Green MSP quits party with claims of tension over trans rights – Belfast Telegraph

One of the Scottish Greens most prominent MSPs has resigned from the party, citing tension around transgender rights.

ndy Wightman announced on Friday that he is leaving the party after more than 10 years as he claimed there is intolerant dialogue within it on questions of sex and gender.

The party, whose Holyrood group has now decreased to five MSPs, said it is deeply disappointed by Mr Wightmans resignation.

Put simply, I cannot operate in this kind of environmentAndy Wightman

In a letter to the partys co-leaders Lorna Slater and Patrick Harvie, Mr Wightman said he will continue to support Green politics despite leaving the party.

The Lothians MSP said he feared expulsion from the party due to his support of an amendment to a Bill passed at Holyrood last week.

The Greens and the Liberal Democrats opposed an amendment from MSP Johann Lamont to the Forensic Medical Services Bill.

The amendment sought to allow victims of sex crimes to be able to choose the sex, rather than the gender, of the person who examines them afterwards.

Mr Wightman said he had been minded to support the move but faced strong opposition from within his party.

In his letter, he wrote: For some time now, since I was admonished for attending a public meeting at Edinburgh University in June 2019, I have been saddened by the intolerance shown by some party members to an open and mature dialogue about the tensions and conflicts around questions of sex and gender in the context of transgender rights and womens rights.

He went on to say he had been threatened with possible suspension, deselection or expulsion if he voted in favour of Ms Lamonts amendment.

He continued: I understand that the Scottish Green Party has a strong commitment to equalities and trans rights.

However, some of the language, approaches and postures of the party and its spokespeople have been provocative, alienating and confrontational for many women and men.

It has become evident to me that the sort of open-minded public engagement I would like to see take place on this topic is incompatible with a party that has become very censorious of any deviation from an agreed line.

Put simply, I cannot operate in this kind of environment and Thursdays vote and the discussions that took place around it were the final confirmation of that.

Mr Wightman said he will continue to work constructively with Green MSPs ahead of next years Holyrood election.

Close

The resignation of Andy Wightman, centre, reduces the Scottish Greens Holyrood group to five (Andrew Milligan/PA)

PA

Responding to his resignation, a spokesman for the party said: The Scottish Greens are focused on building a greener and fairer Scotland that tackles the climate emergency, so Andy Wightmans decision not to be part of our movement anymore is a matter of deep disappointment.

Land reform, empowering local democracy and community empowerment are core Green issues, and Andys contribution has been very important, but the Greens remain committed to carrying on this agenda without him.

The Scottish Greens wish Andy well in whatever he decides to do next.

PA

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Green MSP quits party with claims of tension over trans rights - Belfast Telegraph

Burgess Owens, Utah congressional candidate, to speak at the Republican convention – Salt Lake Tribune

Burgess Owens, the Republican candidate in Utahs tight 4th Congressional District contest, will speak at the Republican National Convention this week.

Owens, a frequent commentator on Fox News, will participate on Wednesday, according to a list of speakers released by President Donald Trumps campaign. Thats the same day Vice President Mike Pence, second lady Karen Pence and President Donald Trumps daughter-in-law, Lara, will speak.

Owens faces Rep. Ben McAdams, D-Utah, in the states most watched federal contest. McAdams claimed the seat in 2018 in a nail-bitter with Republican Rep. Mia Love, winning by fewer than 700 votes.

Owens is a former professional football player who founded Second Chance 4 Youth, a nonprofit aimed at helping troubled kids. He has been a strong advocate for Trump and often wears the presidents signature Make America Great Again red ball cap. He is the only Utahn scheduled to participate in the Republican National Convention.

Im honored to have an opportunity to say a few words, Owens said in a statement Sunday. I love that the theme is land of opportunity, because thats my message. We are the land of second chances. Republican, Democrat, independent, it doesnt matter, we are blessed to have opportunities that some of our ancestors could only dream of.

Owens appeared in an online Wall-a-thon in the summer of 2019, encouraging donations. In that appearance, Owens, speaking about immigrants and the need for a border wall, said liberals are trying to bring in a whole new group of people, people who could care less about our country, do not understand the American way, have not learned our language, our culture. And they will come here and vote for Democrats. And thats what these people do.

Chase Thomas, the executive director of the Alliance for a Better Utah, said Owens should apologize for his appearance.

Its concerning but not surprising to learn that Burgess Owens, a candidate for Congress, was involved in raising money to build this fantasy border wall, Thomas said. Hitching himself to this scam that was doomed to fail from the beginning certainly calls into question his fitness to represent Utahns, and the offensive anti-immigrant rhetoric he helped spread makes it even worse.

In response to similar criticism on Twitter, Owens responded: The true heart of Utahans? Empathy. The lowest unemployment in history for Blacks, Hispanics, Asians, women, Vet & teens. 400% growth in Black business. Highest US employment in history. Results of POLICIES? Americans pursuing HOPES & DREAMS. Who cares about personality & tweets

The Republican convention comes the week after Democrats formally nominated former Vice President Joe Biden.

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Burgess Owens, Utah congressional candidate, to speak at the Republican convention - Salt Lake Tribune

At the conventions midpoint, a liberal and diverse party with older, moderate leaders. – The New York Times

For all of the speakers and images showcasing diversity, and the remarks emphasizing progressive goals, another reality is clear at this midway point in the four-day Democratic convention: This is a party dominated by a 77-year-old white male and leaders from the past with whom he is comfortable, holding to a platform and a campaign that is more centrist and establishment-heavy than left-wing.

Of the eight political figures who got the most speaking time Tuesday, only Sally Q. Yates, the 59-year-old former acting attorney general, is younger than 69 years old. Only Colin Powell, 83, isnt white, and Ms. Yates was the only woman who didnt appear in a capacity as a political spouse.

That will shift somewhat tonight, when Senator Elizabeth Warren and Speaker Nancy Pelosi speak, and major roles go to Kamala Harris, the vice-presidential nominee, and former President Barack Obama. But it wont feel like the future-oriented convention of 2008, when a 47-year-old Mr. Obama minted a new image and new coalition for the Democratic Party.

On the first two nights of the convention, the energy embodied by the partys progressive movement was shoehorned into two speakers: Senator Bernie Sanders, who on Monday urged his followers to swallow their disappointment and back Joseph R. Biden Jr., and Representative Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, who in her 90-second Tuesday slot made a pitch for a movement striving to recognize and repair the wounds of racial injustice, colonization, misogyny and homophobia.

By keeping Ms. Ocasio-Cortez from a prime speaking slot and dividing the keynote address between 17 young-but-moderate officials the Biden campaign focused its convention on the political middle, avoiding obvious land mines for the Trump campaign to exploit.

Even Mr. Bidens selection of Ms. Harris as his running mate was an exercise in tapping a successor who can shepherd the partys next generation without moving it too far left. Ms. Harris, though she briefly endorsed Mr. Sanderss single-payer health care plans, has a long history as a pragmatist.

Democrats certainly hope the combination of Ms. Harris on the ticket and the prime speaking slots given to Barack and Michelle Obama beloved figures, but also leaders from the past spurs Black turnout that sagged in battleground states in 2016. But the key to victory may be holding onto gains in the suburbs, where many women and longtime Republican voters are watching the Democratic Partys older, moderate leaders and envisioning a return to a less chaotic time.

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At the conventions midpoint, a liberal and diverse party with older, moderate leaders. - The New York Times

Look beyond law for answers to the land question – The Star, Kenya

Last week, I spoke at a webinar organised by ICJ Kenya to mark the 10th anniversary of the Constitution. Our task was to respond to the question: Does the Constitution answer the land question?

Drawing on my book to be published this week, I argued that we must look beyond the text of the Constitution and subsequent land laws.

At first sight, Kenya has indeed addressed the land question in her Constitution. In Chapter Five (Land and Environment), it sets out in detail the principles that should govern land and its administration. That chapter is a signal achievement, giving form to what citizens told the Constitution of Kenya Review Commission they wanted: Equality of access to land as a critical productive resource, transparency in relation to acquisition and administration, and a system of land administration functions (such as registries) in close proximity to them.

But

All of this is to be admired in Chapter Five. How then to we explain why Kenyas land inequalities are greater now than they were at the inauguration of the Constitution, with the best land in the hands of a few powerful individuals?

The concentration of land in the hands of the wealthy and powerful has had enormous consequences for ordinary citizens. The forced taking of land has transferred capital to a privileged few, expanding the number of citizens with no resources for subsistence or petty commodity production. Forced to serve as a reservoir of cheap labour, their livelihoods are often dependent on precarious work in cities where their existence is dominated by insecurity.

The attainment of their social and economic rights which shaped the progressive 2010 Constitution is a distant hope. Poor accommodation, domestic and police violence, hunger and a lack of healthcare and access to water are the everyday reality.

Only a wider understanding of the land question beyond the text of the Constitution and other laws will enable us to understand why this so. Prof Yash Ghai has written that to understand the dynamics and functions of constitutionalism, we must pay attention to its social and economic bases. Students, teachers and scholars must go beyond the formal boundaries of the law.

HISTORY

One starting point is to deepen our knowledge of the historical meaning of land reform. In the late colonial period, land reform was a defensive strategy. It was only ever introduced to deal with Kenyans increasingly radical demands over land and their growing challenges to the racial priority given to white settlers and the consequent landlessness of so many.

This perspective allows us to see continuities: in the present day, land reform has also only been on the table as a defensive strategy. The idea is to talk the talk, but only to mask that fact that no substantive concession or change will be allowed to happen that threatens the land status quo.

The class that has benefited from land accumulation can hardly be entrusted with guardianship of a Constitution which, in the form of Chapter Five, seeks to reform a historic system of unequal land relations.

Prof Issa Shivji in his book Accumulation in an African Periphery has explored how at independence a system of racial privilege was replaced with that of ethnic privilege. Prof Atieno-Odhiambo described this as "the tyranny of property" that pitted the haves against the have nots. We cannot understand Kenyan history and specifically its class formation without paying close attention to the history of land.

GOING BEYOND LAW

So, have we put too much faith in the Constitution and in law reform? What are the limits of law in challenging inequalities in land so deeply rooted in colonialism and now benefiting its successor regimes?

For lawyers who wish to be clear-sighted and self-critical, it is important to ask if, by putting so much hope in the law, we have obscured other choices. How land is distributed is the result of political and historical choices. It is not inevitable. But we know from reading Prof Ghai and Prof Patrick McAuslans landmark Public Law and Political Change in Kenya that law was used to achieve land dispossession in the colonial era. The best example was how when the Maasai challenged the legal basis of their removal to facilitate the white reservation of land the courts ruled that the Maasai had sufficient sovereignty to sign away their land in the agreements they had signed in 1904 and in 1911 - a happy outcome for the colonial regime.

Looking back over the past decade, we must consider whether we have allowed our liberal legalism to suppress wider demands for fairer land distribution. Strong institutions alone cannot replace the critical debates we need to have about redistribution, restitution and a reckoning with dispossession.

What intellectual resources are available to us with which to approach this vexed question? How might we shift the current dominant grammar on land - the grammar of law? Have we been too reliant on technical legal solutions to bring about piecemeal change? As law teachers and writers, we must move beyond legal dogma and ask these questions.

WAYS OF SEEING LAND

To do this requires us to find new grammars. Amongst the harms of colonialism was the philosophical assault it involved. Ways of seeing land and our relationship to it were fundamentally changed by the colonial encounter.

Holding land communally, and treating it as an intergenerational asset which carries with it great responsibilities and duties, was viewed as backward. Rather than emphasising a relationship with land (which the South African, Antje Krog, has described as peoples recognition that they are land-owned), importance has been attached to owning land. Land grabbing on a vast scale has been one result.

In a twisted logic, failing to acquire land is presented as personal failure, an outlook summed up in President Jomo Kenyattas question to Bildad Kaggia, "What have you done for yourself? Acquiring land marks you out as special, even when that acquisition has taken place by illegal and irregular means. This is the ethos of the ruling class who believe that by their individual effort they have accumulated wealth and power and can bequeath it accordingly.

This notion is of course built on a deeply gendered and patriarchal model of land and family: A man with a tight grip on his land is expected to have a similarly tight grip on his wife and family. Other ways of seeing land are castigated as backward and wasteful.

The heterosexual family ensures that wealth can be transmitted generationally. A decade-long resistance to the Constitutions provisions on gender representation must be understood in this light. The patriarch and his reproductive wife guard their individual wealth, believing it to be acquired by their unique hard work, and keeping alert to other, more dangerous ways of wishing to organise society. Insurgent demands for fairness - in the organisation of the family (or Parliament) or in access to land - are keenly felt as threats.

This analysis suggests that to assess the past 10 years of the Constitution, we need to think broadly and conceptually. Land wrongs are not episodic. We need to pay attention to structures such as class and the family. We need to see the history of land grabbing not as deviant but as fundamental to the formation of todays state.

