Blog: Treat others with dignity in life (7/11/20) – darnews.com

We believe in the dignity of all people.Those are words I heard at the Unitarian Universalist church we attended most of my childhood.While growing up, I thought those words were almost universally shared. I always knew there were people taking actions that didnt align with showing others dignity, but I believed they were outliers.Im not sure I believe that anymore.Merriam-Webster Dictionary defines dignity as the quality or state of being worthy, honored or esteemed.Ill admit, I had to look that up. I always just used it as a synonym for respect.Im not perfect at showing everybody dignity and nobody is all the time, but the point is to try.Karen Armstrong, a British author who focuses on religion and a former Roman Catholic sister, discusses the golden rule as something apparent in every major faith around the world.Every single one of them has evolved their own version of whats been called the golden rule, she said in a 2009 TEDtalk. Sometimes it comes in a positive version always treat all others as you would like to be treated yourself and equally important the negative version dont do to others as you what you would not like them to do to you.Armstrong said that by living by this rule all day and every day people become less focused on themselves and more compassionate.Despite it being so present in religions, people often dont want to be compassionate and instead argue, she said.People often want to be right instead and that defeats the purpose of the exercise, she said. If we dont manage to implement the golden rule globally I doubt that well have a viable world to hand on to the next generation.Now I thew out a religion that I recognize many people dont know about, so let me explain it since thats the background Im coming from.Unitarian Universalism is a non-denominational faith based on principles rather than a specific text. The core of the faith leans on seven principles:The inherent worth and dignity of every person;Justice, equity and compassion in human relations;Acceptance of one another and encouragement of spiritual growth;A free and responsible search for truth and meaning;The right of conscience and the use of the democratic process;The goal of a world community with peace, liberty, and justice for all;Respect for the interdependent web of all existence of which we are a part.While, again, nobody will be perfect at following any faith 100% of the time, I wish something like these were more universally taught or that the golden rule would guide more actions than it does.These principals are the idea that we should have civil conversations about issues and conversations that go both ways; that we listen with our ears and not our mouths; that we strive to not cause harm.Things are divisive, right now, more than they have been in a while, and thats not going to change anytime soon. But, maybe, if we learn to treat people with more dignity and that did become the norm, the divides can still be mended.

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Moving day – with unity and love | Opinions – The Capital Journal

Ephesians 4:2-3: With all humility and gentleness, with patience, bearing with one another in love, eager to maintain the unity of the Spirit in the bond of peace.

Have you ever moved? Well then, always remember the first commandment of moving is that junk expands to all space provided. The second commandment is likewise; wifes stuff is more important than husbands stuff particularly craft items.

A friend indicated his willingness to help in the moving process. His exact email words were, I love dust, heavy boxes, lifting stuff thats been nailed to the floor for centuries, arguing with spouse, and trying to make it all fit into that uncompromisingly undersized moving truck. So, Ill be there in spirit. Gotta run, time for my afternoon nap.

Admittedly, the arguing with spouse part is most fun. My wife has now packed 9,347 huge boxes of craft stuff; mostly boxes of broken, dry-rotted thread, rusted bobbins, and pieces of faded material passed down by great-great granny, but believe me, its all essential.

On the other hand, I have a tiny, minuscule box taken from my humble bedside table, mostly containing nostalgic items of great value such as Richard Nixon campaign buttons, fingernail clippers, and a few spent ammo shell casings, yet she had the audacity to suggest I was taking up too much room in the truck.

With kindness, I mildly suggested she might consider discarding some of the unusable paraphernalia in exchange for an ounce or two of my pitiful belongings. I was met with the red-flaming eyes of Zuul from Ghostbusters, and the golden rule of moving you just dont want me to have anything, do you?

If I had my way Id roast all of this junk on the front lawn while dancing around the flames singing Johnny Cashs Ring of Fire, but for now Ill head to Menards and spend my retirement money on more boxes. And, being the dutiful husband that I am, Ill come home, soothe the ruffled feathers of a wife who felt guilted into tossing out a toothbrush that the dog-chewed up.

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Moving day - with unity and love | Opinions - The Capital Journal

Legendary Producer Nile Rodgers Used to be a Black Panther – Inside Edition

Decades before this legendary producer founded the 70s disco group CHIC, produced Diana Ross and Madonna or jammedwith Daft Punk and Pharell, Nile Rodgers was a 16-year-old member of the Black Panther Party.

I just sort of... how would I say? I elevated, or I developed into a Panther, Rodgers told Inside Edition Digital. When I joined the Black Panther Party at 16-and-a-half years old, it was after having an entire youth of not only just activism when it was political, but also I was a Boy Scout and a Cub Scout and I was just raised to help people. My parents socialized me to care about other people. We're just a natural extension of... it was almost like a rite of passage. It was like you grew up into being a Panther.

The native New Yorker grew up on the Lower East Side.

Even though my parents, they had a tough time because they were beatniks, heroin addicts, blah, blah, blah, but they were intellectual and really smart. They knew that education was my way and my ticket out. Not only just education, but just basic humanity. My mom used to put me on her knee and talk to me about the golden rule. This is serious, it's so funny that she would always tell me, "Treat others the way that you'd like them to treat you." Over and over, he said.

I had been, I would say part of what we would call the movement for some time.

And then the main thing that we were motivated by, I would say in my circle of friends, was obviously racial equality was pretty high on the ticket. But also, we were anti the Vietnam War.

As we became a teen, especially people of color and poor people, were instantly just shipped off to Vietnam. So I was in a number of organizations that were antiwar organizations that were pro women's movement, which is basically the start of the women's movement that we know today, and the start of the gay riots at Stonewall and all that stuff. All of these movements were just converging, and that's really why we called it the movement. Everything was happening.

Founded in 1966, in Oakland, California, the Black Panther Party was a socio-political movement focused on uplifting the Black community.

Legally openly carrying weapons, they would conduct police watching patrols Black neighborhoods in efforts to curb police brutality. Some perceived this as militant, which helped the Panthers gain that reputation.

So that's why when the Black Panther Party formed in Oakland, California, they could walk into the courthouse with guns, the same thing that white people were able to do. As soon as black people did it, all of a sudden they made gun laws, they made open carry illegal, Rodgers recalled.

You see black people doing it, all of a sudden it's militant, hoodlum, blah, blah, blah. The exact same shot, just change the color of the person and it has a different meaning. The meaning is exactly the same. People were just protesting it, asking for their rights that are written in our documents that founded this country.

The Black Panther Partys Ten-Point Program outlined their goalsincluding an immediate end to police brutality and murder of Black people. They also wanted land, education, decent housing, clothing, justice and peace for African-Americans. Membership peaked in 1968, with more than 2000 Black Panthers across the U.S.

By the time the 1970s rolled around, the FBIs Cointelpro deemed the Black Panthers a communist organization and called them an enemy of the United States. Law enforcement killed members and leaders of the party. By 1982, the Black Panthers disbanded.

Real Panther life is painting a person's house, taking their laundry, getting groceries, feeding kids. That's real Panther life. That would be pretty boring to show on television, but boy, it sure was exciting to show people walking into the Oakland Alameda Courthouse, Rodgers said.

Rodgers continues to carry on his giving spirit through his We Are Family Foundation.

Started in 2002, in response to the September 11th, 2001 attacks. The foundations goal has been to amplify and support diverse young leaders who are attacking systemic racism through basic needs like food, water and housing.

Under WAFFs umbrella, Rodgers started the Youth to the Front Program. It supports and funds Black and Indigenous People of Color under 30 who are youth activists, and are at the helm of youth organizations and projects committed to fighting systemic racism, inequality and injustice.

That Rodgers still manages to maintain his upbeat attitude is nothing short of amazing. Especially when it comes to what he says are close calls.

I am only sitting here just because of the number of encounters I have had, the police didn't choose to shoot. That's it. They just chose not to shoot, Rodgers stated.

It was only a few months ago when Rodgers was on his way to Vermont to produce a well-known band. He wasnt familiar with the route, started seeing street signs in French and realized hed wound up near the Canadian border.

A trip to get gas would turn dangerous.

I turn off, I go to just a little convenience store. And as soon as I walk in, the woman... there's a sole white woman at this store. She pushes the panic button, unbeknownst to me. I walk in, I don't even have any contact with her. I go right in because my car is outside filling up automatically. I go directly to the refrigerated bin to decide whether I wanted diet Mountain Dew which I knew had the most caffeine, or diet Dr. Pepper or whatever, Rodgers recalled.

Then, Rodgers said officers showed up and started screaming.

There's a cacophonous sound. I don't know even know what they're saying. So my head turns, and I look over there at them. I look to the right where they are. And then I just right away... of course, they can't possibly be talking to me. I haven't committed a crime, he said.

So I looked to the left to see who they were possibly talking to. Now, if you had just seen the camera, right? And they shot me, they would have said, Oh, he was looking for a way to run out of the store. But in flight, all it was that this could cacophonous thing that was happening at the door, I tried to see who they were talking to. Because certainly, it couldn't have been me. One, I have a car that you could spot a mile away. My friends laugh and call it the bumblebee mobile. It's a yellow Range Rover, there's only 100 in the world.

