It’s all about the base, no trouble – Ynetnews

The U.S. presidential election campaign officially gets underway on Monday, kicking off as it always does in Iowa, a small Midwestern state where the vast majority of the residents are white and their area of specialization is growing wheat.

Iowa is not America, but every four years the eyes of the nation turn upon it.

Likud supporters hold up Trump banners at a rally

Democratic party activists were to gather Monday in sports halls and community centers across the state for caucuses to discuss their options for presidential candidate. (The Republicans are sticking with the incumbent.)

This is a strange ritual, more akin to a youth movement debate than presidential primary. There are no polling stations and voting is done in stages, with activists trying to persuade one another how to vote.

The result is only important in one sense, seemingly giving momentum to the winning candidate and deflating their defeated rivals.

But this is only seemingly, for at the next stop, in the small state of New Hampshire, everything could change.

According to the polls, Democratic Iowa's favored candidate is Bernie Sanders, a 78-year-old Brooklyn native who looks, sounds and mainly screams like a 78-year-old Brooklyn native.

Bernie Sanders campaigning in Iowa

(Photo: AFP)

He was the first candidate for one of the two major American parties to declare that he was a socialist and has also strongly criticized Israel. This would be a Jewish president who would not rush to pray in Jerusalem.

In the past, a candidate like Sanders had no chance - he was too radical, too old, too in your face.

But the age of social networking has changed the rules of the game, not in the center but on the margins, where his base lives.

Bernie Sanders is a mirror image of Donald Trump. Both are populists, one on the extreme right and the other on the extreme left.

American voters, tired of the political correctness, corruption and manipulation from veteran politicians, are being drawn to whom they perceive as authentic.

And even when they are lying, Sanders and Trump's lies seem authentic.

Trump's support is holding, just like that of his Israeli friend Benjamin Netanyahu.

The revelations about him withholding aid to force the Ukrainian government to help him bring down his rival Joe Biden did not in any way affect his status in the polls.

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and President Donald Trump clasp hands as the U.S. peace plan is unveiled at the White House

(Photo: EPA)

The impeachment trial did not make his supporters cross party lines, much like the indictments against Netanyahu.

The Politico website appealed to Trump supporters among its readers with an interesting suggestion: Tell us why you support him.

Surprisingly, most respondents criticized Trump, but nevertheless decided to vote for him. They justified their decision by quoting the economic situation, the fight against illegal immigration, their antipathy towards his rivals.

In other words, not everyone who votes for Trump is a fan, just like not everyone in Israel who votes for Likud loves Netanyahu.

But after three years of Trump in America and after 10 years of Netanyahu in Israel, skeptical voters are still in no hurry to switch parties.

Some Israelis are sure that everything that happens in American politics is wonderful and want to recreate that at home. But they are wrong; America's elections are corrupt and controlled by big money.

The system is also flawed, and U.S. presidential elections effectively only take place in five or six swing states - which is better than in Israel, where the two biggest parties are deadlocked.

Yisrael Beytenu leader Avigdor Liberman

(Photo: Amit Shabi)

Netanyahu succeeded in creating a bloc of parties committed to him, whose voter base comprises almost half of the electorate. He failed, however, to create a party to the left of Likud that could pull in votes from his main rival Blue & White and bring him the coveted support of 61 MKs, something which he also failed to do in the two national elections of 2019.

The third election in 12 months, on March 2, will be different. After two futile rounds of voting, Yisrael Beytenu Avigdor Lieberman seems to have concluded that he can no longer sit on the sidelines.

He is now talking about an alternative government, which, if I understand correctly, would be a minority government of Blue & White, Labor and Yisrael Beytenu. The predominantly Arab Joint List is apparently not invited.

Ultimately, this coalition is short of four MKs to have the support of more than half of the Knesset. It's just not clear where they will get them from.

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It's all about the base, no trouble - Ynetnews

When the King of Debt Is the President – The New York Times

Mr. Douthat writes that the 2010s exposed the depth of problems without suggesting plausible solutions.

I want to offer another take on disillusionment. All my life Americans seemed to believe that our country was practically perfect in every way. Exceptional. Until we get over that, until most of us can accept that other countries may have better health care at lower cost and that our citizens could be better educated, we cannot move.

I cheer disillusionment as a step toward the movements, leaders, spiritual renewal and structural reforms that Mr. Douthat longs for.

Christine JohnsonPortola Valley, Calif.

To the Editor:

Ross Douthat has coined a term that perfectly captures my mental state at the end of 2019 prosperous despair. Yes, my bank account is fatter, but I am also often depressed and anxious about the world around me. For example, the devolution of politics into tribalism is terrifying.

James Carville famously coined the phrase Its the economy, stupid.

Maybe true in the more innocent 1990s, but in the post-truth era, Ive learned that its not that simple.

Janice GewirtzMountain Lakes, N.J.

To the Editor:

Re The Decade We Changed Our Minds, by Charles Blow (column, Dec. 30): What troubles me about culture in America is the strengthening dogmatism of superwoke culture and its consequences: to restrain freedom of speech and thought, and to dismiss as intellectually inferior or immoral those who disagree with the flock. We need to make an effort in the United States to be content with disagreement, and to embrace compromise something that, until relatively recently, anchored and enriched American culture.

Political correctness embraces conformity over truth, sensitivity over reality. Were not getting to the truth because it can be construed as offensive. Americans are walling themselves off from those who may have differing political opinions or worldviews, and in turn, marinating in self-indulgence and self-reinforcement. This lays bare a society that is losing its sense of common fraternity.

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When the King of Debt Is the President - The New York Times

Ricky Gervais is hosting the Golden Globes. Expect controversy. – Vox.com

In 2018, then-four-time host Ricky Gervais said that hosting the Golden Globes again would be the end of his career.

Gervais was thinking of the blowback he would likely receive from the gig in an increasingly polarized culture as a provocative comic whos known for offending people. But on January 5, he will indeed return to host the awards for a record fifth time.

NBC, which hosts the annual awards show, is leaning into the idea that Gervaiss hosting gig will be outlandish and unpredictable. Theres some justice to that: As Bafflers Brendan James put it in a rundown of Gervaiss career, Gervaiss only real claim on the publics attention in the past ten years has been his epic, renegade, no-holds-barred Golden Globes roast-a-thon, in which hes known for taking potshots at other celebrities and their failings, from Mel Gibsons alcoholism to Robert Downey Jrs drug abuse.

In a recent interview with the Hollywood Reporter, Gervais described his hosting style as wanting to represent the perspective of the viewer watching at home who wasnt invited into the room where it happens. But that descriptor downplays his habit of saying outrageous things both onstage and off. A look at Gervaiss standup history reveals that, far from being unpredictable, his comedy covers a pretty standard range of offenses, including taking cheap shots, doubling down on them, and getting defensive after the fact about people not getting the joke.

Gervais himself insists that punching down is a no-go: You mustnt make [identity factors] the target to be ridiculed, he told THR. You shouldnt laugh at something they cant help. ... Deep down, I want people to know Im not a racist or a homophobe or a sexist. But in the same interview, he also rails against political correctness: People like the idea of freedom of speech until they hear something they dont like.

This ambivalence means his Golden Globes gig will likely be a big swing from last years ground-breaking ceremony toward a more reactionary flavor. And while he may be on his best behavior for Sunday nights ceremony, its also likely we can expect Gervais to joke about everything from war with Iran to cancel culture itself.

How can we be so sure? Heres a selection of highlights from his previous comedy and performances, as well as other moments from his past history.

At the 2016 Golden Globes ceremony, Gervaiss opening monologue included a joke about Caitlyn Jenner that many viewers read as transphobic. After referring to her by her pre-transition name i.e. deadnaming her, a major dont if youre trying to support the transgender communities Gervais joked that while shed become a role model to trans women everywhere, she didnt do a lot for women drivers. The joke was a reminder that, in 2015, Jenner had been involved in a tragic four-car collision that left one person dead; Jenner bore no responsibility for the accident and was not charged and its likely audiences barely remembered the incident or understood Gervaiss point.

So Gervais went out of his way to reiterate his point multiple times first on Twitter, and then in his 2018 Netflix special, Humanity, where he made Jenner jokes that were far more explicitly transphobic than the joke he was trying to debunk as transphobic.

These additional jokes come in the middle of a segment in which Gervais describes creating a string of offensive jokes for his Golden Globes hosting gig including jokes about Bill Cosby raping various celebrities then ironically adds, Id never tell a joke like that, Id never even think of that ... Youre getting offended at a joke that doesnt exist.

Then he moved on to the Jenner joke. It wasnt transphobic in the slightest. It was a joke about a trans person, but the joke had nothing to do with that aspect of her existence. To make the argument, he then repeats the Golden Globes joke verbatim and attempts to explain it.

The target of the joke is a celebrity killing someone in their car, he says. A celebrity killing someone in their car, running home, and popping on a dress, he says.

