From Cummings to bardcore: this week’s fashion trends – The Guardian

Going up

Cummings collar Forget the political advisers creased white shirt. Were into his new Spitting Image styling with a Ming the Merciless popped collar.

French bob The most requested style since hairdressers reopened. See Anna Karina in Vivre Sa Vie or current favourite, Marc Jacobs.

Beyoncs Black is King jigsawHow is it possible for an item to be peak summer 2020 but still properly great? Such is the genius of Bey.

Wine windows Plague-era method of selling alcohol through a window, updated with ice-cream for the current pandemic.

Floafers Loafers that float? Were actually into them.

Hawaiian shirts Garish even before they were co-opted by the alt-right. Were about camp collar (wide, unstructured) shirts this summer.

Boob or bust The needle of shame has landed on our decolletage. Sales of bust-firming cream are on the up. Cheers, Zoom.

Ocado Sick of not getting a slot. Were ordering online BBQ packs. Try Smokestaks smoked meat in a box.

Baseball caps Simply not enough coverage. We prefer the wider Patagonia brimmer and NE Blake cricket hat.

Bardcore Internet trend for medieval versions of pop songs not in a funny way. Havent we been through enough?

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From Cummings to bardcore: this week's fashion trends - The Guardian

The Culture Wars Have Reached Warhammer 40k – VICE UK

Warhammer 40,000 often known simply as 40k has been beloved by sci-fi fanatics since the 1980s. The tabletop wargame, produced by Games Workshop, is a fantasy space where players can become generals of their own futuristic army, locked in an unceasing war on a galactic scale.

In recent years, the game whose players often congregate online has attracted a small but vocal alt-right minority. In 2015, the God Emperor Trump meme began circulating around 4Chans /pol/ board, depicting Trumps face superimposed on an image of a fictional theocratic ruler from the game. Since then, closed 40k Facebook groups have become a repository of racism and far-right content, filled with Warhammer-themed memes mocking everything from specific ethnic minorities to gender equality.

Its easy to see why some players have a fascist reading of Warhammer 40k. Partially written as satire in response to the exceedingly optimistic sci-fi of the 1970s, the game takes place in a hopeless, dystopian galaxy where murderous armies run rampant. Theres a conscious borrowing of fascist iconography, structures and practices. For instance, perhaps the most famous group from 40ks lore, the Imperium of Man, is a bloated, theocratic ethnostate that traverses the galaxy, purging heretics and alien races. In the grim darkness of the far future, there is only war, reads the games tagline.

Many Warhammer fans are becoming increasingly uncomfortable with the alt-right faction of the fandom flowering in certain online corners. One group taking action is No More Damsels, a charity calling for a more inclusive atmosphere in the London wargaming scene. Members want Games Workshop to outline specific plans to tackle racism, sexism, homophobia and other forms of prejudice in the wargaming community.

Last month, No More Damsels co-founder, Sarah Pipkin, helped to write an open letter addressed to Games Workshop, calling out bigotry in Warhammer. Providing open and clear measures around discouraging hatred and abuse would go a long way towards making the community more welcoming and tolerant for all, the letter read. We look forward to your support and seeing the precedent you set by taking repeated and consistent action to address prejudice.

Although the letter, which was signed by over a dozen wargaming groups, was mostly well-received, No More Damsels expected to receive some online backlash. Players who ask for greater representation and a more inclusive atmosphere in the world of 40k are often targeted by far-right trolls, with little in the way of recourse.

If theres a huge pile-on if youre getting trolled for being outspoken about wanting to see yourself represented in the lore theres almost no one to turn to, Pipkin explains over the phone. There was a YouTuber who made a joke about [fictional Warhammer soldiers] Space Marines being gay, who then received death threats for it.

The No More Damsels open letter didnt come out of nowhere. It was published in response to a statement issued by Games Workshop on the 4th of June, which committed to diversifying its models and keeping racism out of its stores. We will never accept nor condone any form of prejudice, hatred or abuse in our company or in the Warhammer hobby, they wrote.

Although Pipkin says that a broad anti-racist message was encouraging, No More Damsels had hoped Games Workshop would have outlined a more practical response. The group also urged Games Workshop to offer an apology to Josh Mallett, a Black wargamer who has spoken publicly about racist comments he says were made to him by Games Workshop staff at a Warhammer Weekender event. Games Workshop did not respond to requests to comment for this article.

Others believe the companys marketing strategy may be inadvertently feeding far-right sentiment in the community. Thomas Parrott freelanced for Games Workshop until June, writing novels for its Black Library publishing arm. He thinks that adopting a surface-level narrative of good guys versus bad guys in a bid to appease the parents of younger customers who might otherwise be put off by 40ks cartoonishly grim lore opens the door to a troublingly simplified reading of the game.

It is really easy to misinterpret the Imperium [of Man] as being presented as a good thing, as opposed to what it originally was, which was lampooning the very idea of this totalitarian state, he says.

But some in the 40k community felt Games Workshop should not have made a statement at all. One such member is Norway-based YouTuber, Arch (known as Arch Warhammer until a recent trademark dispute with Games Workshop prompted a name change). He launched an email campaign in July, urging his 200,000 plus subscribers to email Games Workshop and tell them to keep politics out.

Arch says he does not identify as a member of the far-right, and insists that he was genuinely not aware of any alt-right or fascist section of the 40k community. Rather, he takes the view that Games Workshops statement was tantamount to aligning itself with extremists who support communism and, he says, advocate violence.

For me, this is the same kind of dog-whistling that we hear about for the alt-right, where they talk about some of their code phrases, he explains, via Discord. This seems to me to be a signal to a very small group of extreme people What my campaign is saying is that Warhammer is for everyone, full stop.

Two months ago, screenshots from Archs Discord server were posted on /r/Sigmarxism, a left-wing Warhammer subreddit. Multiple people had used racial slurs, while Arch himself referred to Smi people (an indigenous people of northern Scandinavia) as gypsy but worse. Another poster used the term field exercises a term understood in far-right circles as referring to the activities of the Nazi Einsatzgruppen, which murdered thousands of Romani people, Jewish people and communists in German-occupied territories during the Second World War as a suggested way of dealing with the group.

Prior to the leaks, Arch had made a video in which he referred to the fictional Gnoblar race from the Warhammer fantasy series as house n*****s, and another in which he defended the use of the term White Lives Matter. Asked about his own use of racist language, as well as dog-whistle remarks on his Discord server, Arch tells me that he doesnt really concern himself with how extremists interpret his speech, and that he will continue to allow jokes.

If you are the most extreme tankie, or even the most extreme fascist, if you simply want to play a game of 40k, not talk about your politics, simply collect the miniatures I do not view that as Games Workshops duty to stop it, he says. I view that as the rest of societys duty to debate against these people and to prevent them via public discourse, and the public opinion.

Archs views arent shared by everyone. This includes YouTuber and veteran Warhammer player Leakycheese, who prefers to remain anonymous. He says that ignoring the fascist leanings of certain players will likely prevent new members from becoming part of the Warhammer community. And, worse, it could radicalise young people getting into the hobby as part of Games Workshop's Schools Programme, by leading them down a PewDiePipeline towards extremist and far-right content.

Leakycheese suggests that a positive step would be a sign posted in every Games Workshop franchise, making clear to all customers that prejudice has no place in the community. Some changes to the lore of 40k would not go amiss, either; there should be greater ethnic diversity in models, he says, and it should be abundantly clear that the Imperium of Man arent the good guys.

They need to put the satire back into it, he says. The other thing they need to do is stop making Space Marines appear as heroes; people on the alt-right think they are superhuman bermensch warriors they [Games Workshop] do stuff around that; it just needs to be brought back to the fore.

As long as the alt-right factions of the 40k community remain unchecked, and the satirical nature of the modern game remains unimportant, Warhammer has a problem. But hopefully what were experiencing now is a shift in the tide. Warhammer has persisted for decades, and deserves to be opened up, and continue to open up, for all sorts of fans into the future.

@bigpauliedoyle

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The Culture Wars Have Reached Warhammer 40k - VICE UK

A Bible Burning, a Russian News Agency and a Story Too Good to Check Out – The New York Times

Mr. Cheong, for instance, does not appear to be in any way complicit. He regularly tweets multiple videos a night from the protests and, he said, It definitely wasnt my intention to drive just the one story.

But the Bible video fit his politics, and his tweet about it caught fire.

After this article was published, Ruptly said in a statement that it was shockingly dishonest, noting that The Times had reported that the video was not manipulated in any way and that the Russian news agency had run a livestream of the event. But, Ruptly said, The Times then claims that this verified evidence is now disinformation; Orwell would be proud.

Most of the Russian efforts garner far less notice, and unfold on far less well known websites. American officials late last month identified one of those websites as Inforos, an outlet that they said is controlled by Russias military intelligence service, the GRU, and used to test out various disinformation themes that target Americans, Canadians and Europeans. Covid-19 disinformation, for instance, has spread with the pandemic, and stories about dangers posed by the North Atlantic Treaty Organization have by now become an old standard.

Russian intelligence has grown more sophisticated and more highly resourced in their use of online disinformation, said Senator Richard Blumenthal, the Connecticut Democrat, citing a recent State Department report on Russian disinformation. The methods used in 2016, seem almost rudimentary and quaint.

InfoRos, according to current and former American officials, sits atop a GRU-directed network that includes two other nominally independent news sites, OneWorld.Press and InfoBrics. Those sites, in turn, push out stories to alt-right and alt-left sites in North America and Europe that are receptive to the anti-establishment and often-conspiratorial messaging pushed by the Russians.

In some instances, a straight line can be traced from the GRU-run operations to American websites that promote conspiracy theories. One such story appeared in January, when InfoBrics claimed a whistle-blower had revealed that British spies and Ukraines former president, Petro Poroshenko, had orchestrated the downing of a Malaysia Airlines flight over eastern Ukraine, where Russian-backed separatists were fighting government forces. (Investigators determined that the plane had been brought down by a Russian-made missile.)

The story was produced by a research fellow at the Center for Syncretic Studies, a think tank in Serbia that is similarly believed to have ties to Russian intelligence. The article was then published by InfoBrics. In turn, it was picked up by The Duran, an independent website based in Cyprus that often spreads Russian disinformation.

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A Bible Burning, a Russian News Agency and a Story Too Good to Check Out - The New York Times

Tim Louis: Is the NPA on life support? – Straight.com

When the provincial NDP was elected in 2017, one of its first orders of business was a very positive change to campaign financing at the municipal level. Within months, it passed legislation prohibiting donations to municipal political parties from corporations and unions, and banning individual donations over $1,200.

Vancouvers two developer-friendly municipal partiesVision Vancouver and the Non-Partisan Associationwere dealt a devastating blow. These two parties had been bankrolled almost entirely by very large donations from Vancouvers business elite, including some of the citys biggest real estate developers. In the case of the NPA, this had been happening for a very long time since the party dominated city council for decades.

After the legal change to campaign donations, Vision Vancouver found itself unable to campaign in the 2018 civic election as it had every election since its founding in2005.

It was no more disadvantaged than any other political party because of the new law. But Vision had become so used to spending so much on election ads and its enormous army of paid staff, it found it wiped out at city council, electing zero candidates. Ditto for the park board. Visions sole seat last election was on the school board.

With such poor results, many have predicted that the 2018 election was Vision Vancouvers swan song.

While the NPA, Vancouvers other pro-developer party, did much better than Vision last election, it has shown major cracks since then.

The first crack appeared when the NPA board of directors was taken over at their last AGM in December by conservatives, including several social conservatives. (The term social conservatives is used in a number of ways these days, but youll find examples in the very right-wing Stockwell Day, and groups like the Reform Party, Albertas Social Credit party, Focus on the Family and the Christian Heritage Party of Canada. They believe in all the old-school bourgeois values that privilege Western, Christian, heterosexual, materialistic upper classes. They also want to turn the clock back on feminist gains, like abortion.)

If you can believe it, one of the new directors and the NPAs new chief fundraiser, Christopher Wilson, is the former B.C. director of the alt-right, sensationalist media outlet, Rebel News! Read all about him inthis excellent article by Charlie Smithin theGeorgia Straight. Wilson is known for his sly videos defending Donald Trumps racist views and questioning the motives of Black athletes who take a knee. Hes also a member of the B.C. Conservatives, who want to kill our very successful carbon tax.

He questions climate science, and kept calling our federal environment minister, Catherine McKenna, a Climate Barbie until he got called out by the minister herself andTabatha Southey in Macleans. (He later deleted the tweets.)

Note that two new directors on the NPA board were previously endorsed by an association that opposes SOGI, which helps make schools more inclusive for LGBTQ students. So copy out this paragraph and keep it on your fridge if youre tempted to vote NPA in the coming election.

All this prompted Councillor Rebecca Bligh, who is openly queer, toleave the NPA caucus in December,and sit as an independent. She was a moderate voice, capable of attracting centre-right voters.

More recently, city hall watchers were shocked to see four of the remaining moderate voices on the 15-member NPA board resign, as they were unable to stomach the far-right, undemocratic direction the party is obviously taking.

One of the four moderates, Jane Frost,toldtheGlobe and Mail, they found themselves thwarted by a group of new board members who dont seem interested in holding meetings, speaking out on important issues facing the city or including all current and potential NPA members.

Its easy see that new forces even more right of the usual centrist-right bent of the NPA now have lots of freedom to point the party in a direction that will surely result in its demise. Vancouvers electorate is way too moderate to ever elect a city council dominated by far-right individuals.

Its always a mugs game predicting the future, especially in politics. However, I wont be surprised to see the further implosion of the NPA and a brand new centre-right party born out of the remnants of Vision Vancouver and the moderate wing of the NPA that will be looking for a new political home.

Daily atmospheric CO2[Courtesy ofCO2.Earth]

Latest daily total (Aug. 11, 2020):412.40 ppm

One year ago (Aug. 11, 2019):410.43 ppm

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Tim Louis: Is the NPA on life support? - Straight.com

This is Amerika: Where fascism, totalitarianism and militarism go hand in hand – Augusta Free Press

By John W. Whitehead

( mario beauregard stock.adobe.com)

In this present crisis, government is not the solution to our problem, government IS the problem.Ronald Reagan

Theres a pattern emerging if you pay close enough attention.

Civil discontent leads to civil unrest, which leads to protests and counterprotests.

Without fail, what should be an exercise in how to peacefully disagree turns ugly the momentlooting, vandalism, violence, intimidation tactics and riotingare introduced into the equation. Instead of restoring order, local police stand down.

Tensions rise, violence escalates, and federal armies move in.

Coincidence? I think not.

This was the blueprint used three years ago in Charlottesville, Va., in 2017, when the cityregularly cited as being one of the happiest places in America, became ground zero for a heated war of wordsand actionsover racism, sanitizing history, extremism (both right and left), political correctness, hate speech, partisan politics, and agrowing fearthat violent words will end in violent actions.

It was a setup: local police deliberately engineered a situation in which protesters would confront each other, tensions would bubble over, and things would turn just violent enough to call in the bigger guns.

It is the blueprint being used right now.

In Charlottesville, as in so many parts of the country right now, the conflict was over how to reconcile the nations checkered past, particularly as it relates to slavery, with the push to sanitize the environment of anythingwords and imagesthat might cause offense,especially if its a Confederate flag or monument.

That fear of offense prompted the Charlottesville City Council to get rid of astatue of Confederate General Robert E. Leethat had graced one of its public parks for 82 years.

Thats when everything went haywire.

In attempting to pacify one particularly vocal and righteously offended group while railroading over the concerns of those with alternate viewpoints, Charlottesville attracted the unwanted attention of the Ku Klux Klan, neo-Nazis and the alt-Right, all of whom descended on the little college town with the intention of exercising their First Amendment right to be disagreeable, to assemble, and to protest.

When put to the test, Charlottesville did not handle things well at all.

On August 12, 2017, what should have been an exercise in free speech quickly became a brawl that left one dead and dozens more injured.

As theNew York Timesreported, Protesters began to mace one another,throwing water bottles and urine-filled balloons some of which hit reporters and beating each other with flagpoles, clubs and makeshift weapons. Before long, the downtown area was a melee. People were ducking and covering with a constant stream of projectiles whizzing by our faces, and the air was filled with the sounds of fists and sticks against flesh.

And then there was the police, who were supposed to uphold the law and prevent violence.

They failed to do either.

Indeed, a220-page post-mortemof the protests and the Charlottesville governments response by former U.S. attorney Timothy J. Heaphy merely corroborates our worst fears about what drives the government at all levels: power, money, ego, politics and ambition.