I looked at them and they could see I was puzzled. And I think that maybe my sense of puzzlement startled them, because they're probably accustomed to dealing... I don't know what the... I can't read their minds at all, but all I know is that at some point, the situation calmed down.

I said to the state troopers, During your training, is there any type of training that's a sort of a logic kind of course? When you come to a crime scene, is your brain processed to look around and how we say look at your surroundings? Didn't you notice that the car was a $100,000 car? Didn't you notice that it was being filled up? When you get to a crime scene, don't you start to go, okay, I got this fact, that's a fact. That's a fact. That's a fact. That's a fact? Anyway, they were so embarrassed by the time I finished my little diatribe, they actually gave me a police escort all the way to the place where I was going to Vermont, to the border, and said, Okay, now it's just two miles down. And then they gave me some kind of get out of jail free card, like Please don't stop this guy, or if you stop him, Officer so and so said this.

Rodgers even recalled a harrowing story of the time he got stopped by police as a teenager while on his way to Woodstock 1969.

16-years-old, hitchhiking was a normal thing. A cop pulled a gun out on us, lined us up in a ditch. There was a drainage ditch off the side of the road, and the cop told us that he was going to go up two miles, swing around and come back. If he saw us, he was going to put a bullet in each of our heads. We would just drop in the ditch, and he says, And nobody would even care. We knew that he was telling the truth. We ran into town and called our friend's father, the only person we knew with a car, who was a tenured professor at Columbia University. I think he may have been the first black tenured professor. We called his dad. It was terrifying to us. We had experienced that all of our lives, but not... it was so blatant, because now we're outside of New York City.

With all he has been though, Rodgers believes true, effective, meaningful change is still attainable, and can be reached through the younger generations.

I think it's a long road to hoe but I honestly feel very inspired. I think that this is a movement of love and compassion. I heard someone say, maybe it was the governor of New York, say that, Love will always win. Well, I'm an old school hippie, I believe that all day long. That's who I am.

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Legendary Producer Nile Rodgers Used to be a Black Panther - Inside Edition

What every business owner and employee needs to know before returning to the workplace – BakeryAndSnacks.com

As the phased return to normality is likely to be rolled out over a few months, employers are going to have different needs and requirements in how to restart operations.

The timescale by which they can do so, will depend on the industry they are in. Similarly, employees will have their own considerations and mixed feelings about returning to work with childcare, transportation and health concerns, front of mind.

In some cases, employers and employees may wish to remain working at home for productivity and to enable social distancing for an extended period.

Each employers management of this will need to take into account its operational needs, together with the law and government guidance on how employees can return to work safely.

The Government has recently advised people to go back to work only if they cannot work from home. This may change again with updated announcements.

Employers should realistically undertake a Covid-19 specific risk assessment in respect of their employees returning to work.

Employers do have a legal health and safety obligation, so they must ensure they are operating effective social distancing measures within the workplace. If they have not, employees have a right not to attend their workplace if there is a reasonable belief that doing so would pose a serious and imminent threat. If an employee decides to not go back to work for this reason, they can put in a grievance at work to protect their employment rights and help to stop an unfair dismissal.

The business needs versus safety will be governed by the risk assessment, but staff must be treated fair and non-discriminatory and we strongly advise that staff are consulted and discussions take place as to their needs to avoid claims and also to motivate staff.

Some workplaces will offer flexibility and on-going home working to their employees, so the first port of call should be a discussion between staff and their line manager to try and come to an arrangement.

Employees who have been employed for more than 26 weeks may request flexible working arrangements with their employers. This is a statutory right and the employer must deal with the request in a reasonable timeframe. There may be greater need for flexible working so that you can cover childcare or home schooling, and since the government has suggested varying start/finish times in the phased return to work, it is a practical and sensible solution for both employee and employer.

Requests must be given due consideration and an employer cannot discriminate when giving a decision, but ordinarily it is not duty bound to agree to this. However, these are not normal circumstances, so how the Tribunals may view these cases as they come through will be enlightening. More information is available on the governments website.

While it may have appeared the current remote working conditions are a temporary fix to help businesses continue operations during the outbreak and that they will eventually get back to standard working practice, it is likely some employees will want to continue working remotely. It is also likely employers will wish for staff to remain doing so to help with the staggered return to work plan or for it to reduce office space requirements.

Consultations can take place about how remote working could continue, for how long and for whom, but employers need to be careful to offer this to staff in a non-discriminatory way that is perceived as fair to all staff. Employers also need to ensure they have updated work at home and have GDPR and health assessment policies in place.

The scheme requires employees to be furloughed for a minimum of three weeks. If an employer wants to extend the period, they will need staff consent to vary the agreement.

From August, the furlough scheme will allow employers to bring back employees on a part-time basis to aid in the transition to normal working life. This may allow skill levels to be kept high and also help with child arrangements, but will still require a consent.

Usually staff policies or handbooks are outside the employment contract. These can be amended without consent and simply communicated, so staff should be informed, as they will be obliged to follow these procedures.

Motivating staff during furlough, as well as those continuing to work, should be a key consideration for any employer that wants its team to pull together post pandemic.

With a huge number of employees being furloughed across the UK more than the Government anticipated businesses will need to be aware that reintroducing those members of staff who were furloughed may feel out of touch.

Time for them to settle in is advised, perhaps a return to work interview and review of any training requirements. Training while on furlough or having regular touch in calls may help them feel less isolated and assists bring them back into the working environment.

The employees who have continued to work during this time may also need additional support as they have helped hold up the business during a stressful time. Considerations for additional annual leave or me days may be necessary to maintain a motivated and health workforce.

The golden rule of the current job retention scheme until August is that an employee may not provide services to, nor generate income, for the employer. They may, however, undertake training, such as online training courses to keep up their skills. You must be paid at least the National Minimum Wage for the period you are training.

The training undertaken while on furlough should be reasonable, especially if your employer is contributing to the cost. A development of skills that will assist personal growth or to lean new aspects of the business would likely be the best options.

If you are worried about training, speak to your employer. You should also check your employment contract to see how this deals with any matters of training. Your employer may be responsible for re-training if your employment contract covers this, or you are a member of a professional body who is required to complete certain hours of training.

When returning to work, your employer should ideally conduct a return to work interview. During this interview, re-training and other training issues should be brought up.

It is unlikely that an employment contract would be drafted in a blanket way in which to force employees to take any such test and it offers up concerns about confidentiality. This may be different for keyworkers or those directly exposed to patients.

If an employer creates a new work place policy that insists on this, firstly, it will be impractical due to reliability of tests, availability and how employees obtain such tests, but it will also open up concerns of confidentiality and discrimination actions.

This is a very new legal space so there is not much concrete advice yet. However, an employer has a legal health and safety obligation to provide a reasonably safe place of work.

Employers should set up policies that incorporating testing. For instance, if an employee shows symptoms, a company may require them to leave the office immediately and not return until they have been tested. If the test is positive, the employer would then have to take measures to protect the rest of the workforce. This may include sending home all people who have had contact with the positive employee.

Not all businesses are the same, so it is important that all employers take substantial efforts to remain up to date with government and public health advice when deciding the best policies for them and take advice to ensure its regulated in a confidential and non-discriminatory way.

An employer is only responsible if they cause your condition. This means that the employee must prove, with medical evidence, that it was highly likely you contracted the virus while at work, more so than any other place you have been, for example, public transport and shops.

The employee would need to consider if their employer has put in reasonable health and safety measure like social distancing. This is why a plan and policy is key for an employer to protect itself and be able to show it has taken as much effort as possible to protect its staff.

While not impossible, it would be difficult to show the virus was contracted while at work due to the huge amount of people contracting the illness. If the employee could show this, then they would need to consider bringing a personal injury claim against their employer.

Law enforcement has been seen to be very strict on people intentionally passing on the virus through overt acts of coughing. People have a duty to protect themselves as well and not to be reckless and this extends to their workplace.

If staff are showing symptoms, it would be best to notify the employer and self-isolate before returning to the workplace. If you knowingly and willingly return to the office with such symptoms, your employer can bring disciplinary proceedings and may suspend you from work or even dismiss you if you have knowingly breached its policies on health and safety.

Likewise, an employer also has a duty of care towards its staff and other employees. If staff are showing symptoms, they must take action to protect others in the workplace. This includes sending the person home and likely, all those who have been in contact with them. If they are not appearing to action a plan or policy or take action, an employer could be held vicariously liable.

There can be both criminal and civil liability in terms of passing on infectious disease.

If an employee does not adhere to the business policies introduced or government instructions, the employer may be able to dismiss them for a serious breach of health and safety and breach of contract. Clear policies must be introduced, maintained and communicated.

Employers have both a common law and statutory duty to ensure, so far as reasonably practical the health and safety within a workplace. To breach this duty is both a criminal and civil offence.

Employers will need to be aware of legislation relating to PPE in the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic. The PPE Regulation 1992 should now be on the forefront of all employers minds.

The moot point here will be what is reasonably practical. Employers should all undertake COVID specific risk assessments and ensure they have policies in place and relevant training provided.

Specific PPE requirements and guidance has been published by the government. Not all industries are required to provide PPE. However, it is common that social distancing, as a minimum, is adhered to wherever possible.