He then goes on to discuss the deadnaming, in an extended segment in which he protests that he cant acknowledge that she used to be a man but she did! I saw him on the Olympic games! He then doubles down on the deadnaming and misgendering, doing both repeatedly. Its a deeply transphobic sketch in which he frames transgender identity as gaslighting him, while building a whole joke around Jenners anatomy.

He follows it all up by mocking the entire idea of transitioning by joking that hes going to transition into a chimpanzee.

This is just the most well-known example of Gervaiss transphobic humor. But as Lindy West noted in the New York Times after Humanitys release, his entire attitude toward trans identity is one of discomfort, and he present[s his] spasms of discomfort as something relatable.

Gervais recently drew backlash again for perceived transphobia just a few weeks ago. Shortly after the backlash over a transphobic tweet by J.K. Rowling, Gervais tweeted several things that many readers took as sardonic TERFdom.

He later clarified to THR that hed been playing along with a spoof Twitter account intended to parody white progressives, and had been intending to take the piss out of the parody account without acknowledging that he has a history of taking the piss out of trans identity itself.

Gervaiss history of mocking disabled identities is long. During his 2007 Fame standup tour, in particular, the comic courted controversy with this brand of humor. First came a segment in which he jokes about taking an autistic child to a casino the joke being that he ignorantly thought all autistic kids were like Dustin Hoffmans character in Rain Man. Then came a bit when he joked about chronic fatigue syndrome, known as ME: Not MS, he clarified, not the crippling, wasting disease. No, the thing that makes you say, I dont wanna go to work today.

He also stepped on toes with his portrayal of autism with his puzzling 2013 short series Derek, in which he revived a character hed created in 2001, Derek Noakes. Noakes who was originally a victim of child sexual abuse reads to many people as an adult man with autism, despite Gervaiss insistence that the character is actually just naive and gullible. Its worth noting that Gervais has also participated in fundraising events for autism support, and that he intended the character to be heroic, rather than a mockery; but many people had a muddled impression of the character, while the show itself drew mixed reviews.

Thankfully, his jokes here are rare, but theyre pretty dark. In the aforementioned Humanity special on Netflix, Gervais in the segment where he coyly discusses jokes that were too offensive for him to stay onstage by ... saying them onstage he briefly mocks Bill Cosbys victims by hypothesizing about which celebrities might be, essentially, unrape-able. First, he drops a slightly baffling joke implying that Helen Mirren is too much of a lady to be sexually assaulted. Then, he makes a fatphobic comment about Melissa McCarthy being too much of a beast to be subdued by the date rape drugs Cosby used in his assaults.

A third, extremely dark joke, is considered by some audiences to be one of Gervaiss best and by others to be among his most offensive for its trivialization of male sexual violence against women. The entire bit is built around a setup for a joke about child molestation, with an even darker twist joke about child sexual abuse at its center.

In late 2018, a Louis C.K. post-Me-Too comedy routine, which was still being workshopped through live performances, was leaked online, revealing a stretch of offensive material that mocked everyone from non-binary people to Parkland shooting victims.

Gervais spoke out in defense of Louis C.K., telling Vanity Fair in a 2019 interview that he sympathized with the other comedian for having jokes leaked while they were still in progress. But then he went further, once again blaming audiences for allegedly not understanding the jokes:

[C.K.s] got nothing against those [Parkland] kids. It was him pretending to be angry for comedy.

Two years ago, wed have got that. Wed have said, Oh yeah, hes being naughty. Now we go, No, he means it now. Now hes out in the cold; now hes an alt-right Nazi. Its ludicrous.

In other words, Gervais, joining many of his fellow comedians, blames cancel culture for destroying nuance in standup comedy, while also downplaying the reasons people find certain kinds of comedy offensive.

Remember that old segment from HBOs 2011s Talking Funny special that resurfaced in 2018 in which a bunch of male comics laugh at their own use of the n-word? In case youve forgotten which comics were involved in that delightful episode, here we have Chris Rock, a gleeful Louis C.K., a Ricky Gervais who seems hesitant at first but rapidly gets into the bit, and a Jerry Seinfeld who seems appalled the whole time.

This is important context for his assertion in the aforementioned THR interview that offensive humor is in the eye of the beholder:

Its a good thing to not be racist and sexist and homophobic. But its not a good thing to not be allowed to make jokes about those things, because you can tell a joke about race without being racist. Im happy to play by the rules. Its just that the 200 million people watching have different rules. Thats the plight. When people say, He crossed the line, I say, I didnt draw a line, you did. Its relative. Its subjective.

In the clip above, it almost appears that Gervais is re-drawing the line in front of our eyes, deciding that a line that couldnt be crossed seconds earlier saying the n-word is, in fact, fine.

What does all of this mean for Gervaiss 2020 Golden Globes appearance? Probably just where we were four years ago, the last time Gervais hosted the Globes: with Gervais taking potshots at various celebrities and pet progressive issues, then retreating into a defensive stance on social media. Brendan James notes in his Baffler piece that this disappointingly banal pattern has pretty much defined Gervaiss most recent career phase:

Gervais [abandoned] satire and storytelling and instead adopt[ed] a new comedic style of being incredibly logged-on and tweeting Have I offended you? Do you find me offensive? next to professionally shot photos of himself laughing. It is, in fact, a long way down from the brilliant work that made him famous.

This repetitive cycle means its probably too much to ask that Gervais undergo an attitudinal transformation before the Golden Globes ceremony and recognize that his transphobic jokes and other offensive jokes make life harder for real marginalized people.

But maybe this Sunday, with any luck, Gervais will just stick to mocking celebrities.

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Ricky Gervais is hosting the Golden Globes. Expect controversy. - Vox.com

Can Donald Trump and Boris Johnson save our world from anarchy? | TheHill – The Hill

Pause for a moment to escape from the insanity of the unhinged partisan politics that apparently have engulfed our nation and take a quick peek at the rest of the world. If you do, you will notice to your dismay that much of the world is coming apart at the seams as it appears to careen toward global anarchy.

Yet two world leaders U.S. President Donald TrumpDonald John TrumpBiden rips Trump tweets on Iran: 'Incredibly dangerous and irresponsible' Swalwell pens op-ed comparing Trump impeachment to XYZ Affair Rockets fired near Green Zone after day of mourning for Soleimani MORE and U.K. Prime Minister Boris Johnson are in positions of legitimate strength to stop, or at least delay, our worlds collapse.

From both sides of the pond, no matter which direction these leaders turn, they could point to nations in dangerous stages of unrest. In many cases, countries literally are on fire, besieged by increasingly violent protests and riots.

France, Spain, Hong Kong, Indonesia, the Netherlands, Lebanon, Syria, Iraq, Iran, the Philippines, Chile, Venezuela, Colombia, Bolivia, Mexico, parts of Central America, Haiti and many other nations are dealing with protests, riots and fires; some also are experiencing executions and terrorism.

Potentially much more troubling whats happening in Russia, China, Ukraine, Serbia, Albania, Pakistan, India, North Korea and much of the African continent. All are experiencing real threats to their stability, including protests and emboldened rioters.

Some of these countries have nuclear arsenals that may be at risk, or their governments may become more inclined to consider using them.

Totalitarian tactics of oppression brought about much of the worlds unrest. Some protests are the result of spoiled, pampered students and activists who aim to bring about their view of utopian globalization. They would eradicate borders, wealth, hard work, taxes, accountability, law enforcement and just plain common sense.

These activists become enraged when the false promises of Marxism and socialism collapse and they are told they will have to pay more for public transportation or fuel, or, heaven forbid, work a few hours more to add to the tax base that pays for their benefits. Cue the riots.

Many predominantly young protestors are being radicalized in dangerous and permanent ways. Only a complete capitulation to their ignorant nation-destroying demands will satisfy them. Additionally, the leaders of countries that are under siege may be corrupt, incompetent, frozen by fear, or in socialist sympathy with those who are burning down their infrastructure.

But Trump and Johnson could emerge from all this anarchy as two leaders who may well represent the worlds best defense. These men mirror each other in critically important ways.

Many on the left especially from the arenas of academia, the media and entertainment like to pejoratively point out the superficial similarities between Trump and Johnson. Starting with their wild hair, the comparisons generally devolve to more childish schoolyard insults.

But interestingly, and ironically, three similarities that leftists attach to Trump and Johnson as badges of dishonor are that both men are not politically correct, can be considered populists, and are strongly anti-entrenched establishment.

So heres a message to the left: Trump and Johnson are succeeding precisely because both men do hear the voices of all the people, do rail against the destructive outcomes of political correctness, and will fight those in the entrenched establishment who are in it for themselves.

Certainly, Trump and Johnson disagree at times, but Trump instantly recognized that he might have a lasting ally in Johnson. With the Conservative Partys massive victory in the U.K. last month, Trump tweeted: Congratulations to Boris Johnson on his great WIN! Britain and the United States will now be free to strike a massive new Trade Deal after BREXIT. This deal has the potential to be far bigger and more lucrative than any deal that could be made with the E.U. Celebrate Boris!

