The Religious and Anti-Chinese Roots of Replacement Theory – Religion & Politics

San Francisco, California, Chinatown. Chinese Railroad Workers Mural, by Amy Nelder. Stockton Street. (Via Alamy)

The Great Replacement theory didnt just emerge in Buffalo, El Paso, Pittsburgh, Charleston, or any of the other racist mass murders of the 21st century. Theres a long history to white Americans fear of being replaced. This history is often traced back to the early 20th century when falling birth rates among Anglo-American families, coupled with worries about fecund immigrants from Eastern Europe, fueled the eugenics movement and Immigration Act of 1924. But it was the Chinese Exclusion Act of 1882 that saw the first federal attempt to enshrine something like a Great Replacement theory into U.S. law. To make the case for exclusion, anti-Chinese activists warned of the evils that would overrun America if heathen hordes were allowed free entry.

For the Reverend Samuel Blakeslee, the United States was supposed to be Gods bastion for Christianity. In an 1877 address given before the General Association of Congregational Churches of California, and later submitted in a report to the California State Senates Special Committee on Chinese Immigration, Blakeslee said that America had been preserved for thousands of years for the experiment of true Christian liberty against the petrified tyrannies, errors, vices, and irreligions of the old continents. Erasing the presence of Native Americans, Blakeslee, like many before and after him, saw America as a city on a hill for the rest of the world.

But for Blakeslee, the Chinese threatened all of this. He had originally come to San Francisco some 20 years earlier in part to missionize the Chinese. Yet, the language barrier proved too difficult for him and he turned from thinking that the Chinese could be effectively evangelized in the U.S. to arguing that the Chinese would instead convert Americans to heathenism if allowed to immigrate freely. To prostitute all American advantages and opportunities to a vast people, confirmed in old systems of debasement, idolatry, prejudice, immorality, and clannishnessis exceedingly dangerous, he charged. It is exposing our whole country and its policies to volcanic eruptions of heathen hosts and abominations.

Heathens were understood to be people who worshiped anything but the one true God, misdirecting their energies to the worship of nature, idols, or their own dead. Originally, the term referred to those Europeans who lived on the edges of society and rejected the new Christian religion, choosing instead to worship the old gods like Thor and Odin. Over time, the term expanded to include anyone who fell outside of the Abrahamic traditions not Christians, not Muslims, not Jews.Europeans and Euro-Americans read all of these heathens through the same lens, as people who didnt know how to take care of their bodies or their lands, and who needed Christians to help. Activated by the Great Commissions charge to make disciples of all nations, missionaries went overseas to try to do just that.

But it was one thing to go to the heathen, and quite another when the heathen began arriving on Americas shores. Though some ministers continued to see the arrival of the Chinese as an opportunity to convert them, others, like Blakeslee, began to claim that immigration restriction was necessary to keep America itself from becoming heathenized. The Great Commission needed to become the Great Omission, omitting anyone who threatened to replace the white American Christian way of life with something else. To think otherwise, Blakeslee alleged, was false Christianity, false benevolence, false patriotism. America needed to be a fortress. True patriots needed to defend that fortress in order to preserve a way of life that the rest of the world was supposed to emulate but only from a distance.

There was a crucial economic component to anti-Chinese hostility. White laborers worried about Chinese competition and feared that capitalist elites were bringing Chinese workers into the country to take the place of Black labor after the Civil War, pricing white laborers out of existence. This, too, anticipates the Great Replacement theorys belief that American elites are conspiring to replace so-called real Americans with immigrants from poor countries.

But fear of economic competition from the Chinese also had religious roots. Heathenism was supposed to be the reason for the negative qualities the Chinese brought to America. Anti-Chinese demagogues claimed that Chinese laborers were willing to live on next to nothing, crowding into tenements in Chinatown and making meals from rats, because their heathen religion taught them to devote all their energy and earnings to dead ancestors. Focusing on their dead, they supposedly neglected their living, bringing down the quality of life wherever they went. As Reverend William Lobscheid, pastor of San Franciscos United German Evangelical Lutheran St. Marks Church, put it in 1873, Is this lack of public spirit not a proof that you are Pagan?

By contrast, Europeans had improve[d] the country wherever they settled, said Lobscheid. But this required money: money to spend on sizeable homes, healthy food, clean clothes, churches, schools, and hospitals. Blakeslee explained that money kept the white American laborer and his family from liv[ing] more nearly like a heathen. He added that the Chinese, in his less expenses, can always underbid the American unless the American will descend to the same level with him, in a cheap, wretched, uncivilized, unchristian manner of living.

Anti-Chinese hate took vicious and violent forms. Again, religion was at the heart of it. In a February 1873 speech, Father James Buchard, a Catholic priest, referred to the Chinese as these pagan, these vicious, these immoral creatures and claimed that they were incapable of rising to the virtue that is inculcated by the religion of Jesus Christ.

The following month, Methodist missionary Otis Gibson valiantly tried to defend the Chinese in the face of such hate. He countered Buchards insinuation that to murder a Chinaman would not be a greater sin than to kill a monkey. Gibson understood all too plainly that dehumanizing the Chinese as intrinsically inferior heathens, rather than seeing them as humans made of one blood, opened the door to extreme violence against them. The litany of hate crimes against the Chinese in the late 19th century the massacre of ten percent of Los Angeless Chinese population in 1871, and another massacre of over two dozen Chinese miners in Rock Springs, Wyoming in 1885, among many other incidents of violence proved him sadly correct.

Gibson, and others such as Presbyterian missionary William Speer, had spent time in China. Their views of the Chinese aligned with an older posture of respect for the longevity of the Chinese empire and for fine Chinese goods, coupled with paternalistic pity for Chinese heathenism. But they always saw the Chinese as capable of conversion, and they believed that the arrival of the Chinese on Americas shores was a providential development that would make it easier to missionize them without having to travel all the way to China to do so.

That the Chinese Exclusion Act passed in 1882 shows how Gibsons and Speers views became increasingly muffled by the clamor of anti-Chinese demagogues over time. Whereas Gibson and Speer drew on the Great Commission to argue that the Chinese should be allowed entry, anti-Chinese ministers argued for a Great Omission to preserve America as a Christian nation.

The Great Omission reveals an abiding impulse to exclude or eradicate threats to white American identity. The Christian case against Chinese immigration set a precedent for later white Christian nationalists that exclusion whether carried out through law or extrajudicial violence could be an appropriate response to the presence of people they believed to threaten their way of life.

Though the Buffalo shooter from May didnt claim to be a Christian, he rooted whiteness in the religion of Christianity and Christian values. And at least one of the Patriot Front members arrested in Idaho in June had ties to a church whose pastor has supported Christian nationalism. The Great Replacement theory that motivated the shooter, and the Patriot Fronts belief that America belongs to Europeans, represents nothing but the tired, paranoid, violent case for the preservation of white Christian America that this country has seen again and again.

Kathryn Gin Lum is Associate Professor of Religious Studies in collaboration with the Center for Comparative Studies in Race and Ethnicity and History (by courtesy) at Stanford University. This article is based on ideas first presented in her book, Heathen: Religion and Race in American History, published by Harvard University Press in May 2022.

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The Religious and Anti-Chinese Roots of Replacement Theory - Religion & Politics

FiveThirtyEight Contradicts Its Own Claim That Pro-Life Movement Is Racist – The Federalist

Nate Silvers FiveThirtyEight website claims to use statistical analysisto tell compelling stories about elections, politics, sports, science and life and attempts to present itself as a moderate voice, alongside its fellow Disney-owned media properties such as ESPN and ABC News, both of which have endured heavy criticism for erroneous and ideologically driven reporting in recent years. FiveThirtyEights recent abortion article, however, goes a long way toward disabusing readers of the notion that it is an empirical or centrist media outlet.

The inaccurate screed argues that the pro-life movement is intrinsically rooted in racism, even though the modern abortion industry is an outgrowth of blatantly racist and eugenicist thought among early 20th-century progressives. Even more bizarrely, it argues the pro-life movement has ties to replacement theory, an oft-quoted idea in corporate media that the left will politically dominate due to a massive influx of immigrants.

The article, How The Fight To Ban Abortion Is Rooted In The Great Replacement Theory, written by Alex Samuels and her colleague Monica Potts, even openly contradicts its own thesis.

In order to make this tenuous assertion, the article invokes the recent racist mass shooting at a grocery store in Buffalo, New York. The authors note that in the shooters 180-page manifesto, he expressedconcern about the declining birth ratesof white people. Thats because the anti-abortion movement, at its core, has always been aboutupholding white supremacy.

However, the shooter never once mentioned the word abortion, and thats probably for a very obvious reason: Racists understand that legal abortion is very helpful for their twisted cause. Abortion rates for black women are about four times that of white women, and abortion advocates routinely oppose laws designed to prevent abortion based on the sex and race of the child being aborted. Planned Parenthood has 62 percent of its abortion centers strategically placed within two miles of concentrated African American populations.

FiveThirtyEight also launches into a very dubious history lesson: Declining white birth rates, along with the rising eugenics movement a now-discredited pseudoscience focused on the genetic fitness of white Americans were connected to the practice of abortion, and this helped bolster flawed, racist arguments for a total ban of the procedure. FiveThirtyEight makes no attempt to explain how opposition to euthanasia and abortion would lead to flawed, racist arguments for a total ban of abortion, since abortion reduces the black population and euthanasia has historically been a means of targeting minorities and those with disabilities.

The founder of Planned Parenthood, Margaret Sanger, spoke to the KKK and was a proponent of euthanasia and birth control, known for her saying, Eugenics without birth control seems to us a house builded upon the sands. It is at the mercy of the rising stream of the unfit. In 2020, Planned Parenthood took Margaret Sangers name off a New York City facility, and said the move was the first of many organizational shifts to address Sangers legacy and system of institutional racism.

And while it might be understandable that reporting on an issue as polarizing as abortion would cause reporters to rely on ideologically driven sources, FiveThirtyEight resorts to fringe voices such as the co-founder of the Institute for Research on Male Supremacism.

Finally, in a key paragraph, the authors seem to admit that the premise of their own article is contradictory and incoherent:

Even on its own terms, though, the logic of tying the anti-abortion movement to the racist great replacement theory is deeply convoluted and downright inaccurate. For instance,fewer women are seeking abortions, and women of color particularly those who are Black are more likely than white women to seek an abortion.

This idea that they are writing about the nation, that the fight over abortion rights is somehow tied to great replacement theory theres just no evidence for in what theyve written, Dr. James Sherley, stem cell biologist and associate scholar of the Charlotte Lozier Institute, told The Federalist. If you look at all of the causes of deaths for African Americans, that rate is still less than all the deaths due to abortions so abortion is the number one killer of black people in America. That just really flies in the face of this article by FiveThirtyEight.

Its just really a terrible article, he added. Its a random assortment of random observations.

Beth Whitehead is an intern at The Federalist and a journalism major at Patrick Henry College. Mollie Hemingway is editor-in-chief of The Federalist.

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Bad Seeds and Mad Scientists: On the Build-A-Humans of 19th-Century Literature – CrimeReads

My latest novel, The Daughter of Doctor Moreau, takes The Island of Doctor Moreau as a launching pad, probing the connections with race and colonialism inherent in H.G. Wells fiction, as well as its literary and film cousins. It is, as youll see, a long and distinguished lineage.

The Island of Doctor Moreau focuses on a shipwrecked mans discovery of a distant facility in which a reclusive researcher vivisects animals in an effort to turn them into humansa hobby that makes him one of the grand mad scientists of literature. By the end of the short novel, Dr. Moreaus carefully cultivated animal-human society has descended into chaos and murder. But H.G. Wells was not the first, nor the last writer, to tackle the idea of creation gone awry.

Mary Shelleys Victor Frankenstein must hold one of the top spots for a scientist with questionable medical theoriesHerbert West and his zombies seem the only suitable contenders for medical malpractice in fiction.