When presented with a situation in which the government and its agents were tasked with protecting free speech and safety, Heaphy concluded that the City of Charlottesville protected neither free expression nor public safety.

Heaphy continues: The City was unable to protect the right of free expression and facilitate the permit holders offensive speech. This represents a failure of one of governments core functionsthe protection of fundamental rights. Law enforcement also failed to maintain order and protect citizens from harm, injury, and death. Charlottesville preserved neither of those principles on August 12, which has led to deep distrust of government within this community.

In other words, the government failed to uphold its constitutional mandates. The police failed to carry out their duties as peace officers. And the citizens found themselves unable to trust either the police or the government to do its job in respecting their rights and ensuring their safety.

Despite the fact that1,000 first responders (including 300 state police troopers and members of the National Guard)many of whom had been preparing for the downtown rally for monthshad been called on to work the event, despite the fact that police in riot gear surrounded Emancipation Park on three sides, and despite the fact that Charlottesville had had what reporter David Graham referred to as a dress rehearsal of sorts a month earlier when 30 members of the Ku Klux Klan were confronted by 1000 counterprotesters, police failed to do their jobs.

In fact, as theWashington Postreports, police seemed to watch as groups beat each other with sticks and bludgeoned one another with shields At one point,police appeared to retreat and then watch the beatingsbefore eventually moving in to end the free-for-all, make arrests and tend to the injured.

Police Stood By As Mayhem Mounted in Charlottesville, reportedProPublica.

Instead of establishing clear boundariesbuffer zonesbetween the warring groups and protecting the First Amendment rights of the protesters, police established two entrances into the permit areas of the park and created barriers guiding rallygoers single-file into the parkpast lines of white nationalists and antifa counterprotesters.

Incredibly, when the first signs of open violence broke out, Heaphy reports that the police chief allegedly instructed his staff to let them fight, it will make it easier to declare an unlawful assembly.

This is not much different from what is happening on the present-day national scene.

Commissioned by the City of Charlottesville, thisHeaphy reportwas intended to be an independent investigation of what went right and what went wrong in the governments handling of the protests.

Heaphy found very little to commend.

What went right on Aug. 12 according to Heaphy: 1) Despite the presence of firearms, including members of the militia, and angry confrontations between protesters and counterprotesters, no person was shot and no significant property damage occurred; 2) Emergency personnel did their jobs effectively and treated a large number of people in a short period of time; and 3) Police intelligence gathering was thorough (thats the best he had to say about police).

Now for what went wrong, according to the report:

1. Police failed to get input from other law enforcement agencies experienced in handling large protests.

2. Police failed to adequately train their officers in advance of the protest.

3. City officials failed to request assistance from outside agencies.

4. The City Council unduly interfered by ignoring legal advice, attempting to move the protesters elsewhere, and ignoring the concerns of law enforcement.

5. The city government failed to inform the public about their plans.

6. City officials were misguided in allowing weapons at the protest.

7. The police implemented a flawed operational plan that failed to protect public safety.

8. While police were provided with riot gear, they were never trained in how to use it, nor were they provided with any meaningful field training in how to deal with or de-escalate anticipated violence on the part of protesters.

9. Despite the input and advice of outside counsel, including The Rutherford Institute, the police failed to employ de-escalation tactics or establish clear barriers between warring factions of protesters.

10. Government officials and police leadership opted to advance their own agendas at the expense of constitutional rights and public safety.

11. For all intents and purposes, police abided by a stand down order that endangered the community and paved the way for massive civil unrest.

12. In failing to protect public safety, police and government officials undermined public faith in the government.

The Heaphy report focused on the events that took place in Charlottesville, Virginia, but it applies to almost every branch of government that fails to serve we the people.

As the Pew Research Center revealed,public trust in the government remains near historic lowsand with good reason, too.

This isnt America, land of the free, where the government is of the people, by the people [and] for the people.

Rather, this is Amerika, where fascism, totalitarianism and militarism go hand in hand.

What you smell is the stench of a dying republic.Ourdying republic.

The American experiment in freedom is failing fast.

Through every fault of our ownour apathy, our ignorance, our intolerance, our disinclination to do the hard work of holding government leaders accountable to the rule of law, our inclination to let politics trump longstanding constitutional principleswe have been reduced to this sorry state in which we are little more than shackled inmates in a prison operated for the profit of a corporate elite.

We have been saddled with the wreckage of a government at all levels that no longer represents the citizenry, serves the citizenry, or is accountable to the citizenry.

We the people are not the masters anymore.

It doesnt matter whether youre talking about the federal government, state governments, or local governing bodies: at all ends of the spectrum and every point in between, a shift has taken place.

We the people are not being seen, heard or valued.

We no longer count for much of anything beyond an occasional electoral vote and as a source of income for the governments ever-burgeoning financial needs.

Everything happening at the national level is playing out at the local level, as well: the violence, the militarization, the intolerance, the lopsided governance, and an uneasy awareness that the citizenry have no say in how their communities are being governed.

As I have warned repeatedly, the architects of the police state have every intention of manipulating this outrage for their own purposes.

Predictably, the police state is allowing these protests, riots and looting to devolve into a situation where enough of the voting populace is so desperate for a return to law and order that they will gladly relinquish some of their freedoms to achieve it. And thats how the police state will win, no matter which candidate gets elected to the White House, and we the people will continue to lose.

So whats the answer?

As always, it must start with we the people.

Ive always advised people to think nationally, but act locally.

Yet as Charlottesville made clear, its hard to make a difference locally when the local government is as deaf, dumb and blind to the needs of its constituents as the national government.

Charlottesville much like the rest of the nation has had its fair share of government leaders who are tone-deaf, focused on their own aggrandizement, and incapable of prioritizing the needs of their constituents over their own personal and political agendas; law enforcement officials for whom personal safety, heavy-handed militarized tactics, and power plays trump their duty to serve and protect; polarized citizens incapable of finding common ground, respecting each others rights, or agreeing to disagree; and a community held hostage by political correctness, divisive rhetoric and a growing intolerance for any views that may be unpopular or at odds with the mainstream.

It was a perfect storm just waiting for the right conditions to wreak havoc, a precursor of the rage, frustration and fear that is erupting all over the country.

No matter what forces are manipulating these present riots and violent uprisings, howeverand there are definitely such forces at play herenone of this would be happening without the government having laid the groundwork.

Clearly, its time to clean house at all levels of government.

Stop tolerating corruption, graft, intolerance, greed, incompetence, ineptitude, militarism, lawlessness, ignorance, brutality, deceit, collusion, corpulence, bureaucracy, immorality, depravity, censorship, cruelty, violence, mediocrity, and tyranny. These are the hallmarks of an institution that is rotten through and through.

Stop holding your nose in order to block out the stench of a rotting institution.

Stop letting the government and its agents treat you like a servant or a slave.

Youve got rights. Weve all got rights. This is our country. This is our government. No one can take it away from us unless we make it easy for them.

Youve got a better chance of making your displeasure seen and felt and heard within your own community. But it will take perseverance and unity and a commitment to finding common ground with your fellow citizens.

Right now, as I make clear in my bookBattlefield America: The War on the American People, were making it way too easy for the police state to take over.

Stop being an accessory to the murder of the American republic.

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This is Amerika: Where fascism, totalitarianism and militarism go hand in hand - Augusta Free Press

Gun Enthusiasts Celebrate Man Who Shot Himself in the Balls as Their King – VICE

Back in May, we wrote about a group of gun enthusiasts who love taking pictures of loaded weapons pointed at their dicks. On a long enough timeline, one of them was inevitably going to accidentally discharge their weapon, and on Tuesday, that appears to be exactly what happened to one member in the San Diego area.

A member of a Facebook group dedicated to taking pictures of loaded weapons pointed at dicks finally shot himself in the balls, according to bloody pictures and video he posted on social media and the Imperial County Sheriff's Office, which confirmed the incident to Motherboard. Rather than step back and start questioning whether the practice is wise, the group made him an administrator and are now celebrating him as their king.

On August 11, a member of the group "Loaded Guns Pointed at [B]enis" posted a video of himself pointing a loaded 1911 handgun at his junk. Theres a brief pause before the gun discharges.

The original video of the man shooting himself in the balls and subsequent thread has been deleted, but members of the group captured the video and aftermath and reuploaded it.

Hey [b]ois, I might have fucked up, the man who shot himself in the balls wrote above a picture of his naked legs and splattered blood on the carpet of his floor. A towel is stuffed between his legs and a printed out copy of the constitution is crumpled on the edge of the photo.

The guy posted through the incident as he bled. Gods caliber [.45] went through my scrotum, mattress, boxspring, and floor, he wrote. Originally the man thought hed just grazed his balls, but a subsequent hospital visit told a different story.

In the last public post from the man, hes in a green hospital gown on a gurney. A pink mask is draped across his face and hes pointing his finger at his crotch like a gun. Turns out it wasnt a graze, that round went right the fuck through me, he posted. What I thought were two graze wounds, turned out to be an entrance and exit wound.

The shooter didnt respond to a request for comment, but an admin for Loaded Guns Pointed at [B]enis said he was doing well. [He] is 100% okay, actually went to work the next day, an admin of Loaded Guns Pointed at [B]enis told Motherboard in a Facebook message. The reason we are calling him king is partially because the poor guy already shot himself, dont think he needs to be chastised as well... Im quite sure hes learned his lesson without the entire world calling him an idiot.

According to his Facebook profile, the man who shot himself lives in the San Diego Area. The San Diego Police Department told Motherboard it had been called to the hospital in the area to follow up on a patient with a self inflicted gunshot wound at 8:30 p.m., August 11. A representative of the police department told Motherboard on the phone that the man was gone by the time officers arrived at the hospital. The shooter posted his picture from the hospital at 8:24 p.m. on August 11.

To understand why this idiotic thing happened in the first place, and why there are several groups online dedicated to posting pictures of gun owners pointing a loaded weapon at their dick besides the Facebook group in question, you need to understand the beef raging between online gun people.

"Trigger discipline" is a basic gun safety measure drilled into people when theyre learning about firearms. Basic safety says that you always keep your finger off the trigger until youre ready to shoot, and that you point it away from yourself and other people unless you mean to shoot them. Shitposters love taking pictures of a loaded gun pointed at their groin, finger hovering just above the trigger, to irritate responsible gun owners.

Now, Loaded Guns Pointed at [B]enis has made the shooter an admin, and the group is making memes of him as their king. In one meme, Barack Obama is giving him a Presidential Medal of Freedom. The group changed its cover photo to a screenshot of the shooter pointing his loaded 1911 at his dick.

[We] are sick and tired of being demonized as gun owners, and looped together with the alt-right just for owning guns, an admin of Loaded Guns Pointed at [B]enis told Motherboard in a Facebook message. We are sick of republicans (think NRA) telling us what to do with our property, and we are sick of being told that just because we like guns It means we have to be anti woman, pro life and pro trump.

Since the story made its way to Twitter and other gun groups online, many have called the shooter's actions stupid.

Im honestly surprised it took this long, an admin of Gun People Who Hate Gun People, a Facebook group for gun enthusiasts to vent about irresponsible gun owners, told Motherboard in a Facebook message. But of course this is probably one of the dudes crazy enough to actually point a gun at his junk and then actually post a video of him shooting himself. Like most people have the sense of self worth to not share getting so amazingly owned by their own stupidity.

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Gun Enthusiasts Celebrate Man Who Shot Himself in the Balls as Their King - VICE

Lauren Southern is on the comeback trail, and Australian conservatives are all too happy to help – The Guardian

Far-right e-celeb Lauren Southern is on the comeback trail. And Australian conservatives are more than happy to offer her a helping hand.

Her bid to be taken seriously as a journalist and commentator was given a small boost recently with a slot on Skys Fox News mini-me culture war platform, Outsiders.

The hosts of that program both the ignominiously departed and those that remain have never met a rightwing chancer they didnt like.

But they seem to have a particular affection for Southern, now resident in Australia, who is coming off a curious hiatus from her frenetic work as a far-right influencer.

She bowed out of public life in 2019, claiming she would be looking for fulfilment in a more private capacity, and saying anything she did in future would not be in the same televised firebrand capacity youve seen before.

Before her withdrawal, Southern had come to prominence as a leading light in the so-called alt right as it proliferated across the western world.

She had a stint on Rebel News, which ended in 2017.

While at Rebel she memorably blasted out false rumours on her Twitter account claiming that a mosque shooting in Quebec was the work of Muslims.

But her main vehicle was her YouTube channel, where, among other things, she promoted the idea that white people were subject to an orchestrated Great Replacement by means of nonwhite immigration.

Southern published a video on that concept which is a key tenet of contemporary white nationalist thought in July 2017. In succeeding months, it received hundreds of thousands of views.

The video is now private on Southerns home channel, and oddly absent on the major internet archiving sites.

But a copy obtained by the Guardian sees Southern hitting familiar white nationalist talking points about racial variation in birth rates, white ethnomasochism, and the failure of nonwhite assimilation.

In August 2017, neo-Nazi demonstrators at the Unite the Right rally chanted you will not replace us over two days of street violence. At the end of the final day, one of those demonstrators murdered Heather Heyer, a leftist counterprotester. The same Great Replacement narrative was so appealing to Australian neo-Nazi terrorist, Brenton Tarrant, that he made it the title of the manifesto in which he explained his motivation for mass murdering 51 Muslims in Christchurch in March 2019.

Beyond the promotion of that narrative, between 2016 and 2019, Southern managed to take her race-baiting into a global cottage industry.

She accompanied European identitarians including Tarrants sometime penpal, Martin Sellner on a shambolic, failed mission to turn back refugee boats in the Mediterranean.

She, Sellner, and fellow YouTuber (and Sellners now-wife) Brittany Pettibone were banned from Britain after an Islamophobic stunt in downtown Luton.

And she promoted the false narrative of South African white genocide in a feature-length documentary film.

Her 2018 Australian tour saw Southern sporting a T-shirt bearing a white nationalist slogan; procuring security services from another neo-fascist group, the Lads Society; and receiving dutiful promotion and softball interviews from an array of News Corp properties, including the ever-obliging Outsiders.

After all of this, and her year-long absence, she reappeared in June claiming to have had a change of heart.

In her comeback video, at least rhetorically, Southern was now positioning herself as a kind of centrist, willing to canvas both sides of any issue.

Former allies, like fellow YouTuber and erstwhile Alex Jones offsider, Paul Joseph Watson, have called Southerns new schtick inauthentic, pointing to the bans YouTube had been handing out in her absence to those who shared Southerns old positions.

Milo Yiannopoulos was also critical, and in June offered the view on Telegram (the only remaining social media platform in which he hasnt received a ban) that Southern had popped out just long enough to be exposed and for everyone to forget about what she did, and now shes gonna come right back to milking her beta orbiter followers.

Fortunately for Southern, the Outsiders crew have credulity to burn.

Rowan Dean, the lead interlocutor, didnt sound a single note of scepticism. Instead, he opened the interview by characterising her ban from the UK as an example of her having suffered a lot of abuse. Going over the details of her stunt handing out flyers in Luton asserting that Allah is gay Southern offered it as proof that blue checkmarks, politicians and rich, wealthy celebrities were scaring the people into submission.

In all of the discussion with Dean and his offsiders the Daily Telegraph opinion editor James Morrow and Herald-Sun columnist Rita Panahi Southern was not probed on why she quit the stage, or who exactly, in that case, might have been trying to cancel her. It became clear towards the end of the discussion that she was also there to promote a Sky special the following week on the evils of cancel culture.

Southern is beginning to look like an Outsiders regular.

And now, Southern has been announced as a speaker at another Australian conservative branch-office institution, the local Conservative Political Action Conference (CPAC). Shell speak alongside MP Craig Kelly, Warren Mundine and Mark Latham, among others.

Why would ostensibly mainstream conservatives go so far out of their way to make Southern feel so at home?

A prosaic answer is that her politics aside, she clearly has a knack for media and communication.

Outsiders is good evidence for the near-absence of these talents on the right in Australia. If people buy Southerns volte-face, she might be useful.

And when it comes down to it, there isnt much daylight between the politics of Southern, which are white nationalist, and those of Australian conservatism as it has developed in recent decades.

After her Mediterranean misadventure, a defiant Southern was quoted as saying: If the politicians wont stop the boats, well stop the boats.

She may be an immigrant, but comments like those show she has what it takes to assimilate.