For lawyers, this means taking our lead from the University of Dar es Salaam in the 1960 and 1970s and reading and teaching history, economics, political science, and literature alongside law. We must move beyond the formal boundaries of law and we must understand Kenyas reactionary history in both its public and private manifestations. And we must seek to understand the daily struggles of the people in relation to the land and to build out of them a constitutionalism for the people.

Ambreena Manji is Professor of Land Law and Development at Cardiff University, Wales. She has published widely on land law reform and is the author of The Struggle for Land and Justice in Kenya (James Currey: 2020).

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Look beyond law for answers to the land question - The Star, Kenya

The Proms’ patriotic songs are harmless, silly tradition we should leave them well alone – Telegraph.co.uk

What complicates the matter further is the issue raised by Dalia Stasevska, who will conduct the concert (and who is incidentally, only the second woman to do so). She is a keen supporter of the Black Lives Matter movement and she regards this as the perfect moment to bring change presumably because she believes that lyrics endorsing imperial values associated with slavery and persecution need to be eliminated.

This needs unpicking. Every arts organization, including the BBC, has been put in a flat spin by the challenge of Black Lives Matter. Terrified of being caught out or denounced as unconsciously racist, they are all frantically trying to improve their diversity and inclusion policies, shortcomings in which would leave them ineligible for grants and vulnerable to denunciation on social media.

Without for a second doubting that black lives do matter very much and that the black population has been subject to much terrible injustice, it needs to be said that on the arts front, the instant surrender to all BLMs demands and insistences has been moving too fast, to nobodys benefit. Substantial change is desperately needed, but it needs to come slowly and steadily, from within the educational system. Instead it is being forced through via a series of empty gestures and virtue signals, from taking the knee to engaging board members on the grounds of their ethnicity rather than their skills or experience.

Dropping a venerable tradition such as the Last Night of the Proms at a time of national crisis and high emotion, would be just such a move, playing into the hands of the illiberalism of the cancel culture and its contempt for the principles of free speech. The traditions of the Last Night of the Proms may embody attitudes that some of us dont approve of, but so do Wagners operas and Shakespeares history plays. Singing Rule, Britannia!and waving a flag may be as silly in left-liberal eyes as rolling cheese down a hill or Morris dancing, but many people enjoy it and they have a right to do so. The BBC serves the whole nation, and the Proms is a broad church, welcoming all forms and styles of music: purging the Last Night will upset more people than it pleases.

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The Proms' patriotic songs are harmless, silly tradition we should leave them well alone - Telegraph.co.uk

Trump to visit Mills River, NC: What you need to know – Citizen Times

President Donald Trump visited North Carolina Monday to tout the rapid progression of possible vaccines to treat coronavirus. (July 27) AP Domestic

President Donald Trump will come toMills River on Aug. 24, visiting the Flavor 1st Growers and Packers, at least his fourth visit to the Asheville region.

Here are some key facts to know about the president's visit:

Trump will visit a Farmers to Families Food Box program funded through the Coronavirus Food Assistance Program, according to a White House statement. He'lltour Flavor 1st, which partners with Baptists on Mission to build the Farmers to Families Food Boxes. The tour will show how the boxes are packaged and placed into refrigerated trucks and then delivered to families in need. Following the tour, he will deliver remarks outside.

The U.S. Department of Agriculture sponsors the program, and USDA Secretary Sonny Perdue will accompany the president, as will the president's daughter,Ivanka. The Farmers to Families Food Box Program is intended to aid American farmers, ranchers, and distributors and support food banks and food insecure families.

Background: Here's why Trump is visiting a Mills River farmer-owned produce facility

President Donald Trump will come toMills River on Aug. 24, visiting the Flavor 1st Growers and Packers, at least his fourth visit to the Asheville region.(Photo: Angela Wilhelm/awilhelm@citizentimes.com)

The White House has not promoted any sort of ticketed event or access to watch POTUS disembark from Air Force One or Marine One when he lands at AVL, butthe airport hasareas on the east side of the property where onlookers have gathered forpast events.

The tour of Flavor 1st is not open to the public.

Trump is flying into Charlotte and will take a presidential helicopter, Marine One, to Asheville Regional Airport, arriving at 2:20 p.m. A motorcade will proceed to Flavor 1st from there.

On previous presidential visits, including one by Barack Obama, people gathered in the Southridge Shopping Center parking lot, near the Lowe's store, as it affords a view of the airport.

President Donald Trump will come toMills River on Aug. 24, visiting the Flavor 1st Growers and Packers on Banner Farm Road.(Photo: Angela Wilhelm/awilhelm@citizentimes.com)

Sofar, only the White House has announced plans for Trump's visit, which means only official business of the president's office is planned to take place.

Campaign events are organized separately, as the law prohibits most government officials from politicking during their official work. While the law does not apply to the president or vice president, there are federal election laws and measures prohibiting using taxpayer dollars for electioneering.

Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump during a Sept. 12, 2016 rally at the U.S. Cellular Center in Asheville. Trump would defeat Democratic candidate Hillary Clinton to win the presidency.(Photo: Citizen Times file photo)

While this visit technically is not a campaign visit, whenever the president travels and makes public appearances, it generates tremendous media and public interest. So the ramifications can be political.

North Carolina is a "swing state." That means itsometimes goes for the Democratic nominee, as in 2008 when the Tar Heel state went for Barack Obama, and sometimes it goes for the Republican candidate, as it did in 2012 and 2016, with Mitt Romney and Donald Trump, respectively.

North Carolina, and its 15 Electoral College votes, are inplay this year, too.

Modern presidential candidates essentially have unlimited money to spend, says Western Carolina University political scientist Chris Cooper.

Support local journalism. Subscribe to the Citizen Times today to access all of our content online at offers.citizen-times.com.

"Their most valuable commodity they have istime, and (Trump) is going to choose to spend it in swing states where he thinks it's going to make a difference," Cooper said.

Mills River is also a good choice for Trump as it's rural, and Trump does well with rural voters, and it keeps him out of downtown Asheville, which is much more liberal and likely to host more protesters.

Voting starts earlier than you may realize: It has Trump battling the clock in some battleground states

"With Mills River, it's close to the airport, so it's got some obvious logistics advantages," Cooper said. "And this is not downtown Asheville. It's not Lexington Avenue. He doesn't have to pass three hookah shops to get there."

Mills River, with a population of about 7,500, is an incorporated locality that's been growing in recent years, but it remains a largely rural community.

"Itll play as well as any stop could in Western North Carolina," Cooper said. "The only way (Trump) could get any redder (territory) is is he goes farther west."

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Trump to visit Mills River, NC: What you need to know - Citizen Times

Adam Shatz On Albert Memmi LRB 24 August 2020 – London Review of Books

In 1957, Albert Memmi published a slender but explosive book, Portrait du colonis prcd de Portrait du colonisateur, later translated as The Coloniser and the Colonised. Memmi was a Jew from Tunisia; he was in his late thirties and firmly on the left. At the time of publication, France had entered the fourth year of an undeclared war against nationalist insurgents in Algeria; it had lost its imperial foothold in Indochina in 1954 and was now determined to hang on to its possessions in Africa. Most French critics of colonial rule focused on land expropriation, the exploitation of indigenous labour and violent repression. To Memmi, however, these were symptoms of a broader, structural malaise. He depicted colonialism in North Africa and elsewhere as a pyramid of privilege in which European settlers stood at the top, and the Arab Muslim majority at the absolute bottom. Even the poorest of Europeans the so-called petits blancs or little whites had an advantage over the wealthiest of Arabs, as members of the colonising population. As for Jews like himself, they too were colonised, yet they were a notch above the Arabs, and looked to France and the French language as potential sources of emancipation.

As a young man, he had defied his own community by allying himself with Arab nationalists fighting against French rule, but once Tunisia was liberated in 1956, he settled in France. While he believed that Tunisian Muslims had every right to expel the French whod ruled their country as a protectorate since 1881, he had no wish to live under a government that he expected to be strongly influenced by Islam. Memmi, who died in late May, spent the rest of his life in Paris, in an apartment in the Marais, but he remained preoccupied with the question of the lived experience of colonial domination, racism and other forms of oppression. He was especially concerned with the disfiguring effects of oppression on the minds of the oppressed: as he wrote in his preface to James Baldwins The Fire Next Time, injustice, injury, humiliation and insecurity can be as unbearable as hunger. While he insisted on the specificity of each form of oppression analysis had to begin with le vcu, the concrete, unique experience of the dominated, rather than abstractions he captured what they have in common: the humiliating denial of dignity, the compulsion to assimilate the norms of ones oppressors. Nurtured in institutions and ideologies, in education and in culture, racism was driven less by hatred than by what he called heterophobia, the fear of difference. When the dominant society integrated members of racially oppressed groups who assimilated, this wasnt a victory against racism so much as a capitulation to its heterophobic logic. He believed that the victims of racism should proclaim their rights to be accepted as they are, with their differences, rather than to prove their ability to be honorary whites. Lopold Sdar Senghor, the Ngritude poet and independent Senegals first president, praised him as the African who most lucidly analysed our situation as colonised, and who has offered the most fruitful solutions.

In recent years, however, Memmi has become an unfashionable figure. Although he wrote one of the greatest French-language novels about colonisation, La Statue de sel (The Pillar of Salt), a bildungsroman published in 1953, he isnt read in Tunisian classrooms, or much remembered in Tunisian intellectual circles, except among Tunisian Jews in the diaspora. In a sense, hes been reduced to his status as a minority North African Jewish writer. Memmis attachment to Israel is partly to blame: his failure, or refusal, to see the colonial nature of Zionism did little to raise his standing among anti-colonial intellectuals. Nor did the unforgiving tone of his writing about the post-colonial condition: like V.S. Naipaul when he wrote about the Caribbean, Memmi seemed to flaunt his disappointment with, and estrangement from, the world hed left behind.

Yet Memmis decline also reflects a strength of his work: its refusal of consolations (among them inspirational heroism), and its sense of tragedy. Born in 1920, between the poet Aim Csaire (1913) and Frantz Fanon (1925), Memmi shared their opposition to colonial domination and took part in the anti-colonial struggle. But unlike Csaire and Fanon, whose writing celebrated revolt, Memmi saw little poetry or utopian promise in anti-colonial struggle. The face of revolt, he said, isnt pretty and can also lead to injustice, since everyone ... looks for an inferior echelon in relation to which he can appear dominant and relatively superior ... Racism is a pleasure within reach of everyone. Tunisian independence, he predicted, would leave the countrys Jewish community with little choice but to leave, thanks in part to the otherwise laughable privileges they had enjoyed under the French. (On the eve of independence, there were more than 100,000 Jews in Tunisia; today, hardly a thousand remain.) While he didnt criticise the colonised for using violence, and mocked European liberals who did so, he didnt see violence as shock therapy: You dont get out of oppression so easily. It was one thing to remove the external barriers that had confined the oppressed, quite another to remove the more crippling psychological ones. Only a severe and unyielding labour of reflection could pave the way to freedom.

Writing was Memmis way of freeing himself from the long shadow of colonisation. Like Gide, an early model, he was an intensely confessional writer, both in his fiction and his essays. While he considered autobiography a false genre: a life cannot be recounted, he admitted that he had devoted my entire work to writing my life. One of 13 children, only eight of whom survived, he grew up on the edges of El Hara, the Jewish ghetto in Tunis. The Jews of Tunisia were comprised of two communities: the Grana, prosperous Jews of Italian origin, mostly from Livorno; and the Touansa (Tunisians in Judeo-Arabic dialect), poor artisans who had migrated from Palestine in the first and second centuries. Although some of his ancestors may have come from Italy, the Memmis belonged to the latter group. Memmi means little man, and the Memmis were little people who seldom strayed from the ghetto, which both confined them and provided sanctuary.

Albert Memmi, however, showed signs of academic excellence that exposed him to the world outside. Aged seven, he received a scholarship to the Alliance Israelite Universelle, a French-language school for Jews established by European philanthropists. While learning French, his third language after Judeo-Arabic and Hebrew, Memmi began to see what life might be like beyond the ghetto. But this emancipation came with a growing alienation. In ThePillar of Salt, Memmis young hero Alexandre Mordechai Benillouche realises hes trying to pronounce a language that wasnt mine and would perhaps never be completely mine, and that was, at the same time, indispensable to the conquest of all my dimensions. His struggle to create a coherent identity out of so many disparities is symbolised by his name, an unwieldy composite of French, Hebrew and Arabic. Colonialism, Memmi wrote, creates a linguistic drama for the colonised not least for writers for whom the colonisers language is a passport to a wider world.