It will be on the employer to provide new and innovative ways to adapt their workplace in line with current advice. The HSE may perform spot checks on employers to ensure they are adhering to the guidance. A failure to adequality do so could lead to civil and criminal charges.

Staggering work times and return to work

As the UK Government will want to significantly curb the number of people on public transport at one time, they will likely suggest that employees who have to attend the workplace do so with staggered work times or days.

Staff could do two days on and three days off, and office share with other staff to enable social distancing as well as vary their work operating times. This can be done, but the employees need to be consulted and treated fairly as plans are put into action.

It is hoped this degree of flexibility will have a positive impact upon productivity. Some people work better in the morning and others later in the afternoon and evening.

By staggering the work times of employees, business owners may see an increase in the volume of work produced, a happier work force and potentially personnel to cover longer period of the day to reach clients and customers.

Social distancing in the office

Social distancing is here to stay for a while and employers need to consider how employees get to work and operate safely.

Employers will need to carry out a risk assessment, update its policies and convey these to employees in a clear manner; we would also strongly suggest they are given contact details and a forum to have the opportunity to discuss any concerns they may have with a member of management.

Clean office spaces

We can also expect an increase in the level of cleaning in the offices to ensure that any potential sickness is reduced for staff and visitors. Businesses will be under scrutiny when they start bringing employees back to work and this will be focused on how they manage the health and wellbeing of their staff.

The key for everyone is careful planning and assessment, consulting and communicating with each other so concerns are voiced and addressed, and clear policies are communicated that are practical and agreed.

The basics include a remote working policy; a risk assessment and return to work policy for staff and access to services by clients and visitors; data protection and health & safety audit of procedures and policies and clear communications with staff.

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What every business owner and employee needs to know before returning to the workplace - BakeryAndSnacks.com

How to carve out clever storage solutions from the space you already have | Produced by Seattle Times Marketing – Seattle Times

As we continue to stayhome, work remotely and prepare for more online school in the fall, getting our space organized has become more important than ever.

Even after culling and decluttering, you likely still have extra stuff you need to store and finding permanent, convenient places for those things to live is the way to maintain organization without adding to your already-heavy workload. Here are some local organizing experts ideas, big and small, for finding more storage space within the space you already have.

Many people are having to carve out work and school spaces from their already-full homes. One solution is to convert a spare bedroom or den into a multipurpose room by adding a wall bed and file storage.

Sales of wall beds are up 25% this summer from last year, says Garrett Woodruff, owner of Northwest Closets & Wallbeds, family-owned company in Auburn.

We dont create more space, we just make use of the space you have, he says.

A typical Murphy bed and home-office setup costs about $3,000$5,000, from design through installation, Woodruff says.

You can also find DIY Murphy bed kits online if youre handy.

Look for the hidden, underused spaces in your home. Kammie Lisenby, the Seattle-based CEO of Organizing Experts and author of Impact Organizing Method, says these spaces may be stuffed with forgotten clutter or underused furniture pieces.

The best hidden space in your home is really the closed-door room, whether thats your garage or pantry space, she says. For some people, they have an entire guest room thats been developed into a storage room.

Lisenby argues that you dont need a bed hogging space in your guest room; instead, downsize to a plush air mattress that you can stow in a closet. Then that closed-door room can be turned into a homework or workout space, or whatever it is that you need.

If you think in terms of square footage in your house, its really expensive not to have a room function as you want it, she says.

But say you dont have the luxury of a spare room, and your dining table is buried under laptops and papers.

I think dining room tables across America all probably look the same right about now, Lisenby says. Heres what she suggests: Put a bookcase or a storage ottoman near the dining table. Get clear plastic bins that fit on the shelves or inside the ottoman. Nightly (or on weekends), sweep the items into the bins and bring them back out as needed. For bonus points, use a label maker (Lisenby likes the Brother P-touch) to keep the bins organized and looking neat. And dont forget to keep a recycling bin nearby; purging is half the battle.

In a working parents dream world, the kids would do their Zoom meetings and schoolwork in their bedrooms, by themselves. But this is not a dream world.

Theyre going to want to be where you are, says Linda Deppa, owner of Uncluttered Professional Organizing and Photo Organizing Services in Lynnwood. Thats where theyre going to feel safe. They want to be close to Mom and Dad.

Deppa, a mother of two, suggests getting a portable filing box with a handle for each child. It keeps all of their supplies together in one spot. Let the kids decorate the outside, and put hanging folders inside for each subject. This way, youre not digging through piles of papers, and youre also training kids to put their supplies away. Some boxes have a compartment on top to store pencils, or you can get a zippered pouch to hang in front.

Its basically a portable desk or a portable storage system, Deppa says. Its worked out beautifully for a lot of parents.

Other options that can keep kids supplies corralled and transportable: a caddy, a cart on wheels (such as the ubiquitous Ikea Raskog cart) or a small file cabinet with casters.

Christmas trees. Camping gear. Clothes youre saving for the next kid. For the stuff you want to keep but dont use often, get overhead racks that hang down from the rafters of your garage.

All those kinds of things you dont use very often, they need to go into the non-important real estate, Deppa says.

Set up vertical shelving along the walls of your garage. Deppas favorite go-tos are the powder-coated SafeRacks shelving system ($150) and the Trinity wire-shelving rack on wheels ($119), both of which are available at Costco. Youre investing not a lot, and you get a lot of bang for your buck, she says.

Annie Traurig, a professional organizer in Seattle and founder of Live Simply, recommends the Flow Wall system for garages. After you install the wall panel, you can attach different components cabinets, shelves, bins, hooks that can be moved and rearranged.

I think so, so often, vertical space goes underutilized, Traurig says. Especially in smaller spaces, its integral that you use every square inch that you have.

The golden rule of home organizing is purge, purge, purge. And even after finding more space, you shouldnt stop editing down your possessions. After all, you dont have to organize what you dont own.

I used to live there, in that [Goodwill] drive through, Lisenby says. She hasnt been in four months, though, because of the pandemic. Goodwill drop-offs are opening up again, but donation lines are long.

Until youre ready to queue up, designate a spot in your house to collect the things that no longer serve you. Lisenby recommends getting a clear plastic, stackable tote. Having a defined, will-be-leaving-the-home-someday spot is good, she says.

JiaYing Grygiel is the mother of two boys, and a freelance writer and photographer. She blogs at photoj.net.

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How to carve out clever storage solutions from the space you already have | Produced by Seattle Times Marketing - Seattle Times

A simple but profound call to action | Hillsboro Star-Journal | July 16, 2020 – Hillsboro Star-Journal

A simple but profound call to action

At some point in any protracted discussion there comes a time when opinions no longer are going to change. Everyone has entrenched beliefs, and all the evidence in the world wont alter their opinions.

Its becoming painfully obvious weve reached that point with COVID-19. Those so embroiled in the politics of denial and misplaced concerns about personal liberty no longer can see evidence like the rapidly soaring number of cases in Marion County since government refused to act to protect its citizens.

Polite folks have reached the point where we agree to disagree. Others are at that stage in arguments where foot-stamping, raised voices, hurled epithets, and willingness to accept as gospel the shakiest of evidence that bolsters their position.

Local government, unfortunately, has chosen to appease these people some of whom actually sit, at least for now, on various governing bodies. Like believers in a flat earth, theyre not going to have their opinions changed by this or any other editorial. So at this point, we now switch into a mode of preaching to the choir.

Since government largely has abdicated its responsibility, its now up to us, as individual citizens, to take matters into our own hands.

What can be done?

1. Boycott businesses, churches, schools, and other activities that do not require all visitors and staff to wear face coverings anytime they come within six feet of each other.

2. Do not participate in, become a spectator for, or let your tax dollars be used to support any sport or entertainment event not absolutely necessary to maintaining a functioning society and economy.

3. Encourage schools and colleges to begin planning now to conduct the entirety of their fall semesters and possibly their spring semesters via remote instruction and to cancel all educationally unnecessary extracurricular activities, including sports.

4. Get an advance ballot for upcoming elections and plan to vote for candidates who have based their decisions in this crisis on the best scientific knowledge available, not on the political posturing of radical fringes that deny science or the wishful thinking of plutocrats who care only about making money.

5. Stay at home whenever possible. Shop locally. Converse with out-of-town friends and relatives by phone or computer. Avoid all unnecessary trips outside your home.

6. Continue trying to educate self-absorbed refuseniks who insist this is all fake news, a plot to limit their freedom, or something made up by some Chinese cell phone company or an opponent of President Donald Trump.

7. If you cant make others see the truth, shun them and prevent them from interacting with the community that they seem hell-bent on destroying because its their personal right to do so.

8. Oppose any attempt to extend sick pay or other benefits to people whose dangerous behavior results in their own illness or, worse yet, the illness of innocents who are trying to limit spread of COVID-19.

As a society, we have spent trillions and watched countless businesses and jobs go away not to prevent COVID-19 but merely to keep it from spiking all at once. Too quickly resuming normal activities will make this very serious, multi-generational investment totally meaningless.

In Marion County, we have an aging and not especially well-trained or affluent population. Few of our businesses are entrepreneurial or deep-pocketed enough to weather a storm of this magnitude. The federal government will bankrupt society if it tries to bail everyone out. Our community quite literally is at high risk of devastation if not outright annihilation.