See more here:

Lauren Southern is on the comeback trail, and Australian conservatives are all too happy to help - The Guardian

Artist Abel Azcona Calls on His Native Spain to Atone for Its Colonial Legacy – Artsy

Espaa os pide perdn has now become a collaborative project, where artists from over 20 Latin American cities so far have volunteered to place the posters in their countries of residence. The plan is to continue the installations journey through more cities until 2022. So far, the project includes Havana, Cuba; Mexico City, Mexico; Lima, Peru; Caracas, Venezuela; Buenos Aires, Argentina; Santiago de Chile, Chile; Guatemala City, Guatemala; Montevideo, Uruguay; La Paz, Bolivia; Panama City, Panama; Tegucigalpa, Honduras; Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic; and Quito and Cuenca, Ecuador. Each group of collaborators has the freedom to decide exactly where to place the posters, often using strategic public spaces like historic monuments.

The ephemerality of the posters are preserved through photographs, which are widely shared on social media. By engaging both physical and online spaces, Azcona conceptualizes the piece as a collective performance where the audience becomes an active participant every time someone reacts or comments in real life, as well as on the internet.

The rest is here:

Artist Abel Azcona Calls on His Native Spain to Atone for Its Colonial Legacy - Artsy

The Coronavirus Could Be Controlled by October With the Right Steps – The New York Times

Six to eight weeks. Thats how long some of the nations leading public health experts say it would take to finally get the United States coronavirus epidemic under control. If the country were to take the right steps, many thousands of people could be spared from the ravages of Covid-19. The economy could finally begin to repair itself, and Americans could start to enjoy something more like normal life.

Six to eight weeks. For proof, look at Germany. Or Thailand. Or France. Or nearly any other country in the world.

In the United States, after a brief period of multistate curve-flattening, case counts and death tolls are rising in so many places that Dr. Deborah Birx, the Trump administrations coronavirus response coordinator, described the collective uptick as a sprawling new phase of the pandemic. Rural communities are as troubled as urban ones, and even clear victories over the virus, in places like New York and Massachusetts, feel imperiled.

At the same time, Americans are fatigued from spending months under semi-lockdown. Bars and restaurants are reopening in some places, for indoor service and debates are underway over if and when and how to do the same for schools even as the virus continues to spread unchecked. Long delays in testing have become an accepted norm: It can still take up to two weeks to get results in some places. As the national death toll climbs above 160,000, mask wearing is still not universal.

Its no mystery how America got here. The Trump administrations response has been disjointed and often contradictory, indifferent to science, suffused with politics and eager to hand off responsibility to state leaders. Among the states, the response has also been wildly uneven.

Its also no surprise where the country is headed. Unless something changes quickly, millions more people will be sickened by the virus, and well over a million may ultimately die from it. The economy will contract further as new surges of viral spread overwhelm hospitals and force further shutdowns and compound suffering, especially in low-income communities and communities of color.

The path to avoiding those outcomes is as clear as the failures of the past several months.

Scientists have learned a lot about this coronavirus since the first cases were reported in the United States earlier this year. For instance, they know now that airborne transmission is a far greater risk than contaminated surfaces, that the virus spreads through singing and shouting as much as through coughing, and that while any infected person is a potential vector, superspreading events as in nursing homes, meatpacking plants, churches and bars are major drivers of the pandemic. By most estimates, just 10 to 20 percent of coronavirus infections account for 80 percent of transmissions.

Experts have also learned a lot about what it takes to get a coronavirus outbreak under control. Most of the necessary steps are the same ones public health experts have been urging for months.

Just because America has largely bungled these steps so far doesnt mean it cant turn things around. The nation can do better. It must.

President Trump and his closest advisers have repeatedly contradicted the scientific evidence, and even themselves, on the severity of the pandemic and the best ways to respond to it. Theyve sown confusion on the importance of mask wearing, the dangers of large gatherings, the potential of untested treatments, the availability of testing and the basic matter of who is in charge of what in the pandemic response.

That confusion seems to have bred a national apathy and a dangerous partisanship over public health measures that will be difficult to undo. But leaders at every level can improve the situation by coordinating their messaging: Masks are essential and will be required in all public places. Social distancing is a civic responsibility. The virus is not going away anytime soon, but we can get it under control quickly if we work together.

Such messaging works best when it comes from the very top, but state and local leaders dont have to wait for federal leaders to step up.

As Dr. Tom Frieden, the former director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, has noted: The United States has a glut of data and a dearth of information.

Data on who is getting sick and where is not being used to guide interventions, and crucial figures like test result times and the portion of new cases that were found through contact tracing are not consistently or routinely reported. If scientists had better access to such figures, they could use it to forecast Covid-19 conditions the same way they forecast the weather: warning when a given outbreak is spreading and advising people to adjust their plans accordingly. State and local leaders can make all their data public, and the C.D.C. ought to help them get that data into a usable form.

In places like Melbourne, Australia, and Harris County, Texas, health officials have created numerical and color-coded threat assessments that tell officials and citizens exactly what to do, based on how extensively the coronavirus is spreading in their communities. The highest alert levels call for full-on shelter in place, while the lowest call for careful monitoring of high-risk establishments.

It would behoove the C.D.C. to create a similar, evidence-based scale and work with state and local leaders to employ it in individual communities. In places where the virus is still rampant, that would mean much more aggressive shutdowns than have been carried out in the past. (The United States has not had a true national lockdown, shuttering only about half the country, compared with 90 percent in other countries with more successful outbreak control.)

Smarter shutdowns may also mean closing bars and indoor dining in many places so schools there can reopen more safely; closing meat processing plants until better protections are in place; and tightening state borders in a sensible, as-needed fashion.

The most consistent mantra of experts trying to get the coronavirus pandemic under control has been that the nation needs much better testing, tracing, isolation and quarantine protocols. Despite examples across the globe for how to achieve all four, the United States has largely failed on these fronts. Testing delays make contact tracing not to mention isolation and quarantine impossible to execute.

To resolve the crisis, federal officials need to commandeer the intellectual property of companies that have developed effective rapid diagnostics and utilize the Defense Production Act to make and distribute as many of those tests as possible. As testing is brought up to speed, officials also need to expand contact tracing and quarantine programs so that once outbreaks are brought under control, states are prepared to keep them in check.

The causes of Americas great pandemic failure run deep, exacerbated by innumerable longstanding problems, from a weak public health infrastructure to institutional racism to systemic inequality in health care, housing and employment. If the pandemic forces the nation to meaningfully grapple with any of those issues, then perhaps all this suffering will not have been in vain. But that work cant really begin until Americans solve the problem thats right in front of them, with the tools that are already at their disposal.

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The Coronavirus Could Be Controlled by October With the Right Steps - The New York Times

Citizen Free Press, breaking away from other alt-Drudge sites – Washington Examiner

Its a news website run out of a house in Bloomington, Indiana, by a secretive internet whiz who had a bit part in the classic Middle America movie Breaking Away. A mention of Citizen Free Press often brings a shrug even in news-hungry Washington.

But overnight, the site that calls itself an alternative to the once-conservative Drudge Report has shot past competitors and is now poised to dominate the right-leaning media space.

"It's fantastic. I love it. I'm breaking every rule in the modern digital news business with no social media, no Facebook, no branding, no email, and the site is succeeding beyond my wildest dreams, said the one-man operator who goes by Kane."

According to the web traffic counter SimilarWeb, he recorded 6.35 million visits and 45 million page views last month. Thats just a sliver of Drudges numbers, but it puts Citizen Free Press in the top of conservative news sites for page views. Plus, visitors stay a remarkable 17 minutes. And it happened during a period when CFP was briefly knocked off Google.

The shift by the Drudge Report from seemingly conservative, pro-President Trump, to anti-Trump, has opened the door to several conservative news aggregators to grow, and Citizen Free Press has jumped the furthest fastest.

Like Drudge and unlike traditional news sites, such as the Washington Examiner, it lists stories from other sites, often with edgy, sometimes rude headlines. Today, for example, headlines include When Obama cut the payroll tax, Pelosi loved it, and Cuomo begs fleeing New Yorkers Come back, I will cook for you

Unlike Drudge, Kane also writes his own posts from the stories of others, and that helps boost traffic because he includes eye-catching videos. And for posts that do well, he puts them in a library under his list.

While Drudge and many websites have stalled in recent weeks, CFP traffic is jumping, up 1,000% since January 2019, and he hopes to hit 100 million page views a month in a year. He told us that traffic is increasing 5,000-6,000 a month.

As with most new websites, building audiences can be hard, especially when there isnt any brand. Conservative pundit and podcaster Dan Bongino, for example, was able to get a quick start after launching his Drudge alternative site, the BonginoReport.com, in part because he is well known and has a following on conservative media circles.

For CFP, its been word of mouth, an organic type of growth that has given it about 160,000 regulars who help spread the word, said Kane.

"For context, in January of 2020, CFP had 100,000 daily regulars. Now in August, CFP has grown to 160,000 hardcore readers, who visit the site every single day, multiple times each, he said. These 'sticky' numbers are unheard of in the news website business for virtually every other site except Drudge Report itself, which boasts similar engagement numbers, he added.

Kane also credits his style of listing news stories, a primitive presentation even compared to the old school look of Drudge, though he copied the style of Drudge's banner.

It's all about the list. I designed CFP to be as user-friendly as possible, so readers can quickly find new stories, right at the top. I try to write creative headlines. I guess that helps somewhat. It's an alternative approach to news, he said.

With promotion and advertising, Kane said CFP is set to get bigger. Almost no one knows about the site. There is no Facebook page, on purpose, no advertising, no media appearances, no promotion, he said, though it is on a path of 50 million page views in August.

There's a lot of room for growth, said Kane.

Read more here:

Citizen Free Press, breaking away from other alt-Drudge sites - Washington Examiner

Whats Left To Conserve? – The Bulwark

Conservatism is in crisis. But we knew that.

With the exception of 2004a squeaker that came down to the wire in Ohio, almost necessitating a replay of Floridas dramatic 2000 recountthe conservative movement has not unambiguously won a presidential election by popular vote since 1988.

And that was before Trump came along. Since that time, of course, the conservative movement has been tarred by association not only with Trumps corruption, incompetence, and brutality, but also with the dangerous fanatics of the alt-right and similar white supremacist groups whom he has tolerated, even tacitly allied with. If the conservative movement had troubles already, a key guardrail had broken: the very people whom William F. Buckley and others had desperately tried to keep out of the movement, and who had been seen off again and again, in the persona of George Wallace, David Duke, Pat Buchanan, and others, had now taken control of the movement.

Amid the current culture war, and especially its latest and hardest-contested battleground, the understanding and commemoration of American history itself, traditional conservatives have a vital role to play. But only if they go back to first principles: reverence for the Constitution and its freedoms, and a commitment to implement them for all Americans, not just some. These core values, not a thoughtless and unqualified deification of the past, nor a Manichaean opposition to the ideas of others, will ensure that conservative values will endure.

A Zombie From The 80s

American conservatism has always had a spotty record on racial matters. Even though founders of the modern conservative movement like William F. Buckley sought to distance themselves from overt bigots, anti-Semites, and crackpots, their own record on matters of civil rights was spotty at best, checkered at worst. More recently, the law and order conservatism of the Reagan era, however sympathetically one reads it in light of the Boomer crime wave, carried with it a contempt for civil rights and a tolerance for abuse of power.

These problems look quaint in retrospect. Today, the conservative movement looks dated at the very least, and toxic at worst. Perhaps the biggest indicator of the conservative movements weakness was that, at the time Trump knocked it over in the 2016 Republican presidential primaries, 16 other candidates had no real solution to Americas problems. Despite repeated allusions to a 1980s icon in the form of Ronald Reagan, there was no vision.

This is unfortunate not just for the conservative movement, but for America. Obscured by the fanaticism and partisanship brought on by Trump, the American left has gone crazy. The left has avoided the much-needed discussion on race and policing brought on by the murder of George Floyd by Minneapolis police and instead used his killing as a justification for the vandalism of monuments (not just Confederate ones), the renaming of major institutions, and the cancelling of those who disagree, all the while peddling the argument that the United States is irredeemable.

The response on the right has been inarticulate at best, but its most prominent voice has been a president who ordered the National Guard to use force on peaceful protesters outside the White House so that he could wave a Bible in front of a church whose minister he had just injured. The latest development in this increasingly alarming back and forth has been the attempted sacking of a federal courthouse followed by extrajudicial detention of citizens in Portland (and potentiallyelsewhere) by federal law enforcement with questionable jurisdiction and chains of command.

Amid all this, doomsayers are now all but openly pronouncing the imminentcollapse of the United States. Amid deconstructionism on the left and crushing authoritarianism on the right, we may fear that, as W.B. Yeats would put it, the center cannot hold.

A reasonable conservative, surveying the intellectual and social carnage, might reasonably ask, whats left to conserve?

Plenty, in fact.

On Rebuilding a Movement

There is, in fact, a historic opportunity for American conservatives to reclaim their core principles and build a winning political coalition. In the process, they can rebuild, rearticulate, and revive the American consensus about what our nation is, what it stands for, and where it can go.

What one is against can serve as the basis of what one is for. Indeed, as a conservative speaker pointed out to one of us in 2016, in the short to medium term, one can unite a squabbling party by pointing at something all of its factions find intolerable and reminding them that they oppose it. This, it was argued, was what Reagan had done in the 1980s and what Trump attempted to do and mostly failed.

Its quite debatable whether this was really the secret of past conservative coalitions success, and whether the lesson is applicable now. The real key to Reagans success may well have been the simple fecklessness of his, and his successor George H.W. Bushs, opposition, and the relative absence of partisanship that allowed for super coalitions to be built. But even if it is true, the limitations of this logic have become apparent.

Clearly, conservatives are going to need to articulate a real vision for the United States, and not just stand athwart history yelling, Stop! They are, moreover, going to have to look past Reagan and abandon Trump. They need a new vision, and a chance to articulate it.

The good news, though, is that the excesses of the left and the vacuousness of Trump offer an opportunity to rebuild. Cancel culture, with its internet mobs, digitized harassment and slurs, nihilistic reverse racism, and attempt to shift the climate of intolerance it has created from the college campus to the boardroom is not a viable way forward for America. Indeed, given its origins in postmodernist deconstructionism and its characterization of the United States as irredeemably oppressive, it does not seek to be. The reaction against this over-reach by the postmodern left has come from all cornersfrom the campus free speech movement, to online contrarians, to left-libertarians, to liberals and former Hillary Clintonsupporters, to NeverTrumpconservatives, to moderate free-marketersin addition to Trump supporters themselves.

A movement that can unite this many people across the political spectrum potentially signals the basis for a principled opposition. For conservatives who have historically styled themselves classical liberals, conserving the original liberal principles of Americas founding, this is an opportunity. The challenge for conservatives is not simply to oppose, but to lead.

It must be emphasized: this will not save conservatives or Republicans this election cyclenot in net terms anyway. The Republican Party and the conservative movement are too tainted by Trump and too disorganized to do much more than tread waterif they are lucky. There is no winning this time, and, in fairness, there probably should not be. The question is how to lay the groundwork for a reboot, and what the conservative vision for America would look like in that case.

It is here that we can offer some thoughts.

Preserving (The Right) History

The biggest issue in the current culture war is how America is to remember its history. Without some agreement, or at least give and take, on how to understand and value their shared experience as a nation, Americans have no reason to stick together at alla frightening prospect, doubly so in this age of division and hyper-partisanship.

We live at a time when historical figures are literally being pulled off pedestals, and when the ire of those doing it extends not only to Confederate leaders and soldiers but any historical figure whose views or practices were typical of another era. This has extended even to Union leaders such as Ulysses S. Grant and abolitionist Union soldiers such as Hans Christian Heg. It is vital for some reasonableness to be injected into the discourse. Conservatives, who prize reason and moderation and value historical inheritance, have no choice but to weigh in. They are well-positioned to do so, if they can overcome their worst instincts that have been on display in the Trump era.

As George Will articulated in his recent book, one of few constants in American conservatism over the centuries is its veneration of the Madisonian Constitution, not merely as a legal system to be manipulated or circumvented, but a worthy blueprint for a free society. Limited government, checks and balances, and individual rights are the sine qua non of conservatism; all else may come and go. With them, in the here and now, comes a basic acknowledgement that the country that possesses them should cherish them, implement them, and take pride in them not scorn them. When the conservative movement sided with a president who had no respect for anything but popularity and naked power, it went astray from its roots. It must find its way back.