Frankensteins plan to create a human out of a medley of corpses yields a very tall, hideous, and angry being that has a vendetta against the man who made and abandoned him. As the creature explains: I ought to be thy Adam, but I am rather the fallen angel

The James Whales adaptation of Frankenstein released in 1931 is, even to this day, probably the version of the story most people know. Even if they havent watched it, people recognize the unique makeup used to transform Boris Karloff into a monster. Many of its elements, including the look of its laboratory, have been imitated and mined by countless other films and TV shows. Eugenics, the theory of racial improvement and planned breeding, did not exist when Shelley wrote her book, but it was in full swing in the early part of the 20thcentury and it is not surprising that eugenicist ideas percolate in this adaptation.

In the film, Professor Waldman gives a speech on anatomy with two brains in a jar as visual examples:

And here, the abnormal brain of the typical criminal. Observe, ladies and gentlemen, the scarcity of convolutions on the frontal lobe as compared to that of the normal brain, and the distinct degeneration of the middle frontal lobe. All of these degenerate characteristics check amazingly with the history of the dead man before us, whose life was one of brutality, of violence and murder.

Frankenstein sends his assistant to fetch a brain for his creature. The assistant drops the normal brain and must take the criminal abnormal brain instead. As a result, the creature is degenerate: violent, incapable of coherent speech, though also endowed with a dangerous strength.

We owe the concept of criminal brains to Cesare Lombroso, an Italian physician who promulgated the idea that criminality was inherited, and that criminals could be identified by physical defects, which indicated savage or atavistic traits. Sloping foreheads or left-handedness were some of the physical signs of primitive qualities inherent in criminal brains. Lombrosos theories on criminality would be incorporated into eugenic discourse, and the idea of the criminal brain as a source for the creatures violent actions would be reused in many more adaptations to come.

In 1911, German novelist Hanns Heinz Ewers published Alraune. A researcher interested in the study of heredity impregnates a prostitute with the semen of a hanged murderer. The result of this union is a soulless, unscrupulous, cruel girl; a femme fatale of the early 20th century. Alraunes namewhich is the German term for a Mandrake rootharkens back to legends about witches. It was believed that when men were hanged, they would ejaculate. A mandrake root sprouted from their spilled seed and witches used the root to conceive children.

Ewers, who would become a Nazi sympathizer in later years, was obviously building a plot based on notions of heredity and eugenics. Numerous studies conducted on families such as the Jukes served as examples of hereditary criminality, prostitution and poverty. The idea that criminals would birth children who were criminal by nature was utilized to discriminate, sterilize and institutionalize a wide number of people. The scientist in Alraune is therefore even more perverse than Victor Frankensteinwho can be viewed as an unintentionally neglectful manfor he seeks to essentially conduct an experiment in criminality.

The 1932 film Murders in the Rue Morgue is an adaptation of the Poe story of the same name only in the loosest sense. A Parisian scientist abducts young women and injects them with animal blood to create a mate for his sideshow ape. While one can question the soundness of the doctors biological theories, the movie provides plenty of chewy implications on bestiality, miscegenation, and evolution.

One of the great fears in the 19thcentury after the publication of Darwins theory of evolution was that humans were not so different from animals after all. As naturalist W.H. Hudson said: the fact of evolution in the organic world was repellentbecause we did not like to believe that we had been fashioned, mentally and physically, out of the same clay as the lower animals.

The fear that animals and humans shared an uncomfortable number of traits acquired racial and class components when it was bundled with eugenicists rhetoric. Humans of certain races or classes were given animalistic characteristics to denote their inferiority. For example, Elise Lemires Miscegenation: Making Race in America, has shown how Black men were often associated with apes in racist biological discourses. The film version of Murders in the Rue Morgue showcases the terror not only of an infatuated ape, but of white womanhood in danger and of the possible consequences: rape and the birth of a mixed-race child.

The 1932 adaptation of The Island of Doctor Moreau titled The Island of Lost Souls introduced Lota, the panther woman, as an exercise in both erotizing the original, and peeking at the horrors of miscegenation once again. The hero, Edward Parker, is saved from engaging in amorous activities with Lota by the appearance of his fiance, who literally rescues him. Lota, portrayed as a pseudo-native girl in a sarong, is a monster but also a racial other. The real danger in this island is miscegenation and degeneration into a lower state of existence. Barbarism lurks around the corner in fantastic fiction of this era, threatening to pull humanity down the evolutionary ladder.

Finally, there is Julian Huxleys The Tissue-Culture King (1926). An Englishman named Hascombe, who was captured by a remote African tribe, uses his knowledge of biological sciences to culture the living tissue of the tribes King for use in religious rituals. He also creates animal monstrosities (living fetishes), such as two-headed toads, and experiments on humans. As Hascombe explains:

I took advantage of the fact that their religion holds in reverence monstrous and imbecile forms of human beings. That is, of course, a common phenomenon in many countries, where half-wits are supposed to be inspired, and dwarfs the object of superstitious awe. So I went to work to create various new types.

Huxleys story ultimately envisions a world in which religion and science meld together to control the population.

Huxley was an avid eugenicist. You can hear him speak in this 1937 film where he explains how humanity could be improved if defectives were weeded out of our species. Huxley took great pains to differentiate himself from Nazi eugenicists, arguing that Nazi race theory was pseudo-scientific while his ideas were supposedly scientifically valid. In the end, The Tissue-Culture King is an excellent example of a science fiction tale where the issues of race, colonialism and science fiction are grotesquely mixed.

The Daughter of Doctor Moreau therefore serves as a natural excavation of this science fiction legacy and an interrogation of the distinguished genealogy of scientists who have haunted the imagination for decades past.

____________________________

Silvia Moreno-Garcias The Daughter of Doctor Moreau is now available from Del Ray.

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Is Singapore ready for mass production of eggs and sperm from stem cells? – BioEdge

Scientists have generated artificial lab-grown sperm and eggs from rats and mice, which have gone on to successfully produced healthy offspring, a procedure known as In Vitro Gametogenesis (IVG). Progress has been rapid.

Back in 2016, researchers at the Institute of Zoology of the Chinese Academy of Sciences produced functional sperm from mouse stem cells that can generate healthy offspring, and these went on to give birth to the next generation.

In 2021, Katsuhiko Hayashi, of Kyushu University, generated functional eggs from skin-derived stem cells of mice. This was achieved by artificially replicating the natural soup of nutrients and growth factors present in mouse ovaries within the culture dish.

In April 2022, it was announced that Toshihiro Kobayashi, of Tokyo University, had derived functional sperm from rat stem cells that can generate viable offspring, a feat that was previously possible only with mice.

There are still many hurdles before IVG can be applied to humans. Nevertheless, it is highly plausible that the technique will eventually be realized for human fertility treatment.

How this works out in Singapore, a highly urbanized Asian country with ultra-low fertility rates, a rapidly aging population, and a sophisticated biotech industry will influence other East Asian countries.

IVG is complex, and labour-intensive, so it will cost much more than conventional fertility treatment which is already extremely expensive. IVG for the relatively small number of patients with primary infertility arising from congenital defects, accidental injury to reproductive organs, chemotherapy and premature ovarian failure will not be commercially viable.

It is going to be a niche market for the wealthy. .

One application which could be exploited commercially is posthumous reproduction for bereaved spouses and parents. Tissues and cells could be harvested from a corpse and be used to produce artificial eggs and sperm via IVG, with the resulting embryos being transferred to a surrogate mother. Needless to say, this would be highly controversial, especially if there is no informed consent from the deceased. Additionally there are also ethical concerns pertaining to the rights, welfare and psychological impact on posthumous children.

Another tiny market would be transgender and intersex couples. Under Singapore law, intersex and transsexual people are allowed to get married, provided they have undergone gender-reassignment surgery, which allows them to legally change their gender on their personal identification documents. Nevertheless, there are very few intersex and transgender people in Singapore.

So where is the market potential? There are four areas: age-related female infertility; same-sex couples; mass-production of donor eggs and sperm for the treatment of infertile patients; and mass-production of human eggs for eugenics applications.

In Singapore, there would be hardly any moral objections to treating age-related infertility with IVG. Singapore is a rapidly ageing society with one of the worlds lowest birth rates. The government is unlikely to discourage novel methods of producing more children. However, IVG may lead to new ethical issues in the treatment of age-related female infertility, such as pressure on women to give birth at an advanced age or pressure on women to follow male career structures.

More problematic would be IVG to enable gay and lesbian couples to have children that share their genetic heritage. For example, artificial eggs could be produced from male stem cells, which can be fertilized by sperm from another man, and the resulting embryos implanted into a surrogate mother. Likewise, artificial sperm can be produced from female stem cells and be used to impregnate another woman.

Even in Singapore, this might be a step too far. But same-sex Singaporean couples could still access IVG overseas. This could put legal and political pressure on the government to recognise offspring as Singaporean citizens. Indeed, recent court cases have emphasized the importance of genetic affinity and blood ties between children and parents, as well as prioritizing the childs welfare above public policy based on societal norms.

For example, in the court ruling of the IVF sperm mix-up case by Thomson Fertility Centre a few years ago, it was explicitly stated that The ordinary human experience is that parents and children are bound by ties of blood and this fact of biological experience heredity carries deep sociocultural significance. In another landmark court case the Singapore High Court granted a gay mans bid to adopt his biological son born via a surrogate mother. The Chief Justice declared that the need to promote the welfare of the child is paramount and outweighs public policy against the formation of same-sex family units.

My feeling is that the Singaporean government will reluctantly recognize the relationship of IVG-conceived children to same-sex parents. They will have citizenship and residency rights, parenthood subsidies, and automatic right of inheritance of the child to the parents estate, in the absence of a will.

Mass production of sperm and eggs for infertile patients could be a lucrative market but an ethical minefield. Customised IVG for individual patients would lead to excess production of eggs and sperm which could be donated to other infertile patients who cannot afford the high costs of the procedure.

Besides the obvious issue of informed consent of patients in the donation process, there are also ethical and legal issues related to the rights and welfare of children conceived in this manner. The most pressing of these involves the fractured and confused identity of donor-conceived children, and their right to know their genetic heritage, such as family history of hereditary diseases. It is for this reason that anonymous sperm and egg donation is currently banned in several Western countries.

Still more contentious would be mass production of eggs and sperm from film stars, fashion models, sport stars, brilliant musicians, Nobel prize-winning scientists and so on. If demand for eggs from a model or sperm from a baseball star were high enough, IVG could power up mass production to supply boutique eugenics agencies.

Of course this risks unintended incestuous sexual relationships and marriages between numerous donor-conceived offspring of a single individual. There is also the possibility of the well-documented phenomenon of Genetic Sexual Attraction between close relatives who first meet as adults.

Finally, IVG has eugenic potential. Its promoters claim that it can be used to prevent transmission of genetic diseases. But the same techniques will facilitate eugenics for prospective parents. Even if genome editing is banned, IVG greatly increases the available number of embryos from which to select the ideal future child via genetic testing and analysis. Currently, artificial intelligence algorithms are being developed for selecting the best and healthiest IVF embryos via genetic screening.

After all, some bioethicists have argued, parents desire the best for their children. They invoke the theory of procreative beneficence, which holds that parents have significant moral reason to select, of the possible children they could have, the child who is most likely to experience the greatest well-being that is, the most advantaged child, the child with the best chance at having the best life.

All these possibilities are coming down the pike. Fast. Singapore needs to be prepared.

Dr Alexis Heng Boon Chin is an associate professor of Biomedical Science at Peking University, China. He had previously worked in the field of human clinical assisted reproduction research in Singapore, and has authored 50 international journal publications on ethical and legal issues relating to new reproductive technologies, in addition to also having published more than 250 scientific journal articles.

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Is Singapore ready for mass production of eggs and sperm from stem cells? - BioEdge

Disability rights groups are fighting for abortion access and against ableism – NBC News

The conversation about abortion and other reproductive health care in the country is missing something: people with disabilities.

Since it became clear the Supreme Court would overturn Roe v. Wade, disability rights advocates say the uproar over allowing states to ban or restrict abortion has largely overlooked the ways people with disabilities will suffer. At least 12.7% of the U.S. population lives with disabilities including from speech and limb differences, mobile disabilities and developmental disabilities as of 2019, according to census data.