Now truly is the time to come to the aid of our community by collectively stepping up and filling the leadership vacuum exhibited by too many of our elected and appointed officials.

How many wake-up calls do we need before we recognize the Golden Rule: Our masks protect you. Your masks protect us.

ERIC MEYER

View original post here:

A simple but profound call to action | Hillsboro Star-Journal | July 16, 2020 - Hillsboro Star-Journal

Removing names that hurt – Yahoo News

Whats in a name? A lot, we are learning.

The decision by Washingtons National Football League team to change its name from a racist slur against Native Americans will remove one of the most offensive nicknames in sports. After 87 years of use, Redskins has finally been retired.

The effect should be to deepen the rethinking of names not only in sports but elsewhere in society. The NFLs Kansas City Chiefs may be the next to reconsider whether its name is appropriate. Baseballs Cleveland Indians and Atlanta Braves, and hockeys Chicago Blackhawks, will be under new pressure to follow.

The decision by Washington was a financial one. Its corporate sponsors no longer felt comfortable with being associated with the name. They threatened to leave if a change wasnt made.

The sponsors themselves were under pressure. Behind their new enthusiasm was a sea change in public opinion. The death of George Floyd at the hands of police in Minneapolis in May has seemed to ignite a widespread feeling across racial and generational lines that enough is enough.

Confederate flags and monuments are being seen in a new light the light of empathy and with more compassion for the experiences of Black Americans.Even brand names such as Uncle Bens rice and Aunt Jemimas pancakes now will disappear from shelves along with their racist connotations.

Native Americans hope that the decision by the Washington team will prompt name changes at the collegiate and high school levels as well. Some 2,200 high schools still use Native American names and mascots, though that number has been shrinking.

The golden rule, it seems, is being applied: How would I feel if I were in their shoes? Ways of thinking do change. Limited views expand and take in the world from broader perspectives.

History is beingrevised to portray a more inclusive narrative. One of the grievances from American colonists to the king of England in the Declaration of Independence was his inability to protect them from people they believed were merciless and savage. Contemporaryreview has shown these were Indigenous societies struggling to defend their own homes and territories, and the English were the aggressors.

Story continues

Recently a Supreme Court decision affirmed the rights and existence of Indigenous peoples as Americans, protected by federal law. The court upheld an 1866 treaty between the United States and the Creek Nation that, in effect, confirmed that the tribe rightly still possesses its reservation land in Oklahoma. The land had been given to the tribe as compensation for being removed from its traditional homeland in the southeastern U.S. The forced move westward of some 60,000 Native Americans became known as the Trail of Tears.

On the far end of the Trail of Tears was a promise that this land would be secure forever, wrote Justice Neil Gorsuch in the decision. [W]e hold the government to its word.

Those who see nothing wrong with using Native American names for sports teams argue that they are meant to honor these people. But Native Americans say they are much more honored when the U.S. government honors the treaties it has made with them.

Democracies only exist in practice if the rights of their minorities are protected. That makes the uncovering and correcting of slights toward Black and Native Americans good news for American democracy.

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Removing names that hurt - Yahoo News

How a Display of Hate Led to a Slogan of Tolerance and Cool T-Shirts – Seven Days

Nearly three years ago in August, white nationalists, neo-Confederates, neo-Nazis and other far-right groups convened in Charlottesville, Va., for a Unite the Right rally. During the event, self-identified white supremacist James Alex Fields Jr. drove his car into a crowd of counterprotesters, killing 32-year-old Heather Heyer and injuring dozens of others. Like most people who saw or heard about the incident in media reports, Richard Cook was horrified.

"After watching the grotesque events, and after a lot of anger and sadness and pacing around, I thought, This isn't the last time this is going to happen," he said.

Then Cook turned that anguish into a way to bring positive energy into the world: with the words "Don't Hurt Anyone."

The gentle imperative is now emblazoned in blocky capital letters on T-shirts and tote bags that Cook envisions in his Winooski condo and enlists American manufacturers to make. At first he just wore the tee himself and carried small batches of them around to hand out. More recently he's established a website for online commerce.

The 49-year-old is quick to note that he is not a graphic designer by training. His professional experience is in development and strategic planning for nonprofits in Washington, D.C., particularly ones with a progressive mission. He continues to offer consulting services.

With some 20 years in this line of work, Cook described himself as "marketing-savvy," a skill that informed the evolution of Don't Hurt Anyone. He liked the idea of a strong but nonthreatening message, spelled out in a simple font and delivered on that time-tested human billboard, the T-shirt. "I used to work for the 9:30 Club," he said, referring to the famous D.C. nightclub, "so I have a punk-rock background. I thought, What would Joe Strummer wear?"

One can, indeed, visualize the politically outspoken Clash vocalist/guitarist sporting a Don't Hurt Anyone shirt, were he still alive. The messaging works for anyone from a kindergartner to a raging granny and is germane to any number of grievances.

"The word 'hurt' can mean a whole range of things," Cook observed. In the main, though, the slogan is simply "about being nicer, kinder, respectful. Those things are sorely lacking."

Basically, Cook has reworded the Golden Rule, put it in a cool typeface and offered it on merch that any of us can wear.

Cook said he has no interest in "becoming a T-shirt mogul," and that appears to be a whopper of an understatement. So far, his "business model" primarily involves giving the T-shirts away.

It started when Cook was on vacation a couple of years ago, staying at an Airbnb in Hudson, N.Y. One morning he went out for coffee wearing a Don't Hurt Anyone tee and was stopped by half a dozen people who asked him about it, he recalled. He ended up getting all of them a shirt.

"And then I doubled down: I made 100 shirts and gave those away. Another 100, gave those away," Cook said. He's handed out "probably 500" of them to date.

Whenever he wears the shirt in public, he gets the same reaction. "Total strangers stop and talk to me, anywhere in the country," Cook said. "I've had a lot of great conversations."

Someone once came up to him and said, "This is kind of like 'Life Is Good,'" he related, referring to another trademarked apparel company. "At first I thought that was a good thing, but then I thought, No, the world is not good for many people."

Cook has sent complimentary Don't Hurt Anyone shirts to select celebrities particularly musicians and DJs and was thrilled to get a personal thank-you postcard from Ian MacKaye of Fugazi. Other bands have "come on board," Cook said, citing Wilco and Old 97's.

Here in Vermont, it's no surprise that Cook connected with popular and righteous DJ and performer Craig Mitchell. "Craig was an early adopter," Cook said. "I think he has one of every prototype I've made ... Craig definitely rocks the shirt."

Mitchell confirmed that Cook reached out to him to help spread the word about Don't Hurt Anyone, as well as to make sure the message wouldn't be seen as treading on that of Black Lives Matter. Mitchell felt it did not. He wears a Don't Hurt Anyone shirt "at least two times a week," he said at Red Square gigs or during one of his virtual dance parties for local nonprofits, which began during the pandemic shutdown.

Wearing the message on his chest feels "really good it's a softer blow, not in your face," Mitchell said. From a DJ booth or a digital platform, he hasn't been able to experience the multitude of in-person conversations that Cook reported, but, he said, "Tons of people will respond with a smile, a wink, a nod, that kind of thing."

While he still gives some product away, Cook is making an effort to turn Don't Hurt Anyone into a viable business. His website displays various styles of shirts for men, women and children, as well as tote bags; subscribers to his newsletter get info on new designs, special offers "or other perks." He's not really making any money, Cook said, but he's "staying afloat."

This summer, Cook was invited to apply for what he called an "experiential network" course at Northeastern University; in it, Don't Hurt Anyone is a case study in which graduate students and faculty will "take an almost forensic look at everything DHA," he said. Cook dubbed the group "tech students with a business bent." Perhaps their assessment will help Don't Hurt Anyone grow as an online apparel enterprise.

For now, Cook seems satisfied just to see people wearing his shirts. "I'm elated. I'm humbled," he said. "I never imagined this would happen."

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How a Display of Hate Led to a Slogan of Tolerance and Cool T-Shirts - Seven Days

A simple but profound call to action | Marion County Record | July 16, 2020 – Marion County Record

A simple but profound call to action

At some point in any protracted discussion there comes a time when opinions no longer are going to change. Everyone has entrenched beliefs, and all the evidence in the world wont alter their opinions.

Its becoming painfully obvious weve reached that point with COVID-19. Those so embroiled in the politics of denial and misplaced concerns about personal liberty no longer can see evidence like the rapidly soaring number of cases in Marion County since government refused to act to protect its citizens.

Polite folks have reached the point where we agree to disagree. Others are at that stage in arguments where foot-stamping, raised voices, hurled epithets, and willingness to accept as gospel the shakiest of evidence that bolsters their position.

Local government, unfortunately, has chosen to appease these people some of whom actually sit, at least for now, on various governing bodies. Like believers in a flat earth, theyre not going to have their opinions changed by this or any other editorial. So at this point, we now switch into a mode of preaching to the choir.

Since government largely has abdicated its responsibility, its now up to us, as individual citizens, to take matters into our own hands.

What can be done?

1. Boycott businesses, churches, schools, and other activities that do not require all visitors and staff to wear face coverings anytime they come within six feet of each other.