In doing so, conservatives will have to confront a valid point that the left-wing opposition is making: that American society today, especially if it reveres the principles and guarantees of the Constitution, cannot uncritically praise all of the actions of the great figures of American history, or even curate the list of such figures as it has. Equally, the conservative movement will have to articulate a way to view America that does not involve whitewashing actions and events which cannot be justified under the principles Americansand especially conservativeshold dear.

The way to do this is for conservatives to reclaim the American story honestly, including the nasty parts of which Americans are justly ashamed. Rather than mindlessly take the yin to the woke brigades yang by positing an America that is all good against a vision of America as all bad, conservatives, as befits a group who are trying to, well, conserve something, can simply remind Americans of the obvious: that they have a great (and ongoing) national story, but that that story includes imperfections, wrong turns, and dark hours where the American promise was unfulfilled.

America does, indeed, have much promise, even at this dark hour. As investors have noted, it is still the worlds preferred place to park money: whatever one would like to see done with its economy, it remains a dynamo of productivity. This is not a mere bit of investment analysis: it means that America is still seen, fundamentally, as a good place to make a living and, therefore, a life. Despite anti-immigrant sentiment, people from all over the world still try to get visas to get into the United States; Americans are in far less of a hurry to leave. This is all ultimately a reflection of Americas greatness.

The United States was founded on the noble ideal of the protection of the rights of the individual by a democratic state, with a constitution that is a masterpiece of legal engineering, with an inspiring story of improving itself even if it falls short of its own pretensions, that not only overcame evil at home in the form of slavery but fought it abroad and defeated it twice in the form of fascism and communism. A country of visionaries and practical people, it is almost a byword for inventiveness, creativity, and toughness in the face of adversity. Its final legacy, whatever happens, will be the footprints it left on the surface of the moon. However many its faults and shortcomings, its story is not a thing of no value to be thrown away, and in the absence of others it will fall to conservatives to plead its case.

Reclaim American History; Conserve the Best Within Us

To do that, though, conservatives must enter debates about Americas history not as simple-minded Manicheans, but as opponents of that worldview. The conservative thesis must not be that if the left regards America as all bad, conservatives in turn must regard it as all good. It should rather be that American history is the great story of an imperfect but self-improving people.

To take an example: it is not a contradiction to characterize Christopher Columbus as a brutal colonizer and conquistador and also as an intrepid mariner whose crossing of the Atlantic was perhaps the single most influential distinct act in human history, one that paved the way for the New World and Western liberalism. He was assuredly both. Conservatives can acknowledge the value of understanding historys complexity without simplifying it themselves.

In the current dialectic, conservatives natural role is to argue for understanding and appreciating history, against those who do not see value in it rather than whitewashing it and undermining their own case by doing so. They can, and should, be the adults in the room, arguing for appreciation and, especially, simple knowledge of history, without reducing it to hagiography.

This may be too complex for soundbites and bumper stickers, but is a reasonable enough case for commentators and elected leaders alike to make. Conservatives would be wise to argue that America is not perfect, but that it is fundamentally worth preserving and that its historical figures who made important contributions be subject both to respect and honest appraisal about their deficiencies

Drop the Confederacy; Save and Contextualize All Others

To that end, those conservatives who continue to defend Confederate statues should retreat and retrench to those other areas of historical commemoration where the individuals being commemorated actually contributed something positive to America. Conservatives can and should argue against condemnation of historical figures for failing to live up to modern standards; they can and should argue for appreciating the contributions of imperfect people. But they do well to stop short of defending people who, largely for the worst of reasons, triedand failedto destroy the United States.

This is more than simply a pragmatic attempt to avoid a bad look, but a key element of our principles. Conservatives should concede the point that the Confederacy was a wrong turn for America that was rightly corrected. Moreover, the case for retaining the commemoration of imperfect contributors like Ulysses S. Grant or George Washington, or originators like Columbus who are otherwise almost Martian to us now, will be made stronger if they do not also defend those who, at a critical moment, actively tried to undermine America.

Admittedly, there is assuredly a case to be made in individual cases for retaining old artworkincluding that deemed problematicfor its aesthetic value, particularly in the case of old buildings that often contain too much late-nineteenth century memorabilia to easily be removable. But conservatives should pick their battles: defending a Confederate statue outside a courthouse where thousands were unjustly treated by the intellectual, if not literal, descendants of the Confederacy is bad enough; it is worse if the statue is a cheap piece of kitsch.

In order to defend George Washington and Thomas Jeffersonand, more importantly, the ideas they establishedconservatives will have to prove that they are not the racists and reactionaries that their critics claim.

Champion the Actual Constitution

This is where conservatives reverence for the Constitution can work for them.

Precisely because their opponents in the current dialogue are utopian and fanatical, conservatives have plenty of room to become realistic, thoughtful, and prudentas well as respectful of institutions, especially the Constitution. David Frenchs call for conservatives to become Bill of Rights conservatives instead of law and order conservatives is therefore extremely topical. If conservatives find progressives racialization of American discourse toxic and ineffective, they should substitute something that can work. Protecting the rights of individual Americans from the arbitrary and heavy-handed use of force by unaccountable and overpaid public servants is something conservatives normally support. They should apply that logic to police brutality and police reform.

Conservatives should also reclaim their understanding of the human condition as essentially tragic. Utopian projects with vague goals accomplish little; excesses committed in their name leave no positive legacy. Substantial reform that better safeguards constitutional rights from abuses by law enforcement can be championed by conservatives, even as they reject anger and censorship in the service of nebulous goals. Reining in official abuse, and exercising checks and balances, is a bedrock principle of conservatism. It also helps people.

Build Policy Around These Values

Conservatives are therefore in a position to take the lead on police reform without sacrificing their concern for law and order. There is nothing inconsistent about asking that police to obey legal constraints regarding reasonable and appropriate use of force and subjecting them to impartial oversight, while also being in favor of effective and humane policing on the other. Both are examples of the rule of law in action.

On this, conservatives should be willing to forge links with those elements of the civil rights left who reject utopianism to work together on police reform. Reasonable proposals have already been floated, including scaling back or ending the qualified immunity doctrine and removing investigations of police killings from overly interested local prosecutors. The issue has already found acceptance (and urgent advocacy) among the libertarian right, which was decrying the judicial systems acceptance of law enforcement excesses as early as the 1990s, and whose adherents have chronicled police brutality and overreach in depressing detail. Since 2014, there has been a historic opportunity for the civil rights left and the libertarian right to get something done on this by working together, and their failure to do so has arguably been one of the great tragedies of Americas partisan conflict. Regrettably, partisanship is now killing police reform in the Senate, even as America burns. If one does not want radical anarchists and Trumpian thugs to take over the conversation, it is time for conservatives to start conserving actual law and order, and not its simulacrum. (For those arguing that such proposals do not go far enough, the criticism is validbut the solution conservatives should advocate is to add more tangible policy ideas that support constitutional rights, not recklessly champion a defund the police agenda that Americans do not and cannot support, and not support lawlessness by federal and local law enforcement either.)

Doing this would have involved something akin to implementing the reforms recommended by the famous Republican National Committee 2012 postmortem, or Paul Ryans recommendation that Republicans campaign in minority neighborhoods. It would require not only acknowledging that minority groups have constitutional rights, but actively working to protect them, and showing real results. And if this meant that Republicans could win an election in a city now and then, so much the better.

Although this is the issue of the day, the re-articulation of the value of Americas history and national story, and the end to the hagiography of those who tried to end that story, linked to a recommitment to individual rights, the rule of law, and the Constitution, would allow conservatives to take the lead in other areas as well. This would allow for conservatives to again have a sense of purpose on a broad range of issues such as the environment, science, health care, right to life issues, deficits, and the proper size and scope of government more generally. Only by returning to these principles and having enlightened conversations can conservatives redeem the Republican Party as a party of ideas and patriotism once again.

Find a New Figurehead

That, though, will require turning away from Donald Trump. The only chance the Republican Party, and thereby the conservative movement, has at redemption and resuscitation lies in actively stating that the nomination of Donald Trump was the wrong move. It will not help much this time, but it is the only way to chart a new course.

The worst that might happen is not the loss of the presidency, or even the Senate. It is that, divided and visionless, conservatives will have presided over the disintegration of the Republic they love, when they had an opportunity to save it by living up to their best vision of America and themselves.

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Whats Left To Conserve? - The Bulwark

How Pro-Trump Forces Work the Refs in Silicon Valley – The New York Times

(The Gateway Pundit himself, Jim Hoft, didnt respond to an inquiry but posted pre-emptively that The Gateway Pundit has been 100% correct in all of our reporting on every major story.)

It was Facebook that became the first target of coordinated right-wing outrage in 2016, when conservatives seized on a Gizmodo article to suggest that editors of Facebooks Trending section were censoring conservative voices. The story had, in fact, uncovered a secret: that Facebook was turning to human beings, with editorial judgment, to make decisions about what content to show its users, rather than simply relying on algorithms.

A former Facebook employee recalls the companys Republican lobbyist, Joel Kaplan, pushing in those early days to do away with human editorial choices, and to let Facebooks algorithms choose what news made its Trending section. Instead, Facebook killed the feature entirely, and prostrated itself to the right in a public meeting with Republican media figures and a private 2016 visit by Mark Zuckerbergs executive team to Fox News headquarters.

Since then, Facebook has sought to ingratiate itself to the Trump administration, while taking a harder line on Covid-19 misinformation. As the presidents backers post wild claims on the social network, the company offers the equivalent of wrist slaps a complex fact-checking system that avoids drawing the company directly into the political fray. It hasnt worked: The fact-checking subcontractors are harried umpires, an easy target for Trump supporters ire.

Its the fact-checking business that is causing all this trouble, Brent Bozell, the founder of the conservative Media Research Center and a veteran professional ref-worker told me.

BuzzFeed News and NBC News reported last week that Facebook executives have acted in recent months on pleas from pro-Trump voices that they not be punished for misleading readers. Its a sign of the pressure on the company but also of a reality that Facebook wont say aloud: The pro-Trump media is in the misinformation business with scale and energy that lacks parallel, and in part because simply repeating the president often means spreading misinformation.

In fact, two people close to the Facebook fact-checking process told me, the vast bulk of the posts getting tagged for being fully or partly false come from the right. Thats not bias. Its because sites like The Gateway Pundit are full of falsehoods, and because the president says false things a lot.

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How Pro-Trump Forces Work the Refs in Silicon Valley - The New York Times

2020 Election Live Updates: Democratic Convention to Feature Obamas and Clintons – The New York Times

Democratic convention speakers will include the Clintons and Obamas, along with Sanders and Kasich.

Hillary Clinton will deliver a prime-time speech next Wednesday for the Democratic National Convention, part of a preliminary lineup of speakers for the truncated, mostly virtual four-night event, three Democratic officials with knowledge of the schedule said Monday.

Former Vice President Joseph R. Biden Jr., the presumptive presidential nominee, has said he will not travel to Milwaukee, where the convention is nominally being held but has been scaled back to just a few hundred attendees. He will speak from Delaware on Thursday, the final night of the convention, in a form and fashion yet to be announced.

Senator Elizabeth Warren of Massachusetts will join Mrs. Clinton, the 2016 nominee, on the Wednesday night program if she is not selected as Mr. Bidens running mate, according to the officials. Former President Bill Clinton will speak as well, one of the officials said.

Senator Bernie Sanders of Vermont and former Gov. John Kasich of Ohio, a Republican who is a harsh critic of President Trump, will deliver addresses Monday night, the officials said.

Former President Barack Obamas time slot has not been announced (or leaked), but he could be included on a crammed Wednesday night program, or possibly introduce Mr. Biden on Thursday to deliver a nationally televised rendition of the-Joe-I-know speech he has been giving during online Biden fund-raisers and round tables.

It is not clear when Michelle Obama, who delivered what was widely regarded as the best speech at the 2012 convention in Charlotte, N.C., will speak. But planners have privately said they believe her address could attract the widest viewership outside of Mr. Bidens.

Mrs. Obama has been spending much of her time in recent days working on her speech at her familys mansion on Marthas Vineyard, and has told friends that she views it as her major contribution to the 2020 race, according to two people with knowledge of her planning.

The big names will be augmented by testimonials from from voters of all kinds delegates, parents, teachers, small-business owners, essential workers, activists and elected leaders, culled from 1,000 crowdsourced videos, officials with the conventions organizing committee announced on Monday.

The Big Three broadcast networks ABC, CBS and NBC plan to air an hour of the convention live each night, from 10 to 11 p.m. on the East Coast, according to network officials. Cable channels like CNN, Fox News and MSNBC will cover the full length of the nightly proceedings.

The Republican National Committee chairwoman, Ronna McDaniel, said on Monday that Mr. Trump had every right to give his acceptance speech from the South Lawn of the White House just a day after the presidents chief of staff, Mark Meadows, suggested the speech be delivered from another ZIP code.

Heres my personal opinion: If Joe Biden can live in his basement, the president has every right to talk in front of his house, which is the White House, Ms. McDaniel said during an interview on Fox & Friends a show Mr. Trump watches regularly.

Oh, Im not going to go there yet, she added, when asked if any decision had been made. I think thats going to be up to the president to announce that.

On Sunday, Mr. Meadows, a former North Carolina congressman who frequently accused President Barack Obama of abusing his executive authority, expressed unvarnished disapproval for the idea, which was widely panned by ethics experts.

Those decisions are still in flux, but I can tell you what Im advocating for is miles and miles away from here, Mr. Meadows said in an interview with the former CNN and FOX host Greta Van Susteren that aired Sunday morning.

Mr. Meadows appeared to backtrack in a later interview with CNN on Sunday, saying that the ceremonial East Wing of the White House would be an appropriate venue.

Mr. Trump, who has obliterated the line between the political and the governmental in a series of Biden-bashing events on White House property, floated the idea of delivering his speech from the lawn after announcing he would not attend convention events in North Carolina or Florida.

Federal employees are barred from politicking on government property by the Hatch Act; the president and vice president are exempted from those restrictions.

Mr. Trump, in a court filing seeking to block the Manhattan district attorney, Cyrus R. Vance Jr., from obtaining eight years of his tax returns, said Monday that the efforts amounted to illegal harassment.

The argument came in response to a filing last week by Mr. Vances office, which said prosecutors had a wide basis to subpoena financial documents. The office suggested it was investigating the president and his company for possible bank and insurance fraud, a broader inquiry than the prosecutors have acknowledged in the past.

In their new filing, Mr. Trumps lawyers wrote that even if Mr. Vances office were conducting a sprawling inquiry into financial crimes, the subpoena was still too broad.

If anything, it shows that the district attorney is still fishing for a way to justify his harassment of the president, Mr. Trumps lawyers wrote.

The filing was the latest salvo in Mr. Trumps nearly yearlong fight with Mr. Vance, a Democrat who last August subpoenaed Mr. Trumps accounting firm, Mazars USA, seeking eight years of his personal and business tax returns and other financial records.

Mr. Trumps lawyers noted that the subpoena asks for every document and communication related to the president and his businesses over about the last decade.

There are traditionally three hinge-point moments for presidential challengers: the selection of a running mate, the convention and the debates.

Of course, this is no traditional campaign.

But with the pandemic transforming the conventions from balloon-and-bunting extravaganzas to online events, and Mr. Trumps demands for additional debates and specific moderators, Mr. Bidens announcement this week of his running mate could be as close as the campaign gets to normal.

Mr. Bidens advisers say he has spoken with several of the leading candidates in recent days, and it has been confirmed that he met in person in early August with Gov. Gretchen Whitmer of Michigan. We do not know exactly how many face-to-face interviews Mr. Biden has conducted with potential running mates. A small number of women remain under serious consideration.

Mr. Bidens vice-presidential rollout wont look much like past unveilings, of course. With him and his campaign strictly adhering to social distancing guidelines, the former vice president is expected to appear publicly with his running mate by the end of the week just not before the usual crowd of cheering supporters.

For a candidate whos leading but not enjoying a groundswell of enthusiasm, that means an event that looks much like his appearances since he claimed the nomination: carefully staged, produced for television and online consumption, and decaffeinated.

Democrats, of course, will take it, preferring a scripted and front-running Biden in these sober times to the alternative. But the vice-presidential reveal is just a trial run for next week. Thats when the party will have to recreate an entire convention across four nights of prime-time with no live audience to say nothing of balloons or bunting.