I think one of the reasons that disabled people are not centered in these conversations, even though we should be, is that typically disabled people are de-sexualized, said Maria Town, president and CEO of the American Association of People With Disabilities (AAPD). We are not seen as sexual beings. In fact, the assumption is that we just dont have sex when, in reality, disabled people do have sex. We need and deserve accessible, affordable reproductive and informed reproductive health care, and that includes abortion.

Even after years of highlighting the longstanding lack of access to reproductive care, people with disabilities are still less likely to have health care providers and routine check-ups, and are more likely to have unmet health care needs because of the cost, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Access to reproductive services is even slimmer.

You may need an additional support person for physical access or to provide mental health support, said Town, who has cerebral palsy and uses mobility devices. For states that have banned abortion and people are talking about needing to travel out of state or use telehealth services, many telehealth platforms are not accessible to people with disabilities. These are all barriers to health care. Accessibility of reproductive health care can be a huge challenge.

People with disabilities are more likely to live in poverty than those without and often rely on state insurance programs like Medicaid to meet health care needs, according to the DC Abortion Fund, a nonprofit group that helps low-income people pay for abortions. However, only 15 states and Washington, D.C., cover abortions through Medicaid, a significant financial barrier to abortion access for people with disabilities.

For example, West Virginia, which has the largest population of disabled people in the country, according to census data, solely provides state funds for abortions in cases of life endangerment and fetal impairment. An analysis by the National Partnership for Women and Families found that abortion bans in the 26 states that are certain or likely to ban abortion could affect up to 2.8 million women with disabilities (53 percent of all such women in the U.S.).

Since the Supreme Courts ruling, disability rights groups like the AAPD and the Disability Rights Education and Defense Fund have condemned the Supreme Courts action, detailing the myriad ways people with disabilities will be affected by the decision and calling out ableism in the national conversation about reproductive justice. Black people bear the brunt of this injustice. About 1 in 4 Black adults in the country have a disability, compared with 1 in 5 white Americans, according to the CDC. And about 36% of Black people with disabilities live in poverty, compared with 26% of Americas overall disabled population.

Abortion advocates need to stop saying that the main reason to want abortion is to not have a disabled child, disability rights advocate Imani Barbarin said. Theres nothing like entering a space and the only reason they want access to this medical procedure is to not have somebody like you in their life. This is turning away tons of pro-abortion advocates who have disabilities.

People with disabilities across the country have reported experiences with health care providers that left them feeling discriminated against and concerned about the quality of care theyd receive. In a study by the National Research Center for Parents with Disabilities, one doctor jokingly asked a woman with a physical disability if she used a turkey baster to get pregnant, another refused to touch a pregnant womans amputated leg to help her push during labor, and one nurse remarked to another woman that it was wonderful that somebody like [her] would still want to have a kid.

And the marginalized group fares no better when it comes to terminating a pregnancy. A New York woman recently told The New York Times that Planned Parenthood of Greater New York canceled her abortion appointment, telling her, We dont do procedures for people in a wheelchair. (Planned Parenthood officials later apologized and said the womans appointment had been mismanaged.)

But the challenges of reproductive care dont start at pregnancy, Town said people with disabilities experience unfair treatment from the time they are young.

Procedures like pap smears are not inherently accessible to me, Town said. In the broader reproductive health care space, many disabled people are sterilized forcibly. And if theyre not sterilized, theyre placed on birth control or other forms of contraception without their consent. That happened to me as a young girl. Not for any health-related reasons, but so I was easier to care for.

Stefanie Lyn Kaufman-Mthimkhulu, founder of the disability rights grassroots organization Project LETS, who is nonbinary and uses they and she pronouns, said they had an abortion in 2020 months after giving birth to a daughter. Kaufman-Mthimkhulu has Congenital Myasthenic Syndrome (CMS), a disorder that has an underlying defect in the transmission of signals from nerve cells to muscles. Kaufman-Mthimkhulu said they sometimes use a wheelchair. They also have autism and endure chronic pain in their ankle and spine as a result of multiple surgeries, they said.

As a result, their body had negative reactions to being pregnant and their pregnancy was labeled high risk as a result of their disabilities Pregnancy exacerbated my current pain and health issues, and created new issues. I was constantly in severe pain, and former tools like medical marijuana were no longer accessible to me, Kaufman-Mthimkhulu said.

Research shows that people with disabilities get pregnant at similar rates to those without, but are more likely to experience blood clotting, hemorrhaging and infection during pregnancy, according to research published in the Disability and Health Journal. They also often receive inadequate health care and are at significantly higher risk of dying from pregnancy and childbirth, the research showed.

Kaufman-Mthimkhulu said in the wake of Roe being overturnedruling, Project LETS is working to develop political education sessions to both teach the public about the connection between reproductive and disability rights and strengthen mutual aid networks to support people with disabilities who need access to abortion, medication and other reproductive necessities. She said one key to fighting back against abortion restrictions for people with disabilities will be to strengthen systems that allow people with disabilities to give birth outside of traditional medical environments.

For instance, the organization is working with doulas and birth workers to create care networks for people outside of the traditional health care system, she said. This is important as people with disabilities navigate a system that doesnt always tend to their needs. Pregnancy put my physical body through hell, and mental, spiritual and emotional stability was significantly destabilized to a point that I dont believe has recovered.

But harshly restricted access to care wont be the only consequence of overturning Roe. Barbarin said organizations must prioritize making sure people with disabilities have access to their necessary medications moving forward.

So many disabled peoples medications have ended because theyre abortifacients, Barbarin said, referring to substances that induce abortion. So people who are on certain lupus and cancer drugs have had them stopped immediately.

One example of this is the drug Methotrexate, which is used to treat several types of cancer like leukemia and lymphoma and various diseases like lupus and Crohns disease. It is also an abortifacient, often used to treat ectopic pregnancies. The Lupus Foundation of America this month acknowledged reports of people having trouble accessing the drug since the Supreme Court ruling.

We need not just people who are reproductive advocates, we need people who are medical advocates for people with disabilities. I really want people to understand that, if you want to talk about intersectionality, you need to get disabled people their meds.

Barbarin, Town and Kaufman-Mthimkhulu agree that proper sex education is necessary for a future where people with disabilities have unlimited access to reproductive care. Up to 36 states dont include the needs and challenges of youth with disabilities in their sex education requirements or provide resources for accessible sex education, according to a 2021 report from the nonprofit Sexuality Information and Education Council of the United States. And of those that do, only three explicitly include the group in their sex education mandates.

As the nation gears up for life without federal abortion protection, disability rights groups are prioritizing community care, medication and education for people with disabilities. Even with all these efforts, they say, its important to move away from ableist rhetoric that only further marginalizes people with disabilities.

Often times, disabled folks are used as scapegoats for pro-life arguments. Like, Look at all of these babies labeled with prenatal abnormalities that are aborted! Kaufman-Mthimkhulu said.

While its true that we must interrogate the ableism that leads to many disabled fetuses being aborted, disabled folks are not to be used as props to support harmful pro-life policies. We are not your pro-life scapegoats, and eugenics has no place in abortion access.

CORRECTION (July 25, 2022, 10:57 a.m. ET) : A previous version of this article misstated the diagnosis of Stefanie Lyn Kaufman-Mthimkhulu. She has been diagnosed with Congenital Myasthenic Syndrome, not Lambert-Eaton Myasthenic Syndrome.

The rest is here:

Disability rights groups are fighting for abortion access and against ableism - NBC News

Body politics: the secret history of the US anti-abortion movement – The Guardian

When the US supreme court overturned Roe v Wade on 24 June, permitting the state criminalisation of abortion in America, the only thing everyone could agree on was that it was a historic decision. Unfortunately for America, the history it was based on was largely fake. The ruling, Dobbs v Jackson Womens Health Organization, authored by Justice Samuel Alito, claims that in reversing Roe v Wade, the court restores the US to an unbroken tradition of prohibiting abortion on pain of criminal punishment [that] persisted from the earliest days of the common law until 1973, when Roe legalised abortion. This assertion, however, is easily disproven.As historians have exhaustively explained, early American common law (as in Britain) generally permitted abortions until quickening, or perceptible foetal movement, usually between 16 to 20 weeks into a pregnancy. Connecticut was the first state to ban abortion after quickening, in 1821, which is roughly two centuries after the earliest days of American common law. It was not until the 1880s that every US state had some laws restricting abortion, and not until the 1910s that it was criminalised in every state. In the wake of Dobbs, social media was awash with examples from 18th- and 19th-century newspapers that clearly refuted Alitos false assertion, sharing examples of midwives and doctors legally advertising abortifacients, Benjamin Franklins at-home abortion remedies, and accounts of 19th-century doctors performing therapeutic (medically necessary) abortions.

Dobbss inaccurate claims about the history of US abortion law is one of many reasons why it is so controversial. It is arguably the most divisive ruling since 1857, when the supreme court found that Dred Scott, who had been enslaved and was suing for his freedom, had no standing in US federal courts as a Black man. The Dred Scott decision was a casus belli of the US civil war four years later, and there are many reasons to fear that Dobbs could prove as divisive.

Another proximate cause of the civil war was the Fugitive Slave Act, which led Harriet Beecher Stowe to write what was until 1936 the most popular American novel ever, Uncle Toms Cabin, condemning the cruelty of slavery and the insanity of the fugitive slave laws. The Fugitive Slave Act impelled states to return enslaved humans to their enslavers, even if they were residing in free states that did not recognise slavery, and financially incentivised remanding people into slavery. It was this division that prompted Lincoln to give his famous house divided speech, saying that a nation could not endure half-slave and half-free: because an individuals human rights were drastically changing from state to state. Dobbs has created for pregnant women an analogous situation to the fugitive slave laws, with the bounty hunter laws it has permitted in states like Idaho and Texas, where women may be prosecuted by the state in which they reside for obtaining an abortion beyond its borders. It will create legal chaos, triggering inter-state conflict, as fights over extradition and a states legal rights beyond its own borders will certainly erupt once more.

But there is yet another, less well-known cause for all this in civil-war era America. Although most people today assume that anti-abortion laws were motivated by moral or religious beliefs about a foetuss right to life, that is far from the whole story. In fact, the first wave of anti-abortion laws were entangled in arguments about nativism, eugenics and white supremacism, as they dovetailed with a cultural panic that swept the US in the late 19th and early 20th century as a result of the vast changes in American society wrought by the conflict. This panic was referred to at the time in shorthand as race suicide.

The increasing traction today of the far-right great replacement theory, which contends that there is a global conspiracy to replace white people with people of colour, and has explicitly motivated white supremacist massacres in the US, is often said to have originated with a French novel called The Camp of the Saints by Jean Raspail. Published in 1973, the same year that Roe v Wade enshrined American womens rights to reproductive autonomy, it is a dystopian account of swarthy hordes of immigrants sweeping in and destroying western civilisation. But there were many earlier panics over white extinction, and in the US, debates around abortion have been entangled with race panic from the start. The fight to criminalise abortion may have successfully passed itself off as a moral crusade, but its origins are rooted in a political one.The idea of race suicide was popularised in the early 20th century largely by Theodore Roosevelt, who urged white women to have more babies to protect native American society against diminishing birth rates. He harangued Americans that intentional childlessness rendered people guilty of being criminals against the race. Roosevelt gave speeches declaring: I believe in children. I want to see enough of them and of the right kind.

The Dobbs opinion explicitly rejects arguments that anti-abortion laws were historically motivated by eugenicist nativism, rather than by religious or moral beliefs. It says that the opposition was only able to produce one prominent proponent of the idea that earlier anti-abortion laws were driven by fear that Catholic immigrants were having more babies than Protestants and that the availability of abortion was leading White Protestant women to shirk their maternal duties. Yet even a cursory survey of American discourse a century ago shows how utterly ubiquitous this idea was, as newspapers and lectures and sermons warned that abortion would mean that Catholics and other foreign-born immigrants would outnumber Protestant, native-born Americans. To take just one example among thousands, a 1903 editorial on population statistics noted that the Protestant population of the US was increasing by 8.1% while the Catholic population was increasing by 21.8%. This alarming condition of things was reflected by physicians reporting on the average more than five abortions a month, none of them in Catholic families. The piece was headlined Religion and Race Suicide.