At the prestigious Lyce Carnot, Memmi studied with the poet Jean Amrouche, a Berber Christian from Algeria, and the French philosopher Aim Patri. In The Pillar of Salt, the teacher Professor Marrou, based on Amrouche, at first strikes Benillouche as an image of salvation, proof that it was possible to be born poor and African and to transform oneself into a cultivated and well-dressed man and that one could master a language that wasnt ones mother tongue. Benillouche admires Marrous eloquence, and his long and elegant fingers, yellowed at their tips by the Oriental tobacco he smokes as he lectures on Racine and Pascal. But he fears becoming like Marrou, a man who, for all the praise hes received in Parisian literary circles, cant extricate himself from North Africa. Desperate to remake himself as a Westerner, Benillouche embraces another model: Poinsot, the philosophical rationalist inspired by Patri, who represents France and an escape from the Eastern world of his father.

That model began to crumble after the fall of France, when Memmi, by then a student in philosophy at the University of Algiers, was expelled from school under Vichys antisemitic laws. As his alter ego reflects: I wanted to reject with all my indignation this new image of France, but, after all, the gendarmes were as French as Descartes and Racine. Memmi was thrown into a labour camp, along with other poor Jews from the ghetto (the Grana escaped). In The Pillar of Salt, Benillouche tries to ingratiate himself with his fellow inmates, but they refuse to welcome him as one of their own. French is now his language, and his pitiful attempts to address them in Judeo-Arabic only remind him how much more intimate our conversations would have been if I had spoken their language. (As Jacques Derrida, a Jew from Algeria, put it: I have only one language, and it is not my own.)

Memmi escaped the camp, and after the war went to Paris to study philosophy at the Sorbonne. When a rumour spread that, as a Tunisian native, he might not be permitted to sit the examination, he asked the president of the jury if this was true. It is not a right, he was told. Let us say that is a colonial hope. Memmi soon grew disenchanted with academic philosophy. I was arriving from North Africa in full torment, I was penniless, I was hungry, and I fell on what? The transcendental game in Kant! He was furious: for me, philosophy was blood, death, war, the human condition. Instead he studied psychology and sociology, and began a correspondence with Jean-Paul Sartre, whose work especially his Rflexions sur la question juive impressed him for its commitment to the bloody concrete of the world of men.

In 1951, Memmi returned to Tunis with his wife, Marie-Germaine Dubach, a Catholic from Alsace, and their son Daniel. He began teaching at the Lyce Carnot and established a centre for educational research. In 1953 he published The Pillar of Salt, which launched a revolution in French literature from North Africa, soon followed by the novels of Driss Chrabi in Morocco and Kateb Yacine in Algeria. Here is a French writer from Tunisia who is neither French nor Tunisian, Albert Camus wrote in his preface. Hes hardly a Jew since, in a sense, he doesnt want to be one. Camus praised him for his incapacity . . . to melt into the anonymity of a class or a race his refusal of the comfort of collective belonging.

The refusal took a toll on Memmi all the more so since he had returned home with a European Christian wife who felt out of place in the Arab Mediterranean, and who was terrified by the revolt against French rule. In his 1955 novel Agar, a portrait of a mixed marriage like his own, an assimilated Tunisian Jew and his French wife settle in Tunis, only to find themselves bitterly at odds. The more she complains about his familys traditional ways and proclaims the superiority of France, the more furiously he rises to the defence of customs hed prided himself on rejecting, and the more resentment he feels towards his adoptive French culture. As Memmi put it: I discovered the couple is not an isolated cell, a forgotten oasis of light in the middle of the world; on the contrary, the whole world is in the couple.

His marriage, unlike that of the couple in Agar, survived. The colonial world that had fostered its antagonisms was coming apart for good. Memmi helped contribute to its dissolution, both as a militant in the independence movement led by Habib Bourguiba, and as a founder of the nationalist newspaper Action, edited by Bourguiba from his prison cell. But he undertook his commitments with a growing ambivalence, described in the journal he kept during the last year of French rule in Tunisia. Published a few years ago in France as Tunisie, An I, Memmis diary is an extraordinary chronicle of decolonisation as experienced by a Jewish supporter of independence who recognises that the end of French rule may compel him to leave.

At a dinner hosted by a Muslim doctor, Memmi asks: Why should the solidarity of Afro-Arab nations be founded on religion, on the past? Why not on common conditions (political oppression and economic demands), and on the search for a common future, for freedom? His host replies: You have to speak for people in the language they understand today in Muslim countries, and the language understood by everybody is religion. Memmi is not insensitive to this argument: the countrys oppressed majority are keen to assert themselves as Arabs and as Muslims, and their demands are just. But justice and freedom at least freedom as he understands it arent the same thing. As a Tunisian Jew of French culture on the left, he writes, I belong to a French culture and its too late for me to change that. For all his opposition to colonialism, I neither wish to nor can allow myself to embrace a hatred or pure anti-French passion that I dont feel ... To deny these difficulties, to not see them, is to close ones eyes.

The revolt exacerbates his tensions with Germaine, who worries that shell be shot in the street because of the colour of my hair. Reading of the killing of women and children by Tunisian rebels, she blurts out: Theyre savages. I dont contradict her, Memmi writes. As much as I myself find these acts truly useless. He replies that the violence of the oppressed has to be understood from a clinical, psychological point of view, that its provoked by the still fresh memory of European atrocities. At the same time, hes troubled by his own silence about anti-colonial atrocities, and fears that he has betrayed his own ethical stance for the sake of the cause, since he never hesitates to condemn colonial repression.

There are impossible historical situations beyond justice and injustice, he realises. This impossibility is what, in his view, his comrades on the Tunisian left many of them Jews from Italian backgrounds more privileged than his own refuse to face. There is a wager in the lefts position on the new nationalisms: that these nationalisms will turn neither towards xenophobic chauvinism, nor towards fascism, nor towards racism . . . This is a dangerous wager. For there is less distance between nationalism and fascism than there is between nationalism and revolution. Memmi did not see this as a reason to revoke his support for the liberation of North African Muslims from French domination. It was unfair to ask people whove been rejected as non-European and non-Christian for so long to open their arms to non-Muslims and non-Africans. But one had to be clear-eyed about the likely price of engagement. We have to help the North Africans win their freedom, even if this freedom not only doesnt benefit us, but even risks injuring us. Historical responsibility and interests dont always coincide. The rest is infantilism. Memmi, in the orbit of the Communist Party but never a communist himself, grasped the paradox of Marxism for left-wing Arab Jews: while the embrace of proletarian internationalism brought them politically closer to the Muslim masses, as a secular Western ideology it intensified their Europeanisation, and therefore their cultural alienation from the masses.

In June 1956, a few months after Tunisia won its independence, Memmi and his family moved to Paris. That winter, against the backdrop of the Battle of Algiers, he met with Sartre, and gave him a copy of an essay, Portrait du colonisateur de bonne volont, a portrait of the good-willed coloniser. The essay, a scathing critique of the European liberal who doesnt see himself as a coloniser yet refuses to embrace the revolt of the colonised, struck a chord with Sartre, who published it in Les Temps Modernes. Its not hard to see why. Memmi echoed Sartres own writings on bad faith and vindicated his deepening conviction that the left would have to move beyond protesting against French repression and torture in Algeria, and give its full backing to the rebels of the Front de Libration Nationale, however bloody their tactics. Sartre may also have read it as a swipe against Camus, who out of loyalty to his mother and the petits blancs of Algeria, and revulsion at the FLNs killings of civilians refused to endorse independence, holding out for a federal solution that would leave the country attached to France. Camus evidently interpreted it that way, identifying a veiled portrait of himself in the liberal coloniser who participates in and benefits from those privileges which he half-heartedly denounces. Their relationship never recovered.

Yet Memmi didnt spare himself in his account of leftists horrified by the grim and often ugly realities of the anti-colonial struggle they otherwise welcome. Formed by a Western Marxist tradition that condemns terrorism, Memmi writes, the left-wing coloniser recoils from the violence of the colonised. He also fears that when liberation comes the new nation will impose Islamic law. To remain committed to the cause, he has to temporarily forget that he is a leftist. His choice is not between good and evil, but between evil and uneasiness, the dilemma Memmi himself faced.

He represents no one, Sartre wrote of Memmi in his preface to Portrait du colonis, but since he is everyone at once, he will prove to be the best of witnesses. Anticipating some of the themes of Fanons The Wretched of the Earth, published four years later, Memmi described colonialism as a diseased situation that manufactures colonialists, just as it manufactures the colonised, its century hardened face . . . nothing more than a mask under which it slowly smothers and dies. Coloniser and colonised, he argued, were locked in an implacable dependence that fashioned their respective traits and dictated their behaviours. Their conduct was contradictory to the point of being pathological. Drawing on his own lived experience in Tunisia, he noted that a coloniser could attend to his workers needs while also periodically machine-gunning a crowd of the colonised. And the colonised could at the same time detest the coloniser and admire him passionately (an admiration that I felt, in spite of everything, in myself).

At the heart of the colonial relationship was privilege, which he insisted is not solely economic. Privilege was a reflection of ones personhood, not just ones property or location in the class structure. The essential horror of colonial subjugation was not being deprived of land, but being deprived of humanity, reduced to objecthood (a fundamental and complete immobility), and subjected to a foreign system of values, that of the white man, the non-Jew, the coloniser. Contrary to Camus, who claimed poor whites like his own family in Algiers were no better off than their Muslim neighbours, Memmi wrote that all Europeans in the colonies are privileged, and that even the poorest coloniser thought himself to be and actually was superior to the colonised. The pyramid could not be destroyed so long as France remained in North Africa: only the complete liquidation of colonisation permits the colonised to be free.

In France in 1957, these were fighting words. Morocco and Tunisia had become independent, but Algeria remained part of France and the entire French establishment opposed independence. When Memmi requested French citizenship, he was told hed never get it because Portrait du colonis was damaging to France. (Thanks to interventions by a few well-placed friends in Paris, he became a citizen in 1973.) He taught in the department of sociology in Nanterre, but remained a loner, and felt little sympathy for the soixante-huitards, whom he dismissed as the coddled children of the liberal bourgeoisie, play-acting at revolution. Memmi received proofs of Lhomme domin as the uprising broke out. The book could hardly have been less timely, given its preoccupation with identity, racism and the oppressive force of whiteness, rather the overthrow of capitalism, the society of the spectacle or the cultural revolution in China.

Lhomme domin applied Memmis arguments about colonial privilege and domination to other groups, notably black Americans. In an essay on Martin Luther King, James Baldwin and Malcolm X, he argued that black Americans confronted not merely exploitation and disenfranchisement, but coercive pressure to simulate the white to the point of becoming him, in order to become, at last, a perfect American citizen, in other words a white American a quixotic aspiration, in any case, since the deep desire, hidden or admitted by the white man, is to totally exclude the black man from his horizon. Racism, he wrote, would disappear only when the oppressed person has ceased to be oppressed, and when they could affirm their identity, since heterophobia was as crucial a mechanism of domination as privilege. What Sartre, who spoke as a white man and as a non-Jew, had failed to understand is that for blacks, Jews and other minorities, collective identity is a positive good, and not simply a provisional response to oppression. And though Memmi was not an advocate of racial separatism, he had more sympathy for it than Fanon, who, like Sartre, saw black consciousness as a stage that would have to be surpassed in the name of larger, more revolutionary forms of solidarity among the peoples of the Third World.

Memmis view was bleaker: while all the oppressed are alike in some ways, they have to fight on their own, free of other peoples expectations or agendas. This had nothing to do with sentimental ethnic pride, which he considered spurious: Ive known for a long time that identity is never identical to itself, neither in space nor in time, neither in an individual nor in a group, that this whole business is largely imaginary. But history had turned this imaginary marker into something real, or as he put it, concrete, and he doubted it could be transcended. His experience of the tensions between colonised Arabs and Jews in Tunisia had led him to look askance at liberationist rhetoric, and at the prospects for alliances between oppressed groups whose histories were distinct and sometimes clashing. As Memmi saw it, oppression divided more than it united its victims; the psychic damage it inflicted would be a lasting obstacle to those who, like Fanon, dreamed of creating a new man in the Third World. Although his political sympathies were with the dominated, Memmi described their condition as nearly inescapable, thanks to the limitations imposed by the concrete. In the case of women, he argued, the concrete was not simply a fact of history but of biology. In his essay on Simone de Beauvoir, he wrote (with a condescension of which he was altogether oblivious) that in spite of her intense cultural life, prestigious companion, money, and literary and social success, she failed to achieve the summit of the feminine condition because she never had children. The refusal of feminists like Beauvoir to bear children, he claimed, had caused their thinking to fall into abstraction.