And that is exactly the point. Both Johnson and Trump realize that the European Union is part of the much larger problem of global unrest and self-destruction that threatens nations stability and that of the world as a whole.

The fact is, both men bring unique real-world experiences to their offices Trump, as a decades-long successful businessman who has employed hundreds of thousands of people and Johnson, as a journalist, author and creative force who never has shied away from wielding cutting words as a rhetorical sword against ignorance, lies, power centers, failed policies or appeasement.

Each man, thankfully, marches to the beat of his own drum.

Barring some unforeseen situation, Trump will win reelection in 2020. When he does, he will have four years to work with Johnson to help right the situations that contribute to violence and anarchy. Together, they just might save our world from collapse.

As Winston Churchill said in his famed address to Congress in December 1941: In the days to come, the British and American peoples will, for their own safety and for the good of all, walk together side by side in majesty, in justice and in peace.

If Trump and Johnson cannot replicate that mission and victory, then lives, liberty and world peace will be in great peril.

Douglas MacKinnon, a political and communications consultant, was a writer in the White House for Presidents Ronald Reagan and George H.W. Bush, and former special assistant for policy and communications at the Pentagon during the last three years of the Bush administration.

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Can Donald Trump and Boris Johnson save our world from anarchy? | TheHill - The Hill

In 2020, culture warriors need to call for a ceasefire – The National

Will this be the year that political correctness undergoes a course-correction? All the signs point to a rising enthusiasm for subversive expression against social liberalism. The revolt is against perceived censoriousness and complacent self-righteousness in speech, public policy, political choices and even stand-up comedy.

Consider this.

On December 26, the BBCs flagship domestic radio show, The Today Programme, featured a remarkable exchange between British prize-winning artist Grayson Perry and Marina Hyde, a liberal commentator on politics and culture. They discussed what Ms Hyde described as the incredibly ponderous nature of the political lefts response to national and international events, and its tendency to be too puritanical about language or action that might cause offence to minority groups.

Right round the time of this discussion, some culture mavens declared that it was time to bid a glad goodbye to the 2010s a decade of guilt in which naming and shaming, and an overwrought conscience, had played both too prominent and too ineffectual a part. Interestingly, this appeared in a British newspaper that predominantly serves business titans, bankers and suchlike on both sides of the Atlantic.

The left should lighten up and be less judgemental about those who question. And the right must be less afraid of the metaphorical other and more willing to address the reality of ceaseless change. That would set the terms of the debate very nicely for a new decade

Then in August, Dave Chappelle, an African-American once universally hailed for his stand-up comedy, offered up a profoundly politically incorrect Netflix special titled Sticks and Stones. Critics were unimpressed, acidly acknowledging that while Chappelle may still have the power to offend, he had lost the all-important comics power to shock. But audiences loved the show, giving it a Rotten Tomatoes score of 99 per cent.

And finally, some say that the backlash against political correctness has already proved itself, through election outcomes, not least Boris Johnsons landslide in Britain on December 12. It has been like that since 2016, when Donald Trumps complaints about eco-friendly restrictions on hairspray and his comments on women and minorities garnered controversy but did not decisively affect his electoral support. Four years later, Mr Trump is still seen by some as a champion of plainspeak.

A caveat is in order at this point. If there is any re-jigging of political correctness it will not mean the end of all linguistic good manners. The collective vocabulary has already expanded to a point beyond which it is simply unacceptable to levy racial slurs or to make jokes that denigrate people for their culture, beliefs, the colour of their skin, or a physical or mental disability.

So, what to make of the backlash to more than two decades of political correctness? How far will it go? Politicians who supposedly tell-it-like-it-is think Mr Johnson in the UK, Mr Trump in the US, Narendra Modi in India, Viktor Orban in Hungary and Rodrigo Duterte in the Philippines have a following that celebrates the freedom to rebel. The insurgency is directed at political correctness gone mad, a phrase that is seen to encapsulate a deep and pent-up anger against a culture that allegedly prizes tolerance over truth-telling.

Back in May 2016, the intensity of that anger was expressed by a 22-year-old Trump supporter to The Atlantic magazine as follows: Disagreement gets you labeled fascist, racist, bigoted, etc. It can provoke a reaction so intense that youre suddenly an unperson to an acquaintance or friend. Its almost impossible to have polite or constructive political discussion.

Is that really true? Is political correctness really constraining honest debate and the free expression of opinion in the 21st century? Is it so bad to have linguistic guardrails for tolerance and magnanimity towards weaker sections of society? Is freewheeling majoritarian commentary, no matter how insensitive and threatening to everyone else, a necessary indicator that a society is really free?

The honest truth is that no society can flourish without genuinely free debate, especially about fraught issues that revolve around culture, majority values and minority rights. And it is equally true that no debate can be free if it is argued only with brutish rhetoric that stokes the majoritys fear and anger under the guise of rebelling against too much political correctness.

There should be no shame in updating the concept of political correctness based on the experience of past decades. The re-jigging would have to happen in two ways.

The first is relatively easy. Re-label, re-define and call political correctness what it really is: the verbal form of good manners, with inherently civilising qualities. The second course of action is a great deal harder: leave little space for the category that currently goes by the name of "politically incorrect". Nothing should be politically incorrect. Instead, it can be true or false, right or wrong, legal or illegal. Once political incorrectness falls away, it should be possible to have even the most difficult discussions those that bump up against liberal political principles without throwing around the charge of fascism, racism or bigotry.

So long as the discussion keeps to the now globally accepted collective vocabulary, we can be assured that everyones rights vulnerable minorities, as well as majority communities are protected.

Culture wars are not really ever settled by election victories, successful stand-up comedy shows or trenchant media commentary. More to the point, both sides are well matched in this contest for the ages. The anti-political correctness brigade has formidable tools of its own to match the cancel culture, woke-ness and no-platforming associated mainly with left-wing liberal opinion.

There has to be a middle path. The left should lighten up and be less judgemental about those who question. And the right must be less afraid of the metaphorical other and more willing to address the reality of ceaseless change. That would set the terms of the debate very nicely for a new decade.

Updated: January 1, 2020 11:48 AM

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In 2020, culture warriors need to call for a ceasefire - The National

Scarlett Johannson clarifies controversial casting feedback: I mishandled that – Sunriseread

Scarlett Johansson has responded to the backlash she obtained this summer season after saying she believes any actor ought to be capable to play any individual, or any tree, or any animal.

The assertion got here after the star dropped out of a movie primarily based on the lifetime of a transgender man as a consequence of criticism from the trans neighborhood. The 35-year-old was additionally accused of whitewashing in style Japanese manga Ghost within the Shell in 2017.

In hindsight, I mishandled that state of affairs, Johansson just lately advised Vainness Truthful of her earlier feedback. I used to be not delicate, my preliminary response to it. I wasnt completely conscious of how the trans neighborhood felt about these three actors enjoying and the way they felt on the whole about cis actors enjoying transgender individuals. I wasnt conscious of that dialog I used to be uneducated.

Johansson went on admit she misjudged the state of affairs, including, It was a tough time. It was like a whirlwind. I felt terribly about it. To really feel such as youre form of tone-deaf to one thing will not be a very good feeling.

Scarlett additionally launched a press release claiming her unique feedback have been taken out of context

An interview that was just lately printed has been edited for clickbait and is extensively taken out of context, she wrote. The query I used to be answering in my dialog with the up to date artist, David Salle, was concerning the confrontation between political correctness and artwork. I personally really feel that, in a super world, any actor ought to be capable to play anyone and Artwork, in all varieties, needs to be resistant to political correctness. Thats the level I used to be making, albeit didnt come throughout that manner.

I acknowledge that in actuality, theres a huge unfold discrepancy amongst my business that favors Caucasian, cis-gendered actors and that not each actor has been given the identical alternatives that Ive been privileged to, Johansson went on. I proceed to assist, and at all times have, variety in each business and can proceed to battle for initiatives the place everyone seems to be included.

The controversial quotes stem from a July 2019 As If journal interview the place she mentioned the intersection of political correctness and artwork.

Performing goes by tendencies, she stated. You understand, as an actor I needs to be allowed to play any individual, or any tree, or any animal as a result of thats my job and the necessities of my job. There are lots of social strains being drawn now, and lots of political correctness is being mirrored in artwork.

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Scarlett Johannson clarifies controversial casting feedback: I mishandled that - Sunriseread

Letter: Americans must be alert to threat from within – Reading Eagle

Editor:

I disagree with Trump represents threat to American democracy (Reading Eagle, Dec. 29). The Founding Fathers designed our republics Constitution so that no one not even the president could become an existential threat. Apart from external threats from China, Russia, Iran and radical Islam, an insidious internal threat is posed by corrupt, entrenched bureaucracies in both political parties, government agencies, organizations, and the media. This is fostered by a populace that is generally uninterested, apathetic, and condones immorality by our own oft-coerced amorality.