As a concept, race suicide goes back to the aftermath of the civil war. The fundamental problem of primogeniture ensuring the legitimacy of property succession in a male-dominated society had an even nastier twist in a slave society. Under the laws of American slavery, the more children a Black woman produced, the more human capital her enslaver acquired, while the more white children a white woman produced, the more political capital white men accrued in a representative democracy in which only white men voted and made laws on behalf of all white citizens. But the civil war, and the civil rights amendments that followed it, upended the legal foundations for that old racial and gendered hierarchy. They would have to be rebuilt, and controlling Protestant white womens reproduction to ensure the reproduction of the Protestant elite was central to that project.

The war had devastated a generation of white men, with estimates of around 750,000 dead, or 2.5% of the population, as the ratio of white men to women plummeted after the war. White women were gaining self-determination, forcing their way into higher education and professions. (Men were fighting back: as historians have shown, when American male doctors professionalised in the mid-19th century, one of their projects was to hobble the competition by undermining the legitimacy of midwives and nurse practitioners in caring for pregnant women, and assert their sole control over womens reproduction, which included supporting anti-abortion laws, except when under their care.) Contraception and medical standards were improving while urban industrialisation mitigated against the need for large families to work farms. As a result, white Americans fertility rates dropped precipitously across the 19th century, with families having an average of seven children in 1800, falling to four by 1900. A newly emancipated racial underclass was suddenly shifting the nations power structures, even as huge waves of immigration threatened to undermine Anglo-Saxon cultural and political dominance.

Already in existence as a phrase, race suicide rapidly became shorthand for the protection of white purity. The expression was used in the former Confederate states to describe mixed-race marriages: an 1884 editorial railed against anyone who approves of miscegenation for tolerating the great shame and crime of race suicide. It was invoked to restrict Asian immigration: to allow coolie competition,, wrotedeclared a 1900 editorial in baldly racist terms, is to commit race suicide.

Soon spokesmen for the patriarchal class (politicians, physicians, preachers and professors) were making explicit claims about the racial obligations of Protestant adults to sustain their political dominance.

When Roosevelt and other prominent figures such as sociologist Edward A Ross took up the cry, a panic about race suicide began sweeping the nation, as elite Americans explicitly discussed how to maintain their political dominance if their numbers were dwindling. Antirace suicide clubs were formed, as students at Ivy League universities pledged to have no fewer than five children. By 1918, the US armys campaign for sexual hygiene among soldiers included an educational film called Beware of Race Suicide! Meanwhile, editorials across America called for lawmakers to prevent the awful waste of life at present so great due to abortions and stillbirths: and, more important still, to refuse the right of marriage to the hopelessly diseased and unfit. The argument was straightforwardly eugenicist; soon it was shaping bestselling books, such as Madison Grants 1916 The Passing of the Great Race, which Hitler referred to as his bible.

When the resurgent Ku Klux Klan paraded in Louisiana in 1922, they bore banners that read White Supremacy, America First, One Hundred Per Cent American, Race Purity and Abortionists, Beware! People are sometimes confused by the Klans animus against abortionists, or impute it to generalised patriarchal authoritarianism, but it was much more specifically about race purity: white domination can only be maintained by white reproduction.

Along the way, improvements in medical science had revealed the gradual development of a human foetus and eliminated the simpler idea of quickening, as moral and existential questions about the beginnings of human life became more complex. By the late 1920s and 30s, the successful criminalisation of abortion had sent it underground, while purporting to protect the purity of white women. By 1938, abortion had become so synonymous with the phrase that a film about a criminal abortion ring that preys on young women was titled Race Suicide.

In a forgotten 1928 bestseller called Bad Girl, a married young white woman considers an abortion to maintain her freedom; having decided to keep the baby, she casually employs a racist slur in thinking about the Black mothers with whom she will have to share a ward: But I guess you dont care who your neighbours are once the pain starts, she reflects. The same point is made from an anti-racist perspective in Langston Hughess 1936 story Cora Unashamed, in which a white girl dies from the abortion her mother forces her to undergo rather than see her bear the child of a Greek immigrant. Cora, the Black protagonist, although racially and economically subjugated, has at least borne her own illegitimate mixed-race child free of these lethal hypocrisies.

It was the same year Margaret Mitchell published Gone With the Wind, which replaced Uncle Toms Cabin as Americas bestselling novel. It is also, by no coincidence, a tale of slavery and the civil war, although instead of condemning slavery, it defends it and condemns the war that ended it. The plot of Gone With the Wind is driven less by war, however, than by pregnancy and childbirth. Melanie Wilkes narrowly survives her first labour only to die following a later miscarriage. Scarlett miscarries one child, loses a daughter and contemplates a back-alley abortion.

This focus on the dangers of pregnancy for 19th-century women is part of Gone With the Winds white feminism but is also inextricable from its white supremacism. Melanie wont move north after the war because her son would go to school with Yankees and Black children. Wanting her children to bear witness, and to bear power, she teaches them to hate the Yankees, who have set the darkies up to lord it over us, who are robbing us and keeping our men from voting! Scarlett thinks in similar terms when contemplating her plantation Tara, the red earth which would bear cotton for their sons and their sons sons. Meanwhile Rhetts love for the daughter he forcibly stops Scarlett from aborting is more than paternal adoration and displaced love for Scarlett. Mitchell also makes clear that Rhetts devotion to his daughter is a reflection of his dedication to his people his race and his determination not to let them die out.

By 1939, the year Gone With the Wind premiered as a film, the subtext of race suicide had become manifest. Reporting the latest population statistics, a California paper declared the race suicide prophecies we have heard for many years dont seem to have been justified, as theres evidently life in the white race yet.

Fifteen years later, the United States launched into another of its periodic surges of violence in the onward fight for civil rights and a multiracial democracy. Another landmark supreme court ruling, Brown v Board of Education in 1954, desegregated American public schools. In response, social conservatives began setting up private Christian schools, which also happened to be all-white. As late as 1968, evangelicals at a symposium refused to denounce abortion as a sin, citing individual health, family welfare, and social responsibility as justifications for ending a pregnancy. But with the passage of Roe in 1973, the picture altered, as ever more single women began exercising their rights to bodily autonomy. At the same time, the Nixon administration decided to remove the tax-exempt status of segregated white Christian schools, causing leading social conservatives to seek a wedge issue. As historians have shown, archival correspondence reveals they found in abortion a socially acceptable pretext for a battle that would mobilise social conservatives and allow them to fight for white Christian patriarchy as they understood it, reproducing their dominance.

The day after Dobbs revoked American womens right to reproductive autonomy, Republican congresswoman Mary Miller of Illinois publicly thanked Donald Trump, on behalf of all the MAGA patriots in America, for putting on to the court the justices who created the historic victory for white life in the supreme court. She later claimed it was a slip of the tongue, but the crowd cheered nonetheless. Anyone who was startled by this reaction to the injection of race into a decision supposedly about womens rights does not know the history of abortion law in America. It has always been a contest not only over womens reproduction, but also over the reproduction of political power because in a (putatively) representative democracy, power is a function of population. The assault on womens rights is part of the wider move to reclaim the commanding place in society for a small minority of patriarchal white men. And, as Alitos decision shows, where legal precedent and other justifications cannot be found, myth will fill the vacuum.

The Wrath to Come: Gone With the Wind and the Lies America Tells by Sarah Churchwell will be published by Head of Zeus on 4 August.

Original post:

Body politics: the secret history of the US anti-abortion movement - The Guardian

I ain’t saying it’s right or it’s wrong – Patheos

Paul Campos writes, It should be considered journalistic malpractice to use the phrase Christian nationalism and not precede it with the adjective white.'

This is certainly true here in America, where Christian nationalism in one form or another is older than the nation itself. And every one of those forms of American Christian nationalism from Bradford to Barton has involved explicit white nationalism. It has been ever thus, ever since the good Christian Puritans of Massachusetts piously walked past the severed head of Metacomet on their way to church (for 20 years).

Scratch any American form of Christian nationalism and youll find white nationalism. And you wont have to scratch very hard.

Campos wrote that at the end of a profile of longtime Neo-Confederate John Bircher Michael Peroutka, who just secured the Republican nomination as the GOPs candidate for state Attorney General in Maryland.

In 1911, President Teddy Roosevelt sent a long-winded letter to the Rev. Franklin Smith, decrying Smiths advocacy for family planning. Roosevelt wasted a lot of ink on that letter, considering his whole argument could easily have been summed up in 14 words:

To advocate artificially keeping families small, with its inevitable attendants of pre-natal infanticide, of abortion, with its pandering to self-indulgence, its shirking of duties, and its enervation of character, is quite as immoral as to advocate theft or prostitution, and is even more hurtful in its folly, from the standpoint of the ultimate welfare of the race and the nation. You say that your ministry lies among well-to-do people; that is, among people of means and upper-class workers. I assume that you regard these people as desirable elements in the state. Can you not see that if they have an insufficient quantity of children, then the increase must come from the less desirable classes?

Roosevelt also was concerned about how progressive religious journalism was covering his fear of fewer white children being born, complaining: To me the most horrifying part of this movement is to find nominally religious journals like theIndependentcontaining articles by women and clergymen, apologizing for and defending a theory of conduct which, if adopted, would mean the speedy collapse of this republic and of western civilization. The action of theIndependentin this matter was a scandalous offense against good morals and a cause of shame to men of real religious feeling.

Thats from Rick Pidcocks Baptist News Global piece, Theres a straight line from eugenics to biblical family values to white supremacy and the anti-abortion movement.

And its not even the ugliest part of the history Pidcock traces. Thats probably the bits he cites from Margaret Farleys recent discussion of The Eugenics Roots of Evangelical Family Values. Heres a longer chunk of that piece, with Farleys original links included:

One positive eugenicist who particularly shaped religious conservatives was Californian Paul Popenoe, a central figure in my recent book,The Unfit Heiress: The Tragic Life and Scandalous Sterilization of Ann Cooper Hewitt. Popenoe had been one of the most prolificadvocatesfor the segregation and forced sterilization of people whom he deemed to be waste humanity, eveninspiringleaders of the Third Reich before the time came for him to rebrand as a defender of patriarchal, procreative marriage. In 1930, Popenoe, an atheist,openedthe American Institute of Family Relations (AIFR) in Los Angeles to improve marital harmony and remove what he thought to be obstacles to white reproduction, such as rape, masturbation, pornography, female frigidity, and feminist yearnings. Over the next several decades, Popenoe counseled white couples on the importance of strict gender-norms and same-race marriage,trainingpsychologists, clergymen (many Baptist and Mormon), and youth group leadershis new allies in the racial betterment projectto do the same. According to Hilde Lvdal Stephens, author ofFamily Matters: James Dobson and Focus on the Familys Crusade for the Christian Home, heinstructedcounselors to use heredity and interpersonal compatibility as codes for race, especially when his views on race began togoout of vogue.

Popenoeencouragedwomen to make themselves sexy for their husbands,letdomestic violence slide, and look out for their mans ego and sexual needs. Knowing that some women were sexually reticent, hehiredDr. Arnold Kegel to develop a treatment. (Kegels were born.) Popenoeexploredmethods to suppress homosexual desire, such as electroshock therapy, though its not clear if his institute ever used this technology. The mandubbedMr. Marriage also gave considerable attention to clients temperaments. One of his first-generation eugenics colleagues, Roswell Johnson, abetted these efforts. Johnson, whod previously crafted intelligence tests to identify and weed out the feebleminded,developedan extensive personality test for assessing compatibility, an adaptation of which is popularlyusedby Christian marriage experts today.

You thought purity culture was just about saving your virginity for marriage? It arose from, and remains deeply entangled with, securing the existence of white supremacy.

Pidcock revisits the baby-bust panic that ensued once TPTB realized how small Generation X was compared to its predecessors. The record-breaking baby boom of the Millennial generation didnt calm those fears any more than it stopped people from pretending that Social Security is going to go bankrupt. Hence the current wave of advocacy for breeding our way back to uncontested white supremacy (something Pidcock hears in the natalist cheerleading now coming from Kevin DeYoung, John MacArthur and others).