This was also his quarrel with Fanon, whom he accused of succumbing to revolutionary romanticism. Memmi never met Fanon, who arrived in Tunis a few months after hed left for Paris. But they had a number of things in common: friendship with Sartre, a fascination with the psychology of colonisation, involvement in North African independence movements. Fanon, however, had a more dynamic sense of historical possibility; he wanted to revolutionise the anti-colonial revolt, to push it beyond a narrow nationalism, even to create a kind of United States of Africa. Unlike Memmi, he said little about Islams importance in North African nationalism and hoped that the commitment European and Jewish militants had shown to the independence struggle would insure Algerias future as a multi-ethnic society. This was a vision he shared with a small but influential group of leftists in the FLN, and with Tunisian-Jewish communists whom both he and Memmi had known in Tunis.

For Memmi, this vision rested, again, on a denial of the concrete: the self-hatred and mutilation of the colonised, and their desire to reclaim and assert their identities, religious and national, rather than initiate a socialist revolution. When he revisited Fanons work on the tenth anniversary of his death in 1971, Memmi argued that Fanon should have gone back to Martinique, rather than try to reinvent himself as an Algerian. He was a black man, after all, not a white African; he ought to have known his limits and respected them. Instead of making common cause with North African Muslims who would never accept him as one of their own, he could have helped his people, as Aim Csaire had done.

The irony of this indictment was that Memmi himself had chosen to live in France, not in Israel, among his people. Still, his critique of Fanon was coloured by his Zionism, which he described as the national liberation movement of the Jewish people. The struggle over Palestine, he said, was a minor drama in a small corner of the world. Although he supported the creation of a Palestinian state, he didnt raise his voice against practices of repression that he had condemned in colonial North Africa or against the exclusionary system of ethnic privilege and domination on both sides of the green line between Israel and the Occupied Territories. Memmi might have replied, in his defence, that the face of the oppressed is seldom pretty; he knew that victims could become perpetrators. He was also bitter at the exodus of North Africas Jews after independence. Still, a writer so attuned to paradox, ambiguity and historical contingency and to the bad faith of the left-wing coloniser who refuses to support the liberation struggle might have made something of the fact that, at the very moment the colonial empires of Europe were falling, the victims of Western antisemitism had driven another semitic people into exile and established a highly militarised colonial settler society permeated by racial discrimination. But he refused to apply his own analysis of colonial privilege and heterophobia to the question of Palestine. In one of his last television appearances he remarked that while the two thousand Palestinian civilians whom Israel had killed during the Second Intifada were two thousand too many, the number hardly compared to the million killed in Rwanda, a country that had never previously elicited his concern.

In his 2004 Portrait du dcolonis arabo-musulman et de quelques autres (Decolonisation and the Decolonised), Memmi proclaimed his great disillusionment with the post-colonial world. There has been a change of masters, but, like new leeches, the new ruling classes are often greedier than the old. Post-colonial authoritarianism and corruption, he argued, were driving the decolonised citizens of the developing world into a zigzag march between an increasingly frayed national present and a distant utopian future. Those lucky enough to obtain visas had emigrated to the lands of their former masters, who needed them in factories but lacked the capacity, or will, to absorb them as fellow citizens: immigration, the punishment for colonial sin, was generating a new and intractable conflict between the decolonised and their European hosts. Far from crossing from purgatory to paradise, the decolonised immigrant

discovers that he has moved from one purgatory to another, one that is more comfortable, but one to whose laws he must submit. From now on, rather than simply demanding the complete citizenship so often talked about, he will keep his distance. He is expected to be transparent; on the contrary, he will become more opaque, he will become part of the ghetto.

Still more alienated were his children, especially his sons, for whom Memmi mustered decidedly less sympathy. Memmi described the son of the immigrant as

a kind of zombie, lacking any profound attachment to the land in which he was born. He is a French citizen but does not feel in the least bit French; he shares only partially the culture of the majority of the population and certainly not their religion. For all that, he is not completely Arab. He barely speaks the language, which is still used by his parents, to whom he answers in French or some blend of the two incomprehensible to outsiders . . . If he travels to his parents homeland, he discovers the extent to which it is not his own. And he would never dream of moving there, as if he were the inhabitant of another planet. And, in truth, he is from another planet: the ghetto.

A year after the publication of Memmis book, the children of Frances ghettos, banlieuesards furious over police violence, racism and poverty, set fire to their cits. But Memmi had little to say about these structural conditions and seemed more troubled that ghetto residents had fallen prey to Islamic fundamentalism, antisemitism and what he called dolorism a tendency to exaggerate ones pains and attribute them to another. While he admitted that the children of postcolonial immigration experienced a form of stationary dismemberment, torn and pulled from every side, he argued that if they wished to advance in their host society, they would have to stop their antisocial behaviour by which he meant everything from drug-dealing and singing violent hip-hop lyrics to outward signs of piety such as the hijab and assimilate. We must say again that one cannot live with resentment for ever, especially if you wish to live elsewhere than your homeland. The defender of the right to difference seemed to have succumbed to the heterophobia he had once denounced. The books title referred to the Arab-Muslim decolonised: it did not discuss decolonised Arab Jews like himself; or, for that matter, the religious fundamentalism and militarism that Israel shared with post-colonial Arab states.

As Lia Nicole Brozgal argued in Against Autobiography: AlbertMemmiand the Production of Theory (2003), he now stood resolutely separated from the object of his description. Addressing himself to that object, he wrote sternly: we must . . . speak the truth to them, because we feel they are worthy of hearing it. He spoke as a French citizen, committed to the model of lacit, and they, the descendants of North African Muslims, the people with whom hed grown up and for whose independence he had fought, would have to conform. While there was a certain honesty to Memmis refusal to speak from the perspective of a formerly colonised man, an acknowledgment that his status had irrevocably changed, his lack of empathy left a sour taste. When Tunisias young rebels overthrew the Ben Ali dictatorship, he dismissed the Jasmine Revolution as a collective delirium.

In some respects, Memmi had realised the dream of his hero Alexandre Mordechai Bennilouche to become a Westerner like his lyce teacher Poinsot. Yet he never quite succeeded in turning his back on North Africa. His attic in the Marais was a library of Tunisian books, paintings and memorabilia: his petit pays portatif, or little portable country, he called it. He continued to call himself a child of the Hara, even if in the eyes of some hed become a mandarin. Neither a lifetime in France nor French citizenship could make him a Frenchman: France was his home, but his real country, he said, was the French language. He continued to write novels set in Tunisia, and also dedicated himself to expanding imaginative and geographical boundaries by editing anthologies of North African writers of French expression. If the Swiss Jean-Jacques Rousseau and the Belgian Henri Michaux could be considered French writers, he said, so could the great Francophone writers of Africa. In his commitment to North African literature in French, Memmi helped free French literature from its own provincialism, its nombriliste focus on the lives of the French white middle classes.

In his 1985 essay Ce que je crois, he said that when French friends told him

Lets forget the past (they mean: colonisation, racism, foreignness, poverty), youre one of us now, I think: yes, now, maybe; but am I sure of this? Im not even sure of myself; I no longer even know if I still want to be one of you.

The old aggression of colonisation had almost ended, but Memmi was the first to admit that he still carried the wound in myself. It was this candour about his inner struggle the unease of the colonised that, unlike colonialism, he never escaped that distinguished his best work. In a preface to one of his anthologies, he looked forward to a day when a person can belong to two or even three communities without being considered a traitor or a monster. Memmi himself had experienced being a mtis [mongrel]of colonisation mostly as a stigma and a burden, but his writing showed that having multiple identities can be an epistemological advantage, even in a world still struggling with the legacies of colonialism and white supremacy a kind of privilege.

Original post:

Adam Shatz On Albert Memmi LRB 24 August 2020 - London Review of Books

US Elections: Why The Democrats Seem To Be Moving Away From The Idea Of America – Swarajya

The American Democratic Party National Convention (DNC) has cleared former vice-president Joe Biden as the partys candidate for the 2020 presidential elections, and a half-Tamilian Brahmin woman with Chennai roots, Kamala Harris, as his running mate.

Departing from the standard practice of colourful, quadrennial pageants, when politicians would address large, eager crowds in packed auditoria, it was held online this time in light of the ongoing Wuhan virus pandemic, with keynote speakers addressing their supporters digitally.

The crux, as always, was about getting people to vote in larger numbers, since results are dependent on voter turnout.

In 2016, Republican Donald Trump won with less than 60 per cent of Americans voting, and incongruously swung the Electoral College even though he got 2 per cent less votes than his opponent, Democrat Hillary Clinton.

This is important because the apparent oddity of Trump winning more seats with fewer votes manifested itself only because of the incredibly huge landslides Clinton got in two states California and New York.

If we discount these two which Clinton won, 39 of the remaining 48 states showed a material swing towards the Republicans.

In political terms, the best way to counter that is to somehow increase Democrat voter turnout (much like how former Madhya Pradesh chief minister Kamal Nath was caught on video, asking Muslim voters to come out in larger numbers and defeat Bharatiya Janata Party in 2019).

Its simple math: an enhanced partisan voter turnout can neutralise negative vote swings, without needing to try and woo back those who switched sides.

But the methodology employed to that end by keynote speakers at the DNC, offered an interesting perspective on the nature and evolution of liberal democracies globally: if taken at their word, the seniors of the Democratic Party demonstrated a strangely puerile distancing from the idea of America, in their quest for more Democrat votes, and an oddly increasing similarity to our own secular parties.

This does not augur well for American democracy, and could mark a gradual, epochal shift of genuine, grassroots democracy away from the West, to the Indian subcontinent.

A word on the main speakers first: arch-Leftist Bernie Sanders (Red Bernie to many) spluttered his way through a polemical diatribe against Trump, and offered his support to a slew of socialist welfare measures. His rhetoric was framed in alarmist, apocalyptic, existential terms, and offered no advice on the economy.

Michelle Obama too, made a strong, emotional appeal, laced with the same sense of alarm, doom and gloom.

Maybe there is some method in such madness; playing the gender, fear and race cards together may work to invoke a sense of pathos, and reduce voter apathy, but only Americans will fall for the audacious, saccharine-laden apophasis of someone who talks politics by saying she doesnt talk politics.

An assortment of turncoat Republicans were given top billing, to explain why Trump had to go, on the apparent assumption that former Republicans badmouthing Republicans would induce Republicans to vote against Republicans.

Rather than being a meaningful electoral ploy, this was a convoluted tactic masquerading as strategy, which only highlighted Democrat frustrations at being wholly unable to attract votes from Trumps core base.

Things have reached such a state that Republicans are being wooed with a surreal sales pitch called Biden conservatism: a small tent within the Democratic camp which proposes hold your breath that Republicans vote for Biden in 2020, so that they may unseat Trump now, and reclaim their own Republican Party in 2024. These snake oil salesmen would have better luck hawking toothbrushes without bristles.

Hillary Clintons ephemeral return from political wilderness, for the DNC, was tinged by the secret hope of anxious Democrats, that she put aside her habitual churlishness for once and be a team player; she did, but the effort showed.

In a brief speech endorsing Biden-Harris, she referred to herself half a dozen times, before castigating Trump, advocating more social spending, encouraging voter turnouts, and plugging the race vote with a salute to the militant Black Lives Matter movement.

Barack Obama was the star turn, the darling of the liberals, and he didnt disappoint.

Over 20 anguished minutes, the man informed his party that Trump was a reality show, a disinterested attention-seeker (whatever that means), a nepotist (read crony capitalist), a gold bricker, and someone who uncompromisingly degraded institutions. (Trumps response was a crisply-timed tweet through extra cover to the boundary: Welcome, Barack and Crooked Hillary. See you on the field of battle!)

But the strange thing is, while Obama and other speakers repeatedly, and petulantly, laboured to highlight Trumps personality flaws, and portray him as uncouth, unfit or unwise, none of them offered any rational explanations on why they thought Trump was bad for America.

Instead, the Democrats only highlighted a surprisingly-structural policy cluelessness, as a result of which, the sole, real counter they had to Trump, was a promise of greater social spending.

This was eerily reminiscent of Rahul Gandhis campaign in 2019, Rafale, Rafale, Rafale, chowkidar chor hai, and the freebies of his NYAY welfare scheme (American economist Abhijit Banerjee and Chicago green-carder Raghuram Rajan were involved, inter alia), which flopped before it could be launched.

The Democrats rhetoric vacillated between outrage, cloying mawkishness, frightening negativism, and a superficial, Yankee version of faux Ganga-Jamuna tehzeeb, when the actual truth is that black and white live together and apart, peaceably, in Middle America.

People talked voter turnout, welfare, and race, but no one talked economy, except to the extent that they acrobatically interpreted increased social spending, as being somehow synonymous with economics.

How times have changed. Once upon a time, it was our liberal elite which aped the West and sought to mould us in their casts. Now, it is the liberal West which apes our secular, socialist, elitist proficiencies in electoral welfarism, and the unworthy division of society along sad lines of mistaken identity, for electoral profit.