2. Do not participate in, become a spectator for, or let your tax dollars be used to support any sport or entertainment event not absolutely necessary to maintaining a functioning society and economy.

3. Encourage schools and colleges to begin planning now to conduct the entirety of their fall semesters and possibly their spring semesters via remote instruction and to cancel all educationally unnecessary extracurricular activities, including sports.

4. Get an advance ballot for upcoming elections and plan to vote for candidates who have based their decisions in this crisis on the best scientific knowledge available, not on the political posturing of radical fringes that deny science or the wishful thinking of plutocrats who care only about making money.

5. Stay at home whenever possible. Shop locally. Converse with out-of-town friends and relatives by phone or computer. Avoid all unnecessary trips outside your home.

6. Continue trying to educate self-absorbed refuseniks who insist this is all fake news, a plot to limit their freedom, or something made up by some Chinese cell phone company or an opponent of President Donald Trump.

7. If you cant make others see the truth, shun them and prevent them from interacting with the community that they seem hell-bent on destroying because its their personal right to do so.

8. Oppose any attempt to extend sick pay or other benefits to people whose dangerous behavior results in their own illness or, worse yet, the illness of innocents who are trying to limit spread of COVID-19.

As a society, we have spent trillions and watched countless businesses and jobs go away not to prevent COVID-19 but merely to keep it from spiking all at once. Too quickly resuming normal activities will make this very serious, multi-generational investment totally meaningless.

In Marion County, we have an aging and not especially well-trained or affluent population. Few of our businesses are entrepreneurial or deep-pocketed enough to weather a storm of this magnitude. The federal government will bankrupt society if it tries to bail everyone out. Our community quite literally is at high risk of devastation if not outright annihilation.

Now truly is the time to come to the aid of our community by collectively stepping up and filling the leadership vacuum exhibited by too many of our elected and appointed officials.

How many wake-up calls do we need before we recognize the Golden Rule: Our masks protect you. Your masks protect us.

ERIC MEYER

Read the rest here:

A simple but profound call to action | Marion County Record | July 16, 2020 - Marion County Record

How do you want to treat others during this difficult time? – austin360

In the past six months we have all been through the wringer, and it has left its mark on us.

More than 135,000 Covid-19 deaths, and we see no end in sight. Forty million people out of work and scrambling for enough money to get by and no real confidence that we will come out of this part anytime soon.

And we are being forced to confront the anti-American multitude of wrongful police killings of our Black brothers and sisters.

Here in the middle of what is going to be the longest, hottest summer, we are tired and discouraged. No one living in America today has ever seen this complex constellation of problems all at one time affecting all of the population.

There is a reason we are going through this crisis. God promised Noah that He would not flood the Earth ever again. He did not promise He would not send a crisis to force us to change our way of life all over the world. And that crisis is now knocking on our global front door.

Heres the Good News. Frequently we pray to God to save us from our mistakes. It makes perfect sense to pray to God to save us from this crisis. And God will hear and answer our prayers, but dont be surprised when Our Heavenly Father uses tough love on us. His answer is: "You made this mess and now you have to clean it up."

Looking at how we are solving our current crisis, we can easily see that we are divided, accusing each other of hoaxes, full of fear, distrusting and resisting many of the positive things we could do to get this solved. This is no way to prepare to greet the big storm approaching us.

Ask yourself this question: Would I want to be in the hospital as a COVID-19 patient? Would I want to have lost my job, be unable to feed my family and threatened with eviction? Would I want to continue to live in the American Dream as a Black person?

If you answered No to any or all of these questions, I suggest you remember one of the rules God gave us, appearing in every religion in the world: "Do unto others as you would have them do unto you." This is not just a good idea, it is the law, and most easily understood as the way Karma works.

Perhaps you have noticed that our current unwanted life disruption is forcing people to change their minds about many issues. The time we have been confined is resulting in our surprise enjoyment in slowing down our lives.

Perhaps we can now see how people who are losing their homes, running out of food and facing eviction are crushed by the system that could be quickly updated to solve these problems. Seeing people of all colors peacefully marching to call our attention to how we treat people of color, is making us examine why this is happening to people just as human as we are.

So, here is the test. If we cannot work together to solve the present crisis with positive outcomes for all, we will not be able to solve the big test that is about to consume our entire world.

I suggest the fastest way to resolve our current problems and prepare to solve the coming global environmental crisis is to examine our own lives and see if there are obvious ways that, by using the Golden Rule, we could change the world.

Chuck Robison, a former Protestant chaplain at the United Nations, is the newly appointed Director of the Kundalini Research Foundation.

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How do you want to treat others during this difficult time? - austin360

A simple but profound call to action | Hillsboro Star-Journal | July 15, 2020 – Hillsboro Star-Journal

A simple but profound call to action

At some point in any protracted discussion there comes a time when opinions no longer are going to change. Everyone has entrenched beliefs, and all the evidence in the world wont alter their opinions.

Its becoming painfully obvious weve reached that point with COVID-19. Those so embroiled in the politics of denial and misplaced concerns about personal liberty no longer can see evidence like the rapidly soaring number of cases in Marion County since government refused to act to protect its citizens.

Polite folks have reached the point where we agree to disagree. Others are at that stage in arguments where foot-stamping, raised voices, hurled epithets, and willingness to accept as gospel the shakiest of evidence that bolsters their position.

Local government, unfortunately, has chosen to appease these people some of whom actually sit, at least for now, on various governing bodies. Like believers in a flat earth, theyre not going to have their opinions changed by this or any other editorial. So at this point, we now switch into a mode of preaching to the choir.

Since government largely has abdicated its responsibility, its now up to us, as individual citizens, to take matters into our own hands.

What can be done?

1. Boycott businesses, churches, schools, and other activities that do not require all visitors and staff to wear face coverings anytime they come within six feet of each other.

2. Do not participate in, become a spectator for, or let your tax dollars be used to support any sport or entertainment event not absolutely necessary to maintaining a functioning society and economy.

3. Encourage schools and colleges to begin planning now to conduct the entirety of their fall semesters and possibly their spring semesters via remote instruction and to cancel all educationally unnecessary extracurricular activities, including sports.

4. Get an advance ballot for upcoming elections and plan to vote for candidates who have based their decisions in this crisis on the best scientific knowledge available, not on the political posturing of radical fringes that deny science or the wishful thinking of plutocrats who care only about making money.

5. Stay at home whenever possible. Shop locally. Converse with out-of-town friends and relatives by phone or computer. Avoid all unnecessary trips outside your home.

6. Continue trying to educate self-absorbed refuseniks who insist this is all fake news, a plot to limit their freedom, or something made up by some Chinese cell phone company or an opponent of President Donald Trump.

7. If you cant make others see the truth, shun them and prevent them from interacting with the community that they seem hell-bent on destroying because its their personal right to do so.

8. Oppose any attempt to extend sick pay or other benefits to people whose dangerous behavior results in their own illness or, worse yet, the illness of innocents who are trying to limit spread of COVID-19.

As a society, we have spent trillions and watched countless businesses and jobs go away not to prevent COVID-19 but merely to keep it from spiking all at once. Too quickly resuming normal activities will make this very serious, multi-generational investment totally meaningless.

In Marion County, we have an aging and not especially well-trained or affluent population. Few of our businesses are entrepreneurial or deep-pocketed enough to weather a storm of this magnitude. The federal government will bankrupt society if it tries to bail everyone out. Our community quite literally is at high risk of devastation if not outright annihilation.

Now truly is the time to come to the aid of our community by collectively stepping up and filling the leadership vacuum exhibited by too many of our elected and appointed officials.

How many wake-up calls do we need before we recognize the Golden Rule: Our masks protect you. Your masks protect us.

ERIC MEYER

View post:

A simple but profound call to action | Hillsboro Star-Journal | July 15, 2020 - Hillsboro Star-Journal

Don’t leave Guy Phillips to voters. The Scottsdale council should at least censure him – AZCentral

Tammy Caputi, opinion contributor Published 6:00 a.m. MT July 9, 2020

Opinion: Leaving Guy Phillips' offensive comment to the voters misses the point.We need leaders who will govern with facts and have the courage to take a stand when it matters.

Scottsdale City Councilman Guy Phillips speaks during a press conference regarding calls for his resignation because of his "I can't breathe" comment at a recent rally on June 30, 2020, outside Scottsdale City Hall.(Photo: Sean Logan/The Republic)

The recent protests about systemic racism have brought national awareness to the issues of justice and equality for all.

When a group of people cant count on the machinery of justice to treat them fairly our country is not living up to its ideals.

Scottsdale need to reach higher as a city. The tumultuous events going on around the world are also felt here at home. This is a wake-up call to do better, not just talk about it.

Scottsdale is a Golden Rule City; we embrace the values of kindness, empathy, respect and civility. Our city leaders have a responsibility to uphold and model our values.

A member of our city council recently degraded the city nationally and beyond. Responsibility to speak out lies with our civic leaders, who must include consequences in their condemnation. Those aligned with Council member Guy Phillips should separate from him, following the examples of the Coalition of Greater Scottsdale, the Police of Scottsdale Association and the United Scottsdale Fire Fighters Association.

Looking for the other side of the story? Subscribe today for access to even more opinions.