Wherever theres power and money, corruption is inevitable. There are still some good men and women in politics, in government, in influential institutions and in the media. But we citizens must reaffirm that morality and the truth are not relative. We must reject media bias and partisan spin and abandon political correctness nonsense. This while voting in unity to make government service like military service sacrificial, modestly recompensed, term-limited and a patriotic duty, not a means by which people impose their will or divisive agenda upon others.

David A. Hagginbothom

Williamsburg, Va.

Editor's note: Hagginbothom is formerly of Muhlenberg Township.

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Letter: Americans must be alert to threat from within - Reading Eagle

Sheriff gets robbed; why Grady Judd should have made Florida’s top Politicians of the Decade – Florida Politics

Polk County Sheriff Grady Judd and I have sparred for years over issues of transparency, crossing the line in labeling innocent men sex offendersand his aggressive practices seizing property from private citizens.

Those videos were seen hundreds of thousands of times and the controversial sheriff still got more than 95% of the vote when he ran for reelection in 2016.

In fact, Judd is so popular in Polk County, he hasnt had an opponent on the ballot in 15 years!

But dont mistake the tough-talkin, camera-lovin, bombastic Judd for just another lawman hes as shrewd of a politician as they come, tapping into rural Americas distaste for political correctness long before Donald Trump capitalized on it.

When Judd says hes going to speak, assignment managers all across West/Central Florida stop the presses and race their crews to hear what the sheriff will say from his headquarters in Winter Haven, even though its about as remote as you can get from the newsrooms of Tampa and Orlando; you just know Judd will give you a sound bite (or six) worthy of leading a newscast.

I mean, half the state knows why Polk Co. deputies shot a fleeing suspect 68 times (they ran out of bullets).

Judd isnt just one of the most recognizable politicians in Florida; with countless TV specials and his addiction to the Dateline-style undercover sex stings, he turned himself into the most recognizable sitting sheriff in America.

You want a politician with impact?

As president of the Florida Sheriffs Association in 2013 and 2014, Judd helped steer legislative priorities, a duty he continued even after leaving the statewide post. Hes also the current president of the Major County Sheriffs of America and plays a prominent role on theMarjory Stoneman Douglas State Commission.

Judd may not spend as much time in Tallahassee as some of Florida Politics other top politicians, but his popularity, impact, and ability to influence his community certainly rivals that of any Mayor on the list.

And with no opponent on the horizon for his 2020 reelection campaign, Judd is already building his resume for Florida Politics list of the top politicians for the next decade.

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Sheriff gets robbed; why Grady Judd should have made Florida's top Politicians of the Decade - Florida Politics

Will Gore Has the Lake District gone wet in its search for more visitor diversity? – The Independent

The quiet period between Christmas and new year is always a risky time for anyone making a media appearance, as the chief executive of the Lake District National Park Authority recently discovered.

Speaking to Sky News last weekend about the need to make the Lake District as welcoming as possible to all sections of British society, Richard Leafe quickly found himself accused of bringing identity politics into nature. His suggestion that the national park must adapt in small ways to attract a greater diversity of visitors was regarded in some quarters as political correctness gone mad.

For the most part, the rage that greeted him was concocted. The national parks are, as a matter of principle, for everyone to enjoy: yet there is no doubt that visitors are disproportionately white, middle-class, able-bodied and old. It should hardly be controversial to suggest that particular efforts might usefully be made to explain the Lake Districts merits to people from other backgrounds, and to encourage them to experience the areas wonders.

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Will Gore Has the Lake District gone wet in its search for more visitor diversity? - The Independent

Dori: Im very disappointed in Nordstrom for booting Salvation Army – MyNorthwest.com

(AP)

This story makes me so sad because I hold Nordstrom in very high regard.

It was a fantastic first job for all three of my daughters in high school and college. Everyone holds the company in high regard. So it is from that position of respect and love that I share a story about Nordstrom that really disturbs me.

The Seattle Times had a story over Christmas about an 85-year-old man named Dick Clarke who has been bell-ringing for the Salvation Army outside of the downtown Seattle Nordstrom for 18 years. He estimated that in that time, he collected over $100,000 for the Salvation Army.

The Salvation Army does a lot of good all around the world, from feeding the hungry to disaster relief to addiction rehabilitation to fighting human trafficking to helping survivors of domestic violence.

Dori: Christian soccer player persecuted for beliefs

The Salvation Army is also an evangelical Christian organization. Some LGBTQ Nordstrom employees have apparently complained that the Salvation Army bell-ringing made them uncomfortable.

In a world of common sense and reality, the logical response to these employees would be that they need to raise the bar of what makes them uncomfortable. But we are not in a world of common sense and reality. We are in this bizarro-world where radical political correctness trumps reality.

And so, Nordstrom told the Salvation Army man that he could not ring the bell outside the store anymore, because the Salvation Army is an evangelical Christian organization that uses the money it raises for fundamental Christian principles like helping the least fortunate among us.

Instead, Nordstrom could have told the few employees who were offended, Sorry, but were a private company, the Salvation Army does a lot of incredible work around the world, and weve partnered with them. But instead, they got rid of that wonderful charity opportunity because of a small number of people.

Its a bad move by Nordstrom and Im extremely disappointed.

Listen to the Dori Monson Show weekday afternoons from 12-3 p.m. on KIRO Radio, 97.3 FM. Subscribe to the podcast here.

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Dori: Im very disappointed in Nordstrom for booting Salvation Army - MyNorthwest.com

Religions unseen effects on the elderly … and everyone else – Deseret News

As I recently entered the Bountiful Temple of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, an elderly married couple emerged. They were well into their 80s. Chatting warmly with each other, they both scooted walkers along to steady themselves. It was still early in the day, so they had gotten up with the chickens to attend the temple. They were dressed up to go somewhere special. They were visibly cheerful and having a great time; they clearly enjoyed being together.

They had been volunteering in the temple. Think about it: Where else besides a temple, church, synagogue or mosque service can barely mobile people of advanced age go to work, to be welcome contributors instead of patients, objects to be helped, or problems to be dealt with?

This couple and the many just like them have something to get out of bed for when they go to worship. They want to contribute. They want to feel useful and needed. They want to serve, to do something meaningful. They could just stay in bed and think about their aches and pains, about their limitations. But they choose to serve instead.

In worshiping, they meet and mingle with other people. The social connections they make broaden them and lift their spirits.

The main reason these people worship is to commune with God and pay him their devotions. Here they touch something holy. They promise God to be more obedient, less selfish, more loving, holier, more generous. There arent many places where octogenarians promise and strive to change, to improve, to do better. In this important sense, they are looking forward, not merely backward, as the elderly are often inclined to do. By their efforts and through the ceremonies they participate in, they emerge as better people. They feel Gods hand in their lives.

These people undoubtedly pray for their family a son or granddaughter who is ill, injured, dealing with mental illness, needing a job, suffering from addiction, going through a divorce or suffering financial difficulties. Thus, thousands of people pray for those who need Gods blessings. Just ask someone who has been the beneficiary of that process they feel it.

Science has proven regular religious service adds six years to the average lifespan. Meaningful social connections strongly correlate with improved quality and length of life, and the same goes for engaging in serving others. Feeling connected to ancestors, descendants and to family generally is another silver bullet for improving quality and length of life. No government program can rival the mental and physical benefits that church and family offer all ages in experiencing personal connectedness and meaningful service.

Our current age demands that society acknowledge the uniqueness of each person and their experience and background. If that means that we honor the worth and uniqueness of each individual, who can argue against it? The ultimate goal is to respect each person as an entity, all being of equal dignity, with equal rights.

A culture of political correctness increasingly requires that each individual also be acknowledged by their gender, race, sexual orientation, personal pronoun choices and other characteristics and personal choices. Religious affiliation, spiritual devotion and faith-based service must also be counted among the defining characteristics that make a person who he or she is; few things both guide and characterize a person more markedly.

Many on the political left and the media seem almost uniformly to see religion in negative terms. Admittedly, churches are struggling with hot button issues like same-sex marriage, Catholic sex abuse scandals and how to interface with the hyperpolarized political realm. But pure religion has always been and will always be the most positive and powerful force in making bad men good and good men better. Just ask my happy octogenarian fellow worshipers.

Greg Bell is the former lieutenant governor of Utah and the current president and CEO of the Utah Hospital Association.

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Religions unseen effects on the elderly ... and everyone else - Deseret News

Tony Vagneur: Thankfully, we’ve put the brakes on skis becoming dangerous missiles – Aspen Times

Its the old how did we get here story. A group of us fifth-graders, out on Aspen Mountain enjoying the Red Brick schools always-popular Wednesday Afternoon Activities Club, had just started down the Ridge of Bell. Whoever our leader was that day has probably gone up in a swath of cold smoke.