Immodest. Ambitious. Unlikable. These are the strangely enduring criticisms that travel with women in politics, no matter how many firsts keep adding up or how numerous their congressional numbers become, The Timess Jessica Bennett writes in a news analysis.

And those words have reignited another debate about sexist double standards, as Mr. Biden inches closer to announcing his running mate.

When Stacey Abrams, the former Georgia legislator and the first Black woman in the country to be a major partys nominee for governor, stated bluntly in April that she would be an excellent running mate to Mr. Biden unapologetically making her case for the No. 2 spot on the ticket she was criticized as being inadequately self-effacing.

Senator Kamala Harris, one of three Black women considered a front-runner for that slot, has not actually said publicly that she wants the position. But she did of course run for president causing at least one Democratic donor to remark that she has too much ambition.

She can also rub people the wrong way, according to Ed Rendell, the former Pennsylvania governor who is close with Mr. Biden. And she was seen as being improperly apologetic after she excoriated Mr. Biden on an early debate stage, questioning his policies on busing, with the nerve to later laugh it off as politics.

She had no remorse, Chris Dodd, a longtime friend of Mr. Bidens who is on his vice-presidential vetting panel, reportedly told donors.

American politics may have moved beyond a time when a female candidate would be asked if she could bake a blueberry muffin (that was Geraldine Ferraro in 1984), but it surely hasnt moved that far.

Attorney General William P. Barr, embracing dual roles of partisan combatant and the nations top law enforcement official, on Sunday described demonstrators against police brutality as fascistic standard-bearers of a Democratic Party veering dangerously to the left.

Mr. Barr, who was present when federal officers tear-gassed peaceful demonstrators near the White House in June, vowed to use the Justice Department to fight what he called urban guerrilla warfare waged by protesters in Portland, Ore., and other cities, during an interview with the right-wing radio personality Mark Levin.

They are a revolutionary group that is interested in some form of socialism, communism. Theyre essentially Bolsheviks. Their tactics are fascistic, Mr. Barr said when asked by Mr. Levin about Black Lives Matter protests and demonstrators Mr. Levin described as antifa.

Mr. Barr has been a fierce defender of Mr. Trump throughout his tenure. But his comments to Mr. Levin were among his most pointed verbal attacks to date, blurring the distinction between mainstream Democratic leaders who have expressed support for peaceful protest and the violent minority of demonstrators in Oregon and elsewhere.

Mr. Trump has seized on scenes of national unrest to build a law-and-order message for his re-election campaign, and on Monday he again called for the National Guard to be sent to Portland. But the Trump administrations decision to dispatch militarized federal agents to the city last month drew criticism from state and city officials, who said the agents exceeded their authority and harmed peaceful protesters.

Mr. Biden said last month that the deployment of federal agents to an already volatile situation showed that Mr. Trump was determined to sow chaos and division. To make matters worse instead of better.

Mr. Barr on Sunday portrayed the protests, which erupted after the police killing of George Floyd in Minneapolis, as part of a long-term strategy to defeat Mr. Trump.

They were trying to impeach him from Day 1, he said. Its the lust for power. And they werent expecting Trumps victory. And it outrages them.

Alex Morse, the Democratic mayor of Holyoke, Mass., who is seeking to unseat the House Ways and Means Committee Chairman, Richard E. Neal, is remaining in the race despite allegations he misused his teaching position at the University of Massachusetts Amherst to have sex with students.

Mr. Morse, 31, admitted in a statement on Sunday that he had engaged in consensual relationships with other men, including students enrolled at local universities that Ive met using dating apps, but denied he had done anything inappropriate or unethical.

While I am confident that a full investigation into these matters will clear my name completely of any unethical conduct, I also recognize that some students felt uncomfortable with interactions they had with me, he wrote. I am sorry for that. This is unacceptable behavior for anyone with institutional power.

Mr. Morse, whose candidacy has been supported by progressive groups like Justice Democrats, faces Mr. Neal in a Sept. 1 primary.

His statement came after the schools student newspaper, The Massachusetts Daily Collegian, reported that the university was investigating claims, made in a letter from the College Democrats of Massachusetts, that Mr. Morse had abused his position of power for romantic or sexual gain.

Mr. Morse was hired as a political science lecturer in 2014 and last taught as an adjunct professor in an urban politics course last fall. He is not currently employed at the school, university officials have said.

The allegations present a major challenge for a man widely seen as a rising star in local Democratic politics. Mr. Morse was elected mayor of Holyoke, a city of 40,000 near Springfield, nine years ago at the age of 22, becoming the citys first openly gay and youngest mayor.

Mr. Biden has been critical of Big Tech, admonishing Facebook for mishandling misinformation and saying internet companies should lose a central legal protection.

But his campaign has quietly welcomed onto its staff and policy groups people who have worked with or for Silicon Valley giants, raising concerns among the industrys critics that the companies are seeking to co-opt a potential Biden administration.

One of Mr. Bidens closest aides joined the campaign from Apple, while others held senior roles at firms that consulted for major tech companies. And a nearly 700-person volunteer group advising the campaign, the Innovation Policy Committee, includes at least eight people who work for Facebook, Amazon, Google and Apple, according to documents reviewed by The New York Times. Other committee members have close ties to the companies, including economists and lawyers who have advised them, and officials at think tanks funded by them.

The groups members also include some prominent progressives arguing for stiffer regulation of tech. But the presence of the industrys allies inside Mr. Bidens policy apparatus and campaign and transition teams and his campaigns effort to ensure the confidentiality of its policy process has alarmed an increasingly influential coalition of liberals who say the tech titans stifle competition, disregard user privacy and fail to adequately police hate speech and disinformation.

They are hoping to dissuade Mr. Biden, who has not made tech issues a major focus of his campaign, from following the example of his former boss, President Barack Obama, whose embrace of tech companies helped turn them into darlings in Washington.

The three hosts of a new podcast, Pod Is a Woman, said last week that their first choice for a guest on the first episode was Jill Biden.

Joe Biden was our backup, said one of the hosts, Johanna Maska.

The podcast, hosted by three women who worked in the Obama White House, debuted on Monday morning with discussions of current events, popular culture and, of course, the 2020 presidential election.

On the episode, Dr. Biden rejected efforts to minimize or demean the decision by Mr. Biden to select a woman as his running mate.

This is a major job, Jill Biden said. This woman is going to have to handle all kinds of problems and be a governing partner.

(The co-host Alejandra Campoverdis effort to persuade Dr. Biden to reveal her husbands selection Dr. Biden, were among friends right now, right? was unsuccessful.)

An English professor at a community college, Dr. Biden said she hoped to teach part time, perhaps virtually, should she become first lady, and pledged that a Biden administration would make community college free.

One thing that will create equity in education is to make sure that we have universal prekindergarten, she said. So that every 3- and 4-year-old starts at the same level exact same level.

Along with Ms. Campoverdi, a former White House deputy director of Hispanic media, and Ms. Maska, who was the White House press advance director, Pod Is A Woman is hosted by Darienne Page, President Barack Obamas director of veterans and military families outreach.

As podcasters who are friends from the Obama administration, they recall Crooked Medias stable of shows, including Pod Save America. Theirs is another instance of the increasingly porous line between political operatives and media personalities.

Not that the three were conceiving their show so deliberatively. We didnt say, OK, lets get a blonde and a brunette, Ms. Campoverdi said. We didnt Noahs Ark this podcast.

Reporting was contributed by Alexander Burns, Jessica Bennett, Shane Goldmacher, Michael M. Grynbaum, Nicole Hong, Thomas Kaplan, Kate Kelly, Jonathan Martin, David McCabe, Ben Smith, Glenn Thrush, Marc Tracy, Kenneth P. Vogel and Benjamin Weiser.

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2020 Election Live Updates: Democratic Convention to Feature Obamas and Clintons - The New York Times

Video of men uprooting trees over land dispute in Pakistan viral with anti-Muslim angle – Alt News

Several Facebook and Twitter users have shared a one-minute video that shows men uprooting plants from a field. The viral text associated with the video reads, Tree plantation drive was started by Pak PM Imran Khan. Look how namazi people oppose it becuase its un!slam!c. Planting tree is against the faith.

Right-wing author Renee Lynn claimed that Pakistani Prime Minister Imran Khan copying his Indian counterpart started a tree plantation drive but locals uprooted the trees because they consider it against Islam. The video gained close to 10,000 retweets and 4 lakh views as of this writing. (archived link)

Other Twitter users who shared the viral video include Major Surendra Poonia and Norwegian diplomat Erik Solheim. Poonias tweet gained over 8,000 retweets.

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Pakistani Canadian author Tarek Fatah wrote in foul language that jihads uprooted saplings to practice killing infidel kaafirs.

IPS officer Dipanshu Kabra quote-tweeted Solheim and wrote, Even God cant bless a nation where extremist thinks, Tree Plantation is Anti-Islam All religions preach that We the people of Earth, must respect & protect all living beings and embrace our relationship with the environment. Our deepest sympathies with @ImranKhanPTI. Kabra later deleted his tweet.

Ravinder Sangwan posted the viral video on Facebook with the same narrative. It gained over 6,700 shares.

Alt News performed a keyword search plantation Pakistan uproots trees and found an August 9 report by The News, a Pakistan-based website. The article includes a video of a news bulletin that shows the viral video. The outlet also tweeted the article.

As per the report, the chaotic incident took place at the Mandi Kas area in Khyber Agency in Pakistan. Newly-planted trees were uprooted by locals over alleged forceful plantation on private land. The tree plantation drive was an initiative by Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf member Iqbal Afridi as a part of Pakistans 10 Billion Tree Tsunami, a nationwide plantation drive.

On August 9, PM Khan had organised the biggest plantation drive in the country with the goal to plant at least 35 lakh trees.

Afridi admitted that the plantation campaign in Mandi Kas had been carried out on private property. He told The News, The locals were angry over the unauthorised tree plantation campaign. Were trying to have negotiations with them.

Speaking to Dawn, a district administration official said that there was a dispute between two powerful tribes over the ownership of the land. One of the parties was present when the campaign was inaugurated, while the other was unaware about the drive and uprooted the saplings, he said.

Riaz Ghafur, a former faculty member at Edwardes College Peshwar, had tweeted the viral video condemning the incident. He subsequently shared another video where people can be seen planting trees. Ghafur told Alt News that the elders of the tribe which did not oppose the plantation drive later planted trees on the same land.

Thus, social media claim that people in Pakistan opposed a tree plantation campaign because it is unIslamic to plant trees is ridiculous and false.

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Video of men uprooting trees over land dispute in Pakistan viral with anti-Muslim angle - Alt News

Why UK utilities should adopt remote operations – AltEnergyMag

The UKs lockdown response to COVID-19 has affected most industries, and in the case of utilities companies, a reduction in the workforce will add stress to a network of systems and devices that require regular maintenance. For many, this has been a stark wake-up call emphasising the need to build greater resiliency into operations. Software helped companies keep employees safe and operations running during the pandemic now, digital operational technologies can also make utilities companies more resilient on a long-term basis. George Walker, managing director of Novotek UK and Ireland, explains.

Utilities such as water and power companies have habitually faced a maintenance conundrum, due to the complexities of asset networks and, in the case of water, an ageing infrastructure. Providing mission-critical services like electricity, water, and basic essentials cannot stop, even during the Covid-19 outbreak. Electric utilities are used to dealing with crises, like forest fires and floods, but the pandemic creates new challenges as they need to manage teams and machines remotely.

While they draw on past models to manage the predictability of demand and the consequences of disruption, they also need to enable social distancing rules for their people. As we all get used to working remotely, right now there is a large appetite for team collaboration tools, like video conferencing. However, most of these are IT tools to support collaboration with colleagues, not operations technology tools that industrial companies need to use to remotely operate, monitor or control equipment.

Regulated utilities businesses are not in the main affected by Covid-19, and water utilities for example have not seen any decline in demand. This will require restabilising the workforce and enabling it to work productively from safer remote locations.

Everybody is getting used to working from home now, but utility remote operation requires additionally compliant, industrial strength software, such as PTCs Vuforia Chalk for long-distance service collaboration. Supply chains end up under strain because demand signals change. An enterprise view of supply and demand provides utilities with many more tools to manage the transition from disruption to stabilisation.

Springtime is typically when regulated utilities such as power generation will carry out planned maintenance, and outages or load shedding. They have to take assets off the grid to maintain and upgrade them, but obviously have to keep the grid running, because those winter heating loads that create demand on the electric supply are now going to give way to air-conditioning loads in the summer.

Dropping industrial demand for power during the Covid-19 pandemic, as much as it is a short-term problem, should be seen as an opportunity to temporarily take generating assets off the grid for maintenance and upgrade. That way power utilities can position themselves to come out stronger from the pandemic.

Modern operations technology tools, such as those supplied by Novotek, allow for remote operations and monitoring of everything from entire electrical grids to individual machines, like a pump in a sewage pumping station. Keeping teams safe and equipment well maintained will become more challenging.

As the lockdown eases, it is time for utility companies to seriously consider and seize the opportunity to connect by remote software, to better manage these assets more easily and effectively. Remote and mobile operators may have secure and managed access to equivalent on-site HMI visualisations and essential operational controls regardless of HMI solutions in production.

Managed security and operational validation safeguards ensure that remote, mobile and on-site staff can work independently or together in a secure and compliant environment. Having such systems in place also supports continuity in the face of any future disruptions, while supporting operator efficiency on an ongoing basis.

Selecting the right IoT platform is a crucial first step. Novotek offers systems such as PTCs ThingWorx, which is a single, purpose-built industrial IoT platform. Industrial market-leaders are using ThingWorx to develop feature-rich industrial IoT applications. With ThingWorx, utility operators can rapidly explore, prove and master the value of smart, connected operations and products, even if the organization is new to IoT.

As the UK emerges from lockdown, the ramifications of months with a reduced workforce and limited capacity for maintenance will hang over many utility companies. Its important that remote access and monitoring tools are not only used as a temporary solution so companies can reap the benefits and increase resiliency to future disruptions.

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Why UK utilities should adopt remote operations - AltEnergyMag

Inside the Project Veritas Plan to Steal the Election – The New Republic

The purpose of Diamond Dog, as one source close to theorganization put it, is literally to get Trump reelected.

Last year, Project Veritassdonor development team solicited big-ticket funders with a pitch deckfrequently tailored toa given patrons pet ideologicalgrievances and personal hang-upsoffering tantalizing details about thegroups undercover operations for the 2020campaign cycle. One iteration of this Apple Keynote file was prepared for anask meeting with a person who appears to be Cognex Corporation founder Robert Shillman, a devoted funder of Islamophobic causes who was alsoone of OKeefeswould-be wedding guests. (Shillman ended up pledging to donate $50,000 to thegroup.) The slate of investigations in the Dr.Bob pitch includedschemes to procure evidence of illegal aliensvoting, mail-inballot tampering at nursinghomes, andthe sale of absenteeballots and voter profiles on the Dark Web.

By the end of summer 2019, Diamond Dog had already grown to be across-country effort, based on internal Project Veritas memos, research notes,and other documents that we have obtained. InCalifornia and Texas, Project Veritas has tasked its operatives withunearthing supposed evidence of widespread mail-in ballot forgery. In bothstates, Project Veritas has worked to infiltrate the groups of volunteers andpaid canvassers who collect absentee and mail-invoter applications from low-income, elderly, and minority groupsa perfectly legalpractice in most states that conservatives have tried to label as nefarious ballot harvesting.

In Texas, Project Veritas has alsocoordinated in secret with a local Republican operative named AaronHarris, codenamed Dragon, currently chief of staffto Republican congressman Lance Gooden. In turn, through the activist group hefounded, Direct Action Texas, Harris has helped Project Veritas covertlystrategize with a staffer working for the office of the states Republican Attorney General Ken Paxton. Paxtonis leading the states election integrity initiative, oneof many Republican efforts nationwide to suppress the vote under the guise ofrooting out the nearly non-existent threat of voter fraud.

Granted, Project Veritas, whose fervor to own the libs is matchedonly by its comical incompetence, is hardly likely to tip the election inDonald Trumps favor all byitself. But it is at the vanguard of a larger underhanded approach thatRepublicans, starting at the very top, are taking to the 2020 cycle. If theywant to win, they really have no other choice but to undermine the vote: Trumps poll numbers are in the basement, and heappears constitutionally incapable of making appeals beyond his hardcoresupporters on the right.