As suggested by Gov. Doug Ducey, resignation is the appropriate remedy. If Council member Phillips will not do the honorable thing, then the city council should condemn his conduct publicly.

Leaving this to voters misses the point.We need leaders who will govern with facts and have the courage to take a stand when it matters. We got to this watershed moment because no one helped a man who was being choked to death. We cant stand by while others do something immoral, illegalor unsafeits our duty to stop it.

Scottsdale must be open for business and welcoming equally to everyone. Its the right thing to do, the right message for our city, and the right remedy for Scottsdales brand. We need to leverage this moment of increased awareness of systemic injustices to make our city even better.

We should immediately pass a nondiscrimination ordinance that allows all our citizens to enjoy the same rights. Scottsdale is a golden rule city, and a business and tourism leader; lets own this message.

We needto create a more robust Office of Diversity and Inclusion. The department has one staffer out of 2,000 city employees. It's buried four levels deep on the org chart.We have a Human Relations Commission that could lead on this topic if the mayor and council members made it a priority.

Our neighbors in the city of Tempe lead Arizona in addressing systemic racism. They have invested in a larger staff to support their efforts. They have an initiative called The Right to Breathe,which will examine the areas where there are gaps to better address the underlying issues. They are reexamining core services like schools, courts, and discrimination complaints.

We can collaborate with other cities and share best ideas through the Maricopa Association of Governments with programs that could be consistent on a regional and state level.

Justice is not a zero sum gameone group doesnt have to lose for another group to gain; we can all win. I support fair treatment for all, balancing the needs of all our citizens, including our dedicated public safety/police officers.

The reputation of our city has been damaged and businesses and tourists are being deterred while we struggleto revive our economy and secure our future. Lets be proactive. Lets be leaders. Scottsdale needs to heal the wound and move forwardas a community, better than ever.

TammyCaputi is president of Yale Electric West and a candidate for Scottsdale City Council in the Aug. 4 primaryelection. Reach her at tammy@tammycaputi.com; on Twitter,@tammycaputi.

Read or Share this story: https://www.azcentral.com/story/opinion/op-ed/2020/07/09/scottsdale-city-council-censure-guy-phillips-pass-nondescrimination/5402230002/

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Don't leave Guy Phillips to voters. The Scottsdale council should at least censure him - AZCentral

Letter to the Editor: Black Lives Matter is overdue – The Clermont Sun

I am 65 years old. I was raised in the turbulent 60s and 70s. My father was a Cincinnati policeman and the most racist man I have ever met with the possible exemption of my grandfather.

I cannot imagine my father on patrol. He never had anything but vulgarity to say about blacks.

Luckily, I had many other influences in my life. In particular, there was Mike, an employer and also a mentor. Mike talked of the Golden Rule: Treat everyone the way you want to be treated. That stuck with me, and I have tried to live it ever since.

I went to college in the 70s, a strange time when greed and activism were strong cultural adversaries. I met African Americans and realized that they had many of the same problems, anxieties, and attitudes that I had. I became friends with many of my black American classmates, and I did not blow up as my father would have said.

After college I had many co-workers, some black, some white. I had many bosses over the years, and only one of them was a black man, Clarence, one of the best bosses I have ever had.

In 65 years, I have made friends with many people, black and white and noticed very little difference in the quality of the friendships.

I think racism is a learned trait that is just despicable. There is only one race, the human race. Treat people right and they will treat you right.

I, being a white person, can never know the challenges that racism presents to black Americans.

The videos that have brought into the open the police brutality to black Americans are shocking and enlightening.

I have studied economic data and there is no doubt that racism severely limits the amount of wealth that blacks can accumulate.

A black Americans economic opportunities are severely limited by discrimination.

Black Lives Matter is a movement that is overdue and very timely.

Jeff RichardsMoscow

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Letter to the Editor: Black Lives Matter is overdue - The Clermont Sun

Here’s Something: Signs of the times, part II – Press Herald

Sign, sign, everywhere a sign.

So goes the catchy lyrics from the equally catchy smash hit Signs by Five Man Electrical Band in the 1970s and covered by Tesla in the 1990s.

Fast forward several decades and this phrase fittingly describes the scene along just about every roadway in Southern Maine.

Were in political season now and many roadside signs ask drivers to support one candidate or another. But were also still in a pandemic, and people are using roadside signs as a way to show their support, or disdain, for pandemic-related issues.

Three months ago, when the virus panic was peaking, this column highlighted roadside signs and the near-unanimous messages of encouragement they conveyed. Homeowners along busy stretches of road proudly used their patch of real estate to transmit inspiring or encouraging thoughts on poster board for all passersby to see.

Many of the signs thanked front-line workers, first responders, grocery store employees and delivery drivers. The signs were ubiquitous and artsy and fulfilled their mission to buoy working peoples spirits.

Now, roadside signs signal the cultural changes that are occurring as a result of the pandemic, and more specifically, the governments response. Our society is changing by the day and roadside signs are a good barometer of the developing situation.

In general, it seems the mood of residents, at least the portion I see on a weekly basis on roads in the Sebago Lake area, has shifted from were all in this together to one of quiet desperation (as Pink Floyd, speaking of music lyrics, once sang).

And the desperation and frustration is all around. Of course, its led by supporters of Black Lives Matter, which has plenty of lawn signs urging racial tolerance.

But desperation doesnt appear limited to the BLM movement. Many signs take issue with Gov. Janet Mills handling of the virus. Ive seen in several locations a simple two-word sign that addresses Mills personally and incorporates the ultimate in profanity and therefore cant be shared in a family newspaper. But here is a sampling that can be safely printed:

Raymond: How Maine spells idiot: J-A-N-E-T M-I-L-L-S.

Limington: Hey Janet, its a governorship, not a dictatorship. Open Maine Now!!

Bridgton: Impeach Mills (www.mainerepublic.com)

Buxton: God Help America. Our politicians are taking away our rights. Janet Mills has got to go!

Raymond: Mills kills ME. Every business is essential. End the shutdown now!

Standish: Open America Again!

Signs arent just political in nature. Though not as omnipresent as several months ago, there are still signs conveying support for workers who potentially face direct contact with the coronavirus:

Steep Falls: A frontline hero lives here.

Windham: Thank you healthcare workers.

Naples: Thank you essential workers.

Other signs use the roadside to send a message of good will during this stressful time. Churches use their readerboard signs to focus attention on eternal truths and helpful Bible passages. Many are focused on Jesus Golden Rule:

Steep Falls: Try helping someone.

Standish: Pray for America.

Sebago: Kindness matters. Dont take it personally. Wear a mask!

Gorham: No Hate!

Bridgton: Be Kind. Use ya blinkah. Wear a mask!

Lets hope everything will be back to normal in another three months and roadside signs will be limited to Novembers important election. If pandemic-related frustration is still raging, however, local residents will no doubt use their roadside perches to convey their thoughts, and this column will share an update once again.

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Here's Something: Signs of the times, part II - Press Herald

Letter to the Editor – Wouldn’t following the Golden Rule call on us to wear a mask? – Crookston Daily Times

Shouldnt we all practice the Golden Rule by wearing masks? A new parable for these times may help reconsider how safe the COVID19 virus really is:

Out of the lands of the world rose the free marketers. And they lived high and mighty free of restraints. They believed they were entitled to take all the earths bounty. And those that were not of them, those others, those losers, had sinned and deserved misery. In this, free market hypocrisy denied equally both the lives of the living as well the unborn.

Then there arose a mighty plague in all the lands. A plague that smote the rich and the poor, the high and the low. And many died.

And yet, the high and mighty with their minions denied this fierce plague. They told all who would listen, Fear not. Keep the markets open. Let there be freedom in our lands.

But the wrath of the mighty plague increased. And still more passed through the doors of death. And many families were lost in grief.

Still, the high found sanctuary behind their walls of spiritual pride. As the powerful, they resisted most strongly, as the powerful can. They sold immunity in those churches to all who came in.

The warnings from the wise about such gatherings were not heard. A few could not hide, nor would too many even try to hide from the plague. The high said, We are protected in the blood of Jesus. No harm will come to us. We will be free to worship as we please.

Then again, the high were obsessed with reopening the markets without any care. Despite the now great and still growing death toll, they said, What is more important, free market or human life? What have you got to lose?"

And it came to pass, countless many were stricken dead. A great cry grew throughout all the lands, God, why have you forsaken us?

Finally, in the fever of those who remained, the voice of God was heard at last. You have forsaken me. I sent warnings with few deaths. But your shouts were of remaining free. When more died, your spiritual blindness would not even then let you see. Then after the countless many died, your markets were once more thrown open and again without restraint.

For all these sins, how shall each of you be left not to die?

Erwin R. RudFosston, Minnesota

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Letter to the Editor - Wouldn't following the Golden Rule call on us to wear a mask? - Crookston Daily Times

Coronavirus in Wales: Face coverings mandatory on trains and buses – BBC News

Media playback is unsupported on your device

Three-layer face coverings will be mandatory on public transport in Wales from 27 July, the first minister has said.

At the daily Welsh Government coronavirus briefing, Mark Drakeford said this would also be the case for taxis and other situations where 2m social distancing was not possible.