Stopping just behind the leader, I looked up to see a flurry of activity followed by the haunting yell of days gone by on the mountain: Ski! Ski!

When safety straps failed for one reason or another (like not being decisively buckled), there was nothing to hold the ski to the foot in case of a binding release, and the ski was suddenly turned into a deadly missile, soaring down the slope, out of control. People have died or been severely injured by such flying skis, and everyone took it seriously when it occurred.

But this was different. Coming toward me, skipping off the top of the bumps, was a definitely loose ski topped off with a securely strapped-in ski boot. Visions like that are outside the realm of believability, but youth knows no safety bounds in an emergency and I managed to trap the fast-moving missile, stopping it dead in its tracks.

The girl who owned the unusual ski/boot apparatus was not very happy as we got her put back together and started the long trek to the bottom of the mountain, her wet foot and chagrined attitude slowing things down. The next week, she was no longer in our class. Since then, Ive seen a similar scenario a couple of times.

You cant talk about safety straps without talking about long thongs, those long leather lengths that held our boots to our bindings (about 3 feet long). In the early days, there were no safety bindings and our ski boot toes were held in place by two steel plates, one on each side of the ski. Long thongs were pulled tight against the heel of our boots, making sure the toe couldnt come loose at an inopportune time.

We pulled those long thongs very tight and no one ever came out of the ski binding, let alone the boot. There were several ways of wrapping the leather straps around boots, creating a visible pattern on the back of the boot, but practically all of them in Aspen were done in the same way, simply because we were fashion-conscious, I reckon.

When safety bindings came along, mainly in the form of Marker toes (at least to us), long thongs were still essential to keep your boot solidly against the Marker toe. Marker also had a spring latch that was snapped shut over the heel to keep the boot securely fastened. No safety release on the heel.

When you fell at a high rate of speed and your new Marker safety toe released, one or both skis would be freed from your feet, but would still be attached to you by the long thongs. The skis would flail around in all directions as the straps unraveled, hitting your body, sometimes gashing your head or shins. If you were lucky, you didnt get hurt by the gnashing of the ski edges and got up and put yourself together again. Such falls were aptly described as egg beaters, only in reality they were body beaters.

Many different models of safety release bindings were developed over the years, but the one remaining issue was that of safety straps or long thongs. Until, one bright and glorious day, wop stops appeared on the Aspen scene. Via radio, Robin Perry sent me out of the patrol room one day to stop a skier getting off Lift No. 3 he said the skier had no safety straps.

Said skier was chagrined to be stopped for such a violation, and after showing and describing the invention beneath his ski boot, a spring-loaded device that dug into the snow when the ski was released from the boot, we were convinced of its effectiveness in stopping runaway skis, although company policy had to be changed to allow such things on the mountain (1976).

Wop stops (name origination long forgotten) soon appeared within the patrol room, being mounted on everything except powder skis, the reasoning of which should be clear. If a ski is attached to you during a fall in deep powder, its much easier to find.

It should be said that wop stops were referred to as such until political correctness overtook the world of public discourse. They are now an integral part of every alpine downhill binding manufactured, albeit now denoted as ski brakes. We have unfortunately lost our sense of irreverence.

Weve come a long way, baby, and were not done yet.

Tony Vagneur remembers who lost the ski and boot on the Ridge, but he aint talking. Tony writes here every Saturday and welcomes your comments at ajv@sopris.net.

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Tony Vagneur: Thankfully, we've put the brakes on skis becoming dangerous missiles - Aspen Times

Racism is already mainstream soon it might be the norm – Wired.co.uk

Was it the whipping up of white working-class voters in Trumps election campaign? Or the toxic debate around immigration during the Brexit referendum? Or was it as early as the birth of social media, when a platform was handed to racists? However it happened, public discourse around race in the last decade slowly morphed from polite political correctness and justified outrage at even a hint of racism in public to a slow accommodation with extremist views on the far-right setting up 2020 to be the year that the veil lifts altogether, finally normalising racism in ways that we haven't seen for decades.

Racism has long existed in politics and academia, and persists in structural discrimination and everyday bias. But the idea that the ideology driving racist actions and rhetoric should somehow be given space for discussion has only recently (re)gained currency. In recent years far-right intellectuals have subtly and skilfully changed the rules of engagement, arguing for viewpoint diversity in the disingenuous insistence that they have been unfairly silenced. They argue that racial differences are so profound that the mere presence of immigrants is damaging a countrys genetic stock and cultural fabric.

Primo Levi wrote that the thing about fascism is that it wants everybody to be the same, and you are not. And it is diversity and difference that those intellectuals are against. Their argument is one that was once popular in the early 20th century, at the height of the eugenics movement, when it became fashionable to believe that certain people are good for the health of the nation and should be allowed to live and stay, while others shouldnt. Eugenics was, at the time, accepted scientific wisdom. Then it was the precursor to Nazi racial hygiene and the Holocaust.

Today, disturbingly, we are seeing a re-emergence of eugenics-style thinking on race. Steve Bannon, chief strategist to Donald Trump until 2017, has appeared on the European political scene to promote far-right populism. In March 2018 he told French nationalists: Let them call you racist, let them call you xenophobes, let them call you nativists. Wear it like a badge of honour. When in July 2019 President Trumps supporters chanted Send her back!, referring to black Muslim congresswoman Ilhan Omar, it was clear that politics had changed. Some of us are welcome as citizens and some of us arent.

With the help of social media and the dark web, the new racists have found each other. The burgeoning social network known as Gab, forums such as 4chan and 8chan, and groups like Generation Identity have all enabled this. A report published by the London-based Institute for Strategic Dialogue, following the mass shooting at a mosque in Christchurch, New Zealand, in 2019, found that tweets referring to Great Replacement Theory (the belief that white people are being ethnically superseded) almost tripled between 2014 and 2018. The racist far-right has already become one of the biggest terrorist threats within Europe and the US.

If youre not scared yet, you soon will be. What is most worrying is how nationalists and populists who happily fan the flames of racism are being welcomed into power across the world. The racism swilling about on the dark web will no longer be languishing in the dark in 2020. It will be in parliaments, newspapers and lecture theatres in Europe, the US and across the world.

Angela Saini is author of Superior: The Return of Race Science

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Racism is already mainstream soon it might be the norm - Wired.co.uk

The common phrases midwives are banned from using – Coventry Telegraph

A huge list of words most people use around babies are out of bounds for midwives.

Among the things they aren't supposed to say in the hospital are "good girl", "big baby", and even "delivered".

The guidance was drawn up to stop mothers from getting upset

The lengthy advice bans many words and phrases to make language more "respectful, inclusive, and less intimidating for the mother".

And it doesn't just stop there - the 'labour ward' needs to be called the 'birthing suite', apparently.

But the authors admitted some may see it as "political correctness gone mad".

Instead of telling mums "good girl" during labour, midwives have been told to say "you're doing really well" instead.

"Big baby" should be "healthy baby".

The guide also suggests avoiding the phrase "terminate pregnancy".

Instead women should be told it is a "compassionate induction".

It also stresses that midwives and obstetricians should never address the pregnant woman as a 'she' when they are discussing the situation at hand, and says they should address her by name.

The guide says this is because women should be respected as individuals, "rather than simply a container and mechanism for producing a baby".

Other advice for midwives includes avoiding using phrases that are 'anxiety-provoking, over-dramatic or violent'.

In another move, it asked for coded language, frequently used by medics to describe certain situations, to be replaced in plain English.

This includes scraping the medical term SROM, and telling the woman her water's have broken in much simpler language.

The advice was published last year in the British Medical Journal.

Its three authors were Professor Andrew Weeks, who works at the International Maternal Health Care at the University of Liverpool, Natalie Mobbs, a medical student at Liverpool, and Catherine Williams, a committee member of National Maternity Voices.

Writing in the BMJ, they said: "Although eyes may roll at the thought of 'political correctness gone mad,' the change is well founded.

"Firstly, intra-partum care must keep in pace with and reflect changes in societal norms and expectations."

They said the clinician should "ensure that the woman is in control of and involved in what is happening to her".

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The common phrases midwives are banned from using - Coventry Telegraph

Church of England has ‘swallowed political correctness wholesale’, Queen’s former chaplain says, as he converts to Catholicism – The Telegraph

The Church of England has "swallowed political correctness wholesale", the Queen's former chaplain has said, as he announces that he is leaving the Anglican church to convert to Catholicism.

Dr Gavin Ashenden, who served the Queen from 2008 to 2017, said that the Church is increasingly bowing to the non-negotiable demands of secular culture and has remained astonishingly silent when it comes to defending Christian values.

Dr Ashenden stepped down from his role in the Church after objecting to the Quran being read during an Anglican service.

He has now chosen to convert to Catholicism because he believes it has the courage, integrity and conviction to hold the Christian ground.