Roe v. Wade is gone. Buck v. Bell is making a comeback. After all, it is, as Pidcock shows us, deeply rooted in the history and traditions of the United States.

On the subject of white Christian eugenics, I came across the following while reading about the clash between Ida B. Wells and the Womens Christian Temperance Union. This is Frances Willard, president of the WCTU, in an interview with the New York paper The Voice in 1890: The colored race multiplies like the locusts of Egypt. The grog shop is its centre of power. The safety of women, of childhood, of the home, is menaced in a thousand localities at this moment, so that men dare not go beyond the sight of their own roof-tree.

That sure sounds like this Good White Christian lady wanted to eliminate more than just alcohol.

The link above, by the way, goes to an exhibit from the Frances Willard House Museum examining her racist statements and her initial reluctance to speak out against lynching. Its a good antidote to the white-right freakout du jour about Monticello: In trying to build a truly national organization only two decades after the Civil War, Willard compromised with white womens racism. How and why that happened can help us understand the larger story of racism in American womens movementsand American history in general.

CBN, bless their hearts, titled this piece Witches, Satanists, and Warlocks: Meet the Pastors Who Boldly Shared the Gospel for a Decade in Salem, Mass.

Translated from the kayfabe, that should read White evangelical performers answer casting call for tourism industry that fuels local economy. It seems to have been a win-win for the church-planters, who piggy-backed on the promotional acumen of the towns new tradition of cashing in on its infamous history. They committed to the bit by, among other things, moving in next door to Salems official witch.

Sometimes I miss theater.

The title for this post comes from Martina McBrides Independence Day. It may seem that Im a few weeks late in posting that song, but I think maybe a song about realizing that the only way to protect your daughters life is to burn everything down is pretty much right on time. Heres McBride singing this with Pat Benatar:

Originally posted here:

I ain't saying it's right or it's wrong - Patheos

The Metallization of Man – Crisis Magazine

Are we nothing more than a sum of our parts? As we make our way through the changes in society that I have mentioned in previous articles, we see how changes in the broader society that we wouldnt normally connect to considerations of personhood do in fact connect to them. Before we can understand how to respond to these changes, we must first understand what they are and where they came from.

The commoditization of man is the gradual movement from man having innate value just because of who he is to being looked at more and more simply as having value due to the goods that one can get from him. With the mechanization of man, that commoditization is gradually joined by a continued degradation of the worth of man, now seeing the time and labor of man as the commodity, buying it for the bottom dollar possible. Effectively, man is seen simply as a cog in a great machine meant to make the man at the top rich, whether or not the product being made has any quality or worth to it.

With the metallization of man, the previous two effects, the commoditization of man and the mechanization of man, are then joined by the growth of a view of man as being nothing more than a collection of parts (i.e., a biological machine) rather than a person with innate value.

The growth of this view found its source not only in the treatment of man in his newer, more modern workplaces, and the changes that resulted in his view of himself and others, but it also came from great discoveries in science. As medical science has grown, it has been discovered just how complex the human body actually is. There are innumerable parts working together in order to make the body work, much like the gears in a clock but far more complex. The closer one looked, the more parts and interactive systems one found.

At the same time, as magnification technology gradually grew in effectiveness, scientists began to see more and more what made up the basic materials of the parts, moving from molecules, to atoms, and beyond. Not only did these discoveries show the incredible complexity of the systems of the human body and what makes it up, but they also led to incredible leaps in technology, both in the technological and the biological. More and more, the alteration of the basic biological structures of man, and the fusion of man and machine, things that had only previously been considered seriously by science-fiction writers, began to seem within the grasp of those who could use that knowledge.

The insights that came with this information led to some incredible good for humanity. Surgical techniques that could repair damage that until now would have killed someone were developed, at times developing far enough to lead to outpatient procedures with minimal recovery times. Medicines were developed that could both treat and cure infections from bacteria and viruses, along with various poisonous substances, vastly decreasing the mortality rate from these things.

Along with the surgical techniques and medications that were developed, technological solutions have gradually been developed that allow for the replacement of damaged or lost body parts, whether it is with an organ from a pig or a machine shop. These things, ongoing in their development right now, have led both to longer lifespans and to higher quality of life for those who are having those longer lives. With this, though, comes great danger.

In the early 20th century, this knowledge and prejudices that predate this knowledge came together in one of the darkest chapters of U.S. history, a chapter that most have never heard of. This chapter is the time of the eugenics movement. For centuries, man had been learning how plants replicate, and how to alter the natural process by only allowing certain plants to pass on their genetic material. This has revolutionized agriculture, as this knowledge has also been applied to farm animals and pets.

If your view of the person is as a means to an end, it takes very little imagination to see how one could go from using that concept on non-human entities to using it on humans. The basic Progressive idea at the time was that the poor and otherwise undesirable should be prevented from having children. The poor children would have lives that were seen by the elites as not worth living. And the other undesirables, especially those with some form of genetic or moral defect, were a grave detriment to the genetic pool, causing harm to the greater humanity by their continued having of children.

This led to the state-sponsored, forced sterilization of tens of thousands in the U.S. before this evil practice was ended. While the undesirables of eugenics could simply be ignored and avoided by those who didnt want to deal with them, they wouldnt be the only ones who would face this dehumanization.

Instead, things would then get worse. While the inconvenient poor or mentally ill person can be avoided easily by most, a child one is pregnant with cannot. With the declining view of the human person through the commoditization, mechanization, and metallization of man, and declining religious faith in general, society has drifted more and more to a view of the world in which its all me and my happiness, and anything that gets in the way of that must be gotten rid of. If one can declare that the one who is in the way of your perceived happiness is not a person, then it makes getting rid of that roadblock to happiness much easier.

We see this in the modern age in which the abortion industry and those who support its views, including some philosophers, make the false claim that the child in the womb is no different than a wart on your back, making removing and discarding of it a non-issue in the moral sense. How quickly we moved, as a society, from denying the personhood of the undesirables outside of the womb to those inside of the womb. After all, it is much easier for the undesirables outside of the womb to fight their fight in court and in public opinion than it is for the unborn to do so. If we wont defend the right to life of the most innocent among us, the unborn, then how can anyone else hope that their rights will be protected?

This is the case with euthanasia. Euthanasia is pitched as self or assisted suicide that helps free one from a continued life of suffering and pain. Theoretically, this is a voluntary act done by one who has been thoroughly checked out by a psychologist who verifies a lack of mental illness in the person and a clarity of mind to allow them to make a clear choice. In many cases, though, this is not the reality with those who are effectively being executed.

Although there are stories of family members holding down their supposedly-loved ones so someone can administer the deadly chemical cocktail to them, in many cases, it is a panel of experts at a hospital who decide to end these lives. These death panels decide that the patients life isnt worth continuing and that killing them would be a better, less painful, choice. The sad reality is that the authority to do evil acts such as these, while not at all seen as acceptable by the majority of people, are approved and protected by a centralized governmental authority who, rather than protecting the human rights of their citizens from conception to natural death, sees allowing the removal of these undesirables as fitting whatever agenda it is that they want to push.

If doing this to those undesirables is ok, then what happens when you become the undesirable? This is already a problem even before one considers the reality of forced medical testing that commonly is done in regimes that dehumanize their populations that muchincluding the genetic modification of embryos by the addition of animal DNA to them in order to see what happens.

With all of this, man draws ever closer to a sick dream of recreating himself in his own image, becoming whatever he thinks he should be rather than what God made him to be. The deeper one dives into this, the more totalitarian tendencies one starts to see from a government and whatever mob holds positive public opinion at the time. They seek to remake the world as they see fit, as those with lesser knowledge are too stupid to understand. With this special secret knowledge, the modern gnostic seek to escape the bounds of nature, achieving ascension to a greater existence. Unfortunately for them, thats not how it works.

[Image Credit: Unsplash]

Link:

The Metallization of Man - Crisis Magazine

Why It Pays to Research a Home’s History Before Buying – Money

When Nick Weith and Damien Mordecai bought their Gowanda, New York house in 2020, the Zillow listing read Built in 1940. But they knew better.

The boxy silhouette. The Second Empire roof. It was clearly Victorian Era. That 1940 date? It had to be a placeholder.

After a deep dive into the history of their new homewith help from a local historian, ancestry websites and digitized town recordsthe couple learned their hunch was right. "The Kimble House," as they've since deemed it, was actually built in the 1870s.'

They learned a bunch of other cool stuff, too. Like the property's original owners (Byron and Deborah Kimble), and the name of the guy who built it (Byron's dad, Charles). They even found some books, photos and other memorabilia of its most famous resident: the dancer and stage designer Anthony Nelle, who died in 1977.

If you've never perused the market for centuries-old homes, these details might seem insignificant. But determining a propertys true age and other facets of its history is valuable information. For new owners of old homes, it can inform renovation decisions, and determine your eligibility for tax exemptions.

Also, it's pretty darn interesting.

A little research can tell you a lot. What materials were used during construction? Whatif anythinghas been renovated?

These are major budget considerations. Removing lead paint can set you back a few thousand dollars, and asbestos removal can cost up to $30,000, according to HomeAdvisor.

You should also scour your homes history for details on when major structures were last updated like the plumbing, roof and foundation. This can help you anticipate when your next repair is on the horizon, and avoid any health or safety hazards prior to move-in. If you're really on top of things, it can help you decide if you want to move in.

If electrical, plumbing or HVAC has not been updated, there can be a ton of costs associated with bringing a home into the modern world," says Bret Weinstein, CEO of Guide Real Estate in Denver. We have seen an HVAC replacement cost over $100K.

There are other financial benefits to knowing your home's history.

If it can be certified as a historic structure through an organization like the National Register of Historic Places, you could qualify for valuable tax perks. (The Federal Historic Preservation Tax Incentive, for one, offers a tax credit for income-producing properties equal to 20% of the rehabilitation costs. Some states and cities offer additional incentives.)

And don't discount the resale value: If you eventually decide to put your historic home on the market, it will probably sell faster (and for more money) than a comparable new-construction home.

A good backstory "always" makes a home more marketable, says Leslie Turner, co-founder of Maison Real Estate in Charleston, S.C.

People love to be connected to history," she says.

There are countless ways to dig up an old home's history.

Local historical societies, museums and libraries are great places to start. Newspapers which you can find digitized or on microfiche at many libraries can also be good sources of info. And the keeper of your city's historical records (probably a county courthouse) may have historical maps, deeds, utility records and old building permits for your very property.

Online resources can also be a huge help. At the Kimble House, Mordecai used Ancestry.com, which lets paid subscribers access Census records, birth and death notices, historic photographs and more. It takes time, he says, but if you can track down just one former resident or even a relative of a former resident you can usually piece together a propertys history.

Still, a little luck never hurts.

As it turns out, the historian Mordecai and Weith tracked down used to work as a real estate agent in Gowanda. And about 40 years ago, the Kimble House was one of his properties.

He kind of chuckled when he came in, Weith says. He was like, It looks about the same as when I sold it 40 years ago.

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Why It Pays to Research a Home's History Before Buying - Money

Putin’s fascination with fake history and symbolism may go deeper than we know – Fox News

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It is not just Ukraine-erasing and a violent charge to wipe a brother country, or at least parts of it, off the map. The mission and mindset go much further, according to preeminent Kyiv-born, Russian-educated author and literary translator, Elena Kostioukovitch.

In a recent essay called "Whats Going on In Putins Mind," she says there is a toxic fascination in Russia, starting at the very top, with alternative histories of the entire world, theories which paint Russians as the real masters of the universe and ancient civilizations like Greece and Rome as mere inventions of phony scholars.Fake history, essentially, trumping even fake news.

This world view is largely based on volumes of something called "The New Chronology," which is the brainchild mainly of two Russian authors, an academic and a mathematician respectively-- Anatoly Fomenko and Gleb Nosovsky.One of the key premises is that dark forces tampered with all the history books in libraries across the globe at a certain point in time, wiping out or changing real versions of events and resetting dates.

According to Kostioukovitch, it is one of the many mystical, fantastical theories Russian President Vladimir Putin and his inner circle are peddling, and they have managed to sweep not insignificant parts of the population along with them, manipulating masses towards the conclusion that it is high time to make amendsnot just for losing the Cold War-but for long-standing injustice against Russians.For the Kremlin, this works very well for the moment.