The Democratic Party is now so similar to our Congress, communist, and social justice parties, that you half expect the Democrats to shortly invite Akhilesh Yadav there for campaigning on his bicycle. No wonder they have black liberals who write books equating caste with race.

This is the sort of institutionalised fatuousness which passes for political theory in America today. Not that Europe is any better; the debate over the burkha showed that you could either have democracy, or a ban on the burkha but not both in the same space.

Americans taking offence to statues and pulling them down are intrinsically no different from Europeans taking offense to a traditional Muslim garment, or the Taliban destroying the Bamiyan Buddha because they find idolatry offensive.

The similarities dont stop there. Democratic Party affiliates, who paid to bail out black rioters arrested during the Black Lives Matter riots, are no different from their Indian Congress counterparts, who maintained rigid focus on the objectionable Facebook post of a young man (he made derogatory remarks about the Prophet Mohammed, in response to someone who abused a Hindu god), while conveniently glossing over the violence and mayhem of Muslim arsonists, who torched vehicles, homes and police stations during the recent Bangalore Janmashtami riots.

Barack Obamas wooing of the white vote was no different from Rahul Gandhi wooing Hindus with his temple runs, or his Shiva bhakti. Nothing is changed, and both are still too slick for their own good; Obama still tries too hard to be whiter than whites, while Rahul Gandhi tries to be more Hindu than Hindus.

The fact is that its the same electoral formula: consolidate the minority vote, entice the fence-sitters who still rhapsodise about Chacha Nehru (or John F Kennedy, if in America), add a little guilt-tripping for impetus, and secure the popular mandate.

The high political profitability of such a strategy is obvious, when we note that the non-Caucasian vote (Hispanics, Blacks, and Asians, mainly) is now up to near 40 per cent in America. With each passing year, the Democrats therefore need less of the white Christian vote to secure a mandate, as long as they stick together and vote en bloc.

So, the empty political rhetoric of the DNC speeches show that even as India finally starts to shed its secular hypocrisies, for a mature, equitable, Dharmic democracy, American children of a European Enlightenment are slowly junking classical liberalism, Jeffersonian exceptionalism, and Christian morals, for crude political tools of the atheist, militant, activist, vote bank variety. One society is advancing politically while the other is regressing.

This sinking debasement of once-evolved Occidental thought, to the benthic depths of immature schoolgirl activism, is contrasted by an inexorable Asiatic sobriety, which now seeks to propel society beyond postcolonial politics, to civilisational policies.

A decades-long American custom of dumbing down, and legitimising mediocrity, has reached the substratum of traditions and principles; the bedrock of societal patience has been hit, and Berkeley progressives can dig no more, since mom, the flag, and apple pie are now at stake.

American liberalism has become effete. And if they bend any further backwards for the minority vote, their spines would snap. All they have left is a few ugly shards of race, with which to shred a beautiful land their forefathers fashioned.

If this keeps up, it is entirely possible that parts of America may become mired in a weird sort of zombie-anarcho-Marxism in the coming decades, along deeply polarising fault lines of violent racial identity much as India was between the 1960s and the 2000s. That will have global consequences.

As much as we would like to believe in stasis and terra firma, the truth is that the worlds axis shifts constantly. The North Pole once hosted crocodiles in a tropical environment, and there were palm trees in Antarctica.

Similarly, India was devising radical advancements in surgery and metallurgy while Europeans were living in caves, and deriving formulae of trigonometry, while wild tribes dueled in Asia Minor using swords forged from Deccani steel. And yet, a majority of that same India couldnt put a square meal on the table, while a rocket put the Sputnik satellite in space.

That is changing, and there is now a clear divergence in the force: the tiny liberal democracies of Europe are growing increasingly irrelevant, and illiberal, as India gets its act together. With each passing year, the world is slowly reducing to the Big Four Russia, China, America and India. And only two of those are democracies.

So if Yale-Berkeley liberalism becomes the driving force of North America post-November 2020, it is conceivable that domestic social strife and culture wars in the new world could cause two to shrivel slowly to one, and create an imbalance of power.

That is how important the 2020 American presidential elections are (much as 2019 was for India and the world).

Thus, a conclusion for the short- to mid-term is that India must be prepared to respond cautiously, to fairly dramatic shifts in American policies, if Biden is elected president.

But whether Biden wins or not, the Democrats would do well to learn from India, that the politics of fear doesnt have happy endings. America deserves better.

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US Elections: Why The Democrats Seem To Be Moving Away From The Idea Of America - Swarajya

Why we look to nature in uncertain times – BBC News

The movement had a counterpart in Britain, where in 1976 John Seymour's book The Complete Book of Self-Sufficiency was published. Like Ruskin and co before him, he believed industrial society to be damaging, finding freedom in the backbreaking work of self-sufficiency. His book provided advice on everything from how to plough a field to how to kill a pig, selling more than a million copies and helping to inspire the satirical TV hit The Good Life. Things were forever going wrong for central characters Tom and Barbara. Their methane-powered car continually breaks down, the generator packs in, they cant bring themselves to slaughter one of their chickens for supper. Adding to the comedy, they were striving for self-sufficiency in the heart of suburbia, but their fictional setbacks werent entirely unrepresentative of how many a back-to-the-land adventure has panned out, irrespective of time and place. After all, no amount of idealism can make up for crippling inexperience, and theres a lot more to it than simply sowing a handful of seeds, as disenchanted social media posts featuring pencil-thin carrots and stunted radishes attested this summer.

There is, of course, an altogether darker strand to the history of such movements. In 19th Century Germany, for instance, some of the notions that the Arts and Crafts Movement embraced about the purity of rural ways of life coined the expression blut und boden (blood and soil). By the 1930s, that had mutated into a key Nazi slogan. Even today, it hasnt gone away: recently, the country has seen a growth in right-wing extremist organisations with links to environmentalism and organic farming. Likewise, in America, fans of self-sufficiency include not just liberal environmentalists pursuing a life free from the taint of capitalism, but also right-wing survivalists. Meanwhile, in China, where young artists have begun to leave cities for villages abandoned in the nations rapid urbanisation, the ghosts of Chairman Maos Down to the Countryside Movement linger on. Beginning in 1968, it saw the forced rural relocation of some 17 million 15- to 23-year-olds 10% of Chinas urban population at the time to learn the superior ways of peasants, creating what many believe to be a lost generation.

Lasting legacies

Its easy to poke fun at the dreamers who willingly turn their backs on city life in search of a simpler, more authentic-seeming existence in a yurt or on a commune. All too often, they hail from the ranks of the privileged dilettantes who can afford to be idealistic. And yet, in the end, whats surprising isnt that so many of these experiments fail, its that they bring about enduring change regardless.

The Arts and Crafts Movement, for instance, petered out with World War One, having never solved the problem of how to make its beautiful, costly goods accessible to the urban poor they sought to save. However, it not only had a lasting aesthetic impact on British cultural life, its principles influenced the founders of The National Trust and The Society for the Protection of Ancient Buildings (SPAB). The former was brought into being by housing reformer Octavia Hill, Lake District cleric Canon Hardwicke Rawnsley and solicitor Sir Robert Hunter. All three shared a love of nature and a deep faith in its healing power; for Hill and Rawnsley in particular, they had Ruskin to thank for it. Both struck up friendships with him as idealistic youths, and it was in fact he who introduced them. As for the SPAB, its manifesto a significant document in the history of building conservation was written by William Morris himself. His co-author was architect Philip Webb, a close friend, collaborator and fellow Arts and Crafts advocate.

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Why we look to nature in uncertain times - BBC News

After UAE Deal, Will Liberal Zionists Stand on the Right side of History? – The Jewish Press – JewishPress.com

Photo Credit: pixabay

{Reposted from the JNS website}

The forces of darkness in the Middle East are panicking. One of the most powerful Arab countries in the world has made peace with the dreaded Zionist enemy.

For these forces of darkness, anything that challenges the demonization of the Jewish state is a disaster. In order for these regimes to survive, Israel must remain the irredeemable sinner, the evil oppressor of Palestinians, the Jewish invader who took over holy Muslim land.

This dark view of Israel has long been the mothers milk sustaining the dictators of the region, keeping attention away from their own corruption, incompetence and oppression of their people.

The problem is that in the long run, any model based on lies and manufactured hatred is not sustainable. At some point, people wake up. People have to eat and make a living. People have to envision a better future.

This opens them up to other truths.

The United Arab Emirates (UAE), in making a historic deal with Israel, woke up. In fact, they woke up a while ago.The difference is that now, theyre coming out. Theyre not hiding it. Theyre telling the world and the people of the region: Israel is not our enemy. Israel doesnt want to invade us. Israel has a lot to offer.

This is an earthquake, a call to Israels Arab neighbors to look to the future rather than the past. Emotions that dwell on the past, such as resentment and humiliation, are paralyzing. Emotions that look forward, such as hope and optimism, are liberating.

But lets not celebrate too soon. The past will not go down without a fight. Evil dictators of the region have one key interestto stay in power. To do that they must keep alive the traditional view of Israel as the great sinner rather than the emerging one of a great partner.

Have Arabs been lied to all these years about Israel?

Its no surprise, then, that leaders of Iran, Turkey, Hezbollah, Hamas and the Palestinian Authority are freaking out over this latest deal. You can see them desperately clinging to their old model, accusing the UAE of betraying the Palestinian cause and aiming to isolate them while warning others not to follow suit.

These forces are panicking because the UAE has shattered the model of the Palestinian conflict as the key to progress in the Middle East. If anything, the conflict has been the biggestobstacleto progress, the ideal excuse for nations to stay stuck in the past.

Cunning Palestinian leaders have always understood the power they were given by other dictators. As long as they remained the poor victims and Israelis the evil oppressors, their power was secured. It was a regional con game, and most of the world was in on it, intentionally or not.

Many Jews were in on it, too. Their genuine and heartfelt critiques of Israeli policies vis--vis the Palestinians were not received that way by Israels cynical enemies. Instead, they were seen as Jewish reinforcement for the Israel-bashing narrative that kept leaders on their thrones.

Even now, despite a historic agreement that gives new hope to the people of the region, you can see liberal Zionist groups contorting themselves to keep the old model alive: Yeah, this new deal is nice, theyre saying, but Israel must stop oppressing the Palestinians.

Resolving the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, of course, would be incredible. But relentlessly pressuring Israel while ignoring the lies, cynicism and Jew-hatred on the other side hasnt worked. It has only fed the power games of corrupt leaders and failed both the Palestinian cause and the cause of peace.

Have you ever wondered why decade after decade, as Palestinian leaders have flown around the globe in private jets complaining about Israel, the plight of their people has only gotten worse? They want you, theyneedyou, to believe its all Israels fault.

Now, that worldview has been shaken. The UAEs courageous move to put the interests of its nation ahead of the interests of dishonest Palestinian leaders has opened a new door for real progress.

New truths and hard questions may be dawning in the Arab world, such as: Have Palestinian leaders failed their own people? Have Arabs been lied to all these years about Israel? Is it true that Jews have a deep and biblical connection to the land and to Jerusalem? Can Arab nations indeed partner with Israel for a better future?

This new moment is a big test for American Jewry. If liberal Zionists allow their opposition to President Donald Trump to limit their support for a new direction that can transform the Middle East, they will fail both the Zionist and the Arab cause.

But if they tell Palestinian leaders they no longer have veto power over progress in the region and its time for them to negotiate in good faith; and if they encourage other Arab states to follow the UAE lead and make a seminal peace with Israel, well, they would endorse a major accomplishment of the Trump administration right before an election.

Like I said, quite a test.

The rest is here:

After UAE Deal, Will Liberal Zionists Stand on the Right side of History? - The Jewish Press - JewishPress.com

Trump supporter kicks tenant out after political disagreement, showing renters live at the whims of landlords – Mississippi Today

Anna Wolfe

Editors note: This article contains language that some readers may find offensive.

Whitney Wages first found her landlord, 77-year-old Wilma Hughes, wearing a housedress and sitting on her porch swing during Wages search for a new home in March of 2019.

Wages, 31, recalls the first words Hughes, co-owner of a large plot of land and several rentals off a county road outside of Oxford, said to her: Well, shit! Took you long enough.

Wages, who is white, disabled and depends on a patchwork of public assistance, said it was the nicest place she ever lived. So the college-educated artist and baker grit her teeth at Hughes offensive and racist remarks up until Hughes forced her out of her rental last month, calling her a welfare POS.

I dont know what I did to displease her, Wages said. I did everything she asked but go get a fucking watermelon from the goddamn farmers market on a Tuesday.

Mississippis housing laws heavily favor landlords, resulting in outcomes for renters that are completely personality driven, said Desiree Hensley, who runs the Housing Clinic at the University of Mississippi School of Law.