Freedom of speech is slowly being eroded; those who refuse to be politically correct risk accusations of thought crime and Christians are being unfairly persecuted, he wrote in the Mail on Sunday. And where is the Church of England in this crucial culture war? Is it on the front line? Not that I can see. If anything, it has switched sides.

This isnt just a shame, its a calamity.

Too often, called upon to defend Christian values, it has remained astonishingly silent. Nowhere is this starker today than in the highly-charged debate over transgender rights, particularly regarding children and teenagers.

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Church of England has 'swallowed political correctness wholesale', Queen's former chaplain says, as he converts to Catholicism - The Telegraph

Mullane: A rock and roll Christmas this year and every year – Waynesboro Record Herald

Now its easy to make fun of millennials. They tend toward self-parody with their tattoos, manbuns, complicated coffee orders, fussy beer, over reliance on data, and gender-benderism.

Christmas gift giving is a chore.

You get what you think is right for people, but there are mistakes. A few Christmases ago, a friend got his wife a new upright vacuum cleaner. He posted a pic of the machine on Facebook prior to wrapping. A woman commented, Unless that thing has a diamond bracelet wrapped around the handle, dont do it!

Theyre still together, so I guess it worked out.

The best are the gifts that are instantly loved. That streak of joy that crosses their face when they open and realize what it is. Nothing like it. Youre just as happy, too. And you learn again that its the giving not the receiving that matters more.

And thats my problem this year. Theres a person Id like to get a gift for, a gift that would bring something missing in their life, which is joy. Actually, its not just one person, but a whole generation, the millennials. They are the Americans who turned 23-38 this year. All year Ive read about them. Its usually bad press. They are, according to reports and surveys and studies, the most unhappy of the living generations of Americas.

Now its easy to make fun of them. They tend toward self parody with their tattoos, manbuns, complicated coffee orders, fussy beer, over reliance on data, and gender-benderism.

Even my own kids and their teenage friends, who will soon replace the millennials (Gen Z or zoomers as they call themselves) make fun of millennials and their college debt and in-your-face political correctness.

America is a bubbling cauldron of racism, sexism, homophobia and other intractable social pathologies that requires heavy-handed social media tactics and government policies to correct. The future is dystopian, where CO2 leaves Mother Earth a Wall-E world denuded of green, where the oceans rise and life withers. Man, thats bleak.

It is no wonder that millennials figure prominently in Americas deaths of despair from suicide and opioid overdoses and other addictions. Two weeks ago, a business journal took a look at the state of millennial well-being and published it under this headline Lonely, burned out and depressed: The state of millennials mental health entering the 2020s.

Egad.

As I close in on 60, Im at a loss to explain the generational malaise.

I was born at the end of the baby boom, during the Camelot Era. Optimism was in the air. You breathed it as you grew up. Not that there werent bad things to feel depressed and angry about Vietnam, Nixon, gas rioting, a lot of other stuff, too. We had Klan rolling around Bucks County back then.

But the Big One was the Cold War, what Kennedy called our long twilight struggle between good and evil. (God-fearing America good, godless commie USSR evil.)

It hung over us 24/7. We on the East Coast knew wed be vaporized in a nuclear battle. The worst secret in Levittown was the Nike missile base off Route 413. In World War III, those nukes would rise from their silos and blast off toward the USSR. Our outgoing missiles would pass their incoming, and then our world would end. It was called MAD mutual assured destruction. Afterward, The living would envy the dead, it was said.

As kids we learned this in school, along with our numbers and colors and letters of the alphabet. But we didnt let it get to us, or conquer us. Im not sure why. Maybe it was that wonderful American optimism. Or maybe it was the music, rock and roll. You cant underestimate it. Rock music changed attitudes and emotions faster than any illicit drug. Maybe thats why it was so popular. It bards were taken more seriously than any network anchor, pundit, college professor, public intellectual or socialist socialists considered cranks in those days.

Top 40 radio, prehistoric compared to todays digital streaming services, provided the joyful cultural oxygen breathed by young Americans, maybe more than its credited.

The other night, I came across an old holiday video produced in 1983 for MTV. Its the obscure Rock and Roll Christmas by George Thorogood and the Destroyers. Its a fast, hard rock, blues and boogie tune, which was Thorogoods signature. Its done live, and the set is packed with kids dancing, some badly, but all having a great time, which is all that matters when youre rocking.

Thorogood was from Delaware, and he and bands like his were popular in the Philadelphia area at that time. Watching that video is how I remember it being back then out with friends, dancing with girls we didnt know, rocking til close. And everyone had plans, more or less. Everyone was figuring it out. Christmas was bright. The future was bright. You could see how happy this made your parents, too, that you were having a good time and had plans and were on your way.

I wish I could wrap that rock energy and optimism and fun and give it to the millennials this Christmas, and every Christmas until that joy comes, and despair vanishes.

JD Mullane can be reached at 215-949-5745 or at jmullane@couriertimes.com.

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Mullane: A rock and roll Christmas this year and every year - Waynesboro Record Herald

Italy’s Far Right Charges the Pope With Culinary Heresy for Serving Pork-Free Pasta – Foreign Policy

Few things in Italy are more sacred than food. When the pope offered a lunch to the poor of Rome on Nov. 17, it was the menu, rather than the gesture, that made headlines. The pontiff, already unpopular on the right, came under attack from the conservative media because the lasagna his holiness served for lunch was pork-free. The Vatican had figured out that some of the guests would be Muslim and provided a halal meal, and the Italian right took this as a double insult: Not only did Pope Francis show compassion toward immigrants, but he also did so by butchering the recipe for a standard of Italian cuisine that traditionally requires a mixture of beef and pork.

In a recent TV appearance, the leader of the far-right League party, Matteo Salvini, bashed the European Union because an EU directive requiring the traceability of food makes life harder for Italian nonnas who sell homemade pasta in the southern city of Bari. If you come to Bari and you dont like St. Nicholas and focaccia, go back to your country, he said, referring to the citys patron saint and to one of its culinary specialties. No one had raised an issue with focaccia, but Salvinis defense was preemptive, to make it clear that we do not need to change our traditions.

In Italy, food has become the epicenter of a culture war waged by right-wing parties and their media allies against multiculturalism and European bureaucrats. To the right, traditional cuisine has become not only a source of national pride but also a signifier of national identity, which they believe to be threatened by multiculturalism and political correctness. They vow to defend lasagna and tortelliniwhose original recipes require a mixture of pork and beef and a mixture of pork and prosciutto, respectivelyfor the same reason they defend Christmas nativity scenes and crosses in public schools: to exclude Italys Muslim residents, whose religious practice includes avoiding pork, from Italian culture. (Jews, whose religion also prohibits eating pork, are just not part of the equation in his rhetoricthere are not many Jews in Italy, not all of them keep kosher, and those who do rarely attend public schools, so its unusual for a Jewish Italian to protest that pork is served in cafeterias.)

After the pope served pork-free lasagna, a prominent conservative Catholic author Antonio Socci wrote an opinion piece in Libero, a right-wing newspaper, accusing Francis of having subscribed to a suicidal, multiculturalist ideology that leads to the rejection of all that is Christian or Western. Pork-based lasagna, argued Socci, is a backbone of Italian civilization, like wine and Parmesan cheese.

The popes lasagna controversy wasnt an isolated incident. When the archbishop of Bologna, Matteo Zuppi, hosted a dinner for the poor in October, on the day of citys patron saint, he came under fire for a similar reason. The Archbishop served tortellini, the famous ring-shaped stuffed pasta traditionally filled with prosciutto or pork chops. But to make them palatable to Muslim guests, Zuppi ordered that some of them be stuffed with chicken instead. The choice enraged Salvini, who accused the archbishop of erasing Italys history.

Among those outraged by the chicken tortellini is Andrea Indini, an editor for the conservative newspaper Il Giornale,who wrote an article In Defense of Tortellini (and of Tradition). In an interview, Indini said that deviating from the traditional recipe of tortellini is dangerous because it could result in distorting our society, even more than globalization is already doing. He particularly objected to the fact that the original recipe was changed to suit a different culture: The idea to change tortellini not to bother Muslims is like a provocation, Indini said. Tradition is important, and it starts from little things.

While the populist right is vowing to defend tradition against immigrant cultures and globalization pretty much everywhere, theres something exquisitely Italian in the focus on food. That can be partially explained by the fact that food does have a special place in Italian culture: Many Italians cringe at the idea of Hawaiian pizza, seeing the addition of pineapple to a pizza as a culinary crime, regardless of their political orientation, and online you can find several videos of Italian nonnas expressing their shock on how their cuisine is distorted abroad.