Republicans have all but admitted that this is their strategy. Incoordination with the Republican National Committee and a raft of independentconservative groups, Trump has staked the success of his entire reelectioncampaign to a widespread voter suppression effort built on the pretext ofpreserving election integrity. The project, led by his campaigns senior counsel Justin Clark, has worked toplace operatives in at least 10 battleground states to challenge voter rollsand procedures. Between lawsuits and local advertising blitzesallregularly relayed to Trump in the Oval Officethe effort could cost wellover $20 million, as the RNC told The Washington Post.

Project Veritas has been among the on-the-ground organizations atthe forefront of these efforts and has benefited substantially as a result.According to internal Project Veritas documents, the groups fundraising total for 2019 leaped up to morethan $13.44 million, $4.58 million more than their 2018 returns and the groups largest reported annual revenue figure todate. The group may be comically incompetent, but in these cursed times, we allknow how dangerous comical incompetence can be once enough money and cloutline up behind it.

For an operation premised on conspiracy theories and fueled byraging paranoia, it will come as no surprise that the agents helping tospearhead Project Veritass election mischief are oddballs on the fringes ofAmerican political life. In one slide prepared forDr. Bob, a 69-year-old Florida resident, a registered Republican named JosephVancheri notifies OKeefe of his soon-to-bestatus as a poll worker in Broward County, likely for undercover Election Daysnooping on Project Veritassbehalf. Vancheri, an ex-cop and die-hard Trump supporter, has routinely taken to Facebook to lash out against all the Trump haters and SHEEP, includingSHIFTY SCHIFF and the Idiot Warren, using Trumpspreferred epithet Pocohontas [sic]. Afirst-generation immigranthimself, Vancheri has nevertheless long harbored hardline views onimmigration that echo his anxieties over thepotential for illicit enfranchisement of foreigners.

In anotherslide, Project Veritas boasts of receiving a tip from a formerbroadcast meteorologist named ArchKennedy, who found it suspicious that 300 people were all registered to vote atthe address for Emory UniversitysEmory Muslim Student Association in Atlanta. (In all likelihood these voters,who constitute 2 percent of Emorystotal student population and .0028 percent of Georgias population, have their mail forwarded there.) In 2017,Arch organized one of the anti-Muslim group ACT! For Americas28 nationwide March Against Sharia rallies. Held in AtlantasPiedmont Park, it was a sparsely attended affair but still managed to includeRepublican Georgia State Senator Michael Williams, then mounting a doomedprimary campaign for governor.

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Inside the Project Veritas Plan to Steal the Election - The New Republic

‘I’m out hereI am the news for our people.’ How protesters across the country are keeping informed. – Columbia Journalism Review

Los Angeles protest led by Walk Good LA. Credit: Kavi Peshawaria @kavipictures

Black Lives Matter may be the largest movement in US history, yet as the Justice for George Floyd protests enter their third month, there is a sense that the national news cycle, outside unprecedented events like the federal occupation of downtown Portland, has largely moved on. Likewise, many protesters have also moved onto social media, where they can stream videos of police brutality on Instagram and TikTok, form neighborhood watches on Facebook, and exchange encrypted information over Signal. I asked protesters, organizers, and citizen-journalists how theyve been staying informed and informing others, and whether this moment has changed their views on traditional media.

To be honest with you, Im not even watching the news. Theyre going to give you their story. Im out hereI am the news for our people.

Photo credit: Misha Cohen

Joseph Blake, forty-eight, club promoter and barber. A Portland native, Blake has livestreamed the citys protests on Facebook for fifty-six nights in a row, since June 1. His videos are viewed by thousands.

When the protests first started, you would hear about them just on social media. They call Portland a city, but I call Portland a big town. Word gets out super fast. Right now, its Facebook. People are going live. Twitter, you can put a video on and talk about it. Twitter is popular with celebrities and bigwigs that have the blue check. Regular people like us, we dont usually get too many Twitter followers. I would say Instagram a little bit, but its mostly Facebook, because you can add groups. Just like with the Wall of Momsthey started a Facebook group that Im a part of. I started a Facebook group called We Gone Be Alright.

My kids are into that TikTok stuffI cant get into it. But thats what got me started in this. I used to be the type who sat on the couch and watch TV and be like, Them fools is crazy, I aint going out there with them crazy-ass fools. Until I saw my son and daughters pages. My son, twenty-three, is a professional photographer. Hes capturing so much stuff, its crazy and amazing. And my daughter, twenty-six, is out there protesting, too. So I was like, Well, let me see whats going on. I went and I got the bug, and Ive been out there every night since then.

To be honest with you, Im not even watching the news. Theyre going to give you their story. Im out hereI am the news for our people. Im doing a lot of livestreaming for people who cant get down there to see. I give it to em rough and raw. Im right in the thick of things. Im getting shot. Ive been shot four times by rubber bullets just this week. I come home and I have to take my clothes off outside because theres pepper-spray dust.

Anything youve seen on the national news coverage, man, Ive seen it with my own eyes.

I never thought in my wildest thoughts I would be down there doing nothing like this. I didnt know nothing about protesting, only what I seen on TV. But now its like Im an expert.

Photo credit: Ilaria DAlessandro

JahI Bazin, seventeen, rising freshman at Seton Hall and a volunteer with Street Riders NYC, which leads thousands of bike protesters on weekly justice rides. Since the killing of George Floyd, Bazin estimates, hes been to sixteen protests, where, among other things, he has been struck by a van and called a racial slur.

I went to the Million Man March with my dad in DC in 2015. As a twelve-year-old boy, I didnt see the importance of it until this summer, when I started protesting on my own. When you see that its not just people that look exactly just like you, you get a sense of hope because your people arent the only ones that hear the struggle or see the struggle. They might not feel the struggle, but at least we have other people trying to help us out in our time of need.

I stay informedobviously you have the internet, you have Instagram, Twitter. Most of the protests Ive partaken in have been through Street Riders, through their Instagram. Or else it will be a friend texting me, or their Instagram account. Its pretty simple. Ive seen people say, Oh, I dont know where to go. I dont know when things start. I dont know who to talk to. When, really, its not like the protest organizers are celebrities or godstheyre regular people just like you. You can talk to them and ask.

Photo courtesy Isabella Moles

Isabella Moles, twenty-one, a founder of Central Pennsylvania Advocates for Justice. I met Moles at a Pride event in Mifflinburg, Pennsylvania, population 3,540. She was wearing several rainbow pins and a yellow shirt that read sounds gay im in.

Its young folks who are coming together. I think we have the gift of technology and social media, even when we are apart, to unify and make sure that we get progress. We see that with TikTok too. I find most of my shit from TikTok, even videos of police brutality. When I talk to my ninety-two-year-old grandpa, whose father was a member of the KKK, when Im having conversations with him, I use TikTok. These are actual things that my generation was able to record and document as proof of violence and police brutality. And when I show him that, the evidence is right there and he cant dispute what hes seen with his own eyes.

One of my main sources has been through grassroots journalism like Unicorn Riot. I know for a fact that they are reporting the closest thing to the truth.

Photo courtesy Maiingan Sherritt-Stone

Maiingan Sherritt-Stone, twenty-one. During the curfew, Sherritt-Stone volunteered with a Minneapolis-area nonprofit working to provide protesters with assistance and information in real time. Working sixteen- to eighteen-hour days, he followed police scanners, helped to encrypt organizers information, and created Facebook groups that became neighborhood watch groups. He also assembled a lengthy, encrypted Google document on known white supremacist activity in the area. The list included known plate numbers, people, and how to recognize when there might be an imminent attack. He described a bunch of school alarms and domestic violence calls before things really hit the fan.

One of my main sources has been through grassroots journalism like Unicorn Riot, which has done a really good job reporting things from not only Minneapolis, but across the US. I know for a fact that they are reporting the closest thing to the truth.

ICYMI: How Unicorn Riot covers the alt-right without giving them a platform

A big problem that I had, especially with my own family membersI have some relatives in Floridawas with people believing that we were destroying our own businesses. When I was covering police scanners, I was reporting on white supremacist activity and the tactics they used. It was very clear, hearing on police scanners, who was doing the damage. There was a lot of bait-and-switch. Somebody would set the alarm off at a school. And because its a school, the police have to respond to that, and then thered be nobody there. And then while they were doing that, other buildings that were known Black- and Brown-owned businesses were being targeted. Things like that werent being reported on whatsoever. So it was almost a battle having to explain what was happening to people outside of Minneapolis. A big part of that was the lack of media coverage and what the media painted from just hearing reports and then spinning their own stories.

So I have a lot of mistrust with media. I dont follow many bigger outlets because I and other nonprofits reported to some journalists at the New York Times and I dont think they really did anything with that information.

I definitely sit down and watch some Fox. I like to see how the same story is played out in very different ways.

Photo courtesy Khadija Ahmed

Khadija Ahmed, thirty-two, restaurant manager. Two days after George Floyds killing, Ahmed pivoted from batching cocktails to providing food, water, and supplies to protesters through Inbound NYC, a mutual aid group she cofounded.

Theres three forums that you go through. One is the people youre messaging, that you already have the numbers of, that youre close to. Then theres Signal chat, the different groups that are talking together. And theres Instagram, the groups that post schedules for protests every day. Protect Protesters and Justice for George NYC are the main ones that Ive seen. Everything is Instagram. Instagram is the one where you can catch the most age range, from eighteen to sixty.

I grew up in DC. I had a political job, and I left because I hated it. I need all sources of news. I watch CNN and MSNBC, but I definitely sit down and watch some Fox. I like to see how the same story is played out in very different ways. I still read articles. I read the Washington Post and the New York Times. I read The Guardian and The Independent. Im definitely a three-sources girl. Watching non-American news is really interesting lately. When youre watching Al Jazeera or the BBC, it literally looks like America is a war zone. The way we used to judge all these other countries, were being judged in that way now with video footage.

Photo credit: Brian Davidson

Christine Rossi, twenty-nine, server and volunteer with Street Riders NYC.

When my roommate and I came home every night from the protests, we would watch Fox News and CNN. Not because we believed their narrative, but because we needed to see what it would become. We know were in our own bubble, and we just needed to see what the other bubbles are like out there. Theyre not covering protests. The people in our inner circles are out there, taking photos, taking videos, and Im seeing all of that raw shit on Instagram. But its nowhere on the news. So Ronald Weaver II, Mel D. Cole, Nate Brown, Budithats who were getting the news from now. Theyre not news anchors, theyre photographers, videographers.

Its almost like going home and watching a fantastical movie thats been falsely made about everything thats going on. It feels like another world. Ive felt like this for probably the past decade, but right now its being exposed to its fullest, seeing what a sham the media has become, along with everything else: the cops, the media, our government.

We will still watch Democracy Now! I do think its a good general way of getting news. But I think whatever news you watch, you should be in contact with all different kinds of people.

Jack Duren, left, and James Carthel. Photo credit: Rick Simpson

Jack Duren, eighty, a retired art teacher, makes signs for weekly protests at Rose Villa, a retirement community just outside of Portland.

There are two retirement communities side by side here. Were putting maybe a hundred people out on the street in front of both. We only do it for about an hour, because were old farts. But these are very active retirement communities. People are not sitting on their porches in rocking chairs waiting to die.

I have three primary news sources: one is The Oregonian. Theres also Willamette Week, which is much more independent and subscriber-supported, and a third one called Bridgeliner. We watch the local news as well as PBS NewsHour. Im skeptical of a lot of stuff online. I had to bail out of Facebook because it got too awful. I dont like going to bed mad at this age.

A lot of people here use NextDoor. A couple posts on there were like, Doggone it, cant they move their protests down the street, so I dont have to listen to cars honk? The thing is, its one hour a week. Gimme a break. The person said, Why do they have to encourage the car-honking? Then there was one employee of Rose Villa that posted, We think they should be honking more. I liked that one.

Theres a sense of narrative structure and narrative construction that doesnt seem to reflect what you are watching happening in real time, where there isnt one narrative.

C.J. Holmes, thirty-three, a sales director who was laid off at the beginning of April. When he got in touch, Holmes described himself as a medium protester, attending about a dozen actions in Chicago.

When I read mainstream coverage, it feels very delayed. I have a friend from college who lives in Portland, and she was posting and reporting about it, being a citizen, about a week before it broke more broadly. Sometimes Ill read to get that official view, that language, to see how it was articulated, but itll be more about fact-checking and understanding what people who are not in my headspace are saying. Ill occasionally learn a nugget, but its deeply unsatisfying. Its not a place I go to feel informed, because its so slow. Also theres a sense of narrative structure and narrative construction that doesnt seem to reflect what you are watching happening in real time, where there isnt one narrative. As we know, theres never one narrativeits intersectional, its constantly changing.

I check every box of privilege. Every single one. Ive been recognized as a leader probably since I was ten. So entering these spaces and trying to do the quote-unquote right thing, its very difficult until you decenter yourself. Because when you are centered, you cant listen or learn. Even if youre allowed in the room, the way that you experience that room is going to be untrue, or filtered, or affected, or prevented.

Photo credit: Nicholas Page

Mahadi Lawal, twenty-six, graphic designer, event planner, and an organizer of Occupy DC, which has occupied Black Lives Matter Plaza and is currently hosting yoga sessions in the space.

May 29 was the first day that the protests got violenttear gas and everything in front of the White House. I went home after that day realizing how serious things were, and I formed a Signal group chat with friends and acquaintances that I knew were interested. For the next few weeks we used that chat; I called it America.

Instagram has been the key tool. When I got arrested on the morning of June 24, there was a huge campaign all over Instagram and Twitter. There were videos of my arrest, and all my friends were like, Free him. So I gained a lot of followers like that. I started to use my account more to be informative. After the sit-in, we made the Occupy DC Instagram. We gained one thousand followers in a week. Thats been our main way of getting the information out, that and Signal.

I probably spend 80 percent of my time scrolling through Twitter. I get most of my news through Twitter, just because of how fast it is. When I need information on protests, Ill go on the Instagram pages of accounts like DC Teens Action.

I feel like the city leadership has come to a consensus that theyre just not going to respond or acknowledge the protests and the violence committed by the police, that its just going to go away. The only DC media thats been consistently covering these things has been the Washington Post.

I went from throwing parties to now having protests. This is way more fulfilling.

Photo credit: Kavi Peshawaria

Etienne Maurice, twenty-eight, actor, filmmaker, activist, and organizer of Walk Good LA. Each week the group hosts a 5k run for justice and yoga for restorative justice.

I started out by making my own flyer on Adobe Spark. I made the flyer, I posted it on social media, and I also texted a lot of friends that live in my neighborhood. I made it grassroots. Then I started finding out about other Instagram profiles that had a huge following that became an online bulletin for protests in the neighborhood. One Instagram called In This Together LA have been a major helpthey have over 100K followersand they have short blurbs about what each protest is focused on. I cant tell you how many new people have come to my protests because I submit to that account. Also, a big help is to continue to post the photos and video recaps of what took place that day. That next day I hit the ground running, I get on my computer making those one-minute recaps of what took place that day, so that people stay engaged, they see it happened and will continue to happen.

Its important to be of service in our fight for justice. Thats been the biggest lesson for me. I went from throwing parties to now having protests. This is way more fulfilling. Im using the same organizational skills getting people together in one place that believe theyre going to have a transformative experience.

Photo courtesy Corky Lee

Corky Lee, seventy-two, activist and photo documentarian. Lee, a Queens native whose business card describes him as the undisputed, unofficial Asian American photographer laureate, told me hes gone to more than a thousand protests over forty-nine years.

Before they had the internet, there was something called a phone treeyou ever hear that term? This was the sixties. If you wanted to organize a protest, at the end of a public meeting, or teach-in, everyone would get a list of phone numbers, and you would call, lets say, twenty people, and hopefully each person would call twenty people. This to find out whats going on and where its going to happen.

With Occupy Wall Street, in 2011, it all happened in one location. That was great for the NYPDthey knew if anything was going to happen, it would be in Zuccotti Park. Now the NYPD has to monitor social media more than ever before. Its not going to be in mainstream news or people putting up flyers. A lot of stuff will happen spontaneously.

Another thing about Occupy Wall Street, there werent many leaders, so the news media couldnt figure out who was representing the people. Pretty much the same thing is happening here. Mainstream media doesnt know who to go to speak to, so theyre grabbing anyone whos willing to speak to them. But those people may not necessarily be the organizers or the leaders. This was something that wasnt learned from the civil rights movement of Martin Luther King, Malcolm X, and so forththose guys were well organized. Without some identifiable leaders in the current George Floyd situation, I think that the general public is in a bit of a quandary and they dont know whats happening.