VIDEO SHOWS PUTIN STANDING AWKWARDLY, WAITING FOR ERDOGAN TO SHOW UP FOR IRAN MEETING

"They created the idea that any action can be supported by a pretext," Kostioukovitch told Fox News earlier this month. "It must have a historical context.It sounds idealistic, but idealistic is good for the Russian people and the masses.They love this historical pretext."She goes on, "this is fake history. But it is what Russian people love deeply.Because the idea is that everything in the world can be faked."

Such a position would give carte blanche to question or disobey anything and everything that is unpleasant, the theory goes. Kostioukovich, of course, is not privy to Putins reading list.She is , however, convinced that the Kremlin is gripped by such revisionism from the language used by its top lieutenants, mouthpieces and the leader himself.

Russian President Vladimir Putin uses state-run media to spread the Kremlins message. (ALEXEI NIKOLSKY/Sputnik/AFP via Getty Images, File)

"I have read with great attention his (Putins) speeches," she says."I have seen the lexicon, the expressions he quotes, and I have seen the names and ideas he drops, and he supposes everybody knows, but not everybody knows.To know all this trash, you must read these kinds of books be part of some sort of sect of re-enactors of history and this is dangerous for us all." Kostioukovitch says the sheer volume of readers of the "New Chronology" has gathered over years is also striking.

This deep, if deluded, dive back in time serves to reinforce the recent rants from the Kremlin about the necessity of protecting the long-suffering "Russian World" and putting an end to rising Russophobia propagated by the West.

PUTIN CLAIMS RUSSIA'S WAR IN UKRAINE IS JUST BEGINNING

Kostioukovitch also delves into the symbols being used for this campaign against Ukraine and the West at large. The letter "Z" plastered over tanks but now codified as something to be added in many official contexts and communiques has never been explained. The "Z" can be seen on anything from buildings now to bumper stickers. The less used but still prominent "V" is another symbol of this so-called existential struggle. Neither are letters in the Russian alphabet.It is thus, one of the wars great mysteries.

A soldier of Russian Rosguardia (National Guard) with an attached letter Z, which has become a symbol of the Russian military, stands guard during a rehearsal for the Victory Day military parade which will take place at Dvortsovaya (Palace) Square on May 9 to celebrate 77 years after the victory in World War II in St. Petersburg, Russia, Tuesday, April 26, 2022. (AP Photo/Dmitri Lovetsky)

"By leaving this inexplicable, nebulous unresolved air over everything," Kostioukovitch offers, "perhaps the regime is hoping to further weaken peoples cognitive and logical capabilities, continually remarking that they are not required to understand. Only to obey and intuit." Kostioukovitch sees the "Z" as a sort of reverse half of the Nazi swastikawhich she finds as such a strange choice of symbol for a war against supposed Nazis in Ukraine.

RUSSIA'S SHOIGU SAYS WAR IN UKRAINE WILL END WHEN PUTIN'S 'TASKS' ARE COMPLETED

However, she believes this symbolism comes from a twisted fascination among certain segments of the Russian power base with SS soldiers from World War II which have been portrayed in all their clean-shaven, polished-boot precision in many Soviet films. She suggests "Z" could even represent the "Zentre" Nazi strike force that conquered Ukraine. Kostioukovitch says there may even be a "romanticizing" of "that aesthetic," and "that destructive energy, that unstoppable force mixed with elegance and unholy evil."

Last week, incidentally, Kostioukovitch, who now lives in Italy but whose work over the years has linked her closely with Russia, renounced her Russian citizenship. It is something easier said than done, according to the author.One does not just rip up their passportit is a long bureaucratic process that in her case was held up over three cents due on a tax bill according to her, laughing at the apparent absurdity of being held hostage over a few kopeks.

Ukrainian soldiers install the state flag on Snake island, in the Black Sea July 7, 2022. The Ukrainian military returned the flag of Ukraine to island, which had been under the control of Russian troops for some time. (Ukrainian Defence Ministry Press Office via AP)

Kostioukovitch, who says that she and many Russians in exile are doing whatever they can to try to help Ukrainian refugees, push back against this war and fight for democracy in Russia, brushes off her gesture, calling it nothing compared to what the likes of jailed dissidents Alexei Navalny, and most recently Ilya Yashin have sacrificed to protest the policies of their government.

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"They will be symbols," she says. "They will be heroes. They will be the future leaders of Russia. Not those who are in Europe."

Amy Kellogg currently serves as a correspondent based in Milan. She joined FOX News Channel (FNC) in 1999 as a Moscow-based correspondent. Follow her on Twitter: @amykelloggfox

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Putin's fascination with fake history and symbolism may go deeper than we know - Fox News

This Florida City Has Rich Mob History & You Can Visit Where The Mobsters Hung Out – Narcity Canada

Tampa Bay is probably best known for its beautiful clear-water beaches, world-class theme parks and sports teams, but it also has a unique history one that is widely connected to a mafia past.

You can learn more about the city's unique history and connection to the mob through an interactive Tampa Mafia Tour, or you can just visit these places yourself, as the almost two-hour walking excursion is shut down for the summer due to the heat.

From restaurants to secret tunnels, you can find out about those who walked the streets and followed leaders, like Santo Trafficante Jr., a man who, according to The Mob Museum, was one of the top gangsters in this area.

According to the tour's website, many of the historical places where local mobsters hung out remain open for you to visit, like Donatello Italian Restaurant.

Another place that is still standing today is the famous dining spot, Columbia Restaurant. It's widely known in the historical streets of Ybor City, and members of the Trafficante family reportedly used to eat there.

Some FBI agents also used to sit at those tables, and it stands today as a well-known place to get a delicious cuisine.

There's also a hidden underground system of tunnels in Ybor City where these characters were rumored to have smuggled liquor between speakeasies during the Prohibition Era although the Tampa Bay Times reported in 2018 that these tunnels were actually built in the late 19th century as sewers.

While the tunnels are closed to visitors, Tampa Mafia promises you'll learn about them on their tour.

The tour starts back up in September, and if you're a group of 10 or more people, you can even book a private tour on Tuesday and Wednesday nights.

A Tampa historian from the Mob Museum Advisory Council will guide you through the 1-mile, 1.5- to 2-hour walking tour and tell you all of the tales of Tampa's dark past.

Price: $30

Address: Tour starts at 1523 E. 7th Ave., Tampa, FL

When: Starting in September 2022

Why You Need To Go: This tour is an exciting way to get to know the Ybor City area of Tampa Bay. It's a fun way to learn the rich mobster history that paints the town and see things you otherwise wouldn't have known were a part of this past.

Accessibility: Wheelchair/stroller accessible

Website

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This Florida City Has Rich Mob History & You Can Visit Where The Mobsters Hung Out - Narcity Canada

Neenah cemetery walk highlights the city’s history – WGBA NBC 26 in Green Bay

NEENAH (NBC 26)Since 1985, the Neenah Historical Society has been putting on an annual cemetery walk. This year, it took visitors to Oak Hill Cemetery, where local historians highlighted stories of people who made an impact on the city's history.

For some audience members at the cemetery walk, it might have felt like history was repeating itself. The story of Jens Jersild was played out by Carl Jersild, the great grandson of the immigrant.

He came from Denmark directly to Neenah, Carl said.

Jens Jersild started the Jersild Knitting Company. The company made sweaters that were sold all over the country. The business was passed down through the family for over 150 years. Carl ran the family business for many years, but eventually, the company retired with him.

He was a good leader - my great grandfather, said Carl Jersild.

This years cemetery walk focused on four stories of immigration to Neenah in the mid 1800s. Each story had an actor portrayal of their immigration experience.

Theres thousands of stories at the cemetery and were always looking for new and different ones to tell, said Becky Heidke Kwiatkowski, Associate Executive Director of the Neenah Historical Society.

The stories range from Elizabeth Meyers difficulties marrying a German immigrant during World War II, to a young woman who traveled from Norway to Neenah - and found true love.

Henry Hewitt was an early settler from England and built some of the original locks and bridges in Northeast Wisconsin: a dam in Kaukauna and a plank road from Kaukauna to Menasha.

We charged folks a toll to ride on it, said Adam Westbrook, who played Henry Hewitt. They loved it! It was safe and smooth and saved them tons of time in travel.

According to Kwiatkowski, the stories behind everyone that migrated to Neenah helped the city flourish.

Theyre all important in growing our history, she said.

You can visit the Neenah Historical Society to see the exhibits of the immigrants whose stories were highlighted at the cemetery walk.

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Neenah cemetery walk highlights the city's history - WGBA NBC 26 in Green Bay

Lukes Publishes History and the Post-Truth Era | The Frederick S. Pardee School of Global Studies – Boston University

Igor Lukes, Professor of International Relations and Historyat Boston Universitys Frederick S. Pardee School of Global Studies, has published a new book titled Djiny a doba postfaktick (History and the Post-Truth Era).

In his latest publication, Lukes studies the Czech history of the 20th century with its disasters and myths as well as todays political problems in the United States, Russia, and globally. His work argues that history does not repeat itself, but with a sufficiently critical and value-based perspective, we can reveal our own mistakes and stereotypes, and find parallels between the present and the past that are not obvious at first glance. Special emphasis is put on the relationship between the former Eastern and Western Bloc and long-term Russian power ambitions in Ukraine.

The book is a compilation of Lukes historical essays, political commentaries, and reflections on the contemporary world from 2004-2021. Thematically, the texts are divided into several areas, in which Lukes maps the Obama and Trump presidencies, Vladimir Putins Russia, Czech statehood, the Cold War, secret services, and political ideas. In addition to knowledge and critical observations, the book also brings a significant reading and emotional experience thanks to Lukes style and commitment.

For more on History and the Post-Truth Era,visit Maratons website or read the Radio Prague International article on Lukes book.

Igor Lukesis a past winner ofthe1997 Metcalf Award for Excellence in Teaching and the 2020 winner of the Gitner Prize for Faculty Excellence at the Pardee School. Hewrites primarily about Central Europe. His work has won the support of various other institutions, including Fulbright, Fulbright-Hays, the Woodrow Wilson Center, IREX, and the National Endowment for the Humanities. Read more about Professor Lukes on hisfaculty profile.

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Tagged: 2022, Book, Czechoslovakia, History, Igor Lukes, russia, Ukraine, United States

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Lukes Publishes History and the Post-Truth Era | The Frederick S. Pardee School of Global Studies - Boston University

Teenagers spotted the largest gas pipeline spill in US history – The Verge

A giant pipeline spewed millions of gallons of fuel into a nature preserve for more than two weeks until two teens on four-wheelers noticed the spill and alerted authorities.

The teenagers discovered the leak in the Colonial Pipeline in August 2020 in the Oehler Nature Preserve outside Charlotte, North Carolina, E&E News reports. Just how massive the leak actually was about 2 million gallons came to light recently on Friday, July 22nd.

Colonial Pipeline Company was required to give an updated estimate of the damage because of a recent consent order with the North Carolina Department of Environmental Quality. The company had previously reported that the spill released 63,000 gallons of gasoline shortly after the spill was discovered.

Now we know the spill is actually about 30 times larger than originally estimated. That makes it the largest onshore fuel spill in the nation, according to the North Carolina Department of Environmental Quality. But E&E notes that its likely the largest pipeline gas spill since a ruptured storage tank let out 2.3 million gallons of gasoline in East Chicago, Indiana, back in 1986.

Colonial says that it collected about 75 percent of the 2 million gallons it spilled, as well as nearly 10 million gallons of water that came in contact with the petroleum. Fortunately, the company says its testing has confirmed no impacts to water supply wells.

The pipeline is already notorious for other reasons. With 5,500 miles of pipeline transporting 100 million gallons of fuel a day between Texas and New York, Colonial Pipeline is the largest pipeline system for refined oil products in the US. In May 2021, the pipeline had to be taken offline for five days following a ransomware attack, triggering higher gas prices, panic, and gridlocked traffic outside gas stations. The fiasco showed how vulnerable the nations energy infrastructure is to hackers, who used a compromised password to get into Colonials network.