But Davide Maria De Luca, a political reporter from the online news outlet Il Post, believes theres also another explanation: Italy is a country with a very low patriotism, so they weaponize the recipe of tortellini or lasagna. Likewise, in France, food has been weaponized against Muslim immigrants: Members of the right-wing politician Marine Le Pens party have campaigned against kebab shops, and the Bloc Identitaire nationalist movement has organized festivals dedicated to saucisson, a thick French sausage, and red wine.

The right-wing rhetoric of food purism in Italy started in the late 1990s, coinciding with the first large immigration wave from North Africa and the rise of the League. At the time, the League was a separatist party based in the wealthy North (back then, it was called the Northern League), but it also opposed immigration. Combining these two agendas, the party came up with the slogan Yes to polenta, no to couscous. (Polenta is popular in the Northern Italian Alps.)

But it was only in recent years that so-called alimentary sovereignty became a major political topic. In 2017, the right-wing city government of Trieste banned ethnic food from the cafeterias of public schools to protect our traditions. In 2018, Genoas conservative mayor banned opening of international restaurants in some streets of the city center, also in the name of European traditions. A few years earlier, a French mayor, Robert Menard of Beziers, announced he would block the opening new kebab shops, because they have nothing to do with our culture.

Right-leaning politicians are trying hard to look like foodies. The leader of the post-fascist party Brothers of Italy, Giorgia Meloni, has posted a series of cooking videos online: Meloni, who has recently surpassed Salvini in individual popularity, prepares a caprese salad (not a hard task: just layer mozzarella, tomatoes, basil, and olive oil) while lashing against the EU. Salvinis online presence revolves around food as much as it does around politics: The League leader is constantly posting pictures of his lunchor dinner, or afternoon snackand, when he travels across the country, he makes sure to include the local delicacies of the region he is visiting.

Despite the Italian rights emphasis on traditional food as if it were something unchanged throughout history, and therefore unchangeable, the household names of Italian cuisine often have a foreign origin or influence. And their recipes have changed over time.

Everyone thinks that the food they eat is typical of the place where they live, but most of it came from outside in more or less distant times, said Marco Aime, an anthropologist from the University of Genoa. For example, spaghetti are of Chinese origin, and tomato was introduced from America.

Polenta, so dear to the League, is made from corn, also introduced from the Americas. Many Sicilian recipes, including pasta con le sarde and couscous (yes, theres Sicilian couscous) were introduced by the Arabs during the Muslim domination of the island in the 9th century. Sorbet, a must in Italian cuisine, has an Arabic etymology.

Massimo Montanari, a food historian at the University of Bologna, said that every tradition is temporary and born on the innovation of the past. For instance, tortellini were invented in the Middle Ages, and stuffing them with chicken or turkey was considered normal until the 19th century. The supposed pork-only rule came later (pork was cheaper, and the stuffed pasta could be made from butchers scraps).

But although historically inaccurate, the idea that the countrys culinary tradition is immutable and therefore should be protected from foreign influence and change has become ingrained in Italys right-wing discourse. When a high school teacher made headlines in November for publicly threatening to fail some of his students because they participated to an anti-nationalist protest, the Italian media was quick to point out that the teacher, Giancarlo Talamini, had a personal website in which he proudly declared that he was a racist because I love polenta and tortellini.

Fabio Parasecoli, a professor of food studies at New York University, calls it gastropopulismo. Food, he argues, has become a proxy to describe national identity, and its something everyone can relate to. Food is about what you are. Its an easy tool, in the sovereigntist discourse, because it touches some intimate chords, Parasecoli said. Food brings the great global issues into everyday life.

Gastropopulism, Parasecoli said, originated from the left, with movements like Slow Food and left-wing intellectuals reviving the local food culture from deindustrialized areas. Today, this kind of rhetoric is more popular on the right, but it is still in deindustrialized areas that it enjoys more popularity. De Luca, the political journalist, noted that culinary nostalgia has a particularly strong grip in the countrys northeast, a League stronghold. The Veneto province, once the economic engine of Italy, now sees his young people emigrate to Milan or abroad, he said. In this climate, food has become a comforting tradition to cling to.

But this fetishization of food as tradition raises a question: In a country like Italy, who gets to decide whats tradition and whats not? After all, in almost 3,000 years of history, the Italian peninsula has experienced a wide range of influences and invasions. First it was the Phoenicians from the Levant, then the Romans, bringing culinary influence from all over their vast empire. After the empire collapsed, Germanic tribes and Arabs took turns invading different parts of the peninsula, while Austria and Spain colonized it in more recent times.

The Arabs introduced couscous and sorbet; the Austrians brought schnitzel, which in Italy is called cotoletta alla Milanese; the renowned cioccolato di Modica, a specialty of the Sicilian town of the same name, is a product of the Spanish domination until Italy was eventually unified, in the late 19th century, under the rule of a French-speaking king.

Seen in this context, culinary tradition is a political construct. Its the invention of tradition, said Parasecoli, the NYU historian. But, invented or not, tradition can become a powerful rhetorical weapon: It defines your identity, a pillar, a stronghold from which you can kick out outsiders.

Food in particular strikes a chord, because its often intertwined in personal memories, our personal history, and our deepest sense of identity. The idea that the food that we grew up with could be taken away by the forces of globalization is a powerful rhetorical asset, even if its an inaccurate one.

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Italy's Far Right Charges the Pope With Culinary Heresy for Serving Pork-Free Pasta - Foreign Policy

The most-read agency stories of 2019 – PRWeek

Geo Group calls out Edelman for dropping it as a clientJuly 31

Edelman grabbed unwanted national headlines in July, after finding itself at the intersection of politics and employee purpose. After thinking about adding private prison company the Geo Group as a client, the agency dropped the account in the face of employee complaints over work the company does for U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement. Geo Group accused the agency of bowing to political correctness.

Andrew Garson charged with wire fraudOctober 2

Sometimes, bad news come in twos, not threes. The second-most-read agency piece was the story of Andrew Garson, who was arrested for a scheme involving two PR firms he worked for: MWWPR and WME-IMG. Garson allegedly billed MWW for client expenses he incurred while at Catalyst, a firm that eventually became part of Endeavor.

USAA names Weber Shandwick lead corporate agencyAugust 2

In August, the service-member-focused insurer and bank USAA picked Weber Shandwick as its lead corporate communications firm, with work led by the agencys Washington, DC, office.

How a crass social media star became an agency copywriterNovember 27

Is the jump from crass social media influencer to copywriter that big? Marketing firm EP+Co didnt think so. The firm hired Sarah Schauer, who had 850,000 followers on Vine, prior to the platforms demise, as well as 20,300 followers on Instagram and 137,000 on Twitter.

Freuds hires ex-Clinton campaign adviser Latham to oversee radical changesAugust 18

The fifth-most-read story concerned Freuds hiring back former employee Sara Latham, who was also a senior adviser for Hillary Clinton's 2016 presidential bid. Latham had worked at the shop between 2003 and 2005 and was rejoining to help Freuds implement structural changes.

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The most-read agency stories of 2019 - PRWeek

Spoofing the Argus-Courier – Petaluma Argus Courier

Back in the 1970s and 80s when the Argus-Courier was a daily newspaper, the news and photo staff produced a special edition once a year that was never seen by the general public. It was the annual spoof edition that was assembled in December and distributed to employees at the newspapers holiday party.

The edition, usually four to six pages, was called the Anguish-Carrier.

It was a different time, before political correctness, Human Resource departments and the Me-Too Movement. The Anguish-Carrier editions were humorous, risqu and borderline inappropriate. They poked fun at fellow employees.

And they were always eagerly anticipated at the annual holiday party.

But today, for obvious reasons, they would not be permitted.

And if employees were to produce them, it would likely be grounds for dismissal.

The spoof editions were printed for more than 10 years, before the publisher in 1989 put an end to them because of a story that took a dig at him. Until today, the Anguish-Carrier was known only to employees of the newspaper. A few copies, yellowed by time, have been saved for posterity.

The motto of the Argus-Courier in those days, printed below the front-page flag, was Serving Sonoma County since 1855. The Anguish-Carrier flag was placed above the phrase Milking Sonoma County since 1855.

Recently, several former Argus-Courier employees from that era got together to share their recollections about the Anguish-Carrier editions. And they laughed heartily as they looked over copies of the spoof editions from 40 years ago.

Doug Brown, a photographer at the Argus-Courier from 1979 to 1989, recalled, My most vivid memory was the last edition.That November, a baby duck got cut on a fish hook in the lake at Lucchesi Park.Someone took him to Petaluma Valley Hospital.A surgeon removed the hook and gave the duckling a stitch to close the wound. I took photos of the procedureand they were published with the story.

As the deadline for the Anguish-Carrier approached, he continued, I wrote an article called Save the Bird.It was about how the publisher had a heart attack and needed a heart replacement.The search was on for a heart, but we couldnt find a heart small enough.Finally, we found a baby bird that had a suitably small heart, but once the procedurestarted, everyone began yelling, Save the bird!