Hammad Ahmad, twenty-five, business analyst, Atlanta. In early June, Ahmad and his sisters raised over $2,400 for local bail bonds and to deliver a van full of water and snacks to protesters.

Im not on Twitter. Just seeing the things people tweet makes me angry. But if you were to talk to any other person who would be going to these, I think they would say that Twitter is what they would rely on. There was one Twitter account called Where Is the Protest in Atlanta?Literally every day they would post and then pin where they would have protests in the metro Atlanta area, even in the suburbs. There were a few Instagram accounts that I followed that posted regular updates. In terms of finding out where we could drop things off, whenever we would find out about a protest over the weekendit was kind of hard to go during the weekdays, just because of workwe would reach out to the organizers and go from there.

Honestly, I dont really look at the news, because it just angers me. It doesnt really make sense to me to go somewhere that isnt covering it well enough. I dont share these types of news sources. I dont share CNN.

Photo courtesy Tiana Rawls-White

Tiana Rawls-White, twenty-three, hospitality industry. Rawls-White went to her first protest on June 28 and spoke at the recent Rally for Justice, organized by the group If Not Us, Then Who?, in Williamsport, Pennsylvania.

On Facebook, you have the opportunity to see what other people are saying and how theyre reacting to these things, and it really shows peoples true colors. It also gives you the opportunity to have conversations.

I try my best to watch Fox, even if its something I wont agree with. Its like going to war with somebody and wanting to know what the other side is thinking. The best way to do that is to listen to what theyre saying. Because youre not going to be able to inspire people to do better and to change if you dont know where their head is at to begin with.

There was a woman that I had reached out to. She had said, If you support BLM, then youre a racist, or something like that. And I was like, Hey, do you think Im a racist? I dont think youre a racistyoure one of the nicest people I know. But sometimes the things that you post really upset me and it scares me to think that you would think this way. And I get very disappointed in you, and honestly if you were anyone else I probably would have unfriended you by now. Why dont we talk, lets get lunch, you hear me, I hear you, and lets go from there. Because nothings going to get resolved if people dont talk.

Shes my exs stepmother. After he and I separated, she and I kept in contact. She never responded about getting lunchshe saw it, but she didnt say anything. Im like, Okay, Ill just let it go. If she wants to talk, she wants to talk. But I at least put it out there that Im willing to hear her out.

THE MEDIA TODAY: A mammoth explosion, tears, and resilient journalism in Beirut

Original post:

'I'm out hereI am the news for our people.' How protesters across the country are keeping informed. - Columbia Journalism Review

On Tucker Carlson and Sycophants – Merion West

Regardless of whether President Trump succeeds in his bid for re-election to the White House, those who think and speak like Carlson will likely suffer no retribution for throwing red meat to his base.

Authors Note: This piece is best read as a reply, side-by-side with Jim Prosers recent article The Singular Courage of Tucker Carlson.

The United States has always been a country where merely existing has been physically dangerous and often socially and professionally suicidal for African-Americans, despite what grandiose proclamations about Constitutionally-enshrined rights may otherwise suggest. Timothy Caughman, a 66-year-old black man, was stabbed in the back with a two-foot long Roman-style short sword nine blocks from Times Square on March 20, 2017 simply because he was black. According to a Washington Post story about his death, Caughman collected cans from the trash to pay for trips to Washington, where he enjoyed attending congressional hearings. The profile continues: Standing on line waiting to vote, he wrote under a selfie he tweeted on Election Day, I love America.'

Caughman was the target of white supremacist Harris Jackson. In high school, Jackson belonged to a small group of more conservative students who stood out on the campus of a liberal school. One year, Harriss friends proposed creating a White Students UnionThere was every other kind of union at [the school], but there was no white union.

Jackson was correct. There tend not to be White Unions because of the historical preference for white confederacy, a fact ignored by conservative media outlets as they stoke white grievance, misdirecting conservative Caucasians into blaming immigrants and minorities for their woes.

In the unscrupulous style of character assassination synonymous with Fox News, false outrage was continuously stoked during President Barack Obamas historic eight-year presidency for everything from his wearing of a tan suit to his use of Dijon mustard. In the typical big lie style of right-wing journalism, Fox News also repeatedly gave then-private citizen Donald Trump a platform from which to propagate birther conspiracies. In a rare reprimand to an internal culture that encourages perpetual outrage, Fox News settled a group of racial and gender discrimination lawsuits involving 18 current and former employees for $10 million in 2018. Fox News did not follow suit with outrage when Senator Mitch McConnell wore a tan suit in 2020.

Physical and media attacks against those who seek to improve living conditions for the disenfranchised have always been prevalent as conservative politicians, civic leaders, and celebrities continue to condone the violent, political extremism of right-wing groups. As the United States philosophy, history, and culture suffer from a century of anti-communist paranoia and CIA-executed foreign interventions, leading American media personalities such as Tucker Carlson have unsurprisingly been institutionally fortified and handsomely compensated. In contrast to Carlsons untouchability, his colleagues in Latin America have historically been the targets of American-funded intimidation. As anyone with even a rudimentary understanding of American foreign policy history could tell you:

Cultural revolutions are perceived by the American government as insidious because they seek to change the way people think, write, speak, and act. They are also dangerous because they tend to attract the self-righteous sanctimonious eye of American foreign policy advisors who express their motives in seemingly innocuous terms such as liberty, self-determination, and justiceIraqis and Venezuelans got poor and killed; Dick Cheney and Chevron got rich. (Murderousness can be outsourced to the military).

On his August 6, 2019 broadcast, Carlson called white supremacy a conspiracy theory designed to divide the United States and said it is not a real problem. The District Attorney who charged Jackson with hate crime and terrorism, on the other hand, noted: The coverage of the case was not as extensive or as deep as I thought it would be, given all that was going on in America at time, and its outrageousness. Had he come from ISIS and hunted Jews and then killed a Jewish man, I think there would have been much more attention.

This effort to silence a downtrodden minority by a leading American journalist seems to predate the dinosaurs now dwelling in subsidized coal mines. That the phrase this is the language of blood politics can be uttered as a revelation is deeply telling. This is the language of every third-world despot. This is the language used to silence in the name of anti-communism, a hundred uprisings against monarchy, colonialism, and fascism around the world for the last 100 years. In the United States, this has historically been the language of the establishments propaganda arm. They want to silence every prominent voice seeking to build local autonomy on their way to coronating playboy royals like Shah Pahlavi.

When I say that doxxing dedicated journalists is the language of blood politics, please consider this piece by the Committee to Protect Journalists, headlined Journalists covering US white supremacists must weigh risks to selves and families:

Michael Edison Hayden was one of the first foreign journalists on the ground after the Nepalese earthquake in 2015the ground was still shaking when he arrived, he said.But, Hayden said, reporting on the far-right white identity movement in the U.S. has been his most traumatic professional experience.

Only the newly enlightened think that the phrase The phrase blood politics is not a euphemism is sufficiently surprising to warrant being placed on a separate line for emphasis.

Hayden, a Newsweek reporter,said he has become accustomed to anonymous threatsboth veiled and explicitand has weathered a deluge of menacing messages about his family, including an incident in which his parents home address was circulated on far-right chat rooms. Late last year, he saw an anonymous post in an online forum urging someone to throw a molotov cocktail through his parents window.

Perhaps threats against journalists should not come as a surprise when right-wing journalists often encourage the far-right. Blake Neff, Tucker Carlsons top writer recently resigned after revelations of racist and sexist remarks; in one instance, Neff wrote, Would u let a JET BLACK congo n do lasik eye surgery on u for 50% off? Suffice to say such statements are problematic for Carlson, since, according to Neff: Anything [Carlsons] reading off the teleprompter, the first draft is written by me. Neff had gotten used to what [Carlson] likes and what he thinks about.

It is no surprise then that plastered posters around Washington, D. C. show Carlsons face with the indictment: Block the Alt-Right. Racist with a huge following and platform, uses it to promote racist dogwhistles. This, of course, is not any defense against Antifa targeting Carlsons family. But, if a provocateur that can afford private security to maintain a defensive line at his home can feel victimized, then it goes without saying how disenfranchised populations who mind their own business feel when they learn of incidents like police shooting Breonna Taylor eight times in her home as she slept.

In a delicate, miniature snow globe of the gratuitous military force deployed by the United States against civilian populations in neutral countries like Laos, several insured blocks have been damaged by protestors and police. In rhetoric that would seem at home on a Nixon flashcard, this has been attributed to Marxists, anarchists, socialist Democratic mayors, governors, and a presidential candidate. The American elephant deep in slumber rustles slightly from this flea bite.

Regardless of whether President Trump succeeds in his bid for re-election to the White House, those who think and speak like Carlson will likely suffer no retribution for throwing red meat to his base. After all, the fires of dissent are effectively snuffed by a paramilitary police force, abduction of peaceful protestors and their leaders in unmarked vans, and the infiltration of city, state, and federal law enforcement by Neo-Nazis. If Americans want to re-build any accurate self-concept of their country, they must examine both the policeand their schools and universitiesto undo the damage from generations of right-wing, do-no-wrong, nationalist propaganda.

For those of us who have anything resembling even a prosimian sense of ethicsand are against dog-whistle racism pussyfooting behind First Amendment rightswe should acknowledge the courage of oppressed groups, zealously protect them, and actively, vocally join their lonely voices.

Duluxan Sritharan is a PhD candidate at Harvard University.

Excerpt from:

On Tucker Carlson and Sycophants - Merion West

How to Beat Populists When the Facts Dont Matter – The Atlantic

A few weeks ago, I went to a political rally in a farmyard. The Polish presidential candidate Rafa Trzaskowski was speaking; in the background, a golden wheat field shimmered in the late-afternoon sun. The audience was enthusiasticthe host, a local farmer, had spread news of the candidates visit only the day beforebut the juxtaposition of Trzaskowski and the wheat field was odd. He is the mayor of Warsaw, speaks several languages, has degrees in economics, and belongs to the half of Poland that identifies as educated, urban, and European. What does he know from wheat?

But Trzaskowski was running for president in a country whose other half lives in an information bubble that teaches people to be suspicious of anyone from Warsaw who is educated, urban, and European. Polish state television, fully controlled by the ruling Law and Justice party, was sending aggressive messages into that bubble, warning its inhabitants that Trzaskowski was dubious, foreign, in hock to LGBT ideologywhich the incumbent president, Andrzej Duda, called worse than communismand beholden to Germans and Jews. The messages, constantly repeated on a wide array of radio stations and television channels, were designed to reinforce tribal loyalties and convince Law and Justice voters that they are real Poles, not impostors or traitors like their political opponents.

During his short campaign, Trzaskowski did his best to reach into that bubble too. He stood beside wheat fields, spent a lot of time in small towns, and ran ads that called for an end to division. We are united by a dream, he said in one speech: a dream of a different Poland, a Poland where there are no better and worse citizens. This was a deliberate choice: Instead of mobilizing the voters inside his own bubble by attacking the ruling party, he sought to bridge Polands deep polarization by appealing to national unity.

Anne Applebaum: Polands rulers made up a Rainbow Plague

He came close, winning 49 percent of the vote. But he failed. Trzaskowskis half of Poland was insufficiently enthusiastic, while the other half was energized, angry, and very much afraid of Jews, foreigners, and LGBT ideology. Dudas voters were also happy with the government subsidies and reduced retirement age that his party had approved, and not remotely inspired by Trzaskowskis language of solidarity and unityif they even heard it.

If they even heard it: If that doesnt sound familiar, it should. Because the same thing could happen in the United States this fallor during the next election in France, or Italy, or Ukraine. American politics, Polish politics, French politics, Italian politics, Ukrainian politics, all derived from their own history, economics, and culture, now have this in common: In each of these countries, deep informational divides separate one part of the electorate from the rest. Some voters live in a so-called populist bubble, where they hear nationalist and xenophobic messages, learn to distrust fact-based media and evidence-based science, and become receptive to conspiracy theories and suspicious of democratic institutions. Others read and hear completely different media, respect different authorities, and search for a different sort of news. Whatever the advantages of these other bubbles, their rules render the people in them incapable of understanding or speaking with those outside of them.

In some places, including Poland and the United States, the country is divided in half. In other places, such as Germany, the proportions vary, but the divide is just as deep. A couple of years ago, I took part in a project that looked at foreign influence in the 2017 German parliamentary elections. We found, among other things, that the overwhelming majority of Germansleft, right, and centerfollow a mix of big newspapers, magazines, and television outlets, including public TV. But many of the Germans who vote for the far-right Alternative for Germanythe number hovers between 10 and 14 percentget their news from a completely separate set of sources, including a heavy dose of Russian-funded German-language media, such as Sputnik and RT. The voters in the far-right bubble dont just have different opinions from other Germans; they have different facts, including facts provided by a foreign country.

David Frum: The great Russian disinformation campaign

The point I am making here is not about Russia. It is about the deep gap in perceptions that now separates a tenth of German voters from the other 90 percent. Is that chasm permanent? Should the other German political parties try to reach the people in the populist bubble? But how is it possible to reach people who cant hear you? This is not merely a question of how to convince people, how to use a better argument, or how to change minds. This is a question about how to get people to listen at all. Just shouting about facts will get you nowhere with those who no longer trust the sources that produce them.

Here is how this problem looks in the United States: On the day after Donald Trump met Vladimir Putin in Helsinki in 2018, Sarah Longwell found herself in Columbus, Ohio, talking with a focus group she had conveneda room full of people whom she characterizes as reluctant Trump voters, people who had voted for the president but had doubts. Trumps bizarre behavior in Helsinki had bothered her. The president had looked cowed and frightened; in accepting the Russian leaders insistence that he had not interfered in the 2016 U.S. election, Trump appeared to side with Putin and against Americas FBI. D.C. is on fire about it, Im on fire about it, I think its a big moment, Longwell told me. I ask folks in Columbus, What happened yesterday in Helsinki? They look blank.

Longwell is a Republican activist, or rather a Never Trump Republican activistone of the few remaining members of what was once a large group. She spent 2016 rooting for an alternative to Trump. She spent 2017 losing friends. That was the year of the body snatchers, she said, when people who you thought were with you suddenly started to change. In 2018, she tried to figure out what to do next. Instead of giving up, she and another Never Trump Republican, the longtime journalist and activist Bill Kristol, raised money and set out to find people who felt the same way, not in Washington but across America, especially in Republican-voting suburbs.

Their initiative, now called Republican Voters Against Trump, immediately ran into the information wall. Among Longwells focus group in Ohio, Trumps bizarre behavior in Helsinki did not register. People havent heard about it, Longwell recalled thinking. Its not breaking through. This wasnt because the people in the group were uninterested in politics. Nor was it because they were only watching Fox News. On the contrary, they were getting news from social media, from alerts on their phone, from devices of all kinds. They were getting too much news, in fact. As a result, all reporting about Trumpthe crush of scandals and corruptionis, Longwell said, so omnipresent, so daily, that it becomes white noise to people.

Helsinki, porn stars, Grab them by the pussy, Ivanka Trumps Chinese trademarks, taxpayers money going to Trump golf clubs, the sex scandals, ethics scandals, legal scandals, even the power-abuse scandal that led to Trumps impeachmentthey have all melted together over the past four years. They have become a series of unpleasant news stories that follow TV advertisements for hairspray or mouthwash, that precede a Facebook post about a cousins wedding anniversary. For Longwells reluctant Trump voters, dislike of the scandals and dislike of the media that report on the scandals became one and the samea huge hornets nest that nobody wanted to touch or think about. At the same time, these same voters were being bombarded with other messagesmessages that reminded them of their tribal allegiance. They swim in a cultural soup of Trumpism, Longwell said. Being Republican was part of their identity. Images relating to God, patriotism, and the Republican Party were all around them. Cumulatively, those messages were much stronger than their dislike for Trump.

Quinta Jurecic and Benjamin Wittes: Revenge of the Never Trumpers

Ben Scott, a technology expert who worked on disinformation policy at Barack Obamas State Department and was an adviser to Hillary Clintons 2016 campaign, has studied that same phenomenon. Digital media, he told me, have allowed people to experience a higher frequency of highly evocative representationsmeaning the constant barrage of pictures, video, commentary, and memes that portray America, Christians, or families under siege; that align Trump with the Church and the Army; that see threats from foreigners, immigrants, outsiders of all kinds. People who live in this alternative news bubble also see or hear mainstream, fact-based media. But they reject them. They identify them as the enemy, and they learn to ignore them. The Clinton campaigns mistake, Scott reckons, was its belief that people inside this bubble could be moved by an appeal to facts. They werent.