Last month, Health Minister Vaughan Gething recommended their use.

But he stopped short of making them mandatory.

Transport for Wales said it had worked with the Welsh Government throughout the pandemic and Great Western Railway said it encouraged all customers to follow the new rule.

The Welsh Conservatives questioned why the measure was not being introduced immediately and Plaid Cymru called for masks to be made mandatory for all indoor spaces.

The union Unite said it warmly welcomed the decision.

Mr Drakeford said: "For the sake of simplicity and consistency, as well as being part of our plan tohelp reduce the risk of transmission while on public transport where it is not always possible to maintain a two metre physical distance, it will become mandatory for people to wear a three-layer face covering while travelling - this includes taxis."

Media playback is unsupported on your device

Face coverings are currently required on public transport in England, Scotland and Northern Ireland, while wearing a face covering in shops and supermarkets in England is to become mandatory from 24 July.

Having a different rule for wearing masks on public transport in Wales and England was "not sustainable in the long term", Mr Drakeford said.

"Our decision to make face coverings mandatory on public transport is a combination of the fact that we know as the economy gets back into operation more people will need to use public transport to go to work and for other purposes, and when more people need to use confined spaces then additional protections need to be introduced in order to overcome the fact that two-metre social distancing will not always be possible," he added.

Taxi driver Stephen Clifford, from Newport, does not believe it will work for customers

He said: "Most of people the customers wouldn't wear them.

"We'd lose an awful lot of money. If you've got to have it, you have got to have it. And what if we had to provide them? It's hard to say."

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Asked why coverings were not mandatory in other public spaces, Mr Drakeford said: "The advice of the Welsh Government is that if places are crowded then face coverings are advisory. Where places are not crowded it is a matter for the individual citizen to make that decision."

Coronavirus is now "at its lowest ebb" since the pandemic began, he added, saying the Welsh Government's response had to be "proportionate".

While Mr Drakeford said masks would not be mandatory for shoppers, businesses may ask people to wear them.

He said the retail sector had made "huge efforts" to introduce measures to maintain physical distancing, including putting up one-way systems, limiting the number people who can enter a shop and putting up screens at checkouts.

But, he added: "At this point in time, when the prevalence of coronavirus is low, we are not mandating the use of face coverings in other public places, but many people may choose to wear them - and there is nothing to stop that happening in Wales.

"Our advice may change if cases of coronavirus begin to increase."

The first minister said the Welsh Government had made changes to regulations which recognise there are some occasions when it is not always possible to maintain a distance of 2m.

"These include maintaining hygiene standards and limiting close face-to-face interaction, wherever reasonable," he added.

Mr Drakeford also said 300,000 coronavirus tests have been carried out in Wales, with 17,000 of them positive.

He urged people to carry on following the "golden rules" such as washing hands frequently.

He said there had been a "real change in working patterns, with more people working from home", adding: "We need to see flexible working become a permanent feature of working life in Wales and the Welsh government will lead the way in this."

Reacting to the announcement, Conservative Covid recovery spokesman Darren Millar said: "We must still take every precaution to avoid a second wave of cases, and making wearing face masks mandatory from today may go some way to achieving this - but only if brought in now."

The British Medical Association (BMA) also called for the new rules to be "implemented without delay". It said face coverings should be used whenever people could not keep a safe distance.

Plaid Cymru leader Adam Price welcomed the move but said: "In acknowledging that face coverings make a crucial difference on trains, buses and in taxis, the question must be begged of Welsh Government - why not in shops also?

"The latest guidance, while a step in the right direction, still doesn't go far enough."

Unite Wales regional secretary Peter Hughes said: "This decision will improve safety on our buses, trains and taxis it will also greatly increase the confidence of the general public to travel on public transport as lockdown measures are eased."

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Coronavirus in Wales: Face coverings mandatory on trains and buses - BBC News

On Grand Ole Opry, Margo Price Asks Show to Book the Real Lady A – Variety

In a televised live appearance on The Grand Ole Opry Saturday night, Nashville-based singer-songwriter Margo Price offered an unexpected bit of advocacy between songs, name-checking the group formerly known as Lady Antebellum before suggesting that the show should book Anita White, whom she called the real Lady A.

Price made the suggestion immediately after performing a cover of Skip a Rope, a No. 1 country hit from the 1960s that dealt with racism and other social ills.

Before going into the final number of her set, the title track from her new album Thats How Rumors Get Started, Price said, I would just like to commend the Opry for coming out and saying black lives matter. I think its so important at this time. And I hope that we can continue to go one step further in so many of these Nashville institutions and support the voices of our Black brothers and sisters when they need it most.

She continued, You know, Lady Antebellum has had a platform here. I think it would be really wonderful if yall invited Anita White the real Lady A here to come and sing. You know, country music owes such a great deal of what we have to Black artists and Black music, and there (is) just no place for sexism, racism in this music.

On Twitter Sunday, Price referred to some discord over her remarks. Some people are disappointed by my words about ending racism in this country, she wrote, but I will never be ashamed to stand up for what is right.

Price has not pulled any punches recently in her feelings about the former Lady Antebellum wanting to share the name with the Seattle blues singer who has long used it. Three days before playing the Opry, Price forwarded a news story about the band suing Price to establish that both artists could use the name Lady A, tweeting: Sooooo they changed their name but does the A stand for antebellum or ahole.

Skip a Rope was recorded by Henson Cargill in 1967 and spent five weeks at the top of the country chart in 1968, going on to be nominated for a CMA Award for song of the year. Sometimes cited by country music historians as an example of a golden age of social commentary in the genre, the song included lines like, Cheat on your taxes, dont be a fool / Now what was that they said about a Golden Rule? / Never mind the rules, just play to win / And hate your neighbor for the shade of his skin.

Preceding Price on the Opry Saturday was one of the newest Black country stars in a genre that hasnt always had a surplus of them, Jimmie Allen. Also appearing on the bill (filmed live without an audience) were the Gatlin Brothers; given their avowed support for Donald Trump, that could have made for some interesting conversation backstage, if Price and the Gatlins werent too socially distanced.

Price has not been shy to speak up on other topics recently. Earlier in the month, she tweeted, Would be cool if, instead of arresting peaceful protesters, the police would go downtown on Broadway and arrest bar owners like Steve Smith and all the other asshat(s) who are walking around without masks on and spreading Covid.

Prices TV tour behind her new album continues with two more appearances today. After performing on PBS/CNN Internationals Amanpour, shell be seen in a pre-recorded full-band video on Jimmy Kimmel Live!

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On Grand Ole Opry, Margo Price Asks Show to Book the Real Lady A - Variety

In this time of pandemic | Guest Perspectives – San Mateo Daily Journal

Most of the worlds major religious traditions teach some variation of the Golden Rule, the same rule many kids learn in kindergarten: Treat others as you want to be treated. At the root of this common moral principle lie two fundamental recognitions. Despite our myriad differences, we all want and deserve fair and kind treatment, and we are all deeply interconnected dependent on one another and responsible for each other. In my own tradition of Unitarian Universalism, we express these principles in our covenant to affirm and promote the inherent worth and dignity of every person and respect for the interconnected web of existence.

The COVID-19 pandemic is laying bare with terrifying clarity the truth of these principles. It is reminding us that we literally depend on each other for survival. When I wear a face covering, I protect you; when you wear a face covering, you protect me. And it is teaching us that we are all only as safe as the most vulnerable among us. If we as a society dont protect those who cant afford rent from becoming homeless, we put everyone at greater risk. If we imprison asylum seekers or condone the policies of mass incarceration, we ensure that the virus will continue tearing through our overcrowded jails and prisons and into surrounding communities. And if we continue to disproportionately invest in a broken system of policing instead of health care, education, affordable housing and public services, we will continue to undermine both public health and public safety.

The simultaneity of COVID-19 and the uprisings against systemic racism and police brutality is no coincidence. In addition to our interdependence, the pandemic also reveals where our social, political and economic systems are broken. It reveals the ugly truth of systemic racism that puts Black and brown people at greater risk not only of illness, but also of poverty, unemployment, homelessness, incarceration and police violence.

The great American writer and activist James Baldwin famously said: Not everything that is faced can be changed. But nothing can be changed until it is faced. By forcing us to face truths that have been long denied in this country, the pandemic offers us all a choice. Are we going to give in to fear, hatred and blame, doubling down on the ideologies and practices of individualism, competition, white supremacy and state violence? Or are we going to take this time of shutdown, uncertainty and unrest to reflect on our shared interests and to reimagine who we want to be as people, as communities, as a country?

In San Mateo County, it seems we arent yet sure. On June 23, for example, the Board of Supervisors voted unanimously to adopt a resolution supporting the Black Lives Matter movement and then approved a budget with a $12 million increase to the Sheriffs Office, including nearly $1 million for new Tasers, and substantial cuts to a variety of safety net programs. In a time of pandemic and in a county where three men of color were killed with a Taser by law enforcement in a single year (2018), the juxtaposition between the supervisors words and deeds is stark indeed.

Like our county supervisors, many religious communities, businesses, organizations and individuals are waking up to the long-standing realities of systemic racism and police brutality and declaring publicly that Black Lives Matter. But we cant just affirm that Black Lives Matter in words. We need to affirm that they matter in our budgets, in our policies, in our schools, in our houses of worship, in our workplaces and in our homes.