Because renters have little control and protections over their dwelling, experts say, the tone of the personal relationship between a tenant and landlord can play as big a role as anything when it comes to evictions and expulsions.

That did not bode well for Wages, a liberal-thinking recipient of government benefits, living in a house owned by a Trump supporter who recently said shes sick of everybody holding their hands out.

Hughes sent the 30-day expulsion notice by text message about an hour after Wages shared a post on Facebook suggesting that arresting President Donald Trump, who was impeached less than a year ago, would heal the nation.

But neither political opinions nor socioeconomic class describe protected groups under the federal Fair Housing Act, so while ending a tenancy based on those biases might constitute discrimination, Hensley said, its just not a type of discrimination that is unlawful if a private landlord does it.

Hughes declined to discuss this story when reached, telling this reporter: Kiss my ass and dont call this number again.

Eric J. Shelton/Mississippi Today

Whitney Wages feeds her cat, Wilson, in her apartment outside of Oxford, Mississippi. Less than a week earlier, her landlord Wilma Hughes told Wages she must vacate her home, which means finding a new, one-floor apartment that she can afford and that will accept her housing voucher.

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Eric J. Shelton/Mississippi Today

Whitney Wages was working to cultivate a vegetable garden outside her apartment in Lafayette County when her landlord expelled her from her home in late July. The landowner, Wilma Hughes, called the garden an eyesore, Wages said.

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Whitney Wages talks on the phone with her partner, who is helping her move her belongings into storage after she was unable to immediately find a new apartment that is accessible and that she can afford.

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For Wages who is diagnosed with bipolar disorder, generalized anxiety disorder, complex post traumatic stress disorder, agoraphobia and also struggles with joint pain and sciatica Hughes place was perfect.

The apartment, with its wood paneled walls and brushed concrete floors, was clean and affordable on her limited income. Being just one story, she wouldnt have to struggle up and down stairs. It offered lots of outdoor space for her to get fresh air and even plant a garden.

And Hughes agreed to accept Wages federal housing voucher, a critical hurdle for her when looking for a place to live. Mississippi law does not prohibit landlords from discriminating against rent applicants who receive the housing subsidy as 11 other states do.

Wages moved there within two months, eager to leave behind a shabby house in Baldwyn filled with memories of her ex-husband.

In the following year, despite vastly different worldviews, the two women developed a relationship. Wages would run errands for Hughes, picking up buttermilk from the market, or gin and a big ole jug of Burgundy wine from the liquor store. Hughes brought over jarred salsas and they made Sauerkraut together. They shared progress on their home projects Hughes new headboard and Wages tomato plants.

On July 21, Hughes asked if Wages planned to go to the market. She was craving watermelon. But Wages had developed a sore throat and was going to get tested for COVID-19 instead.

The next day, Wages shared a Facebook post that called President Donald Trump a fraud and a traitor and predicted his loss in the upcoming election.

Hughes, a staunch Trump supporter, did not appreciate it: Well I don,t know you at all_ a lot of stuff you pass on_ I can not comprehend_ but Trump is not POS_!!! she commented.

About twenty minutes later, Hughes told Wages in a text message she needed to vacate her house in 30 to 45 days. I do not want to live with a negative person like your self, she wrote. Wages got a formal letter a few days later.

Eric J. Shelton/Mississippi Today

The news was a blow to the independence Wages had finally gained in her apartment over the last year, an especially important achievement for someone living with mental illness. Wages receives $794 in social security benefits due to her disability, which means she cant earn more than $1,260 a month at any job. Despite her limited income, she never missed rent.

Wages had recently left her prep cook job at Proud Larrys restaurant because she was planning to start substitute teaching at Lafayette County School District. That opportunity fell through when the pandemic hit in March she didnt have internet access to teach remotely. She also left a part-time job at local market and restaurant Chicory Market in March, fearing for her health.

But after receiving her more than $700-a-week unemployment benefits in mid-July, more money than shed ever made before, Wages was finally able to pay off several debts, a veterinarian bill for her cat Wilson and the balance owed on her red 2013 Hyundai Tucson. She paid other bills months in advance and bought a new lens for her camera that she planned use to do freelance photography.

The benefits allowed Wages to stay safe and sheltered-in-place during the pandemic so far and offered some promise of financial comfort. They also irked her landlord.

You get all this free unemployment money_after you Had quit your jobs_ how much of that did you pay on student loans!? None because you will never pay_ say it isn,t so? Hughes wrote in a text message after notifying Wages she must move.

Hughes wrote: My money pays your SSI, medicare, food stamps, unpaid tuition, etc_ can you not even try to understand??

Wages reprieve from poverty was short lived. Right as she was losing her housing, her unemployment benefits also dropped to just $140-a-week. Congress has yet to determine if it will extend the benefit boost as the pandemic continues to rage, though a recent executive order by the president may lead to a $300 boost soon.

Hughes was able to expel Wages from her property in a months time, and for little reason, because her initial lease ended in March. Though Wages didnt realize it, that automatically began a month-to-month agreement, which Hughes was free not to renew at any time.

The law gives the landlords too much power over the lives of the people they rent to, Hensley said.

Mississippi law also allows owners to start the eviction process if a tenant is just three days behind on rent. In 2019, lawmakers removed a cushion in the law that gave tenants 10 days after an eviction to vacate. Current law allows landlords to immediately request a warrant for a renters removal the day of a judges order. The law also does not allow tenants to withhold rent when a landlord fails to conduct a repair at the unit, a common complaint of renters.

Its definitely a landlords world, said Allison Cox, director of the Jackson Housing Authority.

Landlords who rent to people with a federal housing subsidy, such as Wages, sign a contract with the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development, which contains certain cleanliness and safety standards. But if a landlord violates the contract, Hensley said, the most the housing authority can do is bar the property owner from contracting with HUD again making little difference to a low-income renter potentially facing homelessness.

Wages secured her federal housing choice voucher, sometimes referred to as Section 8, in 2013. It pays a portion, usually between 50 and 65 percent of her rent, depending on how much income she earns. Typically, voucher holders are reluctant to give up the assistance, remaining on the program for many years. In the Oxford area, 109 families are on the wait-list for the voucher program it will take several years before they are accepted.

Since her landlord gave notice of her ejection, Wages has struggled to find a new apartment that fits her income level and accessibility needs and accepts the voucher. Shes contacted units only for them to fill before she receives a call back.

If you add a physical need to a unit on top of already trying to look for a price range, that increases the difficulty in finding a place, Cox said. Thats a tall order for that area.

Wages has packed most of her belongings into a storage unit and moved into her partners apartment, which was already cramped by a roommate and another friend crashing on the couch. If Wages doesnt find a place to use her voucher in 60 days, she could lose it, though the Oxford Housing Authority has promised to work with her.

Johnathan Hill, director of the Oxford Housing Authority, said most of their voucher holders have a six-month or year-long lease. But he estimated at least one-in-ten are on month-to-month leases, which may benefit tenants who want more freedom to move when they want. Otherwise, theyre terrible for residents whose landlord, for whatever reason, says, I dont want to rent to you anymore, Hill said.

Hill said its unusual for an owner to elect to remove a paying tenant for something other than a major violation. Landlords have an interest in keeping units full and rent money flowing. But that doesnt take into account other emotional human motivations.

Anna Wolfe

Right after Wages began documenting the landlord saga on her Facebook page, Hughes took to her own post: I do know if I own land, rental house, pay taxes and up keep_ I do not have to have a welfare POS living there. I am not against empty house_ some things you just can,t digest!

Wages said she hears this rhetoric all the time, resigning that there are people that obviously hate me for just who I am, being a disabled woman on Section 8.

They dont even know what welfare even means. They just assume its free money, so therefore I live a luscious lifestyle and Im like, Do I? Wages said. Im grateful I can put gas in my car when I can Im grateful that I can, you know, feed myself. Im really grateful when I can decide what to feed myself and not have to go to the food pantry.

Who wants to live that way, hand to mouth? she added.

On a recent trip back to the apartment to grab some belongings, Wages noticed some new Trump signs had been posted on the property.

One read: Make Liberals Cry Again.

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Trump supporter kicks tenant out after political disagreement, showing renters live at the whims of landlords - Mississippi Today

A new social contract: We need to fundamentally reform our labour markets – The Indian Express

Written by Naushad Forbes | Updated: August 21, 2020 9:15:26 amIn the last two months, things have improved. CMIE reports that unemployment is now down to around 9 per cent, and as economic activity has restarted in cities, labour has begun returning from villages.(Illustration by C R Sasikumar)

A well-known saying attributed to the Chinese sage Confucious is may you live in interesting times. What is less well known is that Confucious meant this as a curse interesting times remove time for reflection and make us think about our baser instincts. We live in far too interesting a time: An unprecedented and worsening health crisis, and the knock-on effect of the worst economic performance in our independent history. So let us rise above Confucious and reflect on where we must be as a country when India turns 75 in 2022.

The Prime Minister, while addressing the Confederation of Indian Industry (CII) annual meeting this year, urged those present to think big and partner with the government in putting India on the path to growth. This is an important call. There is much that we can achieve if government and industry work towards the same objective, and in a spirit of mutual trust.

Employment is one such area. Over 85 per cent of employment in India is in the informal sector. An unplanned national lockdown halted economic activity and wiped out livelihoods, especially of informal workers. The Centre for Monitoring the Indian Economy (CMIE) estimates that between mid-March and mid-April, 120 million people lost their jobs, with unemployment rising to an all-time high of 27 per cent. Left with nothing, we saw reverse migration on an unprecedented scale some 10 million people abandoned cities to return to their native villages. For a while, our media was full of discussion of the need to address some of our most chronic social problems.

In the last two months, things have improved. CMIE reports that unemployment is now down to around 9 per cent, and as economic activity has restarted in cities, labour has begun returning from villages. As things have returned to normal, the priority for addressing our most chronic social problems has reduced. We must not waste this crisis. There are three problems we must address: Labour regulation, living conditions for migrant labour in cities, and the strength of our rural economy.

Labour regulation must start with a clear-eyed recognition of facts: We have stringent labour laws to protect workers, but this covers only the formal sector under 15 per cent of employment. This labour aristocracy has almost complete protection, and employers have almost no flexibility. The 85 per cent of our workforce who are informally employed, meanwhile, have almost no protection, and employers have almost complete flexibility. We need to address both ends of the labour spectrum to get the balance right between flexibility and protection for all labour. Everyone must have a minimum level of protection, and every employer a minimum level of flexibility. This calls for a new social contract to define a well-calibrated social security system. This huge project demands good faith and strong leadership by industry, labour and government. It will take years to get it right, but if we dont fix our employment system now when this issue has achieved such prominence, we will always regret the missed opportunity.

Opinion | Tailwind from villages: Rural economy may do the heavy lifting in 2020

Living conditions in our cities is the second challenge. For too long, we have been content to drive by slums where some of the people who clean our homes, deliver our goods, and repair our equipment live in squalor. How do we set in force a massive private home-building programme? It probably needs much more liberal land-use regulations our cities have among the least generous floor-space indices (FSI) in the world. New York, Hong Kong, and Tokyo have an FSI five times Mumbais. If five times as many people can live in the same area, it would drastically reduce rents for quality housing in our cities. Again, this is a multi-year project, and it involves state and city governments partnering with private developers. India is unique in having 70 per cent of our population still residing in rural areas. Seventy-three years after Independence, this is a statement of failed development. We must encourage the migration of people to higher productivity occupations in our cities. And we must ensure that clean, affordable and accessible housing is available for all in our cities. A massive project, again, with the scale that can get an economic recovery underway post-COVID.

Reverse migration is also an opportunity to collaborate in spreading the geography of development. We have long had policies aimed at getting firms to invest in less-developed districts and the current government has an ambitious goal of doubling farmers incomes. But the gap between the richest (urban) and poorest (rural) districts in the country still keeps growing. We need a three-pronged approach: First, as Ashok Gulati has often argued, the easiest way to grow farmer incomes is by having them grow more value-added crops. Fruits and vegetables have great export potential, and exports must be consistently encouraged and not switched on and off as domestic prices change. And the cultivation of palm plantations has the potential for huge import substitution, but, as Gulati points out, we need corporate farming as the gestation period of seven years for the first crop is too much for the average farmer to handle. The Atmanirbhar agricultural reforms, which permit contract farming, and open up agricultural markets, are major medium-term reforms. Implemented right, they can transform agricultural markets. Second, we need to encourage agro-processing near the source. Fostering entrepreneurship in rural and semi-urban areas would combine nicely with local processing. And third, we need to invest even more massively in rural connectivity. Many years ago, the great sociologist Alex Inkeles was asked if there was only one thing that could be done to foster development, what would it be. His answer was to build roads which connect producers to markets, heads to knowledge, and people to each other. Today, we would add digital connectivity to road connectivity to level the playing field for all regardless of where they live.