Brown added, This was during the time the editorial and photo departments were trying to unionize. On December 26, after seeing the Anguish-Carrier,the publisher came storming out of his office screaming, Who the f--- wrote this? It was me and I signed the article By Dog Bowser.I know the entire editorial staff knew who wrote it, but not a finger was pointed, or a word uttered.

The publisher put the kibosh on the Anguish from that moment on.

One of my favorite memories about working at the Argus-Courier was writing for the Anguish, said Brown.

Jeff Weber, who worked in the newsroom from 1980 to 1985, recalled contributing several Anguish articles during his five years at as a reporter and Saturday edition editor.

The one I remember best was a not-so-subtle parody of the sports editor, whose tenure was relatively short -- perhaps because he faced the unenviable task of following in the footsteps of the legendary Casey Tefertiller. (Tefertiller went on to work as a sportswriter for the San Francisco Examiner and wrote several books about Wyatt Earp and the American West.)

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Spoofing the Argus-Courier - Petaluma Argus Courier

2019: A Year in Reading – National Review

Winston Churchill(Library of Congress)Mostly about politics ancient and modern

As the decade comes to a close, I would like to thank National Reviewfor giving me the opportunity to put forward this annual list of books that you should read.This is my seventh list since 2013.For this one, I have put a lot more emphasis on political books because, like most thinking Americans, I am striving to understand our dynamic and unpredictable landscape. Incredibly useful in this regard were two books by authors well-known to NR readers: Alienated America, by Tim Carney, and The Smallest Minority, by Kevin D. Williamson.

In Alienated America, Carney captures the enormous differences in 21st-century American between tight-knit communities and alienated communities, and the political implications of those differences. He sees religion as a stabilizing force, noting that popular culture likes to paint the dark picture of religion in America, but the actual data point the other way. Carney observes, however, that religions ability to stabilize social institutions and create community is increasingly limited as younger generations turn away from any faith at all. He notes rather grimly that if you have to choose between plentiful worry-free sex and church, then church is fighting an uphill fight.

Williamsons The Smallest Minority also looks at todays America and finds a country where too many citizens are unwilling to tolerate differing opinions. The chief pleasure of Williamsons book is the way his critique is presented in strong and evocative writing. Williamson is like a jazz master with English. He may not follow all the traditional rules, but youre impressed with what he can do with language and metaphor to drive an argument home. His riffs off the main melody includes syncopating, laugh-out-loud humor. His description of his brief ordeal with The Atlantic magazine is Williamson at his best and a reminder that NR is fortunate to have him back.

Another writer familiar to NR readers is Michael Brendan Dougherty. His moving memoir, My Father Left Me Ireland, tells the story of his growing up with an absent father, in the form of letters he wrote to his father as an adult. Along the way, he has moments of great insight into family, fatherhood, and Irishness, including this one, about the Irish language: When the Irish compare the language revivals of Hebrew and Irish, they are tempted simply to despair of Irish ability. The similarities are hard to miss. Each language movement talked about itself as an attempt to recover their respective nations manhood. . . . And each of the language revivals was meant to foreshadow and undergird the building of a viable nation state.

The year 2019 was a good one for biographies, and some of the best were Matriarch, by Susan Page; Our Man, by George Packer; Touched with Fire, by David Lowe; and of course Churchill, by Andrew Roberts.

Matriarch, about Barbara Bush, tells the story of one of the most important and unsung women of the 20th century. Wife of one president and mother of another, she was a quick-witted and wise adviser who was often underestimated by those who couldnt get past the white hair and the string of pearls. One of the misunderestimaters was Nancy Reagan, who was chronically rude to Barbara when Nancy was the first lady, but she got her comeuppance in later years. When Nancy falsely claimed that Barbara snubbed ex-president Reagan, Barbara did not hold back, telling Nancy, And we did have your wonderful husband to the White House, and dont you ever call me again! That was the last non-perfunctory conversation the two women ever had.

Our Man, referring to the Democratic foreign-policy adviser Richard Holbrooke, explains why a man who never had any of the top jobs in American foreign policy was still influential enough to merit a substantial biography. He may never have made it to his lifelong goals of being secretary of state or national-security adviser, but he sure acted as if he belonged. As an assistant secretary of state under Clinton, Packer reports, At meetings in the situation room, [Holbrooke] would start out seated against the wall with the other plus-ones, but soon his chair began to slide forward until it was wedged at the table between the cabinet officers, to their intense annoyance. This behavior understandably created some enemies. Packer tells of a young Susan Rice flipping the bird to an arrogant and condescending Holbrooke, and later getting congratulated for doing so by Secretary of State Madeline Albright.

Touched by Fire, about the Jewish civil-rights lawyer Morris Abram, was a total and pleasant surprise. I vaguely knew of Morris as a long-time Jewish organizational leader, but he had a fascinating life, serving, among many other things, as a formidable sparring partner for National Review founder William F. Buckley, who called him one of the most ferocious advocates in my experience. Abram also mentored future homeland-security secretary Jeh Johnson, who was amazed that Abram liked lowbrow snacks, just like anyone else. As Johnson recalled, It was like yodels or Twinkies or Ring Dings. Im addicted to those things. I was 27 years old at the time. It was a validation for me to see the great Morris Abram eating junk food. Although Abram initially gained fame as a liberal, he drifted to the right in response to many of the excesses of the Left, and his taste in reading improved greatly over the years. Late in life, Lowe observes, Abram wrote to his son Morris Junior that [Joseph] Epstein, whom he said had been forced from his position as editor of The American Scholar for reasons of political correctness, had become one of his favorite essayists. In Geneva, he would look forward to receiving the latest issue of the neoconservative magazine Commentary and proceed to read it from cover to cover the morning of its arrival, making notes in the margins of each article.

NR readers do not need to be told to read a biography of Winston Churchill by Andrew Roberts, especially one as good as this one. Its worth reading the 1,000 or so pages just to get to this observation about the elderly Churchill seeing some of his acquaintances pass on: As a drinker, smoker and carnivore, outliving teetotalers and vegetarians never failed to give Churchill immense satisfaction.

Barry Strausss 10 Caesars is not a biography, but a history of the ten most important Roman emperors, in his expert opinion. Strauss has a gift for making the ancients come alive, and he does not disappoint here. When describing Hadrian, for example, he notes that Hadrians traveling entourage, complete with imperial secretaries, bureaucrats, hangers-on, servants, his wife and her staff, was the second Rome; the government on the move. It was the Air Force One of the ancient world. I understood the key Roman emperors much better after reading Strausss book.

Ben Shapiros Right Side of History also starts in the ancient world and brings things up to the present in a breezy, whirlwind tour of western civilization. While he rightfully lauds the accomplishments of the West, he cautions that modern man may not exactly be making the most of what our ancestors have built. As Shapiro says, We might not think of binge-watching Stranger Things as an iron yoke upon our neck, but if television is our best reason to live, were not really living. Rejoice in the purpose G-d gives you.

David McCullough has written many excellent works of history, and The Pioneers, his look at the movers from the 13 colonies to what is now the Midwest, is no exception. What stood out most about this book, though, was the acknowledgements section, in which he explains what attracted him to the topic, the libraries and archives he needed to tell the story, and his multi-decade effort to pursue it. Another book that makes great use of a library is Dan Rabinowitzs The Lost Library, which tells the Indiana Jonesworthy tale of Eastern Europes greatest Jewish library, its conquest by the Nazis, and the post-war struggle over the librarys contents.

Finally, I recommend Jack Goldsmiths In Hoffas Shadow. Goldsmith, a senior Justice Department official under George W. Bush, got that position only by renouncing his stepfather, Chuckie OBrien, a longtime aide to Jimmy Hoffa suspected by the FBI of delivering Hoffa to his still mysterious demise. OBrien achieved his own sort of infamy from the FBIs attention. As Goldsmith writes of Chuckie, It takes a special life and a special character to be portrayed by Robert Duvall, Paul Newman, and Danny DeVito in three quite different roles and three major motion pictures. Goldsmith makes the case that he was wrong to renounce Chuckie, and the FBI was wrong to accuse him. He also gives a great portrayal of the fiery and charismatic Hoffa. Regarding Hoffas teamster rival Frank Fitzsimmons, Goldsmith informs us that one sign of Hoffas visceral, almost childlike hatred was that he taped a picture of Fitzsimmons face under the downstairs toilet seat. While Hoffa could be immature, he could also be wise. As Chuckie recalled, I didnt know what the Wall Street Journal was until Mr. Hoffa said, You read this, you read Time, Newsweek, and find a book and read it and youll be able to handle yourself with anybody. Good advice to follow.

With the 2010s over, many people like to make pledges or resolutions regarding their plans for the next decade. My pledge to you, dear reader, is to keep reading, and I hope you do the same. Doing so will allow you to handle yourself with anybody, and somewhere, in some still undiscovered place, Jimmy Hoffa will appreciate it.

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2019: A Year in Reading - National Review