Historically, writes Arundhati Roy, pandemics have forced humans to break with the past and imagine their world anew. This one is no different. It is a portal, a gateway between one world and the next. We can choose to walk through it, dragging the carcasses of our prejudice and hatred, our avarice, our data banks and dead ideas, our dead rivers and smoky skies behind us. Or we can walk through lightly, with little luggage, ready to imagine another world. And ready to fight for it.

May our descendants remember this pandemic time as the time we learned to protect ourselves by protecting each other, prioritizing the most vulnerable among us. May they remember this as the time we finally harnessed our collective power to build communities of justice and compassion for all, right here in San Mateo County.

Dr. Tovis Page is a Unitarian Universalist seminarian and the program coordinator for the Peninsula Solidarity Cohort, a group of more than 35 religious leaders from diverse traditions working to leverage moral power for the common good in San Mateo County.

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In this time of pandemic | Guest Perspectives - San Mateo Daily Journal

Grad School During a Recession: Is It Worth It? – Rewire.org

Facing a dismal job market during the 2008 Great Recession, many folks chose to ride it out in higher education.

College enrollment grew by three million between 2006 and 2011, according to the U.S. Census Bureau. But some folks who went to grad school in 2010 the very beginning of the recession didn't quite get their timing right.

When they graduated in 2012, the job outlook was bleak, and the economy wasn't recovering as quickly as predicted.

One of those folks was Katie Surma. When the Hartford Courant interviewed her in May 2012, she was about to graduate with a master's degree in forensics science. But she still hadn't landed a job interview yet.

"In the Northeast, employers projected they'd hire 11,584 recent grads in May and June 2011, which would have been a 25 percent increase from 2010," the Courant wrote.

"Instead, they hired 9,589 a 4 percent increase."

The job market was improving. But it wasn't up to pre-recession levels, not even close. That put new grads like Surma in a tight spot.

Today, the U.S. is officially back in a recession. The national unemployment rate peaked at 14.7 percent in April 2020. Depending on who you talk to, recovery is on its way, or could still be a long way off.

It's putting folks back in the same boat. Face a stormy job market, or get that grad degree?

"An advanced degree makes the most sense when you know it is a good match for your interests, the degree you received 10, 15, or 20 years ago may not be relevant in today's job market or the degree is needed for professional or financial advancement in your chosen field," said Elizabeth Venturini, a college and career strategist.

In other words, grad school isn't just a place to wait out an unstable job market. It can be a calculated career move, if you're smart about it.

The first thing you should consider: Is the cost worth it?

"Going to school during a recession can be a smart move if it will allow you to increase your salary and progress more quickly," said Camilo Maldonado, a personal finance expert.

"This is especially true if your company has hiring or promotion freezes."

At the same time, grad school isn't (typically) free. The cost of a degree has skyrocketed over the past 20 years, contributing to the country's current $1.6 trillion student loan crisis.

A grad degree doesn't always guarantee you higher wages either. Do the math: When you graduate, will you be able to afford your student loan payments with the average starting salary in your desired field?

"The golden rule is that loan payments should not exceed 10 percent of after-tax earnings," Maldonado said.

Don't forget to consider your current monthly expenses. Can you still make all your payments if you're spending less time working for a paycheck and more time in the classroom?

Lots of graduate programs are about social interaction as much as they are about what you learn in the classroom.

Master's programs can help you build a bigger, stronger career network than you would have with just an undergrad.

But we're not just dealing with a recession. We're also facing a global pandemic, and that's affecting the way we do school.

"Many universities, including Harvard, have decided to move all instruction online," Maldonado said.

"If you were planning to pursue a degree in which in-person interaction is key, then it might make sense to reconsider. An elite full-time MBA program is a great example because many students and graduates (including myself) agree that social interactions and networking were one of the top value propositions of attending the school."

Some enter graduate programs for academic career tracks. Folks who are hoping to get hired at a university right out of a graduate program might also want to be cautious, as many universities are facing budget shortfalls and hiring freezes.

"Students who are passionate about research and want to go to graduate school should be aware that it will be very complicated for students with non-professional degrees to find research or tenure-track positions in the next two years, at the very least," said Pierre Huguet, CEO of educational consulting agency H&C Education.

But a professional degree like a JD, MD or MBA will still make you more marketable, recession or not.

"While a professional degree isn't a magic formula when it comes to finding employment, it can certainly help students, provided that they've spent enough time building their resumes by pursuing impactful activities during their education," Huguet said.

If you're considering a graduate program at all, it's worth it to do extra digging to make sure you're not wasting your time and money.

"Go to as many graduate school open houses as you can to meet people and speak with them about graduate school," Venturini said.

"Ask for their advice on how they manage the workload and their time. If you are going to graduate school to get into a new industry, take into consideration the amount of time it will take to get up to speed the key players, companies, organizations, professional nuances, industry lingo."

Networking will still be important for landing a job, albeit more difficult with COVID-19 in the mix. Building a network of contacts now, and throughout your time in school, will help ensure that your time in grad school pays off.

Originally posted here:

Grad School During a Recession: Is It Worth It? - Rewire.org

Fact check: Does Red Cross really spend only 9% of its money on charity? – The Columbus Dispatch

The claim: American Red Cross pays its CEO nearly $652,000 while spending $0.09 of every dollar it collects on "people in need."

The claim has been floating around on social media and in forwarded emails for years, but it recently started gaining traction again on Facebook.

The viral post, shared in April 2018 by Mike Totman, shows a woman who is identified as Marsha Evans and says she is the president and CEO of the American Red Cross. It goes on to state her alleged salary and explain how the nonprofit spends its money.

This is not true.

Evans left the nonprofit in 2005. Gail McGovern is the Red Cross current CEO. Shes led the nonprofit since 2008. Her annual salary in 2018 was $694,000.

USA TODAY has reached out to Totman for comment.

Red Cross spending

So, how does the charity spend its money?

Nonprofit groups in the United States have to publicly report what they earn and where they spend it.

The most recent data for the Red Cross comes from its fiscal year ending June 30, 2019. It reported spending 88% (about $2.7 billion) of its $3 billion budget on "program services."

Most of that money, about $1.74 billion, went to what the Red Cross labeled "biomedical services." Thats the part of the charity that collects donated blood and sells it to hospitals and health-care providers. About $667 million went to disaster relief services, according to the annual report.

Selling donated blood is a standard practice, according to a Slate article called "The Business of Blood." Most charities that collect blood will sell it to cover some of their costs. The groups financial statements show more than half the biomedical dollars ($921 million) went to employee wages and benefits.

And what about McGovern? How is she paid?

"Red Cross President and CEO Gail McGoverns salary and benefits are paid from general operating funds," spokesperson Jenelle Eli said. "General operating funds include all revenue and contributions not restricted by donors, contracts or specific program costs."

Those funds amounted to about $103 million, according to the 2019 financial statements.

The American Red Cross also states on its website that "no portion of the compensation paid to McGovern comes from contributions by the public to help people affected by disasters."

What percentage of my donation goes to program services?

"That 0.09 cents statistic is not and has never been accurate," Eli said. "The American Red Cross is proud that an average of 90 cents of every dollar we spend is invested in delivering care and comfort to those in need."

Charity Navigator, a watchdog group that grades charities on their financial health, transparency and fundraising costs, estimated the Red Cross spends almost 90% of its "total expenses spent on the programs and services it delivers."

The Red Cross overall ranking on Charity Navigator is three out of four stars and an overall score of 89 out of 100.

A charity that spent 9 cents of every dollar raised on its programs wouldnt get a good score, Charity Navigator spokesman Kevin Scally said. The nonprofit is working on a new grading system that would automatically fail charities that dropped below 50 cents on the dollar.

"I think its been kind of a long-established golden rule of nonprofits that you want at least 70% going toward your stated cause," Scally said.

A 2014 investigation by NPR and ProPublica said the Red Cross' percentage could be closer to 70%.

The article called the claim by the Red Cross that "91 cents of every dollar that's donated goes to our services" misleading. Fundraising expenses over five years, according to documents reviewed by the news outlets, ranged from 14%-26% of every dollar the Red Cross raised.

Our ruling: False

The post gets both the name and annual salary of the CEO wrong. And though there is some evidence that the Red Cross has spent less than it says on program services over the years, there is no evidence to suggest its ratio is anywhere near as low as 9 cents on the dollar.

Our fact-check sources:

American Red Cross - "Red Cross Statement on Inaccurate Viral Email on Charity CEO Pay"

American Red Cross - "THE AMERICAN NATIONAL RED CROSS Consolidated Financial Statements June 30, 2019"

American Red Cross - How the Red Cross Spends Your Donations

ProPublica - "The Red Cross CEO Has Been Serially Misleading About Where Donors Dollars Are Going"

Slate - "The Business of Blood Does the Red Cross sell your frozen plasma?"

Charity Navigator - "American Red Cross"

Our fact check work is supported in part by a grant from Facebook.

astaver@dispatch.com

@annastaver

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Fact check: Does Red Cross really spend only 9% of its money on charity? - The Columbus Dispatch