Opinion | Geographical spread of virus poses new policy challenges

This must be our programme of work: To fundamentally reform our labour markets, to attract people to our cities where we ensure healthy living conditions, and to create economic opportunities in rural India. The task is huge, and only collaboration between all levels of government (Union, state, and city) and our dynamic private sector can hope to make substantial progress. Lets use our unprecedented health and economic crisis to truly build a new social contract as our commitment to India@75.

This article first appeared in the print edition on August 21, 2020 under the title A new social contract. The writer is former President CII, Chairman India@75 Foundation and co-Chairman of Forbes Marshall.

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A new social contract: We need to fundamentally reform our labour markets - The Indian Express

OPINION EXCHANGE | Admit it: The two-state solution for Palestine is dead – Minneapolis Star Tribune

Support for the two-state solution is the pious cover invoked by senators and members of Congress whenever they are asked to support Palestinian rights. Our politicians talk about two states even though Israels Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has long spoken of less than a state to describe his vision of a future for Palestinians who demand equal rights in their ancestral land.

Now, with Netanyahu promising to annex a third of the West Bank Palestinian territory, illegally occupied by Israel since 1967, we are at the end of the zombie two-state myth. The choice for Israel and for its U.S. supporters is now clear: an apartheid Jewish-supremacist nation with millions of Indigenous people denied self-determination, freedom of movement, equal justice and other basic human rights or the alternative, two peoples with equal rights living together in one state.

Many Jews will regard the latter as failure of the utopian Zionist dream of creating an exclusively Jewish nation state in a land inhabited by others.

The Jewish writer Peter Beinart, once a loyal two-state liberal Zionist, recently horrified supporters of Israel with his articles in the New York Times and Jewish Currents confessing that he no longer believes in a Jewish state. For that, some Jews are calling him a traitor.

Beinarts sin seems to be letting his humanity override his liberal Zionist instincts. He has now declared his belief in a single, binational state with equal rights for all, explaining in the New York Times: I knew Israel was wrong to deny Palestinians in the West Bank citizenship, due process, free movement and the right to vote in the country in which they lived. But the dream of a two-state solution that would give Palestinians a country of their own let me hope that I could remain a liberal and a supporter of Jewish statehood at the same time.

Beinart and many others have seen that hope extinguished by Israels relentless building of Jewish-only settler colonies on Palestinian lands throughout the West Bank territory that Israel has occupied for 53 years, in violation of existing international law. Israels formal annexation that is planned would leave only noncontiguous enclaves for Palestinians to inhabit in their ancestral lands, erasing all hope for a viable, independent state of their own.

Its time, Beinart concluded, to abandon the traditional two-state solution and embrace the goal of equal rights for Jews and Palestinians. Its time to imagine a Jewish home that is not a Jewish state.

Palestinians have been imagining such a state for a long time.

In his latest book, The Hundred Years War on Palestine, Columbia University historian Rashid Khalidi reframes the long struggle for control of Palestine as a colonial war on the Indigenous population that has rationally resisted displacement by Zionist settlers for more than a century.

With the establishment of Israel Khalidi writes, Zionism did succeed in fashioning a potent national movement and a thriving new people in Palestine. But, despite a campaign of Zionist terror and the ethnic cleansing of 750,000 Palestinians, the Zionist movement could not fully supplant the countrys original population, which is what would have been necessary for the ultimate triumph of Zionism.

The fundamental colonial nature of Israel in Palestine must be acknowledged, Khalidi writes, but there are now two peoples in Palestine, irrespective of how they came into being, and the conflict between them cannot be resolved as long as the national existence of each is denied by the other. Their mutual acceptance can only be based on complete equality of rights, including national rights, notwithstanding the crucial historical difficulties between the two. There is no other possible sustainable solution, barring the unthinkable notion of one peoples extermination or expulsion by the other.

In general, Americans have not viewed Israel as a domineering colonial power. And considering our own colonial history, some Americans think we have no right to criticize Israel. No matter that U.S. taxpayers provide at least $4 billion a year to support Israel, a prosperous country that is the largest recipient of our foreign aid.

Our representatives in Congress refuse to put conditions on this aid for Israels behavior, be it annexing occupied land or imprisoning Palestinian children. They justify unqualified support for Israel by saying it is the only democracy in the Middle East. It is, however, a country that does not provide equality to all its people. Israel grants full rights only to a specific ethno-religious group, and it denies all rights to millions of other people under its control. That is not the kind of democracy embedded in the U.S. Constitution. That is apartheid.

As Israel prepares to formally annex the most fertile, most water-rich third of the Palestinian West Bank, will America continue to enable Israeli apartheid and the Hundred Years War on Palestine? Or will we help birth a true democracy based on equal rights? That is our choice.

Mary Christine Bader is a writer in Wayzata.

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OPINION EXCHANGE | Admit it: The two-state solution for Palestine is dead - Minneapolis Star Tribune

Question of independent redistricting in Oklahoma could land on 2022 ballot – Oklahoman.com

Treat accused People Not Politicians of spreading false information about the legislative redistricting process by saying the Legislature conducts redistricting "behind closed doors." The Senate is committed to an open and transparent redistricting process that allows for citizen involvement, he said.

"It may be a new proposal, but its the same old, misdirected idea: a redistricting coup to rearrange Oklahoma to make it easier for liberal politicians to get elected," Treat said. "This is a poor solution in search of a nonexistent problem and hopefully will be rejected by Oklahomans.

People Not Politicians withdrew and tweaked its initiative petition so, if passed, the independent redistricting commission can get started as soon as possible instead of having to wait until Oklahoma's next redistricting cycle in 2030.

The group initially filed its initiative petition in October 2019, but was held up by two court challenges seeking to have the measure bounced from the ballot. When the time came to collect the 177,958 signatures necessary to qualify for the ballot, Oklahoma's Secretary of State had halted signature collection due to the pandemic.

The redistricting petition details the selection process for choosing commissioners, their qualifications, redistricting criteria and what happens if commissioners cannot agree on new maps.

The Legislature would be forbidden from altering the commission or trying to usurp its redistricting powers.

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Question of independent redistricting in Oklahoma could land on 2022 ballot - Oklahoman.com

Import bans cant be a throwback to the licence raj – Livemint

The defence ministry on Sunday announced a ban on import of 101 defence items to create domestic manufacturing of 4 trillion in six to seven years to protect local industries. The move is in line with the Centres push for self-reliance. Mint explores the issue in detail.

How exactly do the import bans work?

There are two kinds of policy instruments that are used by governments to regulate international trade, one being import tariffs like custom duties and the other being quantitative restrictions or quotas. Import tariffs allow for import of certain items after paying a tax, while quantitative restrictions limit the amount of goods that can be imported into a country. A ban on import is a type of a quantitative restriction that prohibits import of an item in the country. With a ban on imports of defence equipment, our defence forces will now have to meet their requirements through domestic manufacturers.

How are they different from licenses, quotas?

They key difference between the import bans that have now been imposed and the licences and quotas that existed before 1991 is that there are only a few items under the negative list that require permission or licences from the government. Unlike earlier, for all goods outside the negative list, people can set up businesses and produce goods and services without having to procure a government licence before manufacturing an item. The same is true for imports where only specific items require prior government permission or can only be imported up to a certain quantity.

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Will import bans help lift the domestic industry?

India has tried various forms of protectionism in the past to assist domestic manufacturers, from import tariffs to quotas, but these did not have the desired impact. The key issues are land laws, labour laws, availability of affordable electricity for industries, high cost of taxes and capital along with issues related to enforcement of contract.

Why are we still opting for import bans, then?

Most advanced economies provided protection to their local industries during the early periods of industrialization. Many South Asian countries combined protectionism with domestic reforms, which led to the creation of an incentive structure for firms to look at export-oriented markets. A key element of the self-reliance move includes a strong push for reforms across sectors. This, combined with the proposed land and labour law changes, suggest a push towards making domestic manufacturing competitive.

Is there a chance for clock turning back?

Many people have cautioned against the possibility of Atmanirbhar Bharat turning the clock back to a period of licence-quota raj because of the increase in tariffs and import bans. However, it is noteworthy that India allows liberal foreign investment inflows, as against the situation before 1991. We are inviting foreign firms to invest for catering to our domestic market. However, we must be careful as India has the chance to integrate with global value chains.

Karan Bhasin is a Delhi-based policy researcher.

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Import bans cant be a throwback to the licence raj - Livemint

TS Elida strengthens off coast of Mexico; to avoid land – 95.7 News

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by The Associated Press

Posted Aug 9, 2020 6:33 pm ADT

Last Updated Aug 9, 2020 at 6:40 pm ADT

MEXICO CITY Tropical Storm Elida has formed off Mexicos Pacific coast and is expected to become a hurricane on Monday as it moves away from land.

There are no coastal watches or warnings in effect but the U.S. National Hurricane Center warns that swells generated by Elida could affect portions of the coast of west-central Mexico and the southern Baja California peninsula over the next couple of days.

Elida had maximum sustained winds of 50 mph (85 kph) late Sunday afternoon and was located about 195 miles (315 kilometres) southwest of Manzanillo, Mexico. It was moving west-northwest at 15 mph (24 kph).

The hurricane centre said Elida should become a hurricane Monday then begin to weaken late Tuesday or Wednesday as it moves out to sea.

The Associated Press

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TS Elida strengthens off coast of Mexico; to avoid land - 95.7 News

Jabotinsky in the mirror of reality – The Jerusalem Post

Eighty years ago, the stormy heart of Zeev Jabotinsky, Zionist leader, founder of the Revisionist movement and Betar Youth Organization, fell silent.

After decades of his teachings being pushed to the margins of public discourse, today Jabotinsky finally receives a proper place in history. His ideology has slowly but surely seeped into the public consciousness and is appreciated for its merits.

This significant step comes with clear support and recognition from the worlds greatest democratic superpower the US. Once and for all, the uncertainty is being cleared away regarding the future of the Jewish communities in Judea and Samaria and solidifies the main tenets of modern-day Zionism.

Back in the 1930s, Jabotinsky shared his dream of an Arab-Jewish agreement regarding the Land of Israel. His respectful attitude toward the Arabs is expressed in these remarks:

But perhaps no war is necessary. Perhaps you, the children of Ishmael son of Abraham, our patriarch, will support the claim of the people of Israel... that a homeless nation may be allowed to return and settle in its ancient kingdom.

Knowing the power of the stubbornness of the Arab nations, as well as the genuine desire to fulfill the aspirations of the Jewish people for the establishment of a Jewish state in the Land of Israel, he opened a door to a liberal approach of compensation while providing a well-known measure of independence.

Now here we are in the year 2020 and countless proposals for bridging the gaps between the Arabs and the Israelis have been discussed, proposed, attempted and force-fed.

Attempts to bring peace and creative solutions for both sides were offered as early as the last century.

There was the Balfour Declaration of 1917, which was met by a complete refusal from the Arab world, who used severe violence and rioting against Jews in the years that followed. The UN Partition Plan of November 29, 1947 was also completely rejected by the Arab world, and following the vote, and hostile actions were launched against Jews both in Arab lands and in the Land of Israel.

From the Six Day War of 1967 until today, countless plans and initiatives were launched and failed. Amid international headlines and great fanfare, agreements was tried and tested. They include: the Madrid Conference, the Oslo Accords, the Hebron Protocol, the Wye River Memorandum, the Sharm El Sheikh Memorandum, the Camp David Summit, the Taba Summit, the Arab Peace Initiative, the Road Map for Peace, the French Peace Initiative and the Kerry Initiative.

IN BETWEEN those initiatives, plans such as the Disengagement and the Convergence Plan have been tried, and unfortunately, have simply not worked, resulting in fierce debates, societal rifts, terrorism and military operations.

Our generation was privileged to be born into an independent country, with language, culture, a strong military, robust economy, educational excellence and hi-tech expertise. We did not experience what our parents and grandparents did in exile. We did not struggle to hold on to our Jewish heritage or feel the longing to return to our home the Land of Israel.

The USs Deal of the Century is now under consideration and has been debated from different angles. But 80 years after the passing of Jabotinsky, it is time to stop sitting back.

The principles of the Zionist movement include the unity of the Jewish people, its bond to its historic homeland Eretz Yisrael, and the centrality of the State of Israel and Jerusalem, its capital, in the life of the nation. Zionism calls for aliyah to Israel from all countries and the effective integration of all immigrants into Israel as a Jewish-Zionist and democratic state. Settling the land is an expression of Zionist fulfillment.

In my opinion, the Deal of the Century, yet another of the innumerable plans for trying to live a normalized life here, may be a rare window of opportunity to unite our ranks. For the first time since Israels founding, our borders could be solidified and Jerusalem recognized as our eternal and historic capital, while fulfilling Zionism by implementing our sovereignty in the heartland of our nation, Judea and Samaria.