Apparently, most pipelines arent very technologically sophisticated when it comes to detecting spills either. Most leaks are found by people, as was the case with Colonial, E&E News reports.

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Teenagers spotted the largest gas pipeline spill in US history - The Verge

An Exciting New Theatrical Show Is Tackling The Long And Complicated History Of Cannabis – Forbes

Grace Galu (center) in "Cannabis! A Viper Vaudeville"

When Baba Israel, a composer, music director and performer of Cannabis! A Viper Vaudeville," first read Martin A. Lee's book, "Smoke Signals: A Social History of Marijuana - Medical, Recreational and Scientific," he was so excited about the material, he felt compelled to develop a show inspired by it. However, there was a issue: At the time, about five and a half years ago, very few states had legal adult-use and medical markets. Though committed toward the project, Israel and key collaborator Grace Galu were simultaneously apprehensive that it could threaten their jobs as licensed teachers in the state of New York. It was a precarious situation, symbolic of the struggles that cannabis advocates have faced for years.

Yet, despite the challenges, Israel, Galu and their creative team were able to forge on and tell the history of this deeply misunderstood and stigmatized plant in a show that deftly mixes music, dance and the spoken word. Weaving the music of icons such as Bob Marley with the stories of grassroots activists Dennis Perron and Brownie Mary, "Cannabis! A Viper Vaudeville" plays as a thrilling visual and aural spectacle, a seductive time-travelling theatrical concert that encapsulates the highlights and milestones of cannabis.

The production began a limited run at the legendary Off-Off Broadway theater La MaMa on July 14, 2022, and is slated to end on July 31, 2022.

Baba Israel in "Cannabis! A Viper Vaudeville"

Recently, Israel and Galu took a break from the show, in which both share equal duties as music director, composer and performer, to discuss the genesis and evolution of the productionand its future. This interview has been edited for conciseness and clarity.

Iris Dorbian: How did this project begin and evolve?

Baba Israel: When I came across [Martin Lees] book, I was really excited about it. I started to hear songs and imagine the words in the book as lyrics. I felt for a lot of reasons that [cannabis] is an important subject I wanted to talk about as an artist.

From there, I started to write songs. The first one I wrote was Rope Dope, which was inspired by Martin Lee. When I wrote it, I knew I wanted to collaborate with a female vocalistto balance my own voice. Thats when I met Grace and she came to the studio. She sort of stepped into that role.

Grace Galu: It was a symbiosis of sounds, of meeting, of intention. Organically, I became composer of the piece because I ended up writing most of the songs.

Israel: For me as a writer, its been an amazing experiencehow Grace takes words and breathes life to it.

Dorbian: There's very little conventional script. Was that a conscious choice or simply something that happened as the show was being developed?

Israel: As my role as an emcee, I use spoken word and poetry as a form of narration. We wanted to do the storytelling through poetry and music. That was intentional. We were working with brilliant designers. Talvin [Wilks, the dramaturge and co-director] gave us this idea of subverting this vaudeville aesthetic, to have someone [for instance] roller skate during a solo even though its a mournful song about Mexicans coming over the border during the revolution.

Galu: I always love operettas. Im a musical theater nerd. One of my favorite shows is Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat. Its part of my influence.

The company of "Cannabis! A Viper Vaudeville"

Dorbian: In addition to the federal illegality of cannabis, despite two-thirds of the country having legal medical markets and a third having legal adult-use, what were some other snags you encountered when putting together this show?

Galu: There were a few: the transition for me becoming a composer. That interpersonal gender dynamicsmaking sure there was representation with gender and race in the cast. I feel the cast is representative of cannabis in the world.

Israel: Its a heavy subject. The War on Drugs has paid a heavy price on people of color and all kinds of community. A lot of things that deal with cannabis tend to be very comedic and male, but we wanted to do something different. When I started this project, I was the original conceiver, but we moved into a more collaborative [mode].

Also, this is the largest scale production Ive put on in New York. It grew out of a residency program at HERE [the Off-Off Broadway presenting house, which commissioned, developed and produced the show]. Weve been ambitious. We feel this is an important subject and we wanted to do it on the scale it deserved. Its both a challenge and its rewarding.

Dorbian: What are the future plans for the show? Anything you can discuss?

Israel: The plan is to tour the piece and take it around the country. It will be interesting to take it to different states that are in different levels of legalization. Eventually, we want to bring the show back for a longer run and perhaps on a streaming platform. In a lot of ways, were at the beginning of the journey.

For more information about the show and its run at La MaMa, click here.

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An Exciting New Theatrical Show Is Tackling The Long And Complicated History Of Cannabis - Forbes

Today in History, Aug. 1, 2022 | | gjsentinel.com – The Grand Junction Daily Sentinel

Country

United States of AmericaUS Virgin IslandsUnited States Minor Outlying IslandsCanadaMexico, United Mexican StatesBahamas, Commonwealth of theCuba, Republic ofDominican RepublicHaiti, Republic ofJamaicaAfghanistanAlbania, People's Socialist Republic ofAlgeria, People's Democratic Republic ofAmerican SamoaAndorra, Principality ofAngola, Republic ofAnguillaAntarctica (the territory South of 60 deg S)Antigua and BarbudaArgentina, Argentine RepublicArmeniaArubaAustralia, Commonwealth ofAustria, Republic ofAzerbaijan, Republic ofBahrain, Kingdom ofBangladesh, People's Republic ofBarbadosBelarusBelgium, Kingdom ofBelizeBenin, People's Republic ofBermudaBhutan, Kingdom ofBolivia, Republic ofBosnia and HerzegovinaBotswana, Republic ofBouvet Island (Bouvetoya)Brazil, Federative Republic ofBritish Indian Ocean Territory (Chagos Archipelago)British Virgin IslandsBrunei DarussalamBulgaria, People's Republic ofBurkina FasoBurundi, Republic ofCambodia, Kingdom ofCameroon, United Republic ofCape Verde, Republic ofCayman IslandsCentral African RepublicChad, Republic ofChile, Republic ofChina, People's Republic ofChristmas IslandCocos (Keeling) IslandsColombia, Republic ofComoros, Union of theCongo, Democratic Republic ofCongo, People's Republic ofCook IslandsCosta Rica, Republic ofCote D'Ivoire, Ivory Coast, Republic of theCyprus, Republic ofCzech RepublicDenmark, Kingdom ofDjibouti, Republic ofDominica, Commonwealth ofEcuador, Republic ofEgypt, Arab Republic ofEl Salvador, Republic ofEquatorial Guinea, Republic ofEritreaEstoniaEthiopiaFaeroe IslandsFalkland Islands (Malvinas)Fiji, Republic of the Fiji IslandsFinland, Republic ofFrance, French RepublicFrench GuianaFrench PolynesiaFrench Southern TerritoriesGabon, Gabonese RepublicGambia, Republic of theGeorgiaGermanyGhana, Republic ofGibraltarGreece, Hellenic RepublicGreenlandGrenadaGuadaloupeGuamGuatemala, Republic ofGuinea, RevolutionaryPeople's Rep'c ofGuinea-Bissau, Republic ofGuyana, Republic ofHeard and McDonald IslandsHoly See (Vatican City State)Honduras, Republic ofHong Kong, Special Administrative Region of ChinaHrvatska (Croatia)Hungary, Hungarian People's RepublicIceland, Republic ofIndia, Republic ofIndonesia, Republic ofIran, Islamic Republic ofIraq, Republic ofIrelandIsrael, State ofItaly, Italian RepublicJapanJordan, Hashemite Kingdom ofKazakhstan, Republic ofKenya, Republic ofKiribati, Republic ofKorea, Democratic People's Republic ofKorea, Republic ofKuwait, State ofKyrgyz RepublicLao People's Democratic RepublicLatviaLebanon, Lebanese RepublicLesotho, Kingdom ofLiberia, Republic ofLibyan Arab JamahiriyaLiechtenstein, Principality ofLithuaniaLuxembourg, Grand Duchy ofMacao, Special Administrative Region of ChinaMacedonia, the former Yugoslav Republic ofMadagascar, Republic ofMalawi, Republic ofMalaysiaMaldives, Republic ofMali, Republic ofMalta, Republic ofMarshall IslandsMartiniqueMauritania, Islamic Republic ofMauritiusMayotteMicronesia, Federated States ofMoldova, Republic ofMonaco, Principality ofMongolia, Mongolian People's RepublicMontserratMorocco, Kingdom ofMozambique, People's Republic ofMyanmarNamibiaNauru, Republic ofNepal, Kingdom ofNetherlands AntillesNetherlands, Kingdom of theNew CaledoniaNew ZealandNicaragua, Republic ofNiger, Republic of theNigeria, Federal Republic ofNiue, Republic ofNorfolk IslandNorthern Mariana IslandsNorway, Kingdom ofOman, Sultanate ofPakistan, Islamic Republic ofPalauPalestinian Territory, OccupiedPanama, Republic ofPapua New GuineaParaguay, Republic ofPeru, Republic ofPhilippines, Republic of thePitcairn IslandPoland, Polish People's RepublicPortugal, Portuguese RepublicPuerto RicoQatar, State ofReunionRomania, Socialist Republic ofRussian FederationRwanda, Rwandese RepublicSamoa, Independent State ofSan Marino, Republic ofSao Tome and Principe, Democratic Republic ofSaudi Arabia, Kingdom ofSenegal, Republic ofSerbia and MontenegroSeychelles, Republic ofSierra Leone, Republic ofSingapore, Republic ofSlovakia (Slovak Republic)SloveniaSolomon IslandsSomalia, Somali RepublicSouth Africa, Republic ofSouth Georgia and the South Sandwich IslandsSpain, Spanish StateSri Lanka, Democratic Socialist Republic ofSt. HelenaSt. Kitts and NevisSt. LuciaSt. Pierre and MiquelonSt. Vincent and the GrenadinesSudan, Democratic Republic of theSuriname, Republic ofSvalbard & Jan Mayen IslandsSwaziland, Kingdom ofSweden, Kingdom ofSwitzerland, Swiss ConfederationSyrian Arab RepublicTaiwan, Province of ChinaTajikistanTanzania, United Republic ofThailand, Kingdom ofTimor-Leste, Democratic Republic ofTogo, Togolese RepublicTokelau (Tokelau Islands)Tonga, Kingdom ofTrinidad and Tobago, Republic ofTunisia, Republic ofTurkey, Republic ofTurkmenistanTurks and Caicos IslandsTuvaluUganda, Republic ofUkraineUnited Arab EmiratesUnited Kingdom of Great Britain & N. IrelandUruguay, Eastern Republic ofUzbekistanVanuatuVenezuela, Bolivarian Republic ofViet Nam, Socialist Republic ofWallis and Futuna IslandsWestern SaharaYemenZambia, Republic ofZimbabwe

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The ‘Deplorable’ History Behind the Pope’s Apology to Canada’s Indigenous Peoples – TIME

Many of Wahhshon Whitebeans family members attended Canadas residential schoolslargely Catholic-run institutions designed to erode Indigenous culture and that were rife with abuse. So Pope Franciss six-day trip across Canada, which began Sunday, feels personal for 39-year-old Whitebean, who attended an Indian day school, a similar institution but one in which students returned to their families in the evenings. (Pope Francis has called the tour a pilgrimage of penance and apologized on Monday.)

The issue is also an academic pursuit for Whitebean, who is pursuing a Ph.D. at McGill University researching Indian day schools in her home community of Kahnaw:ke, just outside of Montreal, Qubec. For the last few months, Whitebean has been poring over archives and interviewing dozens of survivors from these institutions. She used to think of herself as somewhat de-sensitized to the issue but says that lately its been hard to hold it together while reading detailed complaintsfrom parents about abuses their children suffered from not being allowed to use the bathroom to having their hands burned on a stove. I dont know what came over me. I just started to cry. I bawled and realized at that point it was like a dam broke and all the emotion and my anger and grief was just building up for a while doing this work, Whitebean says. Theres no justice for us. There hasnt been justice.