At first, Longwell also thought that an appeal to facts could move reluctant Trump voters to change their mind. But when she played them videos that clearly showed Trump lying, they shrugged it off. In part, this was because they did not hold him to the same standards as other politicians. Instead, she thinks, they saw him as a businessman and a celebrity, someone exempt from normal morality. They say, Yes, he lies. But hes honest, hes authentic, hes real, Longwell said.

Even more powerful, though, is the pull of the group. Republican voters know that Trump lies. If they forgive him, that is because their friends and their families, the other members of their party, forgive him too. Im a Republican, my parents are Republicans, all of my friends are Republicans, Longwells focus-group members told her. To vote differently wouldnt just be an intellectual decision for these voters. It would tear them away from their tribe.

But what happens when that tribe itself starts talking about Trump in a different way? That, it turns out, is quite another matter entirely.

Inside the noisy and chaotic modern information sphere, the message doesnt matter nearly as much as the messenger. Many people no longer trust major media outlets to give them valuable informationand they may never do so again. They no longer trust politicians or groups they perceive to be outside their tribe eitherand the days when a president got a respectful audience just for being the president may never return again. But voters do trust people they know, or people who resemble people they know. Understanding this to be true, Longwell and Kristol began experimenting. Instead of just creating professional campaign videos (though they have made one or two of those), they began soliciting and disseminating homemade clips. The Republican Voters Against Trump website features a quote from one of themId vote for a tuna fish sandwich before Id vote for Donald Trump againas well as information on how to create your own video.

Hundreds of people have contributed clips, and many have already been posted. Among them are people who describe themselves as lifelong Republicans, as evangelical Christians, or as veterans of Iraq and Afghanistan. The videos are unscripted: Each person gives their own reasons for feeling disillusioned or angered by an administration they believe has betrayed them and their conservative ideals, and each explains their views in their own words. People know that they are being sold something in an ad, Longwell said. By contrast, they look at the RVAT videos, they see someone in their community, and they think, I like that person.

When tested on focus groups, the ads do have an impact: People find them convincing. Perhaps this is because they reflect conservative anxieties about Trump without criticizing the conservative tribe. The people in the videos sympathize with Republican voters dilemma, as Longwell herself does. Tribalism isnt all negative, she said. It also involves elements of loyalty, trust, and community. Indeed, Trumps abuse of loyalty, trust, and community is what seems to anger both her and the people in the videos the most. Their feelings of betrayal come through.

Robert P. Saldin and Steven M. Teles: The last anti-Trump Republicans are biding their time

The use of insiders to reach into closed communities is an established techniqueone often used in touchier, more trying circumstances. Sasha Havlicek, who runs a counter-extremism organization in London called the Institute for Strategic Dialogue (the group also worked on the 2017 German election study), has tried many times to find credible inside voices to speak with people who are on the cusp of being recruited online, whether into ISIS or white-supremacist organizations. Havlicek and her colleagues sometimes find disillusioned former members to counsel these would-be recruits, but she also looks for church groups, local employers, veterans, or anyone who can offer an alternative sense of community. Whats important, she told me, is to find people who can offer a crucial form of reassurance: Once you change your vote or your politics, once you break from what everyone around you is doing, you wont be alone.

If the world of counter-extremism offers lessons, so does the experience of anti-communism. Back in the 1980s, Poland was a Soviet-occupied Communist country with an entirely closed media environment. The Communist Party ran all the newspapers and the sole television network. Protest was illegal, and protesters were arrested. But an unusual dissident group called the Orange Alternative broke through the wall of regime mediaby making people laugh. The group staged happenings that werent exactly demonstrations but something closer to comic performances. In 1987, the Orange Alternative held a parade on the anniversary of the Bolshevik Revolution, carrying pro-communist banners and drawing laughing crowds; another time, dozens of people dressed up as Santa Claus and gave out candy. The authorities were flummoxed: The parades were clearly protests, but the police looked stupid when they arrested people for wearing communist red outfits or Santa Claus suits. Srdja Popovic, the veteran Serbian activisthe helped lead a youth movement that overthrew the Serbian dictator Slobodan Miloevihas lectured on what he calls the power of laughtivism. Humor melts fear, he says. Mockery removes the aura of an authoritarian party or leader, making followers more willing to listen to alternatives.

In the U.S., this is one of the tactics now being pursued by the Lincoln Project. Founded by another group of anti-Trump Republicans, it doesnt need the elaborate introduction it might have required a few weeks ago, not least because it has so successfully trolled the president. In May, the group made a short video that began with the words, There is mourning in America. Today, more than 60,000 Americans have died from a deadly virus Donald Trump ignored. Gloomy music followed, along with gloomy pictures: tattered buildings, abandoned houses, shabbily dressed people. Then, at the end, a picture of the Lincoln Memorial and the American flag: If we have another four years like this, will there even be an America?

The clip, a harsh take on the famous Ronald Reagan Morning in America commercial, was an instant hit: More than 1.5 million people watched it within two days of its appearance on Twitter. Even more people saw it after it ran on Fox News in the Washington, D.C., market. One of its viewers was the president, who fired off a series of midnight tweets loaded with all the familiar insults: RINOs, losers, a disgrace. The result: Money poured into the Lincoln Projects coffers. John Weaver, one of the groups founders, told me that in subsequent days, the video was viewed on Twitter, YouTube, and Facebook millions of times.

Reed Galen, John Weaver, and Rick Wilson: The party of idolaters

Since then, the Lincoln Project has launched advertisements mocking Trump in Russian; advertisements making fun of the presidents apparent difficulties drinking a glass of water; advertisements laughing at his campaign manager, who was later fired, possibly for that reason; advertisements appearing within minutes of the event that they parody. A clip needling the president over his weight and apparent mental decline briefly caused #ImpotusAmericanus to trend on Twitter. The sometimes nasty, sometimes childish glee radiated by the groups Twitter account (1.8 million followers) has provoked a harsh counterattack. The Lincoln Project and its founders have been denounced by some on the right as Democrats in disguise, acting under a false flag; by some on the left for alleged hidden agendas; by others as stooping to the same destructive tactics as the president. My Atlantic colleague Andrew Ferguson called the Lincoln Projects ad campaign personally abusive, overwrought, pointlessly salacious.

The Lincoln Projects founders count the attacks from the Republican Party as a success, not least because they distract the GOP from its campaign against Joe Biden. But do the Lincoln Projects ads get through to Republican voters, let alone change their minds? Steve Schmidt, another one of the founders, argues that the information bubble around the president really does now function like an autocratic personality cult: Before any positive messages can get through, the spell has to be broken. For that reason, attacking Republican Party leaders is a necessity. Diminish them, mock them, and laugh at them, Schmidt told me. Punch back hard before you lose the ability to do it. He also thinks that aggressive, even vulgar, laughter will help break through the wall of indifference and convince distracted voters that something important is happening. The side arguing from democratic values should not be the soft side in the debate, Schmidt said. It should be ferocious.

In the grand scheme of things, both of these Never Trump Republican projects are tinylike little speedboats racing alongside the aircraft carrier that will be the Democratic presidential ad campaign this fall. Weaver described their role as the sappers blowing up supply lines while the generals prepare their assault. Still, some of their efforts run parallel to Bidens campaign strategy. He, too, is looking for ways to reach into the conservative bubble, or at least to not offend it. Biden has, for example, been careful to avoid making statements that could be used to scare Republican voters. He does not call for defunding the police, for example, or the opening of the border, or the abolition of all private health insurance. He keeps his rhetoric moderate, even though his base is baying for redder meat. As Ezra Klein of Vox has written, the Democratic candidates campaign staff is well aware that mobilization is often the flip side of polarization. The language that excites his base will also enrage his opponents, which is why he avoids it.

The risk, of course, is that Biden ends up like Trzaskowski, issuing calls for unity that excite nobody, not even his own party. But not everybody in the liberal center ends up that way. Schmidts conclusionthat the side arguing from democratic values need not be boringwas also reached a few years ago by a group of university students in Zurich, the founders of an effort called Operation Libero. When they began, the Swiss Peoples Party, a populist-nationalist party, dominated the countrys politics. It had successfully promoted a vision of Switzerland as a closed enclave, and proposed a series of referendums designed to stoke xenophobia, halt immigration, and curtail the countrys ability to sign foreign treaties.

Peter Beinart: Biden goes big without sounding like it

In contrast, Operation Liberos founders argued for a more welcoming vision of the nation. They pointed out that modern Switzerlands founding moment was the liberal revolution of 1848, that the country had a long history of religious tolerance and openness to the world. Calling themselves the children of 1848, Operation Libero started making amusing video clipsan animated cartoon of Helvetia, the national symbol, howling as she is knocked over by a populist wrecking balland memes. The group created teams of volunteers who would argue against the Swiss version of the online alt-right, and invited the populists to engage in debate. It worked: Not only did Operation Libero help its own side prevail in several referendum campaigns, but its members looked like they were having fun doing it. One widely circulatedphotograph showed members of the groupincluding one of its founders, Flavia Kleiner, in a hot-pink jacketcheering exuberantly as they celebrated an electoral victory.

But Operation Libero didnt just offer fun; it also offered patriotisma different version of patriotism. We are offering a more positive view of Switzerland, Kleiner told me a couple of years ago. We dont want it to be an open-air museum with an idealized past. In the United States, the field is wide open for Biden, or anyone who supports him, to use emotive American symbols and traditions to mobilize voters of all stripes. One Biden campaign ad from last year went in exactly this direction, contrasting the language of the Declaration of Independence (All men are created equal) with the language of the 2017 alt-right march in Charlottesville, Virginia (Jews will not replace us). The renewal or recasting of American founding documents to suit a contemporary moment is, of course, nothing new. Martin Luther King Jr. quoted the magnificent words of the Constitution and the Declaration of Independence and referred to the unalienable rights of life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness.

But there is a possible trap here too. In this era of information overload, the appeals to life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness that worked in the past might now sound trite; worse still, the language of democracy and of Americas founding can sound like yet another set of slogans in the information war. Trumps campaign seems to be hoping that this happens; thats why the president is already mocking the ideas and ideals of democracy itself. On social media, the president has posted Trump 2024, 2028, 2032 memes and teasing tweets about postponing the election. Although they did cause some alarm among some of his supportersproof that the rules surrounding elections still enjoy bipartisan respectTrumps tweets may have achieved their purpose among others: They made the familiar rhetoric of democracy and common purpose sound old-fashioned, out of touch, dated.

Its not just American rhetoric that no longer unifies. American history itself has become contentious too. At a moment when people are arguing over statues, how can stories about the past ever unite us? Or, to put it differently: How can Biden talk about American history in a way that doesnt alienate either his opponents or his supporters?

Read: The Kumbaya candidate

Some lessons might emerge, eccentric though they may seem, from another project Ive been part of. This one also used focus groups, in an attempt to understand how Ukrainians in regions with very different histories remember the past. Western Ukraine was part of Poland until 1939, the east has a long history of Russian domination, and the two regions have radically different memories, especially of the Second World War. Russian disinformation directed at Ukraine has long sought to exacerbate these differences, characterizing western Ukrainians as Nazis and reminding easterners of the part they played in the Red Armys victory. As a result, any conversation about the war is liable to make somebody (maybe everybody) angry.

But when focus-group moderators changed the subject to different historical traumas, it turned out that the differences were not so great. When Ukrainians talk about, say, the Soviet-Afghan War in the 80s or the economic collapse that followed the end of the U.S.S.R. in the 90s, they have similarly strong emotions and similarly evocative feelings, no matter which part of the country they inhabit. They are also more likely to believe the information presented in documentaries about those subjects, whereas they approach similar films about the Second World War with distrust.

To my knowledge, no one has yet done the same kind of study in the U.S. But I can guess that, as in Ukraine, some Americans are divided by their different historical memories. Right now, different interpretations of the civil-rights movement, and even of the Civil War and Reconstruction, lie at the root of angry arguments about statues, military-base names, and the Confederate flag. Reconciling those memories is not something that will happen between now and November. But there might well be other things we can talk about, other episodes in American history that evoke strong, unifying feelings in both red and blue America. The moment of national mourning that followed 9/11? The financial crisis of 2008? The Biden campaign has already begun to explore the national experience of isolation and lockdown. Unsurprisingly, the Trump campaign has responded with a disinformation campaign designed to sow doubt about whether that isolation and lockdown were even necessary. From its point of view, anything that creates bonds between red and blue Americans is anathema.

One way or another, all successful campaignspolitical campaigns, activist campaigns, even commercial advertising campaignsneed to reckon with the fact that audiences live in different information spheres. The era of mass media and unitary campaign slogans is drawing to an end. This is not news: The Russian operatives who intervened in the 2016 election were telling members of Black Lives Matter Facebook groups different things from what they told the anti-immigration activists they targeted in Idaho.

Still, we havent really absorbed the significance of this moment. In this post-mass-media era, sowing division is far easier than creating unity, giving an advantage to politicians who seek to win by creating scapegoats and enemies. Targeted advertising makes it much easier to splice and dice the electorate, and it isnt hard to create misunderstandings between groups who no longer speak to each other. For all those reasons, the odds are that whoever is the ultimate victor, the 2020 campaign will leave America even more bitterly divided than it is today, and that will go on being a problem in the future.

Read: The long arc of Joe Biden

Even if the Democratic nominee wins, Can Biden reach into the opposite bubble? is a question not just for the autumn of 2020 but for the spring of 2021, the winter of 2022, and many years into the future. The need to reach across informational and cultural divides will add an extra layer of complication to the multiple economic, medical, and foreign-policy crises a new Biden administration would immediately face, and will make it difficult to carry out the deep reforms that our bureaucracy, our democracy, and our health-care system need. But unless Biden makes an effort to talk with his opponents, he could end up much like the candidate in the Polish wheat field, with only the facts and 49 percent of the public on his side. Bidens campaign may represent the last chance to bridge the gaps that divide us. If Trump wins another term, then we can be certain that no one will even try.

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How to Beat Populists When the Facts Dont Matter - The Atlantic

How to Create a Windows Key If You Dont Have One – How-To Geek

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If you prefer using an older classic keyboard such as the IBM Model M that doesnt include a physical Windows key, theres a neat way to add one using Windows 10 by borrowing a key you dont use very often. Heres how to do it.

Using Microsofts free PowerToys utility, you can easily reassign any key to work like any other key (or even give them a novel functionlike muting your audio). In our case, well be assigning the Windows key function to a key of your choice.

(By default, the Command key on a Mac keyboard functions as the Windows key if plugged into a Windows 10 machine. Theres no need to use this trick when youre using a Mac keyboard with Windowsjust use the Command key as your Windows key.)

First, if you dont already have PowerToys for Windows 10, download it for free from Microsofts website. After that, launch PowerToys, and click the Keyboard Manager option in the sidebar. In the Keyboard Manager options, click Remap A Key.

In the Remap Keyboard window that pops up, click the plus sign (+) to add a key mapping.

Now you have to decide which key you want to double as the Windows key. We find that the right Alt key works very well (if you have one), because it is easy to use for one-handed Windows shortcuts and most people use the left Alt key more frequently. You could also choose a seldom-used key, such as Scroll Lock or right Ctrl instead. Its completely up to you.

While defining the mapping in PowerToys, use the drop-down menu below the Key: heading on the left to select the key youd like to function as your Windows key. In this example, were using Alt (Right).

In the Mapped To section on the right, select Win (which represents the Windows key) from the drop-down menu.

Click OK. Windows will probably warn you that the key youre remapping wont be usable because youve reassigned it to another function. In that case, click Continue Anyway.

After that, the new Windows key mapping should be active. Test it out. If you tap the key you assigned to Windows, your Start Menu should pop up. From then on, you should also be able to use it to launch handy shortcuts such as Windows+I to open Settings.

When youre ready, close PowerToys, and you can use your computer as usual. You wont have to log out or restart your PC; your change will take effect immediately.

If you change your mind and want to assign a different key to Windows or restore the function of the key you remapped, launch PowerToys, and navigate to Keyboard Manager > Remap A Key.

Locate the mapping you defined earlier and click the trash can to delete it. Then click OK to close the window. After that, youre free to create a new mapping or simply close Power Toys.

RELATED: Why I Still Use a 34-Year-Old IBM Model M Keyboard

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How to Create a Windows Key If You Dont Have One - How-To Geek