For a moment, Jabotinsky seems to be somewhat involved in these current proceedings.

If we sit back, Jabotinsky wrote, and look at how others are clamoring and we do not intervene the nations of the world will not consider us, our neighbors will lift their heads against us, and any piece of goodness that we may have and any future goodness we would have in our world will fall in the hands of others, and only we will be disappointed.

And us? Our job today, 80 years since his passing, is to act for the fulfillment of Zionist values. It is to settle, build, flourish, educate and sustain the exemplary society which the forefathers of our country and the pioneers of Zionism dreamed

See the rest here:

Jabotinsky in the mirror of reality - The Jerusalem Post

If the Liberal party truly cared about racial injustice it would pay its fair share to Close the Gap – The Guardian

Throughout our countrys modern history, the treatment of our Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander brothers and sisters has been appalling. It has also been inconsistent with the original instructions from the British Admiralty to treat the Indigenous peoples of this land with proper care and respect. From first encounter to the frontier wars, the stolen generations and ongoing institutionalised racism, First Nations people have been handed a raw deal. The gaps between Indigenous and non-Indigenous Australians outcomes in areas of education, employment, health, housing and justice are a product of historical, intergenerational maltreatment.

In 2008, I apologised to the stolen generations and Indigenous Australians for the racist laws and policies of successive Australian governments. The apology may have been 200 years late, but it was an important part of the reconciliation process.

But the apology meant nothing if it wasnt backed by action. For this reason, my government acted on Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander social justice commissioner Tom Calmas call to Close the Gap. We worked hard to push this framework through the Council of Australian governments so that all states and territories were on board with the strategy. We also funded it, with $4.6bn committed to achieve each of the six targets we set. While the targets and funding were critical to any improvements in the lives of Indigenous Australians, we suspected the Coalition would scrap our programs once they returned to government. After all, only a few years earlier, John Howards Indigenous affairs minister was denying the very existence of the stolen generations. Howard himself had refused to deliver an apology for a decade. And then both he and Peter Dutton decided to boycott the official apology in 2008.

To ensure that the Closing the Gap strategy would not be abandoned, we made it mandatory for the prime minister to stand before the House of Representatives each year and account for the success and failures in reaching the targets that were set.

Had we not adopted the Closing the Gap framework, would we now be on target to have 95% of Indigenous four year-olds enrolled in early childhood education? I think not. Would we have halved the gap for young Indigenous adults to have completed year 12 by 2020? I think not. And would we see progress on closing the gap in child mortality, and literacy and numeracy skills? No, I think not.

Target 1: Close the Gap in life expectancy within a generation, by 2031.

Target 2: By 2031, increase the proportion of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander babies with a healthy birthweight to 91%.

Target 3: By 2025, increase the proportion of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander children enrolled in Year Before Full-time Schooling early childhood education to 95%.

Target 4: By 2031, increase the proportion of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander children assessed as developmentally on track in all five domains of the Australian Early Development Census to 55%.

Target 5: By 2031, increase the proportion of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people (age 20-24) attaining year 12 or equivalent to 96%.

Target 6: By 2031, increase the proportion of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people aged 25-34 years who have completed a tertiary qualification to 70%.

Target 7: By 2031, increase the proportion of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander youth (15-24 years) who are in employment, education or training to 67%.

Target 8: By 2031, increase the proportion of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people aged 25-64 who are employed to 62%.

Target 9: By 2031, increase the proportion of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people living in appropriately sized (not overcrowded) housing to 88%.

Target 10: By 2031, reduce the rate of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander adults held in incarceration by at least 15%.

Target 11: By 2031, reduce the rate of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander young people (10-17 years) in detention by at least 30%.

Target 12: By 2031, reduce the rate of over-representation of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander children in out-of-home care by 45%.

Target 13: A significant and sustained reduction in violence and abuse against Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander women and children towards zero.

Target 14: Significant and sustained reduction in suicide of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people towards zero.

Target 15: a) By 2030, a 15% increase in Australia's landmass subject to Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people's legal rights or interests; b) By 2030, a 15% increase in areas covered by Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people's legal rights or interests in the sea.

Target 16: By 2031, there is a sustained increase Torres Strait Islander languages being spoken.

Despite these achievements, the most recent Closing the Gap report nonetheless showed Australia was not on track to meet four of the deadlines wed originally set. A major reason for this is that federal funding for the closing the gap strategy collapsed under Tony Abbott, the great wrecking-ball of Australian politics, whose government cut $534.4m from programs dedicated to improving the lives of Indigenous Australians. And its never been restored by Abbotts successors. Its all there in the budget papers.

Whatever targets are put in place, governments must commit to physical resourcing of Closing the Gap. They are not going to be delivered by magic.

On Thursday last week, the new national agreement on Closing the Gap was announced. I applaud Pat Turner and other Indigenous leaders who will now sit with the leaders of the commonwealth, states, territories and local government to devise plans to achieve the new targets they have negotiated.

Scott Morrison, however, sought to discredit our governments targets, rather than coming clean about the half-billion-dollar funding cuts that had made it impossible to achieve these targets under any circumstances. His argument that the original targets were conjured out of thin air by my government is demonstrably untrue. The truth is, Jenny Macklin, the responsible minister, spoke widely with Indigenous leaders to prioritise the areas that needed to be urgently addressed in the original Closing the Gap targets. Furthermore, if Morrison is now truly awakened to the intrinsic value of listening to Indigenous Australians, I look forward to him enshrining an Indigenous voice to parliament in the Constitution, given this is the universal position of all Indigenous groups.

Yet amid the welter of news coverage of the new closing the gap agreement, the central question remains: who will be paying the bill? While shared responsibility to close the gap between all levels of government and Indigenous organisations might sound like good news, this will quickly unravel into a political blame game if the commonwealth continues to shirk its financial duty.

The announcement this week that the commonwealth would allocate $45m over four years is just a very bad joke. This is barely 10% of what the Liberals cut from our national Closing the Gap strategy. And barely 1% of our total $4.5bn national program to meet our targets agreed to with the states and territories in 2009.

The Liberals want you to believe they care about racial injustice. But they dont believe there are any votes in it. This is well understood by Scotty From Marketing, a former state director of the Liberal party, who lives and breathes polling and focus groups. Thats why they are not even pretending to fund the realisation of the new more realistic targets they have so loudly proclaimed.

Go here to read the rest:

If the Liberal party truly cared about racial injustice it would pay its fair share to Close the Gap - The Guardian

BLM admits its focus is to abolish the US ‘as we know it’ – Leader & Times

GUEST COLUMN, Larry Phillips, Kismet

Within the hysteria generated by the death of George Floyd, the fawning acceptance of the terrorist group Black Lives Matter and its Marxist agenda by so many is a sign of systemic socialism being taught throughout Americas institutions of higher learning.

That indoctrination is seen in the major professional sports leagues where players are mostly under 35 and have been dumbed down by universities. They were never taught the countrys founding and history, thus anti-America is rampant among pro and college athletes.

But BLMs agenda is also accepted without question by all those millions of young liberals that control the social media companies like Facebook, Google and Twitter. And you have too many huge corporations to mention that fall into that kind of thinking as well.

I believe this misguided and unquestioned support of an entity BLM that was founded on Marxism will go down in history as one of the biggest scams ever unleashed on America. And the most fools in an era.

In Portland, Ore., July 17, BLMorganizer Lilith Sinclair made a remarkable statement. At a resistance protest, Sinclair, who identifies as an Afro-Indigenous non-binary local organizer said what they were organizing for: Not just for the abolition of the militarized police state but also the United States as we know it, according to a July 18 report posted at http://www.redstate.com.

She then also said theyre standing on stolen land and she wants to do a land acknowledgment, the report added.

Redstate then posted what Sinclair said previously in June and posted by Willamette Week.

For me, I cannot look at and will not look at these moments and these movements that are happening right now were living through history as riots,Sinclair said. Instead, what they actually are, are the uprisings that the U.S. and every other imperialist and capitalist, racist and oppressive system has seen across history. There only comes a certain level to which you can ask large and vast numbers of people to sacrifice their literal health, lives and sanity for the capitalist system that will not provide for them and will also exploit their labor for the protection of the continual padding of the pockets of the 1 percent.

So, as Redstate noted, BLMis not really peacefully advocating for police reform or against police brutality: Its about eliminating capitalism and taking over the U.S.A.

But how many average citizens realize this? How many professional sports players? How many board members of huge corporations?

Its not ever reported in the sympathetic Lame Stream Media, which has the same agenda. In fact, as Redstate reported in the same story about Sinclair, CNNs Chris Fredo Cuomo praised BLMmarchers, comparing them to WWII military who stormed the beaches at Normandy.

He said that when asked about the marchers who were chanting No KKK, no fascist USA, claiming to be fighting fascism.

According to BLMs leaders, they seek not reform but transformation; they envision a fundamentally different world, a world emerging in the wake of a complete transformation of the current systems, according to a lengthy report by Peter C. Myer and posted in the Summer of 2017 at http://www.nationalaffairs.com titled The Mind of Black Lives Matter.

BLM is a veritable symphony of revolutionary rhetoric,Myer noted.

Yet we see leftist mayor in cities controlled by socialist-loving city councils allowing an entire block of roadway in their downtowns to be painted with huge Black Lives Matter murals. Yes, they call them murals, while most folks call it vandalism.

This is over the top to many people, and the consequences of such illegality is coming home to roost.

In Redwood City, Calif., city leaders allowed resident Dan Pease to paint a Black Lives Matter mural on one of the citys main downtown streets on July 4. The city even supplied the yellow paint Pease used to create the mural.

Then a real estate attorney in the area made a mural request of her own to local officials: She wanted to paint MAGA 2020 nearby, according to a July 22 report posted by Sister Toldjah at http://www.redstate.com.

The attorney, Maria Rutenberg, in a statement (to the city) noted that it would only be fair to allow such a mural seeing as the city has open(ed) up asphalts as public forums, the report noted.

Smelling a justifiable legal suit they couldnt win, the goofy city council quietly had the mural removed (spray-washed) during the dark of night, and rightfully tucked their tails between their legs and dropped approval of all street murals.

Of course, everybody knows the absolute love affair New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio has with BLM, and his hatred of police is legendary (even before George Floyd). Weve all seen him with roller brush in hand helping BLM activists painting BLM in street-filling letters in front of Trump Towers in downtown NYC.

Voila. Guess who has decided that was a stupid idea?

Yes, Hizzoner himself.

Its been revealed that the city ignored its own rules for the process of public art projects like the BLM lettering because de Blasio never got the required permits for painting the lettering,according to a http://www.redstate.com report.

That (the lettering) is something that again transcends all normal realities because we are at a moment of history when that had to be said and done, thats a decision I made, de Blasio said. But the normal process continues for anyone who wants to apply.

Hizzoner has blocked other groups (Pro-Trump or pro-cops) from painting streets, and says hell have to approve future permits at the citys public arts department, too.

If there were any conservatives living in NYC, Ipray one will step forward and sue de Blasio for breaking the law.

He should be arrested, where he can post bail oh, right, there is no bail in NYC. Crooks are released immediately.

Well, fine him. He broke the law.

More here:

BLM admits its focus is to abolish the US 'as we know it' - Leader & Times

Letter to the Editor: People who want change hate America – Fairfield Daily Republic

Some corporations, including major league sports franchises, have caved to groups trashing our nations culture and heritage. Theyre intimidated by a tiny fringe of malcontents. Theyre losing the respect of the great majority of Americans.

On the individual level, taking a knee during our national anthem, or not standing for the Pledge of Allegiance, are within the bounds of the First Amendment; but the perpetrators are merely taking advantage of a right protected by the Constitution and defended by millions of men and women far better than they.

Blocking streets or sidewalks, splashing vile graffiti, destroying statues of historic figures, or in any way harming citizens or their property are not protected by the First Amendment. We expect our police to enforce laws against such action. Thats why some groups want police departments reformed or even gone. Then they can do violence with impunity.

They hate America. They dont accept that this nation has given them freedom to strive after personal goals. Theyve come to think that socialism or anarchy is better. Theyve not been taught or learned how such ideas have destroyed other countries and enslaved their people. If they get their way if they change America they will not be in charge.

The reality is that, if politicians cave and defund or restrict law enforcement, only those of us who are armed will stand in the way. Thats why gun sales are booming across the land.

Most Americans dont want this confrontation of ideas to go any further. We all need to stop and think about the consequences if the destruction of recent months continues. Its pitting one person against another. We need to put America first.

Our nations enemies are rooting for the rioters and malcontents.

John Takeuchi

Fairfield

Related

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Letter to the Editor: People who want change hate America - Fairfield Daily Republic