Whitebeans story shows how important the matter is for Indigenous peoples as Pope Francis visits various communities across Edmonton, Qubec and Iqaluit in the northern territory of Nunavut. (Francis was welcomed to Canada on Sunday by Indigenous leaders as well as Prime Minister Justin Trudeau.)

Read more: What to Know About the Popes Visit to Canada and Apology to Indigenous Communities

In 2015, Canadas Truth and Reconciliation Commission (TRC) issued a report documenting how the nations policy toward Indigenous peoples amounted to cultural genocide through its attempts to eliminate Indigenous governments, ignore Indigenous rights and through a process of assimilation, cause Aboriginal peoples to cease to exist as distinct legal, social, cultural, religious, and racial entities in Canada. The report noted that a key way in which the Canadian government executed this policy was through residential schools, which more than 150,000 children have attended since the late 19th century. The Catholic church operated about 70% of residential schools in Canada, before the government took control of them in 1969. The last residential school shut in the 1990s.

In recent years, the remains of more than 1,300 peoplemainly childrenhave been discovered using new technology on the grounds of three former residential schools in Canada, prompting an outcry. Indigenous communities say the figures confirm what they have long suspected; estimates suggest between 10,000 and 50,000 children never returned home after attending the schools.

A makeshift memorial to honour the 215 children whose remains have been discovered buried near the facility is seen as orange light drapes the facade of the former Kamloops Indian Residential School in Kamloops, British Columbia, Canada, on June 2, 2021.

Cole BurstonAFP via Getty Images

Deliberately going after Indigenous children as the quickest path to assimilation is just inhumane, says Dale Turner, associate professor of political science at the University of Toronto.

In establishing residential schools, the Canadian government essentially declared Aboriginal people to be unfit parents, the TRC report noted. The residential school system was based on an assumption that European civilization and Christian religions were superior to Aboriginal culture. In these schools, children were banned from speaking their own languages and church-led campaigns prohibited Indigenous spiritual practices.

The facilities were also overcrowded, and diseases such as tuberculosis and measles wreaked deadly havoc on Indigenous children.

When you leave a home that has structure, love and empathy to go into an institution that has no love, no compassion, very cold and in many cases physical, emotional and sexual abuse to children, it has an impact that will stay with them for their entire lifeas well as the lives of their children and grandchildren, says Angela White, executive director of the Indian Residential School Survivors Society (IRSSS). Many of these residential school survivors went to these institutions, not knowing a parents love, and blaming their parents for making them gowithout knowing that they were forced to go.

For Whitebean, the older generations in her family have embraced a culture of silence around their experience at residential schools because of the trauma and shame associated with them. Her grandmother told her that her great-grandmothers body was full of scars from residential school. She says that others in her family reported different forms of physical and sexual abuse.

The Popes apology, which comes seven years after the TRC recommended one, will hold different weight across Indigenous communitiesbut for many there is a sense that it isnt enough.

Whitebean says she has mixed feelings about the Popes visit. I just dont believe that anything practical or real or beyond lip service will come out of the visit. I dont want any more hollow apologies, she says.

The IRSSSs White notes that the people her organization represents hold diverse views but personally, shes not sure its enough. They had many opportunities to provide this apologyalong with accountability and transparency about their participation in how these schools were operated, so its too little, too late, White says.

Thats not to say that the apology doesnt hold greater meaning for other Indigenous peoples, a large number of whom are still Catholic. In April, while meeting with a delegation of Indigenous leaders in the Vatican, the Pope issued an historic apology for the deplorable abuses at residential schools. He had promised the delegation he would apologize on Canadian soil.

Indeed, the trip marks the first time a papal visit to Canada is focused on reckoning with the harm caused by the church. To say that the Popes apology does not have political significance in whats going on in contemporary politics is a mistake because I do think the Pope has an opportunity to come down on the side of Indigenous peoples here, Turner says. Part of that reconciliation is to recognize what they took from Indigenous people, which is those important, historical, philosophical, everyday relationships they have with their homelands.

This ritual needs to take place for meaningful reconciliation to take place, Turner says, adding that it was important for it to occur on Indigenous homelands.

And the Popes apology is part of a growing movement towards recognizing past abuses against Indigenous peoples. Last year, Trudeau became the first Canadian prime minister to apologize for the incredibly harmful government policy that created the residential schooling system.

Residential school survivor Charlotte Manual makes a speech during Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau's visit to Tk'emlups, the Secwepemc First Nation, to apologize in Kamloops, British Columbia, Canada on October 18, 2021.

Mert Alper DervisAnadolu Agency via Getty Images

For Whitebean, its important that the church honor its pledge to raise funds. Some 48 local Catholic church entities were required to use their best efforts to fundraise 25 million Canadian dollars for survivors as part of the 2008 Indian Residential Schools Settlement Agreement (IRSSA), between the government of Canada and thousands of survivors, but ended up raising less than 4 million.

That fundraising gap set the stage for a subsequent pledge. Last year, a group of Canadian bishops announced they would set up an Indigenous Reconciliation Fund that would raise up to 30 million Canadian dollars. So far, less than 5 million has been raised.

By contrast, the IRSSA saw the federal government set up a major compensation fund for children who had been enrolled in residential schools. A 2021 report found that the government has paid out at least 3 billion Canadian dollars in compensation so far.

Whitebean says that the church should also return cultural artifacts held in the Vatican, give back land to Indigenous owners and make it easier for the public to access records related to residential and day schools. Many records are housed within individual religious orders and can still be difficult to access, according to Whitebean.

But whatever comes next, many Indigenous peoples will agree that Pope Francis did not mince his words while condemning the residential school system. I humbly beg forgiveness for the evil committed by so many Christians against the Indigenous peoples, he said on Monday outside a former residential school in Maskwacis, Alberta.

Correction, July 26

The original version of this story misstated the university where Dale Turner works. It is the University of Toronto, not McGill University.

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Write to Sanya Mansoor at sanya.mansoor@time.com.

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The 'Deplorable' History Behind the Pope's Apology to Canada's Indigenous Peoples - TIME

Edgin: What goes into a 50-year history story on Lubbock’s mall – LubbockOnline.com

Hello A-J readers!

I hope you have read the two stories on the South Plains Mall's 50th anniversary coming up this Tuesday. If not, this column might not make sense.

I first heard about the mall's golden anniversary from Chick-Fil-A's marketing team in June. 50 years is a big deal for any business, especially a mall, so I knew I should spend some time digging through records and asking questions.

One of the first groups I reached out to was "If you grew up in Lubbock, Texas, you remember when......" on Facebook. I posted a call for people to share their memories, most missed stores, and whatever mall-related stories they had to tell. This led me to one of my key interviews, Sue Hammons, who received awards during the 25th anniversary of the mall for her entry into contest where people needed to share what the mall meant to them.

Sue went on her first date with her husband in the first days of the mall. She also shopped for baby clothes, gifts, anniversaries. South Plains Mall trips really seemed to reflect her life.

There were several other sweet, interesting and fun memories shared through the comments, which were mentioned in the 50 years of memories article.

From there, I scheduled a time to visit the Southwest Collection at Texas Tech to peruse documents spanning those 50 years. I learned entirely too much about the mall, which was built in part to rival Dallas stores, during an all-morning study session that reminded me of college. Read more about the history I learned in the history-focused article, which also has an image of the original layout.

I want to thank the Lubbock historians on social media and the Southwest Collections for giving me excellent starting points. The weeks of work that went into these two articles were so much easier thanks to them.

Moving on to next week, keep an eye out for a smooth feature on a business that has been in town for over 30 years. If you know of other businesses with a cool story to share, please reach out to me.

Alana Edginis a journalist covering Business News in Lubbock and the surrounding area. Send her a news tip ataedgin@lubbockonline.com.

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Edgin: What goes into a 50-year history story on Lubbock's mall - LubbockOnline.com

13-Year-Old Makes History As Youngest Black Student Accepted Into Medical School – Romper

At just 13 years old, Alena Analeigh Wicker has achieved an accomplishment that could take many people up to a decade to reach. The 2022 Global Child Prodigy has been accepted into the University of Alabama at Birminghams Heersink School of Medicine and made history as the youngest Black person in the country to ever be accepted into medical school.

Statistics would have said I never would have made it, she captioned an Instagram post celebrating her accomplishment, which included a photo of her acceptance letter, on June 30. A little black girl adopted from Fontana California. I've worked so hard to reach my goals and live my dreams.

Wicker graduated high school only last year at the age of 12 and is nearly halfway done with her undergraduate studies at Arizona State University and Oakwood University. She told Black Enterprise she hopes to complete her undergrad studies by the time she reaches 18 and wants to become a doctor. Now, at just 13, her acceptance into University of Alabama at Birminghams Heersink School of Medicine makes her the youngest Black person to be accepted into medical school, NBC affiliate KPNX reports.

Initially, Walker wanted to pursue an engineering career with NASA and even interned with the government agency at 12 years old. (She also made history as NASAs youngest intern.) But instead, she decided to shift gears and study immune system responses to viruses. It actually took one class in engineering, for me to say this is kind of not where I wanted to go, she told 12News. I think viral immunology really came from my passion for volunteering and going out there engaging with the world.

What I want from healthcare is to really show these underrepresented communities that we can help, that we can find cures for these viruses, she added.

In her celebratory Instagram post, Wicker thanked her biggest motivator and supporter: her mother. I couldn't have done it without you, she wrote. You gave me every opportunity possible to be successful. You cheered me on, wiped my tears, gave me oreos when I needed comfort, you never allowed me to settle, disciplined me when I needed. You are the best mother a kid could ever ask for. MAMA I MADE IT!

You always believed in me, she added. You allowed me space to grow and become, make mistakes without making me feel bad. You allowed me the opportunity to experience the world.

In addition to her academic accomplishments, Wicker is also the founder of the Brown STEM Girl foundation, which gives scholarships to students of color pursuing STEM careers. She is currently fundraising for her STEM Abroad program in which she will be taking girls, ages 12 to 17, to the Art Science Museum in Singapore. Wicker announced on Instagram that she is looking to sponsor one more girl.

Representation matters to Wicker and she is looking to not only achieve these accomplishments for herself but other Black girls like her. I want to inspire the girls. I want them to see that there are no limits, she told 12News of her aspirations.

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13-Year-Old Makes History As Youngest Black Student Accepted Into Medical School - Romper

History at the Heritage Program Highlights Cleanup of Schuylkill River – bctv.org

Learn more about the project that restored the major waterway in our County at Augusts History at the Heritage program on Saturday, Aug. 6 at 10 am. This program is free and open to the public. It will be held regardless of weather in the barn at the Berks County Heritage Center.

August 6: 10 am | History of the Schuylkill River Project

After the extraction of coal began in its headwaters in the early 1800s, the Schuylkill went from being considered waters of uncommon purity to being called this countrys dirtiest river by the 1900s. That distinction resulted in the Schuylkill River becoming the focus of a precedent-setting river cleanup effort in 1947 known as the Schuylkill River Project. Without the Schuylkill River Project, a very different river would flow through our communities today.

Chari Towne, Director of Grants and Operations with the Delaware Riverkeeper Network, has researched the Schuylkill River Project. In this presentation, Towne will tell the complicated story of how the Schuylkill was allowed to become so polluted. She will detail efforts by those who worked to restore the health of the river and discuss how that project still resonates today. Towne is the author of A River Again: The Story of the Schuylkill River Project. This talk is sponsored by The Consortium for Scientific Assistance to Watersheds.

More about the speaker, Chari Towne: Towne joined the Delaware Riverkeeper Network (DRN) in 1996 to oversee the organizations Schuylkill programs. She continues to act as DRNs Schuylkill watershed specialist, but now serves as Director of Grants and Operations. From preparing comment for decision makers, to writing grant proposals, to overseeing many of DRNs daily business activities, Towne has broad responsibilities with DRN. She also develops and organizes programs around watershed issues, such as the annual Watershed Congress.

For more information on this program, please contact Historic Resource Supervisor Dan Roe [emailprotected] or (610) 374-8839 ex. 201.

The Berks County Heritage Center is located at 1102 Red Bridge Road, Reading PA 19605. This program is presented by the Berks County Parks & Recreation Department.

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History at the Heritage Program Highlights Cleanup of Schuylkill River - bctv.org