of Liberty University over allegations of a sexual relationship between him, his wife, and a business associate. TO BE CLEAR: One's sex life is one's own damn business and shouldn't have any bearing on one's job. However, Falwell is indisputably a grade-a conservative creep who shouldn't be allowed to be in control of anything, so... HA. HA. HA.

In other "stepping down" news: White House counselor Kellyanne Conway has announced she is stepping down from her post to "spend more time with her family" to whom we offer our deepest condolences.

Postmaster General and Trump crony Louis DeJoy testified before an angry Congress today, denying that any of the implementations that he's enacted since taking his post have slowed down the mail. (Narrator's voice: "Though they clearly have.")

Today in "headlines you probably don't want to read, but here it is anyway": Scientists say Hong Kong man got coronavirus a second time.

Are these two points related? As a Taylor Swift fan, I say PROBABLY.

YOU NEED LAUGHS, RIGHT? Then don't miss the livestream I, ANONYMOUS SHOW featuring the wildest anonymous confessions and rants from the famous I, Anonymous column that will be deliciously dissected by a hilarious panel of comedians including Simon Gibson, Steph Tovah, Ify Nwadiwe, and your host Kate Murphy! GET THEM TICKETS NOW, BABIES!

THE WEATHER REPORT: Sunny skies tomorrow with a comfortable high of 82.

And finally... posted without comment.

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Good Afternoon, News: Cops Turn Blind Eye to Violent Right Wingers, Falwell (and KellyAnne) Resign, and a Black Wisconsin Man Shot in the Back by...

Labor candidates receive email threatening negative ads if they support gay conversion therapy ban – The Canberra Times

news, act-politics,

Labor election candidates have received emails from a conservative lobby group threatening to run negative advertising if they supported legislation to outlaw gay conversion therapy. ACT Labor election candidates across all five electorates received an email from Melbourne-based conservative group Binary Australia on Tuesday, warning it would release negative advertisements if they supported the government's bill to ban gay conversion therapy. It came as Chief Minister and Labor leader Andrew Barr warned of a rise in "ultra-right activity" in Canberra, which he feared would only increase in the lead up to the ACT election. Mr Barr said right-wing groups, which were based outside Canberra, were "agitated" by his government's progressive policies and would seek to rally their forces in an attempt to disrupt and influence the October 17 ballot. In the email seen by The Canberra Times, Binary Australia spokeswoman Kirralie Smith said the candidates had 24 hours to respond before the ads would be published. "Let us know if you support the Labor Green Bill or do you believe that parents and teachers and people of faith should be protected and able to speak openly with kids in their care?" it read in part. "If you support the bill as is, or if we don't hear from you, the ads will be run online." Ms Smith said Binary Australia had made attempts to gauge each candidate's position on the legislation before publishing the ads. "People are reasonably asking where the candidates stand on these issues considering there was little to no public consultation," she said. "We don't want to misrepresent the candidate's positions so we have gone to great lengths to get feedback from the candidates before we publish any advertising." Labor's candidate for Kurrajong, Jacob Ingram, took to Facebook on Tuesday, saying he "couldn't care less" and stood behind the legislation. He labelled the email "blackmail" and said it was "disgusting behaviour" by the conservative group, which "is only going to make me advocate for it even more". "Do your worst," he wrote. Ms Smith rejected the claim the emails were blackmail. "It is not blackmail to ask a political candidate in public office to state their position on an issue," she said. Under the proposed legislation, people would face fines of up to $24,000 and 12 months' imprisonment for performing a "sexuality or gender identity conversion therapy" on a child or individual with an impaired decision-making ability. The bill has come under fire from religious groups saying the definition of sexuality and gender identity conversion practices is too broad. Mr Barr said the threats from Binary Australia, which last week robocalled Canberrans about laws allowing young people to change their gender on birth certificates, was evidence of a rise in activity from what he described as "ultra-right conservative groups". He also pointed to reports that material linked to alt-right, male-only group Proud Boys had been seen in Canberra. "I fear that we will see more of this activity in the lead up to the territory election," Mr Barr said. "The ultra-conservatives are certainly agitated by a progressive government in this city and are seeking to marshal their forces in an attempt to influence or disrupt the ACT election. "I need to make very clear that we will not bow to pressure from right-wing extremist groups on gay conversion, on white supremacy on anti-Islam ... on all of that right-wing nonsense."

https://nnimgt-a.akamaihd.net/transform/v1/crop/frm/YSE9Nkng6wVvRADAVf7nRi/af7950e3-a63d-4d9f-8fa9-55f3ec0f7df0.PNG/r0_662_828_1130_w1200_h678_fmax.jpg

Labor election candidates have received emails from a conservative lobby group threatening to run negative advertising if they supported legislation to outlaw gay conversion therapy.

ACT Labor election candidates across all five electorates received an email from Melbourne-based conservative group Binary Australia on Tuesday, warning it would release negative advertisements if they supported the government's bill to ban gay conversion therapy.

It came as Chief Minister and Labor leader Andrew Barr warned of a rise in "ultra-right activity" in Canberra, which he feared would only increase in the lead up to the ACT election.

Mr Barr said right-wing groups, which were based outside Canberra, were "agitated" by his government's progressive policies and would seek to rally their forces in an attempt to disrupt and influence the October 17 ballot.

In the email seen by The Canberra Times, Binary Australia spokeswoman Kirralie Smith said the candidates had 24 hours to respond before the ads would be published.

An email sent to Labor candidate Jacob Ingram from Binary Australia warns negative ads would be published if he supported legislation to ban gay conversion therapy. Picture: Supplied.

"Let us know if you support the Labor Green Bill or do you believe that parents and teachers and people of faith should be protected and able to speak openly with kids in their care?" it read in part.

"If you support the bill as is, or if we don't hear from you, the ads will be run online."

Ms Smith said Binary Australia had made attempts to gauge each candidate's position on the legislation before publishing the ads.

"People are reasonably asking where the candidates stand on these issues considering there was little to no public consultation," she said.

"We don't want to misrepresent the candidate's positions so we have gone to great lengths to get feedback from the candidates before we publish any advertising."

Labor's candidate for Kurrajong, Jacob Ingram, took to Facebook on Tuesday, saying he "couldn't care less" and stood behind the legislation.

He labelled the email "blackmail" and said it was "disgusting behaviour" by the conservative group, which "is only going to make me advocate for it even more".

"Do your worst," he wrote.

Ms Smith rejected the claim the emails were blackmail.

"It is not blackmail to ask a political candidate in public office to state their position on an issue," she said.

Under the proposed legislation, people would face fines of up to $24,000 and 12 months' imprisonment for performing a "sexuality or gender identity conversion therapy" on a child or individual with an impaired decision-making ability.

He also pointed to reports that material linked to alt-right, male-only group Proud Boys had been seen in Canberra.

"I fear that we will see more of this activity in the lead up to the territory election," Mr Barr said.

"The ultra-conservatives are certainly agitated by a progressive government in this city and are seeking to marshal their forces in an attempt to influence or disrupt the ACT election.

"I need to make very clear that we will not bow to pressure from right-wing extremist groups on gay conversion, on white supremacy on anti-Islam ... on all of that right-wing nonsense."

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Labor candidates receive email threatening negative ads if they support gay conversion therapy ban - The Canberra Times